Even so, I’d be reluctant to say this was a book for teenagers alone. If it was made into a film (which I think would suit it) there would be no doubt in my mind that it would be one of those great family entertainment films that rarely get made any more. There’s a strong feeling of Indiana Jones about the character of Boone Shepard, who is sent off to inhospitable places on wild goose chases and never fails to have a wisecrack for every situation. He’s certainly good company, as are the sassy, capable female companions he rubs along with, and his grumpy editor in chief also brings along a classic Clark and Lois feel. But there’s a darker side to Bergmoser’s novel, with some classic Victorian characters such as Dorian Gray, Sherlock Holmes, and Dracula himself making an appearance, alongside the authors who created them. It’s great to meet Oscar Wilde and Bram Stoker for a few pages, although I don’t know how much anybody who’s not that interested in classic horror literature would get out of it. Still, the supernatural elements (along with the time machine, of course) also give the book the flavour of a light-hearted episode of The X-Files at times, as the odd couple of Boone and his rival Promethia Peters are told to get out there and investigate occurrences. If that seems like a lot of reference points to touch, then I would say the book does it knowingly, and makes a good job of it. For, at heart, this is a book about the act of creating stories. How events are turned into tales, how those tales then live on and cannot be destroyed, haunt both Boone Shepard and the readers. We’re travelling through time, meeting familiar faces and coming across some who seem to be new acquaintances but turn out to be old friends or enemies. Their stories have all been written and rewritten so many times, but here we go again. And we’ll get to experience them from a different angle, so that the whole thing is just fresh enough to get us interested once more. Here’s where I wonder not only if this is Young Adult entertainment, but also if being a novel at all is to its best advantage. Yes, is it written in a filmic style, but it’s also a little too light on the kind of writing that makes best use of the novel format, for me. Having said that, publisher Bell Frog Books is doing more than simply putting out a book and I can see why. The material seems to naturally lend itself to short, sharp adventures via digital formats – there’s already a fun prequel up for reading at their website – and Sanspants Radio will be releasing an audiobook version which I think will really suit this story. Boone’s voice, relating aloud his journeys in laconic fashion, will perhaps be the best fit for his particular brand of derring-do. So there’s a universe being created here, and it’s a very enjoyable one which isn’t afraid to take well-worn characters and ideas and put a new spin on them. If there really is nothing new under the sun, then why not celebrate the old? Or perhaps we should call them the timeless; just as Dracula and Sherlock Holmes have become creations outside of their own times, so the character of Boone Shepard is a man out of time. He’s not Young Adult, and he’s not Old Adult. He’s in that general and yet so rare category of Enjoyable By All, and in many formats. I’d recommend seeking him out in one form or another if you’re a fan of Fox Mulder, Van Helsing, Clark Kent, Victorian Literature, or any of the other diverse influences that all get crammed into this short and surprising read that heralds the arrival of a big new playpark of ideas. Boone Shepard is published by Bell Frog Books on the 26th of April 2016. Author Gabriel Bergmoser is an occasional contributor to Den Of Geek. You can read his work for the site, here.
Boone Shepard Review
<span title='2025-08-23 00:00:00 +0000 UTC'>August 23, 2025</span> · 4 min · 686 words · Theresa Decook