evenflo easy click latch Britax UpNGo Click Backless Booster Car Seat
SKU: 715978793
evenflo easy click latch

evenflo easy click latch Britax UpNGo Click Backless Booster Car Seat

Sale price$20.98 Regular price$23.31
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Ships within 48 hours · Estimated delivery Jul 3 - Jul 8

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Description

evenflo easy click latch Britax UpNGo Click Backless Booster Car SeatThe UpNGo Click backless seat booster gives your child the boost they need to move up into the final car seat stage and go anywhere with confidence. Designed for children from 40 120 lbs and 46 63", this booster combines the portability and convenience that parents look for with kid approved comfort and style. The rigid LATCH connectors click in with ease and release in seconds, making it easy to move the seat between vehicles. UpNGo Click is

The UpNGo™ Click backless seat booster gives your child the boost they need to move up into the final car seat stage and go anywhere with confidence. Designed for children from 40-120 lbs and 46”-63", this booster combines the portability and convenience that parents look for with kid-approved comfort and style. The rigid LATCH connectors click in with ease and release in seconds, making it easy to move the seat between vehicles. UpNGo Click is innovatively designed with PosturePlus™ to help encourage proper posture and seat belt positioning. It also includes a shoulder belt guide to help keep the seat belt in the right place. The slim 17.1” SpaceSaver™ design means there’s more room for siblings or carpoolers, and the soft cushioning and large, padded armrests give your child that extra boost of comfort. Whether they're heading out for a shopping trip with grandma or hopping in with a friend on their way to a sleepover, they’ll feel confident navigating big-kid trips with this lightweight and easy-to-carry booster. They can keep their favorite after-school snacks and drinks close at hand in the two cup holders, which are dishwasher-safe for easy cleanup. The booster seat cover is safe to machine wash and dry, and it’s naturally flame-retardant with no added FR chemicals. The color-coded belt guides help kids learn how to buckle up correctly as they make the final car seat transition, setting them up for safety no matter where their journey takes them.

Features

Click On, Quick Off

Steel rigid LATCH connectors click in with ease and release in seconds.

Slim SpaceSaver™ Design

17.1” seat leaves plenty of room for siblings & carpoolers without compromising trusted Britax safety and premium comfort.

PosturePlus™ Contoured Seat​

Helps encourage proper posture and seat belt positioning.

Lightweight & Portable

Weighing under 5 lbs, it’s easy for both caregivers and kids to carry. ​

2 Dishwasher-Safe Cup Holders

Removable for easy cleaning between car rides.

Washer & Dryer Friendly

Quick and easy cleanup so you can keep moving.

Naturally Flame-Retardant Fabrics

With no added FR chemicals.

Designed for Comfort

Contoured seat with breathable foam and soft padding, plus large padded armrests.

Color-Coded Belt Guides

Help kids learn how to buckle up safely.

Shoulder Belt Guide

Helps keep shoulder belt in the correct position, encouraging proper fitment as your big kid continues to grow. ​

Specifications

  • Product Weight (Car Seat Only): 4.5 lbs
  • Product Dimensions: 15.5"L x 17.1"W x 9"H
  • Child Weight: 40-120 lbs
  • Belt Positioning Booster Height: 46" - 63"
  • Seat Area Depth/Width: 12.7" / 10.9"
Shipping Notes
  • Free Standard Shipping on $100+ Orders to the USA.
  • Except Preorder products are shipped in 48 hours.
  • Delivery to the USA:
  1. Standard Shipping : 3-10 business days
  • If time is of the essence, please consider selecting expedited delivery for faster service.
Exchange/Return Notes
  • We offer a 30-day return/exchange service after receiving.
  • Final sale items are not eligible for returns or exchanges.
  • To process your return/exchange, please contact us at [email protected]
  • Please click here for more details>>> Return & Exchange Policy
SKU: 715978793

