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Booksurfers: Treasure Island
 
 

Booksurfers: Treasure Island [Kindle Edition]

David Gatward
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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TWO BOOKS IN ONE! Read the Booksurfers adventure and follow it up with the story the gang have been exploring.

Jake, Becca, Ryan and Harriet are kidnapped by Dr Crookshanks and his accomplice, Professor Kaufman. Against their will, the gang have to jump 'into' the world’s best known adventure stories to steal important artefacts, using an incredible invention called the Nautilus. If they don't get what Crookshanks wants, what will he do to their parents? And what will Becca do without her dad's credit card?

Crookshanks explains that in order to keep their families safe, the children must bring him back the actual treasure map from Treasure Island. Their parents’ lives are in the hands of a complete madman! The Booksurfers have little time to argue. Before they know it, they are thrown into Treasure Island; they’re talking to Jim Hawkins, running away from pirates and risking their lives to get their hands on that map!

Ever wondered what it would be like to not just read a book, but actually experience it? Throughout these books you'll find something rather ingenious: hyperlinks. They're pretty easy to spot; look out for an underlined word or phrase or sentence. And whenever you see one, you can just click on it, and - KA-POW! - you'll be zipped into the actual book the Booksurfers are exploring at the exact point they are discovering it! Have fun tagging along; you never know what story you'll end up in next...

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
15 of 15 people found the following review helpful
Format:Kindle Edition
This is a fantastic idea and, in a way, makes author David Gatward the Jamie Oliver of kids' fiction, by encouraging them to read more stuff that's good for them.
A very clever use of modern technology (as the Booksurfers series is only in ebook format) what we have here is the modern day equivalent to what I loved as a kid (the choose your own adventure books) as the reader can choose as and when they want to dip in and out of the new story and into the original text of Robert Louis Stevenson's Treasure Island.
Ever wondered what it would be like to not just read a book, but actually experience it?
The set-up and premise is fairly straight forward but is sure to appeal to its target audience, particularly those who love books like the Alex Rider novels and similar tales of children having fantastic adventures.
Jake, Harriet, Ryan and Becca find themselves thrown together, their parents stolen away and imprisoned from them and facing a series of tasks ahead.
The sinister Cruella de Vil-alike, Kaufman visits them and tells them their mission, a mission they must undertake for the equally strange Crookshanks. They are to go into classic books, into the stories themselves, via `rips' that can be created by a gadget called the Nautilus (a reference to 20,000 Leagues under the Sea, of course). The Nautilus allows its user to `travel in the here and now. It also allows you to move about in the there and never was'.
Once inside the books they are to steal valuable artifacts from within them and bring them back to the outside world. The first of these is the treasure map from Treasure Island, but there are constant references throughout to other great novels - many of which I'm sure will follow after the second title (also available now) The Wonderful Wizard of Oz.
There is a secondary challenge, however, and that is that the children have to ensure that they do nothing in the book that will have an affect on its ending, can do nothing that may change the path of the story and so, in this first title, they choose to try to replicate a copy of the map to leave behind.
Scattering other book titles along the way is a good move, there's always a chance that the mention that `Dracula' for someone who's really into ghost stories is `brilliant. All that romance and intrigue...' will be enough to cause a young reader to give it a go.
However, the brilliance here, is that with every underlined section of text, words of a song or mention of a section of the original text, that the reader can simply click and they are taken straight into the original Treasure Island. Once there, they can choose to continue to read Treasure Island in full, or read a bit and then duck back out to the booksurfers tale, but there are enough comments made by the characters as to how much they loved the book to ensure that readers will be tempted time and time again to read some or all of the original novel.
Alternatively the reader can simply whizz through the great adventure story of the Booksurfers and they will still get a lot of the flavour and feel of Treasure Island and, when they reach the end, they'll find that the complete Stevenson novel is there for them to enjoy too.
It's a very clever idea. Maybe it could be argued that the concept of characters running amok and creating their own stories outside of the ones written for them and reality crashing into fictional characters has been done before, with books such as the Inkheart series, but this is unique in the way it is executed and is sure to catch the imagination of the generation who rarely want to read anything unless it is on a screen and who would, otherwise, be increasingly unlikely to settle back and enjoy a classic.
So, it's congrats all round - a great start to an exciting adventure series and a bold and clever way of encouraging children to read some of the old stuff/good stuff too.
Highly recommended - it's the first book I will gladly let my children borrow my kindle to read.
Get yourself over to amazon and get downloading Booksurfers now.
Keith
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
Format:Kindle Edition
In Booksurfers: Treasure Island we are introduced to a team of young book loving characters: Jake, Becca, Ryan and Harriet. The foursome have been kidnapped from their respective homes by the totally nasty Dr Crookshanks, and his evil inventor accomplice Professor Kaufman. His demands are simple: using the Nautilus, an incredible gadget created by Kaufman that allows people to enter the story of any book they choose, he wants the children to enter Treasure Island and retrieve Billy Bones' map so that he can sell it for a huge fortune.

