The spectacular space loop

Javier de Castro, 1990-

Book - 2025

"Cosmo and his team are ready to test his new jetpack, but when it explodes, sending Cosmo into space with no hope of communicating with his companions, he's about to embark on the biggest adventure yet! Meeting aliens, destroyers, magicians, sewer mutants, and a friendly, slightly egg-like creature - countless whacky encounters await our brave space hero! "--Provided by publisher.

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Subjects
Genres
Science fiction comics
Graphic novels Juvenile fiction
Comics (Graphic works)
Action and adventure comics
adventure story comics
Upside-down books
Graphic novels
Published
London : Flying Eye Books 2025.
Language
English
Spanish
Main Author
Javier de Castro, 1990- (author)
Other Authors
Rosa (Translator) Gómez (translator)
Item Description
Translation of: Cosmo en el espacio.
A brilliant introduction to comics for younger readers that you read one way, then flip over and read upside down.
Physical Description
1 volume (unpaged) : chiefly color illustrations ; 23 cm
Audience
Age 5-7 years.
ISBN
9781838743550
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Testing the new jetpack his family built, Cosmo winds up lost in space, his journey back home introducing him to new friends and facing him with various trials and opponents. If that seems pretty straightforward, rest assured that--true to its name--The Spectacular Space Loop is absolutely not a straight narrative line, and it isn't simply the plot that will have visually minded readers returning over and over to obsessively reexamine every detail of its grand design. The last page, you see, only gets you through the first half of the story. You must flip the book over to get the second half of the story, which loops back through those same pages and panels, now upside down. It's not just an efficient use of pages and panels but also a transformation of the entire visual experience. Cosmo's rescuer in the first half flips over to become a heinous enemy in the second; a dance flips over to become a fight; and entire environments flip over to become creatures, presenting a gob-smacking manipulation of visual space that hearkens back to MAD magazine fold-ins. More than a fun, fast space adventure, it's a triumph of design that will open a world of new possibilities to readers with strong visual art inclinations, and also a lesson in the value and potential of physical books.

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

"Everything changes when you change your perspective," writes Spanish creator de Castro in this charming graphic novel debut, which offers two interstellar adventures linked by a formatting twist. Opening pages introduce human astronaut Cosmo, who is preparing to test-pilot a jet pack made by him and his team of sentient robots. A disastrous launch sends Cosmo careening into open space, where he floats headfirst into adventure upon boarding the spaceship of a suspiciously helpful intergalactic explorer bot; crash-landing on an alien planet that's home to insect-like creatures; and encountering unruly, levitating magicians. Straightforward paneling populated by friendly-faced characters is rendered via thick line art enlivened by a boldly saturated color palette that recalls rounded Playmobil aesthetics. Opening instructions prompt readers to, at journey's end, return to the story's beginning and flip the book upside down; the perspective shift impels the audience on a brand-new adventure, which uses color-coded dialogue balloons to change the context of familiar but inverted scenes. Though the upended scenarios don't always fully translate, Cosmo's free-wheeling, low-conflict quest to reunite with his friends culminates in a cheerful jaunt through space and back again. Cosmo is portrayed with pale skin. Ages 5--7. (Dec.)

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

Gr 1--3--Cosmo, 10, is testing out a new jetpack on his distant planet when a malfunction sends him spinning into space and miles away from his family. A kindly spaceship captain picks him up, promising to help him get home, but another mishap sends Cosmo back out into space, this time landing him on a jungle planet. There he meets Blo, a young egglike creature who has recently escaped from poachers. They are also looking to return to their family. Using a spacecraft that Blo repaired, Cosmo bravely pilots them off the planet. However, encounters follow with a magician, a sewer monster, and space pirates before they can both return home to their worried families. All the characters are either aliens or robots; only Cosmo is humanoid and presents as white. The book uses an interactive format: readers first read white speech balloons right-side up, then flip the book to read yellow balloons--originally upside down--all the way back to the first page. The first page explains how to read the book forwards and backwards. The colorful panels, sometimes filled with too much action, can be interpreted in two ways depending on the orientation. Some of the perspective shifts are obvious while others are more difficult to understand. VERDICT An additional purchase where gimmicky books are popular.--Elisabeth LeBris

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

A boy encounters curious creatures on a strange galactic journey. Cosmo is ready to test a jet pack prototype, but things go haywire as soon as it's activated. Thrust deep into swirling space, he's found by a purple creature who looks distinctly like an upside-down light bulb and who turns out to be most hospitable, offering Cosmo nachos and a place to rest. Soon, a careless push of a button sends Cosmo hurtling headlong into a lush jungle, where he discovers a wiggly white bloblike creature in search of its family. The pair proceed to a bustling city, where they narrowly evade a great green sewer monster and meet a bald, bearded, pink-skinned magician who vows to send them homeward. His specious spell simply flips them topsy-turvy, and the story literally turns upside down as well. Youngsters must then flip the book over, reading from back to front and viewing the peculiar planetary passage in a new light--the seemingly bald magician grows a full head of hair, frowns become smiles, and a sinister skull cracker replaces the harmless nachos--but all is made right in the end. De Castro's creative concept is impressively executed; each image must work turned on its head, and it does. Moreover, Cosmo's interstellar odyssey is so fun and fully realized that readers will intuitively understand what's going on, making it a page-turner, twice over. In de Castro's squared-off, thick-lined cartoon artwork, Cosmo is light-skinned and wears a spacesuit throughout. A wild ride with a wonderfully weird cast of creatures.(Graphic science fiction. 5-9) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.