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Cover of Please Don't Tell My Parents I Saved the World Again

Please Don't Tell My Parents I Saved the World Again

Richard Roberts (2024-04-23)

Subgenre
Age groupMiddle Grade 8-12
Content ratingPG
Pages396 (Standard (250-400))
Setting
CSM age10

Content levels

ViolenceMild
Sexual contentNone
LanguageNone

Trigger warnings

Not yet tagged

Protagonist archetypes

Coming-of-Age Protagonist

Synopsis

Magic, mad science, and teenagers are a recipe for trouble. As the only living necromancer, fifteen-year-old Avery Special has too much trouble as it is. Trying to use her dark powers for good, she awakens a cyborg from a coma. The superintelligent Tonika is grateful and full of plans to help Avery help others, but the more Avery helps, the more trouble she gets in. Her parents are worried. Her boyfriend and girlfriend are lonely. A robot-possessing ghost is on the loose. Oh, and she stole a crystal ball from a museum. How much helping is too much? Can she afford to not help when the ultimate evil mad scientist tries to destroy the world?

Is Please Don't Tell My Parents I Saved the World Again appropriate for my child?

Suitable for most readers 10 and up.

A humorous superhero story about a teenage necromancer learning to balance her powers with everyday life. Features comedic situations, mild peril, and positive messages about responsibility and helping others without graphic content.

What to know going in

This book has mild violence, no sexual content, and clean language.

Who'll love this

Readers who love quirky superhero stories with funny situations, unusual powers, and relatable teen problems will enjoy following Avery's misadventures.

Tags

Superhero FictionMad ScienceUrban FantasyContemporary Fantasy