Parents' Guide to

The Rotten Adventures of Zachary Ruthless

Book Allan Woodrow Humor 2011
The Rotten Adventures of Zachary Ruthless Poster Image

Common Sense Media Review

Kate Pavao By Kate Pavao , based on child development research. How do we rate?

age 8+

Silly series starter about wannabe villain.

Parents Need to Know

Why Age 8+?

Any Positive Content?

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What's the Story?

Zachary Ruthless appears to be a good kid -- he blinks a lot "and everyone knows people who are good and kind sweet blink a lot." He appears so good in fact that his parents plan for him to spend his summer at Sister Celia's School for Good Samaritans. But Zachary has other plans: Pulling off a prank evil enough to earn him entry into the wickedest society of all: The Society of Utterly Rotten, Beastly and Loathsome Lawbreaking Scoundrels (or SOURBALLS). But can Zachary, his freckled henchman Newt, and a box of close-out items from evilbadguystuff.com really take down Mayor Mudfrogg and the town of Plentyville?

Is It Any Good?

Our review:
Parents say: Not yet rated
Kids say: Not yet rated

This is a fun first installment of a new series, and a good choice for reluctant readers ready to move past Captain Underpants into another silly adventure. The chapters are short, the wacky plot never stops moving, and readers will find plenty to laugh at throughout the book. Zachary may be a wannabe evil mastermind -- he hasn't quite mastered his cackle and has to shop the close-out items on evilbadguystuff.com -- but readers will be impressed that he remains committed to being rotten throughout (when he begins searching for the mayor's zombie laser, his freckled henchman Newt assumes he plans to destroy it and save the town. Really Zachary wants to use the laser himself. "Saving the town is kind of against the whole point of this," Zachary reminds Newt). He's also got some style, shuddering at the bad puns thrown about by the book's other evil characters.

Clever comic book-style illustrations of famous evil villains, such as Dr. Felonious Freckles (whose freckles are in the shape of small rats) and instruments of evil (like a rocket that will destroy all life that has the words "Happy Fuzzy Children's Books" printed on its side to disguise it), add to the book's humorous, far-fetched tone -- and will keep kids flipping through pages. And looking forward to the next rotten adventure.

Talk to Your Kids About ...

  • Families can talk about bad guys. Can you think of other books and movies that have a villain as the star? Most books for kids have a lesson at the end -- but does Zachary change at all here?

  • What did you think of the book's illustrations? Do they make the story easier or more interesting to read? Would the tone of the book have been different without them?

Book Details

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