Unfortunately for Jake and his new friends they very quickly discover that this is not as simple as it sounds, and they can't just rock up at the first mention of the map in the story and nab it, as this would mean that the whole story would then cease to exist (what's the point of Treasure island without the map?), and therefore the map would be worthless. And so begins an exciting adventure for the 9+ age group that had me totally hooked.

But.... there is much more to Booksurfers than just the standard "send new characters in to old stories" plot that has been seen before, as this new story is littered with Kindle hyperlinks that when clicked take the reader to the original R.L. Stevenson text, and in some cases, he very cleverly works this original text into his new story, especially where some of the dialogue is concerned, although this latter aspect is much more evident in the sequel, Booksurfers: The Wonderful Wizard of Oz. These hyperlinks take a little bit of getting used to as initially I was unsure how they would work (but then again, I am a lifelong reader who is pretty much set in his ways). After clicking on a few of them, and feeling that they distracted a little from the flow of the main Gatward story, I chose instead to ignore the majority of them. However, inquisitive young minds will, I am sure, make much better use of them than I did. What I did do though was as soon as I had finished Dave Gatward's story, I then felt compelled to read the full text of Treasure Island for the umpteenth time. Did I not mention that with the Booksurfers story you also get the full original text? A brilliant idea and a surefire way of encouraging a new generation of readers to read classic stories, without them feeling like they are being told to read them, as I am sure many would do the same as I did.

Treasure Island is one of my all-time favourite books, and I was initially a little concerned as to how I would feel about a modern day story interfering with my beloved classic. I had little to worry about as I loved it, especially with the way that the new characters occasionally interacted with the likes of Jim Hawkins, Blind Pew and Squire Trelawney in order to ensure that the story did not deviate from Stevenson's original.

Of course, when the foursome finally complete their allotted task they discover that Dr Crookshanks is not going to honour his initial promise to set them and their captive parents free, preferring instead to give them a list of other popular books, with an item to retrieve from each one. This leads us straight into the sequel, Booksurfers: The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, which was published at the same time as the first book.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta)
Amazon.com:  4 reviews
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful
Great Read, Great Idea 26 July 2011
By HR Harkness - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Kindle Edition|Amazon Verified Purchase
Reading David Gatward's Booksurfers series was a new experience for me: not only is this the first time I've read an e-book on a mobile device, but it's also my first encounter with Treasure Island, which is one of those classics I've always wanted to read but have never got around to. But despite my lack of familiarity with RL Stevenson's tale of pirates and treasure, I never found this to be a disadvantage while reading Booksurfers, mostly due to Gatward's skill with storytelling. He knows exactly the right amount of detail to insert from the original texts to stop unfamiliar readers from getting lost, while at the same time preventing it from being needlessly explanatory for those readers who know the classic well.

Jake, Ryan, Harriet and Becca are four characters whose personalities are very defined, making their interactions with both each other and the books they are thrown into very enjoyable. There are plenty of laughs here, particularly from Jake's snappy one-liners and Becca's constant preening and pouting.

It took me a little while to get a handle on the significance of the hyperlinks in the text, though I suspect this is more to do with my own inexperience with e-books. Once I realised that certain parts of the Booksurfers story link to parts of the original work (and in some cases, quote it word for word with some clever changes) I found this a very novel introduction to the text itself. By doing this, Gatward allows us to dip into parts of the original book (in this case Treasure Island) before returning back to the main storyline.

