FeaturedMiddle Grade

Rieden Reece and the Final Flower

By

Loved it! 😍

This book radiates energy, wit & warmth. I can’t remember the last time I had so much fun reading a middle grade novel! This one's a keeper!

“You are traveling through another dimension, a dimension not only of sight and sound but of mind. A journey into a wondrous land of imagination. Next stop, the Rieden Reece Zone!” And what a “zone” it is in this rollicking, high-flying, high-octane sci/fi fantasy adventure from Matthew Guzman! 


There's a good chance that Rieden Reece and the Final Flower is unlike anything you’ve ever read. (Hi, Twilight Zone.) Because this puppy’s in a class by itself! And that’s good. Because it’ll reel you in from page one and keep you going until the very end. It's like tossing some sci fi into a blender. Adding some fantasy and a dash of humor. Stirring in truckloads of imagination, wit, and creativity. Swirl. And you’ve almost poured out Rieden Reece and the Final Flower. Almost.


Regarding the story, it doesn’t take long for our intrepid hero, thirteen year-old Ri, to discover that alien dahlia weeds are both “important and dangerous.” Yep, dahlias. Ri is determined to find out what’s going on and why. And that’s a good thing. Because the fate of humanity and the future of planet earth hang in the balance. So no pressure, okay?


There’s also a bee with a doctorate in quantum theory, honey. A creepy “Plague Doctor.” A child slave labor workforce. Think mind-numbed robots commanded by… cockroaches. Also shape-shifting aliens who seem able to disguise themselves as plants. And “Helpful tips for communicating with intelligent organisms outside your species.” Thought drones. Time travel and alternate universes. “Slip-sleep.” Fakes. Teacher cliques. Connections.  Empathy. Zero cents. What is “the hardest thing to do,” anyway?

 

Meanwhile, can properties of alien plants affect humans? All this and more while earth is hurtling down a doomsday path and the fate of humanity sits on the shoulders of a thirteen year-old. What could possibly go wrong? “Oh, hey there. Wassup?”

 

Finely tuned and skillfully crafted, this novel is highly readable. Indeed, author Matthew Guzman hits another home run with his latest installment in the Rieden Reece adventures, Rieden Reece and the Final Flower. This time “Ri” is joined by his older brother, Rob. Sort of. Robert is another universe. He communicates with Ri via lots of techno-gadgetry and a blue watch thingy. (It’s not exactly The Twilight Zone. But it’s close.)

 

One thing that makes this book a hoot and a half is the rapier wit and dry humor. The former could cut paper. Or steel girders. The latter is as dry as the Sahara Desert. Taken together, they’re snort-lemonade-out-your-nose hilarious (don’t ask how I know that). The snarky repartee between Ri and his “broseph” Rob snaps and crackles like a bowl of Rice Krispies. After you add milk.

 

Strategically sprinkled throughout the story like hot peppers in salsa, the humor, word play, alliterative chapter headings, and groan-worthy puns are just Too. Much. Fun. “Robots are people, too.” Even the weeds offer commentary, thanks to a universal translator. “Ouch mister, that hurts.”

 

Indeed, you might want to limber up and take some deep breaths before diving into Rieden Reece and the Final Flower, because the action is lightning-quick and almost non-stop. The plot balances laugh-out-loud humor with imminent danger and life-threatening peril poised on the edge of a knife. It’s a masterful blend of hair-raising suspense, high-octane action, and chuckles galore. (Scene stealer: Brian Bowman and his Star Wars glasses. “That was so awesome!”)

 

Speaking of which, reading this book is a little like landing in Oz. Or climbing through the Looking Glass. Chasing a White Rabbit. Chatting with H.G. Wells. Or traveling through Mirkwood. On an “infinite escalator.” Think The Matrix or Honey, I Shrunk the Kids meets Men in Black. With one humdinger of a surprise ending. It crackles with energy, radiating wit and warmth like heat from a blast furnace. I can’t remember the last time I had so much fun reading a middle grade novel!


Also, the techno-thingamajigs and AI devices will pull in the target audience of middle grade readers like fish on a line. Ditto older readers. In fact, anyone with a vivid imagination, half a funny bone and a mischievous sense of humor will enjoy this book. It's a great follow-on to Rieden Reece and the Broken Moon! More, please!


Wait. Is that Rod Serling?


My Rating: 4.5

Reviewed by

Lifelong bibliophile. Library Board Member. Select book reviews featured on my blog, Goodreads, and Amazon. I'm a frank but fair reviewer, averaging 400+ books/year in a Wide Variety of genres on multiple platforms, including Net Galley and Book Sirens. Over 850 published reviews.

The Leftover Lettuce

About the author

After managing restaurants for 20 years, Matt made a drastic decision. Quit. And used what he learned the hard way about leadership and communication to help children. He’s obsessed with emotional health. He crafts sci-fi stories for his twelve-year-old self—still hiding inside his adult brain. view profile

Published on July 15, 2023

70000 words

Worked with a Reedsy professional 🏆

Genre: Middle Grade

Reviewed by