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Go Boy 7, Volume 2: The Human Factor »

Book cover image of Go Boy 7, Volume 2: The Human Factor by Jon Sommariva

Authors: Jon Sommariva (Artist), Brian Augustyn, Todd Demong (Illustrator), Todd Demong (Artist), Kris Justice
ISBN-13: 9781593072643, ISBN-10: 1593072643
Format: Paperback
Publisher: Dark Horse Comics
Date Published: December 2004
Edition: (Non-applicable)

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Author Biography: Jon Sommariva

Book Synopsis

When Jonny Zero's blood was infused with lifesaving nanotech plasm, his life was changed forever. No longer simply a teenage boy, Jonny became GO BOY 7 - Human Action Machine! Now Jonny's life is one adventure after another as he battles the evil, nonsensical genius of The Cultist - who seeks the destruction of logic, reason, and Go Boy 7! In this graphic novel the Cultist's devastating creativity with anarchic giga-technology threatens civilization yet again as an enigmatic new player comes in town: BioAgent! Who is this sudden hero, what is happening to Jonny's body, and what is the origin of the Cultist?

Publishers Weekly

This unoriginal but fast-moving superhero graphic novel works as a modern adventure story for younger readers. Go Boy 7 is a teenager named Johnny who gained superpowers after being infused with life-saving "nanoplasm." (Go Boy 7's poignant though somewhat predictable origin is explained near the end of the volume for maximum dramatic effect.) His colleagues are his uncle, Professor Zero; Zero's assistant, Jett Girl; and Go Boys 2 through 6-robots that help the professor fight bad guys. They operate out of Go Base and tackle menaces like a terrorist group that threatens to destroy a Microsoft-like company with an electromagnetic pulse bomb. Their primary nemesis, however, is the Cultist, a powerful robot dedicated to the elimination of all life on Earth. This may sound grim, but the art ensures it's not. All the characters, including the Cultist, are joke-cracking wise guys, and they all are drawn as brightly colored, exaggerated, cartoony figures. The action moves too quickly to allow readers to dwell on the dire significance of the Cultist's apocalyptic plans. Indeed, aside from the general lack of new ideas, the biggest problem with this graphic novel is its speed. It rushes along so rapidly that readers barely get a chance to get to know the characters' names. (Dec.) Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.

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