Jack Blank: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
Content added Content deleted
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 2: Line 2:
Plucked from a crate labeled "Jack," an infant Jack Blank began his life as a lowly orphan. Preferring fantasy to grim reality, he whittles away the ensuing twelve years at St. Barnaby's Home for the Hopeless, Abandoned, Forgotten, and Lost, eagerly exploring comic books. Meanwhile, his real life is dull and boring. His name just about explains it all--blank. Following an attack by a robot, Jack suddenly faces the Imagine Nation, a fantastical land filled with superheroes. As it turns out, he carries a deadly robot virus, causing him to make many enemies along the way. The series chronicles Jack's struggles as he tries to discover his origins and master his new found powers.
Plucked from a crate labeled "Jack," an infant Jack Blank began his life as a lowly orphan. Preferring fantasy to grim reality, he whittles away the ensuing twelve years at St. Barnaby's Home for the Hopeless, Abandoned, Forgotten, and Lost, eagerly exploring comic books. Meanwhile, his real life is dull and boring. His name just about explains it all--blank. Following an attack by a robot, Jack suddenly faces the Imagine Nation, a fantastical land filled with superheroes. As it turns out, he carries a deadly robot virus, causing him to make many enemies along the way. The series chronicles Jack's struggles as he tries to discover his origins and master his new found powers.


A trilogy made by Matt Myklusch, who used to work for MTVu, the twenty-four seven running show of MTV for college students. Though it may seem cliched at a first glance, it manages to have good humor and surprisingly well constructed plot twists.
A trilogy made by [[Matt Myklusch]], who used to work for MTVu, the twenty-four seven running show of MTV for college students. Though it may seem cliched at a first glance, the Jack Blank Adventures trilogy manages to have good humor and surprisingly well constructed plot twists.


This page needs some [[Wiki Magic]] and a better summary.
This page needs some [[Wiki Magic]] and a better summary.
Line 52: Line 52:
** [[Technopath]]: [[The Hero]]
** [[Technopath]]: [[The Hero]]
* [[Sufficiently Advanced Aliens]]: the Rustov and the [[Proud Warrior Race|Valorians]]
* [[Sufficiently Advanced Aliens]]: the Rustov and the [[Proud Warrior Race|Valorians]]
* [[The Wiki Rule]]: [https://imaginenation.fandom.com/wiki/Imagine_Nation_Wiki Imagine Nation Wiki]
* [[X Meets Y]]: [[Harry Potter]] meets [[Percy Jackson and The Olympians]]. Kind of.
* [[X Meets Y]]: [[Harry Potter]] meets [[Percy Jackson and The Olympians]]. Kind of.


{{reflist}}
{{reflist}}
[[Category:{{PAGENAME}}]]
[[Category:Literature]]
[[Category:Literature of the 2010s]]
[[Category:Fantasy Literature]]
[[Category:Fantasy Literature]]
[[Category:Children's Literature]]
[[Category:Children's Literature]]
[[Category:Jack Blank]]
[[Category:Literature of the 2010s]]
[[Category:Literature]]

Revision as of 21:21, 26 July 2021

Plucked from a crate labeled "Jack," an infant Jack Blank began his life as a lowly orphan. Preferring fantasy to grim reality, he whittles away the ensuing twelve years at St. Barnaby's Home for the Hopeless, Abandoned, Forgotten, and Lost, eagerly exploring comic books. Meanwhile, his real life is dull and boring. His name just about explains it all--blank. Following an attack by a robot, Jack suddenly faces the Imagine Nation, a fantastical land filled with superheroes. As it turns out, he carries a deadly robot virus, causing him to make many enemies along the way. The series chronicles Jack's struggles as he tries to discover his origins and master his new found powers.

A trilogy made by Matt Myklusch, who used to work for MTVu, the twenty-four seven running show of MTV for college students. Though it may seem cliched at a first glance, the Jack Blank Adventures trilogy manages to have good humor and surprisingly well constructed plot twists.

This page needs some Wiki Magic and a better summary.

Tropes used in Jack Blank include: