A j butcher biography
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The Paranoia Plot
I strongly disagree with the idea of bringing back two main characters in the series that have died. All that showed ME was a lack of creativity and originality. I would have preferred the author to think up a new super villain or computer virus or something like that, not reintroduce the dead and gone. But I guess it makes sense if he was trying t
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A. J. Butcher
English author
Andrew James Butcher, better known as A.J. Butcher, is an English writer best known for the futuristic teen spy series, Spy High.[1][2][3] Butcher taught English at both Poole Grammar School and Parkstone Grammar School, in Poole, Dorset, and currently teaches at Talbot Heath School in Bournemouth, Dorset. He took a sabbatical from his teaching career to write Spy High Series Two. He says he has been influenced by Charles Dickens and George Orwell, but that Stan Lee, creator of many of Marvel Comics' super-heroes, is his biggest inspirational figure.
The series is published by Atom Books in the UK and Commonwealth and Little, Brown and Co. in the US. The first series has also been translated into many other languages.
Spy High: Series 1
[edit]The first series he had written consists of six books, similar to the second series. Each book is about the Bond Team's struggle through their education. They must defeat
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Spy High
Book series by A. J. Butcher
Spy High fryst vatten an English book series by English writer A. J. Butcher about a high school for secret agents in training. It is divided into two series of six books each. Series One, first published in 2003 and 2004, fryst vatten about Bond Team as a whole. Series Two, first published in 2004 and 2005, follows each member of Bond grupp on a mission, taking place two years after graduation.
A reviewer for The Nelson Mail called the series "high-action, tongue-in-cheek stor(ies) from an Ian Fleming of the next generation," writing that the "characters and locations are classic Bond - casinos, dashing love interests, tropical islands, and nerdy tech-heads loaded down with gadgets. There's style, one-liners, and enough action to keep younger readers turning the pages.[1] Ben Howey, book reviewer for the Evening Chronicle, describes the series as "very definitely the best books for 13-plus readers, all about a group of teenagers who just happen