rkiladitis's review against another edition

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4.0

Take five science and candy-loving friends, a dose of STEM/STEAM, and a group of uber-over-achievers to go up against for the all-city science fair, and you've got the NS3: the Not-So Secret Society. This group of middle schoolers needs a project that will wow the judges at the science fair, and they come up with one when they create a machine that can bring candy to life! Their test run brings an adorable gummy bear to life, but Gummy has a sweet tooth that won't quit - and neither will the growth spurts that follow! The NS3 has to track down Gummy, who goes on a sugar-eating rampage, before it's too late, and they still have to make it to the science fair on time! This is an hilarious story of friendship, science, and candy, starring a group of middle schoolers that readers will love: Madison, the bookish one; Aidan, the inventor; Emma, the licorice-obsessed artist; Dylan, the comedian, and Ava, the tiny wrestling fan with a big temper. Readers who loved Eleanor Davis's Secret Science Alliance will enjoy this comic. I just want to know why three years have passed without a new adventure! Back matter includes a parent reading guide and learning activities, along with Common Core standards info. Unfortunately, the website for the NS3 doesn't seem to be up at the moment, but in the meantime, try some safer candy experiments in the spirit of the NS3, with no risk of giant gummy bear attacks. This Pinterest board never disappoints - I've made the candy slime with my library kids, and I've made the Ziploc bag ice cream with my own kiddo. If you want to go old school, show them a few episodes of the early 2000s cartoon, Codename: Kids Next Door.

wordnerd153's review against another edition

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2.0

Fun story, but the writing was uneven and the dialogue felt inauthentic.

jeninmotion's review against another edition

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4.0

This was extremely cute.

alenka's review

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3.0

This is a fairly typical mystery-kids style book, just replace "mystery" with "science shenanigans." They invent a machine that makes candy anthropomorphic, something of course goes wrong, hijinks ensue! It's cute and cast is diverse, but the highlight for me was the mini comics in the back. I think more of the kids' personalities come across in the minis and Daley + Crafts are great with punchlines. Reading the minis first might've helped me enjoy the main story more.