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4.9 ★★★★★
Based on 145 reviews
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Product Reviews
M
Verified Purchase
Matthew
Whiting, US
★★★★★ 1
Poor read
Format: Paperback
Not worth the hype. Was poorly written and had to put it down and not finish it.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on May 20, 2025
T
Verified Purchase
T
San Leandro, US
★★★★★ 4
Great story
Format: Paperback
I’m not an avid reader, but this was finished in a few days. Such a good book!
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on June 14, 2025
A
Verified Purchase
AMD
Carnegie, US
★★★★★ 3
Won’t be buying book two.
Format: Paperback
Entertaining enough but poorly written. Lots of typos. Won’t be buying book two.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on July 8, 2025
D
Verified Purchase
Dr.C.J.Singh.Wallia
Fort Morgan, US
★★★★★ 5
An Excellent Primer on Novel-Writing
Format: Paperback
WIRED FOR STORY By Lisa Cron Reviewed by C J Singh (Berkeley, California) Excellent Primer on Novel-Writing In Berkeley, California, we happily have access to four independent bookstores that display literary novels and creative-writing craft books. Browsing, I picked up two books by Lisa Cron on using "Brain Science" for writing fiction. The jacket quote by Caroline Leavitt rivetted my attention: "I'd never consider writing a novel without Lisa's input, and neither should you." As a longtime fan of Leavitt's novels "Is This Tomorrow," " Pictures of You, " "Girls in Trouble," I looked up Stanford Continuing Education where Leavitt regularly teaches online courses. As a Stanford Alumnus (Psychology PhD), I've taken several on-campus and online workshops on fiction-writing. While still at the bookstore, I promptly signed up for Leavitt's soon-to-begin course that uses two coaching books: Cron's Wired For Story and John Truby's The Anatomy of Story. I'm familiar with Truby's book and its nine excellent exercises. See my detailed review on amazon: https://www.amazon.com/review/R29NU7U6LAHGBV/ Here's my review of Lisa Cron's "Wired For Story" "WIRED FOR STORY' presents a unique, distinguishing feature among fiction-writing primers: throughout its text, the author includes excerpts from the published works of leading contemporary brain-scientists that validate the principles of narrative craft. Cron explains the principles of narrative craft in twelve well-organized chapters that focus on theme, the protagonist's issue, characters' bios, points of view, rising conflicts, subplots, suspense, reveals, and the arc from setup to payoff. At the beginning of each chapter, she presents sentences in italics that illuminate the cognitive-science underpinnings of narrative craft. Examples follow. "Cognitive Secret: When the brain focuses its full attention on something, it filters out all unnecessary information. Story Secret: To hold the brain's attention, everything in a story must be there on a need-to-know basis" (page 23). . "Cognitive Secret: Everything we do is goal directed and our biggest goal is figuring out everyone else's agenda, the better to figure out our own. Story Secret: A protagonist without a clear goal has nothing to figure out and nowhere to go" (p 65) . "Cognitive Secret: It takes long-term, conscious effort to hone a skill before the brain assigns it to the cognitive unconscious. "Story Secret: There's no writing; there's only rewriting" (p 219). Also remarkable are sentences in bold that challenge advice offered in some writing-craft workshops and books. Examples follow. "Myth: Write What You Know. "Reality: Write What You Know EMOTIONALLY" (p 62). . "Myth: Sensory Details Bring a Story to Life." "Reality: Unless They Convey Necessary Information, Sensory Details Clog a Story's Arteries" (p 118). . "Myth: `Show, Don't Tell' Is Literal - Don't Tell Me John Is Sad, Show Him Crying. "Reality: `Show, Don't Tell Is Figurative - Don't Tell Me John Is Sad, Show Me WHY He's Sad" (p 152). Has the author introduced a Myth of her own? I am afraid so. On page 57, "No matter whose point of view you're writing in, you may be in only one head per scene." In my opinion, the Reality is: No matter whose point of view you're writing in, you may be in only one head per PARAGRAPH. This is the new reality -- virtually every fiction-readers' perception has been reshaped by watching films and TV dramas that imply the camera engaged in frequent head-hopping in a scene. At the end of each chapter, Cron presents a concise series of checkpoints to remind the readers while they develop their work-in-progress. Throughout, she includes many examples from literary works and films. Literary works like Gabriel Marquez's "Love in the Time of Cholera," Margaret Mitchell's "Gone with the Wind," and Caroline Leavitt's "Girls in Trouble." Films like "It's a Wonderful Life," "Vertigo," and "American Graffiti." An inspiring citation for writers: " `Recent breakthroughs in neuroscience reveal that our brain is hardwired to respond to story.... It turns that a powerful story can have a hand in rewiring the reader's brain -- helping empathy, for instance - `which is why writers are, and always have been among the most powerful people in the world'. " (On p 239 of Endnotes is the specific citation of three scientists' 2009 article "On Being Moved by Art: How Reading Fiction Transforms the Self" in the Creativity Research Journal vol. 21, no.1 ) WIRED FOR STORY fully earns its title with its numerous citations of recent contributions of neuroscience that validate narrative craft. Examples of cited works included are: V. S. Ramachandran's "The Tell-Tale Brain: A Neuroscientist's Quest for What Makes Us Human"; Michael Gazzaniga's "Human: The Science Behind What Makes Your Brain Unique; and Steven Pinker's "How the Mind Works." These stellar books illuminate the nexus between art and science; their shining light reflects on Lisa Cron's book as a five-star primer for novel-writing.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on March 7, 2020
