The Big Chunk of Ice: The Last Known Adventure of the Mad Scientists' Club
Bertrand R. Brinley
Bertrand R. Brinley's The Big Chunk of Ice was not published during the author's life. His son, Sheridan dug up the manuscript after Purple House Press successfully reprinted the previous Mad Scientists' Club books. He (Sheridan) wrote a brief Introduction explaining the origins of the story (or its setting) in his father's Army experiences in Austria. He also added an epilogue based on some notes made by his father about the real people and places behind the story. He doesn't explain why the book was not published during Bertrand Brinley's life.
Fans of the Mad Scientists' Club, among whom I count myself, are likely to find this one disappointing. There is little of what I loved in The Mad Scientists' Club. Henry Mulligan's creatively subversive technical innovations play little role. Instead, the MSC goes on a trip to Austria with Professor Stratavarious, whom we met in The Big Kerplop!. There they make measurements on a glacier. There's a also a subplot concerning a large diamond that was lost a hundred years ago on the glacier. ("Big Chunk of Ice" -- get it?)
In addition, the MSC is joined by two young women. In principle, this is a great idea with the potential to expand the appeal of the MSC. But not like this. The young women, Angela Angelino and Angelina Angelo, are played for pure comic relief. They make no intellectual contribution to the investigation or problem-solving.
In fact, the big problem with The Big Chunk of Ice is that Brinley tries too hard to be funny. The Mad Scientists' Club often was funny, but it was a different kind of humor. It was based on the subversion of the staid citizens of Mammoth Falls by the teenage boys of the MSC. In The Big Chunk of Ice Brinley tries for comic dialog, but he doesn't have an ear for it. The effect is just embarrassing.
The Big Chunk of Ice: The Last Known Adventure of the Mad Scientists' Club is for Mad Scientist completists. I wouldn't recommend it to others. But, like all the Mad Scientists' Club books, it is brief, so you have little to lose.
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