Iron Man 2: The Junior Novel

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Overview

A fast-paced and engaging junior novelization of Iron Man 2, the guaranteed blockbuster coming to theaters May 7, 2010!
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Overview

A fast-paced and engaging junior novelization of Iron Man 2, the guaranteed blockbuster coming to theaters May 7, 2010!

Product Details

  • ISBN-13: 9780594226826
  • Publisher: Little, Brown Young Readers
  • Publication date: 8/20/2011
  • Pages: 140
  • Sales rank: 299,661
  • Age range: 8 - 12 Years
  • Product dimensions: 7.90 (w) x 7.80 (h) x 0.30 (d)

Meet the Author

Alexander Irvine has written several licensed novels based on comics, including Batman: Inferno, The Ultimates: Against All Enemies, about the Marvel Comics Super Hero team, and Have Robot, Will Travel, a novel set in Isaac Asimov's positronic robot milieu. He is a comic book writer in his own write, and is the author of many original novels, including the Locus Award-winning A Scattering of Jades, One King, One Soldier, The Narrows, and Buyout. He has been a reporter at the Portland Phoenix, and currently works as an assistant professor of English at the University of Maine.

First Chapter

Iron Man 2: The Junior Novel


By Irvine, Alexander

Little, Brown Books for Young Readers

Copyright © 2010 Irvine, Alexander
All right reserved.

ISBN: 9780316083546

CHAPTER 1

A massive aircraft soared through the sky. Below it, lights flashed and people screamed. When Iron Man tipped himself out of the cargo door of the plane and began soaring toward the ground, an observer might have thought he was diving into a war zone. But no… this was more like a Hollywood movie premiere.

It was opening night of the Stark Expo, a show sponsored by Stark Industries that brought together the best and brightest minds from around the world to share ideas and new technologies.

The crowd on the Expo grounds poured into the Tent of Tomorrow. They had already been treated to a montage, on the giant video screens, of Iron Man’s recent exploits: an aerial tango with a barrage of shoulder-fired missiles, a lightning raid on a pirate ship off the Horn of Africa, a head-on collision with an air-to-air missile whose explosion coming over the Expo sound system was loud enough to register on nearby seismometers. The crowd loved it.

And they exploded at the sight of Iron Man falling from the sky to execute a perfect somersault at the last moment and land at the center of the stage.

Robot arms sprouted from the stage and formed a framework around Tony Stark, unlocking the invisible joints on the Mark IV suit and lifting it away from his body. From the crowd’s perspective, it appeared that Iron Man had been disassembled and a tuxedo-clad Tony Stark constructed in his place. The whole procedure took only a few seconds. Tony was a genius inventor and billionaire who had created the Iron Man suit so that he could help people and fight the evils of the world.

“It’s good to be back!” he called out over the tumult. He paused for a moment to get his breath. Six months earlier, when he’d turned himself into the armored Super Hero, he hadn’t known what a physical toll it would take. Between the explosions, the late nights, and the recent problems with palladium, Tony Stark was not the man he had once been. But he had a show to put on.

“Ladies and gentlemen,” he began. “Decades ago, my father, Howard Stark, began a grand tradition. Every ten years, he would level the playing field for inventors by building a city. An idealized city. A city of the future. An Expo where for five glorious months, scientists, world leaders, and corporate CEOs could come together to pursue one goal: advancing mankind.”

The giant TV screen behind him lit up with archival footage of the first Expo. The camera panned across visions of the future ranging from the fanciful—Your Children’s Flying Car Is Here Today! was one slogan that drew a laugh from the crowd—to the hardheaded and practical, all against the backdrop of the New York City skyline.

“A place to do the impossible,” Tony said. “A place to unleash ideas.” Howard Stark appeared on the screen, shown in his workshop sometime around 1970.

“Everything is achievable through technology,” Howard Stark said in the old film footage. “Better living, robust health, and—for the first time in human history—the possibility of world peace!” He gave the camera a nervous smile as he walked to a scale model of that first Expo. “And everything you’ll need in the future can be found right here. So from all of us at Stark Industries, I’d like to personally show you the City of the Future… the Stark Expo! Welcome.”

Applause from the crowd swelled over Tony’s father’s speech. Tony himself picked up the thread. “Today I’m issuing a challenge. A challenge for anyone, any country, any company to prove its value. A chance to put up the best ideas, the best inventions… the best foot forward, in the hopes of leaving the world a better place than the one we came into.” With a bow and a flourish, he headed for the stage exit. “That’s all I’ve got for now. Have a good time!”

