Maximum Boy

Maximum Boy  
Author(s) Dan Greenburg
Illustrator Greg Swearingen
Country United States of America
Language English
Genre(s) Superhero

Maximum Boy is a series of books about a young superhero by the American author and screenwriter Dan Greenburg. The series started in 2001 with The Hijacking of Manhattan, later republished as How I Became a Superhero. There are eight books in the series.

Max "Maximum Boy" Silver is an 11 year old hero. He lives on the north side of Chicago next to Lake Michigan. He lives with his mum, his dad and his teenage sister, Tiffany. He has braces, glasses, and superpowers: he can lift freight trains, fly faster than a space shuttle, and burp the alphabet. He has an adult friend named Porter "Tortoise Man" Torrington, who has a power called the Tortoise Ray.

Max has a few weaknesses. Milk products and sweet potatoes give him a badly upset stomach. Ragweed makes him sneeze his head off. Seeing and hearing math makes him weak and dizzy.

Like the hero, Max, the author grew up in Chicago and, in part, he based his character on his own childhood. For example, Greenburg hated math lessons, and in his stories, Max loses his super powers if he comes across a math problem.[1]

Contents

The series

Plot of Superhero... or Super Thief?

Max forgot to set his alarm and overslept. So he did his morning routine fast. He rushed into the shower, which made his sister angry. He gulped his breakfast. On his way to school, Max encountered many delays, which caused him to arrive at school just one minute before school started.

At school he found his classmates and everyone else frozen. His teacher, Mrs Mulvahill, was staring at him. He left his class and saw another frozen boy named Sheldon. He left school and saw everybody outside frozen, even his family. He met his adult friend, Tortoise Man. Tortoise Man and his wife were frozen while playing a game of Scrabble.

After sometime everyone thawed out and they talked about the world being frozen. A reporter named Warren Blatt came and accused Tortoise Man of using his Tortoise Ray to freeze the world. The president called to tell Max that a thief had stolen four of the worlds' greatest treasures—the Mona Lisa painting by Leonardo da Vinci in the Louvre museum in Paris; the Hope Diamond at New York's museum of Natural History, on loan from the Smithsonian; the Crown Jewels from the Tower of London; and a billion dollars in gold bullion at Fort Knox in Kentucky.

Max went to his house to see how his family was. They weren't frozen anymore.

Max returned to his school, and his teacher told him that he missed out on the excitement--the whole world had been frozen. Max explained why he was late and had to go into detention.

After detention, Max saw the news on Newspapers and TV. One report said Tortoise Man's ray slowed things down.

The president called Max again, telling him to watch the videos from the burglarized locations. Max saw that the thief was dressed up like Maximum Boy, so his dad hired a lawyer for Max. But the lawyer his dad hired was a patent lawyer], not a defense attorney. Too bad because Max went to jail and a hero named Noodleman in his superhero team called him to say Max was expelled from the league of superheroes. Max was very unhappy to hear this news.

Max went for help to Tortoise Man, but Tortoise Man was depressed. Tortoise Man took Max to his old friend, Ethelred, and his servant, Wolfgang. Max finally discovered that Ethelred was the thief, but then Ethelred died.

The president and Noodleman came to apologize to Max for wrongly accusing him of stealing the four treasures.

Characters

Notes

Invasion from the Planet of the Cows features Max meeting a cow named Bossy and making friends with her. The cows speak cow language, which is similar to the English language. Maximum Boy, Starring in the Hijacking of Manhattan was noted by the Washington Post to have caused the publisher some concern, because the cover showed Max flying past skyscrapers and it was published just before Sept 11 2001.[2]

References

  1. ^ Ludingon Daily News, Apr 27 2002
  2. ^ Washington Post Nov 2, 2001

External links