The Booksurfers storyline in itself would be excellent as a standalone, but I think it's the hyperlinking with the classics that makes this series really shine. It's an incredibly clever idea, and I can see it being a sneaky way for parents to get their kids onto classics - because younger readers will latch onto the great characters and evil villain storyline of Booksurfers, they'll definitely want to explore the original that the book was based on after they've finished (or even while they read it). I love what the e-book format has been able to achieve which would have been impossible in a paper book, and while the concept is an inventive one, it never takes away from the fact that in the end, these are some extremely entertaining stories!
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
Splendid 27 Jan 2012
By HE - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Kindle Edition|Amazon Verified Purchase
The story of the booksurfer kids' adventures in the book of Treasure Island is rxcellent but, to top it all, the book, Treasure Island, itself, which I never read, comes included. Priceless!
2 of 3 people found the following review helpful
Booksurfers 1: Treasure Island 27 Jun 2011
By keithbwalters - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Kindle Edition
This is a fantastic idea and, in a way, makes author David Gatward the Jamie Oliver of kids' fiction, by encouraging them to read more stuff that's good for them.
A very clever use of modern technology (as the Booksurfers series is only in ebook format) what we have here is the modern day equivalent to what I loved as a kid (the choose your own adventure books) as the reader can choose as and when they want to dip in and out of the new story and into the original text of Robert Louis Stevenson's Treasure Island.
Ever wondered what it would be like to not just read a book, but actually experience it?
The set-up and premise is fairly straight forward but is sure to appeal to its target audience, particularly those who love books like the Alex Rider novels and similar tales of children having fantastic adventures.
Jake, Harriet, Ryan and Becca find themselves thrown together, their parents stolen away and imprisoned from them and facing a series of tasks ahead.
The sinister Cruella de Vil-alike, Kaufman visits them and tells them their mission, a mission they must undertake for the equally strange Crookshanks. They are to go into classic books, into the stories themselves, via `rips' that can be created by a gadget called the Nautilus (a reference to 20,000 Leagues under the Sea, of course). The Nautilus allows its user to `travel in the here and now. It also allows you to move about in the there and never was'.
Once inside the books they are to steal valuable artifacts from within them and bring them back to the outside world. The first of these is the treasure map from Treasure Island, but there are constant references throughout to other great novels - many of which I'm sure will follow after the second title (also available now) The Wonderful Wizard of Oz.
There is a secondary challenge, however, and that is that the children have to ensure that they do nothing in the book that will have an affect on its ending, can do nothing that may change the path of the story and so, in this first title, they choose to try to replicate a copy of the map to leave behind.
Scattering other book titles along the way is a good move, there's always a chance that the mention that `Dracula' for someone who's really into ghost stories is `brilliant. All that romance and intrigue...' will be enough to cause a young reader to give it a go.
However, the brilliance here, is that with every underlined section of text, words of a song or mention of a section of the original text, that the reader can simply click and they are taken straight into the original Treasure Island. Once there, they can choose to continue to read Treasure Island in full, or read a bit and then duck back out to the booksurfers tale, but there are enough comments made by the characters as to how much they loved the book to ensure that readers will be tempted time and time again to read some or all of the original novel.
Alternatively the reader can simply whizz through the great adventure story of the Booksurfers and they will still get a lot of the flavour and feel of Treasure Island and, when they reach the end, they'll find that the complete Stevenson novel is there for them to enjoy too.
It's a very clever idea. Maybe it could be argued that the concept of characters running amok and creating their own stories outside of the ones written for them and reality crashing into fictional characters has been done before, with books such as the Inkheart series, but this is unique in the way it is executed and is sure to catch the imagination of the generation who rarely want to read anything unless it is on a screen and who would, otherwise, be increasingly unlikely to settle back and enjoy a classic.
So, it's congrats all round - a great start to an exciting adventure series and a bold and clever way of encouraging children to read some of the old stuff/good stuff too.
Highly recommended - it's the first book I will gladly let my children borrow my kindle to read.
Get yourself over to amazon and get downloading Booksurfers now.
Keith
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He was also beginning to think that Harriet, who was now handing him the Nautilus, was the kind of person who said very little, but what she did say was worth listening to. &quote;
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Thats the name of Captain Nemos submarine from Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea. &quote;
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Ever wondered what it would be like to not just read a book, but actually experience it? &quote;
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