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Trapped in Antarctica! by Nel Yomtov
Trapped in Antarctica! by Nel Yomtov











Unless, of course, Yomtov and the other writers, and perhaps the owners, of this series were trying to imply that the aging process pauses on Nick when he time travels, I cannot imagine that he wouldn't have aged. For example, I've met someone who has a 16-year-old son, and his face seems to mature every 6 months. "Why do you look like you aged a bit by going to the underpart of this boat?" (I have no idea what it's called educate me, please, lol) The reason is that there is a good chance that someone who is 15 would look older 7 months on from any given start date. I give the author and illustrator credit for including that Nikolas would need to find a way to explain his appearance (Flux mentions specifically his hair), but I think he'd also see his brother Chuck and the others on the boat looking at him strangely. I did know, vaguely, that there had been attempts by several crews to reach the south pole, but that's it.ĭoing the math, this time, Flux was technically gone for 7 months. Obviously, since I had never heard of this happening, I too had never even heard of Sir Ernest Shackleton. It's mildly embarrassing, but I've never even heard of the Shackleton Expedition, so this graphic novel's existence at the very least served a purpose. He's gone back to the Boston tea party, the Salem witch trials, the California gold rush, the battle of the Alamo, the eruption of Mount Vesuvius in Pompeii, the assassination of Abraham Lincoln (President), to the attack on Pearl Harbor, and now to the time of the Shackleton Expedition in Antarctica.

Trapped in Antarctica! by Nel Yomtov

Yet again: Nikolas Flux has the amazing, yet uncontrollable ability to travel back in time to historically significant events.













Trapped in Antarctica! by Nel Yomtov