Sardine in outer space

Emmanuel Guibert

Book - 2006

Saved in:

Children's Room Show me where

jGRAPHIC NOVEL/Guibert/Sardine v
vol. 1: 1 / 1 copies available
vol. 2: 2 / 2 copies available
vol. 3: 1 / 1 copies available
vol. 4: 1 / 1 copies available
vol. 5: 1 / 1 copies available
vol. 6: 1 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
Children's Room jGRAPHIC NOVEL/Guibert/Sardine v. 1 Checked In
Children's Room jGRAPHIC NOVEL/Guibert/Sardine v. 2 Checked In
Children's Room jGRAPHIC NOVEL/Guibert/Sardine v. 2 Checked In
Children's Room jGRAPHIC NOVEL/Guibert/Sardine v. 3 Checked In
Children's Room jGRAPHIC NOVEL/Guibert/Sardine v. 4 Checked In
Children's Room jGRAPHIC NOVEL/Guibert/Sardine v. 5 Checked In
Children's Room jGRAPHIC NOVEL/Guibert/Sardine v. 6 Checked In
Subjects
Genres
Graphic novels
Published
New York : First Second 2006-
Language
English
French
Main Author
Emmanuel Guibert (-)
Other Authors
Joann Sfar (illustrator)
Edition
1st American ed
Item Description
v. 1. Originally published in France in 2000 under the titles: Sardine de l'espace: le doigt dans l'oeil and Sardine de l'espace: le bar des ennemis by Bayard Éditions Jeunesse, Paris ; v. 2. Originally published in France in 2001 under the titles La machine à laver la cervelle and Les voleurs de yaourts by Baynard Éditions Jeunesse, Paris ; v. 3. Orginally published in France in 2002 under the titles Le championnat de boxe and Le Capitaine tout rouge by Bayard Editions Jeunesse, Paris ; v. 4. Orginally published in France in 2003 under the titles: Sardine de l'espace : les tatouages carnivores and Sardine de l'espace : la grande Sardine by Bayard Éditions Jeunesse, Paris ; v. 5. Orginally published in France in 2007 under the title: Sardine de l'espace 6: la cousine Manga by Dargaud ; v. 6 Orginally published in France in 2008 under the title: Sardine de l'espace 7 by Dargaud.
Physical Description
volumes : chiefly color illustrations
ISBN
9781596431263
9781596431270
9781596431287
9781596431294
9781596433809
9781596434240
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Gr. 3-5. Sword fighting her way through this French paean to disobedience is tiny space-pirate Sardine, all long red hair and giant blue hat, who cruises in her spaceship Huckleberry0 with Uncle Yellow Shoulder and friend Little Louie. Their mission: to oppose Supermuscleman, the mustachioed tyrant of a space orphanage where children are taught "proper behavior." In 12 whirlwind tales filled with comic battles and clever escapes, the heroes foil the villain's plans, exposing themselves to the dangers of space lions, ice-cream shops, and video games. The disobedience stays largely within reason, and Uncle Yellow appears to have as many rules for his wards as the space orphanage does. But Uncle Yellow is still a big, burly pirate, which makes for a free-wheeling ride peppered with as much grisly monster-filleting action and bodily fluid humor as a young reader could want. Sfar's off-kilter, slightly uglified art, reminiscent of a toned-down Beavis and Butthead,0 gives the simple fun an unusual punch. --Jesse Karp Copyright 2006 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Punky heroes, interplanetary action and unpredictable bouts of silliness characterize these hyperbolic color comics. Sardine, a fearless red-haired urchin, wields a silver saber and killer enthusiasm. She travels on a rattletrap, fig-shaped spaceship called the Huckleberry, goes shoeless and wears blue tattered clothing; a grinning black kitten rides atop her floppy hat and hisses "The End" at each episode's punch line. Sardine's Uncle Yellow Shoulder, a beefy, stubbled space pirate, "teaches [children] to disobey," according to one disgruntled villain; Sardine is his cutest and most dangerous trainee. She and the crew (including Little Louie, a boy who'd be at home in Sfar's Little Vampire books) tangle with their nemeses, the pencil-mustached Supermuscleman and lizardy brainiac Doc Krok. They also endure a dance-off on "the loathsome planet Discoball" and kick back with a virtual-reality game called No-Child-Left-Behind-School II ("Isn't that game a little violent?" Yellow Shoulder wonders). Some episodes get rough-Sardine lures a "space leech" into a rocket's fiery path and remorselessly chops fishy underwater aliens in half. Other moments are just gross, as when the baddies load Sardine and Louie's sundaes with nasty ingredients. Guibert and Sfar (co-creators of the Black Olives series) sling jokes, make up funny names and backhandedly salute the original Star Wars movies by including a primordial soup slithering with creatures and a wacky cantina. Their plots are wispy, but the pirate humor and gothic panels-abundant with Jolly Rogers, drippy slime and creepy-crawly creatures-provide surprises in every space vignette. Ages 6-up. (May) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by School Library Journal Review

Gr 4-7-Sardine is the sprightly, swashbuckling niece of Captain Yellow Shoulder, a galactic pirate who saves children from orphanages run by a costume-wearing villain (Supermuscleman). Twelve chapters each contain a short adventure, as Sardine and her cousin Little Louie fight Supermuscleman and his Assistant, Doc Krok, as well as various aliens, creatures, and robots. The artwork is scratchy and primitive, but also contains the sort of raw, grotesque sensibility that so often clicks with young readers. Tentacles, poisons, and gloopy substances are exhibited in abundance, as is Supermuscleman's rear end, and despite Yellow Shoulder's vast musculature, it is petite Sardine who usually ends up saving the day. Occasional puns and cultural references are sophisticated (e.g., a trio of clouds made from beer, wine, and rum take their names from Dumas's Three Musketeers; the youngsters play a video game called No-Child-Left-Behind-School II), but most of the dramatic situations are comical enough to be appreciated by the intended audience.-Benjamin Russell, The Derryfield School, Manchester, NH (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Taking a seat in first class aboard the graphic-novels-for-preteens train, this import features a carrot-topped lass who travels the starways with her piratical uncle Yellow Shoulders, foiling the plots of Supermuscleman, nefarious Chief Executive Dictator of the Universe. Presented in small sequential panels of brightly hued cartoon art and spacious dialogue balloons, Sardine's adventures take her from the space prison Azkatraz to Planet Discoball (for a dance contest presided over by Empress Laser Diskette and her offspring, Prince Beejeez), from encounters with deadly, as well as thoroughly nerve-wracking, Honkfish to a deliciously violent round of "No-Child-Left-Behind-School II," a virtual game. With nonstop action, humor geared to multiple levels of cultural awareness and the promise of more episodes to come, even readers stubbornly resisting the trendy format's lure will find that, as Supermuscleman sneers shortly before gorily blasting his own foot, "Resistance is futile." (Graphic novel. 7-9) Copyright ©Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.