CHERUB: The Recruit
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
CHERUB: The Recruit | |
First edition cover |
|
Author | Robert Muchamore |
---|---|
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Series | CHERUB |
Genre(s) | Children's, Thriller, Spy novel |
Publisher | Hodder and Stoughton |
Publication date | 30 April 2004 |
Media type | Print (Paperback) |
Pages | 322 pp (329 including epilogue and a history of CHERUB) |
ISBN | ISBN 0340881534 (first edition, paperback) |
Followed by | CHERUB: Class A |
CHERUB: The Recruit is the first novel in the CHERUB series, written by Robert Muchamore. It introduces most of the main characters, such as James Adams, Lauren Adams, Kyle Blueman and Kerry Chang.
Contents |
[edit] Plot summary
James Choke is a 11 year old boy with serious anger management problems, he has a 9 year old sister, Lauren Onions and an obese mother named Gwen Choke, who runs a shoplifting gang. James gets in trouble at school when he man handles a girl named Samantha Jennings, causing her to scratch her face quite seriously on a nail jutting out of the wall. He gets beaten up by her older brother, Greg Jennings. James returns home to find his mother dead as a result of mixing painkillers with alcohol, partly due to Ronald Onion(AKA Uncle Ron)'s fault.
When his mother dies, James is sent to a children's care home by the name of Nebraska house, while James's sister Lauren is taken to live with her father Ronald Onions, causing James to lose contact with her.
Whilst staying in Nebraska House, James shares a room with Kyle Blueman who turns out to be an agent on a recruiting mission after a disaster in the Caribbean, James finds out after he is recruited that it was Kyle who had pointed him out as a good candidate.
James is taken to his mother's house, which has already been ransacked by Ronald. He then searches for a safe in which she kept all the money she made from her shoplifting, hoping that Ronald hasn't already found it. He finds the safe and try's to figure out the combination to unlock it. He searches around the safe, and spots a label. James finds a magazine that Ronald would ever think of looking in and shakes it to find a small piece of paper with the combination written on. After unsuccessfully attempting to open the lock James realises there is an order of rotation direction, written on the label as a note from the manufacturer. James finds a mass of bank notes stashed away in the safe and after hurridely cramming them into a binliner, leaves the combination, label and a picture of himself to anger Ron.
James makes friends with some rebellious teens and is arrested. He is drugged and taken to cherub not long after his twelfth birthday. The chairman, Dr MacAfferty or Mac on a good day, tells him about CHERUB and puts James through a series of tests. These test range from physical like climbing, strength and swimming, which James does well in except for the swimming test because of his fear of water. Also, an exam paper consisting of maths and verbal reasoning questions. He is asked to kill a chicken as one of the tests, but disagrees initially, stating that it was cruel. Eventually after Mac's persuasion, he does.
James is admitted into CHERUB and following CHERUB conditions to become an agent, James changes his last names to Anthony Adams, after the old Arsenal footballer Tony Adams. He begins a personal fitness regime after fears of not being fit enough to qualify for training, mainly running 15 laps of the athletics track per day, as well as being taught how to swim by the much older "Amy Collins".
All aspiring agents must have completed this course to be allowed to participate in missions, however there is always the chance to quit, but the agent must begin from the beginning again. Basic Training is mainly carried out in the CHERUB campus, however there are trips to other countries for training in other environment's, James was sent to Malaysia.
Later on, James is sent on his first mission at a hippies settlement claimed from an out of date document stating that the grounds were free for all by a 17th Century owner. His cover story is that he and his partner are nephew an niece of one of MI5s secret informants. His mission briefing describes a struggle between police and the hippies over settlement rights thirty years back, the hippies won.
He and Amy must find and stop two (hippy-born) teenagers, named Fire and World, and a Redneck environmentalist, named Brian "Bungle" Evans, from killing thousands of people from an anthrax attack. Unfortunately while investigating Fire and World's workshop, James is suspected of contracting the anthrax disease but is later (and after a lot of very toxic and vomit inducing drugs) pronounced to have a vaccine strain of the disease and so is declared fit to continue with the mission, under the cover that he had been hit by a car.
The mission ends with a large, and partially armed, police force clearing away the Hippy settlement and James and Amy sent back to the CHERUB Head-quarters and de-briefed. James is given his Navy shirt for outstanding courage in the face of death, although some friends believe it was down to the pity of being poisoned on a first mission.
[edit] Audio
An Audiobook of The Recruit has been released read by Julian Rhind-Tutt. It was officially sold in England September 21, 2006.
[edit] Awards and nominations
- Red House Awards: Old Reader Category 2005 - Winner.[1]
- Bolton Children's Book Award 2005 - Winner.[2]
- Medway Children's Book Award 2005 - Winner.
- Bishop Luffa Children's Book Ward 2005 - Winner.
- Salford Children's Book Award 2006 - Winner.
- The Sakura Medal (Japan) 2007 - Winner. [3]
- Doncaster Children's Book Award 2005 - Runner Up.
- Richard and Judy Best Kids' Books 2007 - Fluent 12+ category - Winner.[4]
- Kingston Young Readers Award 2007 - Winner
[edit] Footnotes
- ^ "Baby book wins children's award", BBC, 2005-05-11. Retrieved on 2008-03-08.
- ^ "Robert Muchamore wins Bolton Children's Book Award", SLA, 2005-07-04. Retrieved on 2008-03-07.
- ^ "Sakura Medal 2007 Winners", ASIJ. Retrieved on 2008-03-08.
- ^ "The eight best books every child should read, by Richard and Judy", Daily Mail, 2007-09-25. Retrieved on 2008-03-08.
[edit] External links
|