"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title. Fans of the first book and newcomers alike will thoroughly enjoy the zaniness and clamor for more.- Mara Alpert, Los Angeles Public LibraryĬopyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. Emily's second journal, a sequel to The Lost Days (HarperCollins, 2009), is a dark delight, filled with all kinds of Strangeness: a broken leg, a Strange Manifesto that causes the entire town to go loony, an ex-spymaster neighbor, and an oddly understanding and absurdly patient mother, all described with demented wit and great relish, and accompanied by manga-style black-and-white cartoons. Co-Author, Rob Reger says the book maps new territory inside the mind of his popular character. Written in a diary format, it opens with Emily attempting to recover her memory and regain her sense of style. At first OtherMe is cool and useful, but it quickly becomes apparent that she is evil and will take over the world if not stopped. The first HarperCollins novel, Emily the Strange: The Lost Days, was released in June 2009. But the duplication device may have been a mistake, especially when an accident produces an identical Emily. Grade 7–10-Emily the Strange, evil genius and skateboarder extraordinaire, has invented many things in her time-golems, working cat translators, great names for bands. Emily the Strange: Stranger and Stranger - Rob Reger Emily is.
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