Autorenbild.
2+ Werke 143 Mitglieder 7 Rezensionen

Rezensionen

Zeige 7 von 7
This was a different kind of audiobook in that instead of being read, it was acted out. I enjoyed the format, except for when it was difficult to differentiate between voices. The story was just getting really interesting when it abruptly stopped. I assume there will be a new installment at some point? Then again, I'm still waiting for the Alvin Wandering series to conclude...
 
Gekennzeichnet
atari_guy | 6 weitere Rezensionen | May 11, 2021 |
LADDERTOP starts off on Earth with an application competition to an elite academy which trains children for working 36,000 miles up at the top of a tower. This first volume goes through the competition, election, training, and transportation through the tower of the chosen children. The Earth scenes look modern day but the story takes place 25 years after aliens visited Earth, built the towers, and then disappeared.
Robbi and Azure are best friends who are both in the competition. Robbi is the quieter one who has problems at home but feels she is the only one who can solve them, while Azure is a little spitfire who will take on any challenges but often gets in a jam because of it.
The plot answers some questions 11-yr-olds might ask when reading this (like how do you go to the bathroom when you’re strapped in a chair on an 18 hour journey?) but also leaves several unanswered, building the complexity for later volumes.
I was surprised at how much the book held my interest. The drawings conveying emotions are spot-on and there is continuing action throughout the book. I liked how so many intriguing things were going on. What does the scanner really scan the children for? What are the drawings on Robbi’s arm? What is the real work being done at the top of Laddertop? I would have to recommend LADDERTOP to middle readers because I for one really want to find out what happens in the next volume!

I received this through goodreads' First Reads giveaways.
 
Gekennzeichnet
BooksOn23rd | 6 weitere Rezensionen | Nov 25, 2015 |
Robbi is a young girl (in Middle School, I think) who ends up getting into Laddertop Academy because her mother secretly sent in her application. Her best friend Azure wants to go so badly, and they both get accepted to the academy for training. While there, Robbi has a string of strange experiences connected with to the mystery surrounding the aliens that gave Earth the Laddertop towers. No one really knows anything about the advanced technology, how to change it, how to fix it, and definitely not how to replicate it. It seems the reason only young children are capable of fitting into the small tubes for maintenance is very much intentional on the part of the mysterious alien givers.

Robbi is the main character and she's just an average girl her age, although perhaps a little short in stature. That's a good thing for kids in this world because the smaller and smarter you are, the more likely you are to get selected to attend Laddertop Academy. Azure is a spunky tomboy who's been dreaming of attending the Academy her whole life, although Robbi never wanted to leave home because her mother's husband is physically violent and she's afraid he'll start abusing her little sisters and mother while she's away. I like Robbi, but with so little of the story contained in this volume, it's hard to get a clear idea of her personality.

The concept of this story is really great—something very much up my alley. It reminds me of my favorite science fiction anime, which I believe is an influence. The mystery surrounding the aliens is very intriguing because they seem a little too sneaky. What are they up to? All the adults running the Laddertop towers try to uncover the towers' secrets only to be constantly stumped. While I really like the premise and the world building, both are well done, I'm not usually into stories meant for younger children, so this one seemed a bit lackluster to me.

Because it is a manga-style comic book, the writing is done through talk bubbles and captions, and it's done well. The artwork, which has to be mentioned, on the other hand, is not my favorite. I just didn't feel like the quality was good enough and the style wasn't very appealing to me, either.

Favorite Scene/Moment: I liked the scene where Robbi picked up a metallic bug-looking object and it suddenly started carving out some alien symbols into her arm. That was unexpected and very cool! Never found out what any of it meant in this volume, unfortunately.
 
Gekennzeichnet
Cathy_Keaton | 6 weitere Rezensionen | Sep 16, 2012 |
LADDERTOP VOL. 1 by Orson Scott Card & Emily Janice Card is a fun foray into sci-fi graphic novels. If you’re a fan of Orson Scott Card it’s definitely worth picking up.

Robbi is chosen to go work in The Ladder, a structure left by aliens that extends up into space. Only children can fit into the webbing-like tubes in order to do maintenance and keep the Ladder in working order. Anyone who’s read the Ender books will definitely start feeling nostalgic in reading LADDERTOP. Though different aliens and plot, the idea of children being trained for a specific task, in space, is very familiar. It makes me wonder what the story would have read like if it was written in traditional novel format rather than as a graphic novel.

The artwork and layout of LADDERTOP reminds me strongly of manga and without the different hairstyles I would have found it difficult to keep the kids apart. The build up to the beginning of the mystery that Robbi finds herself a part of is interesting, and there’s enough information presented that I’m curious about what the aliens (the Givers) are up to and why they left the Ladders on Earth. One thing I chuckled at, there’s this one panel near the beginning of the book that has some drawings of different spaceships, and I’m pretty sure I saw not only a Borg cube and the Enterprise, but the TARDIS as well. So very neat.
 
Gekennzeichnet
thekams | 6 weitere Rezensionen | Jul 18, 2012 |
Robbi's best friend Azure dreams of being chosen to go to Laddertop, a space station built by aliens that came to Earth twenty-five years before. The space stations require small, trained humans for maintenance, so when Azure, two classmates and Robbi are chosen, they undergo some intense training first...but there are distressing signs that the aliens may not have been so gentle/peaceful as they pretended to be.

While the big picture story - what was the real reason aliens came to Earth and built incredibly advanced tools for humans to use, then leave? - is intriguing, the execution is less so. The story seemed disjointed, as if panels or pages were missing, and this volume is waaaaay to childish for the teen audience it's marketed to.

I give this one a "Meh." But I may try out the 2nd volume. Good for girls looking for smart female characters in science fiction stories.
 
Gekennzeichnet
kayceel | 6 weitere Rezensionen | Feb 21, 2012 |
Laddertop Vol. 1 is as the title suggests the first book in the Laddertop series and I hope not the last. This is a young adult graphic novel and I was a little leery at first partly because I was afraid it was really going to be focused on young girls since the that is who the main characters are. I’m happy to say that while it’s about these young kids it’s not a just a story about being a young girl.

While reading Laddertip I felt echoes of Ender’s game; there was the brush with a mostly unknown extra-terrestial culture; military personnel training children for a job; most people unaware of what is really going on. There was also the feel of Gunnerkrigg Court, another graphic novel about a girl going to school away from friends and family where mysteries abound.

About 25 years previously the ‘givers’ came and shared with us their technology, including for towers or elevators that extend 36,000 miles into space. They provide power to Earth as well as making it easier to put things into orbit and bring materials back to earth from asteroids. The ladders were designed in such a way that the using children for the repair work was found to be the most efficient way and so a culture has grown up around the ladders for children competing to be chosen.

This first book is primarily about Robbi and her trials on her way to Laddertop, and it stops shortly after. This book is really just to prime the pump if you will, all setup and a lot of explanation is still left to do. I enjoyed it more than I thought I would and I hope the next one will be out soon.
 
Gekennzeichnet
readafew | 6 weitere Rezensionen | Nov 15, 2011 |
Looks to be an exciting story. Children are used to maintain a 'web' that was provided to earth by the "Givers" and is used to power everything. One girl is being contacted by aliens and will be used to uncover mysteries of the Givers and their gifts. Book 1 gives us some background and setting as well as introduces us to the main characters.
 
Gekennzeichnet
ksattler | 6 weitere Rezensionen | Jul 1, 2011 |
Zeige 7 von 7