As he spoke the last words, the lights cut to black. The music picked up where it had left off, booming through the darkness as the crowd went nuts all over again. The Stark Expo, bigger and better than ever, was under way.

In a forgotten part of Russia, a flickering television screen showed Tony Stark’s grand entrance at the Expo. It was quite a spectacle: flashing lights, loud music.

Ivan Vanko watched. He was alone except for the television and his cockatoo, Irina. His father, Anton Vanko, had passed away recently. Since then Ivan had turned his small apartment into a workshop, filled with welding equipment, spools of wire, and bits of metal.

His father had told him many things—and shown him many things. Ivan had learned the true stories of Anton Vanko’s work and Tony Stark’s crimes. Ivan had absorbed as much of his father’s knowledge as he could. He had sorted through old records and plans, notebooks and loose sheaves of paper covered in diagrams and equations.

Ivan shuffled through boxes of his father’s papers and brought out a cardboard tube. On the peeling label he read the English words: STARK INDUSTRIES. Underneath were two names: HOWARD STARK and ANTON VANKO. It was time for Ivan to claim his heritage and for Tony Stark to learn the bitter truth about his own. Ivan returned to the worktable and spread out the blueprints in the spill of lamplight. The English words ARC REACTOR filled him with a sense of purpose. Tony Stark believed the Arc Reactor was his own invention. Ivan couldn’t wait to see the look on Tony’s face when he realized how wrong he was—for that alone Ivan Vanko would have given his life. But Tony Stark was arrogant and prideful, and Ivan didn’t think it would ever occur to Tony that someone could be his intellectual equal.

At least, not until it was too late.



Continues...

Excerpted from Iron Man 2: The Junior Novel by Irvine, Alexander Copyright © 2010 by Irvine, Alexander. Excerpted by permission.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Customer Reviews

Average Rating 3.5
( 9 )

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Sort by: Showing all of 9 Customer Reviews
  • Posted April 6, 2010

    more from this reviewer

    I Also Recommend:

    Iron Man is a solid good read

    You never know what to expect with these movie-tie in books. This sequel although written by Alexander Irvine, the first book was written by Peter David, is an exciting supplement to the movie. It is really escapest fun. A great book to read on a plane to help pass the time. It is a fast moving story with enough action to keep you turning pages. With books of this nature you really aren't concerned with character development or shocking plot twists, you basically want to be entertained and this novel provides plenty of that. A book for people of all ages and die-hard Iron Man fans. I am not sure but I have a feeling there will be a third installment and I am looking forward to it.

    1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.

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  • Posted May 13, 2010

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    Bridget's Review

    In the first Iron Man, Tony Stark admits to the world that he is in fact the hero everyone has been talking about. The United States military wants to get their hands on the Iron Man suit and use it as a weapon. When a ruthless killer comes after Tony, he soon realizes that his suit may not be the most powerful weapon after all. Can he save people from the mass destruction his enemy is ready to unleash on the world or will it be all he can do to make it out himself?

    I love superheros and I love books, so this was right up my alley. I love the good versus evil plot that keeps you guessing with each new development. Four stars.

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  • Posted April 14, 2010

    Iron Man 2 Brings a Comic Feel to the Novel World

    Irvine manages to capture the same feel as the comic books (something quite similar to men's adventure) while not alienating me as a reader. In fact, I was thrilled by some of the lines, and appreciated the balance between the outward and inward lives of the characters.

    He manages this balance in part by using multiple points of view, some of which are known and familiar, while others, including the villain, a mirror image of Tony Stark himself, are new to me. While there are some moments when I'm feeling the "oh come on" part of hanging out with someone as arrogant as Stark, or when the sheer lack of honest and open communication makes me want to slap the characters, these same moments are very much in character. And the consequences are real and plausible.

    Not only that, but Irvine has captured how Stark thinks in a beautiful way that opens a window into that kind of genius. While there's no way I'm going to turn around and build myself a flying machine, nor am I so naive as Stark who continues to protest that the Iron Man suit is not a military weapon while he's flying around stopping the bad guys with the suit, I have a touch of that kind of focused problem solving, and I can tell you the portrayal is spot on.

    It should be clear that I enjoyed the book. It's a fun ride, and definitely a candy-type book.

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