M
Verified Purchase
Matt M
Charlottesville, US
★★★★★ 5
Will reading Wired for Story really make you smarter?
Format: Paperback
In my 36th year as a would-be and penniless writer, I found myself exiled to a dark rough and tumble city in the Far West, guns blazing as a steely-eyed wordslinger for hire. But then one day I stumbled upon Lisa Cron's book Wired for Story. The book's title had my curiosity. A few sample pages later grabbed my attention and has held it ever since. But the price wasn't right for a poor, humble English teacher living in China upon a Chinese salary. I had bills to pay, a mistress to please, and habits to feed. It seemed to me that Amazon.com was colluding with other dark powers to suck humanity dry; why else would they charge more for a digital book than its paper copy? But then I heard ghostly voices, the cinematic intonations of Morpheus telling me to choose between the red and blue pill; Obiwan Kenobi, "Use the Force"; Nike commercials, "Just Do It!"; and other such shadows flickering upon the wall of my TV room. Even this very particular retail website seemed to whisper across all the vastness of cyberspace, reminding me of my destiny via a personalized showcase of products, that I was not just born to buy... So I added it to my cart. About a download and two chapters later I found that I was still happy after the post-purchase buzz ran its course. This book should be required reading for all writers - and anybody else seeking an inoculation against the raging pandemic of competing narratives spewed out from marketers, pundits, prophets, and others posing as guardians of the truth - most of whom seem to be more enraptured than enlightened. For writers though, Wired for Story is quite different from other "how to" books, as Lisa Cron approaches the craft of storytelling from a neuroscientific point of view. She makes the case that writers aren't just entertainers: they are some of most powerful shakers and shapers of human perception. So if storytellers are like snake oil salesmen, then what is the difference? Both seem to be highly skilled in crafting story, using imagery, and evoking emotions, memories, desires. The difference is all about marketing. Salesmen claim to have knowledge, skills, and expertise, that they, and they alone have whatever it takes to get the facts right and fix things. They market their brands cloaked in story, as if they have a monopoly on truth, or at least the can-do spirit and problem-solving experience needed to improve the economy, save the world, whatever. It doesn't matter that time and time again reality proves them wrong; they will always have another story to spin. The difference between those who would use the power of story to express themselves versus those who would use it for personal gain is, perhaps, a fine red line marking the shadowy borders of between ethics and morality. Storytellers differ because they use words to hook audiences and manipulate a willing reader's central nervous system. They make no claims to knowledge or expertise. Indeed, fiction writers will be first to emphasize their work is fictional, and not based on any real life events or people. Their best writing leaves readers thinking, questioning, minds opening, empathizing, expanding their worldviews, the list goes on almost ad infinitum. Storytellers speak for themselves and let audiences think for themselves; pundits speak for others and tell audiences what to think. What's more, the art and craft of story, as well as the talent and hard time in solitary confinement required for their honing, is estimated to take an average storyteller at least 1,000,000 words or 10,000 hours - not including all the reading, language arts development, and life experience necessary to get to a point one needs to seriously embark on such a ludicrous and un-economical vocation. This means that fiction writers who risk everything for dubious prospects of financial reward must have something else driving them - and a good day job. A presidential candidate though, who has genuinely done the time, and crafts speeches with the skill of a poet or bard, should hypothetically have the critical thinking background, moral authority, and empathy to be a great leader. But in the final analysis, actions contradict words; their ability to spin tales proves the old universal theme that the pen is mightier than the sword. Now when I finish Wired for Story sometime this week, I will be one step further on this endless quest to actually sell stories for a living (i.e. stories fit for the fiction aisle of an actual bookstore, not a review for an online retailer). Until then, I'm probably just a hypocrite acting as if a single book alone makes a smarter man, when in fact I know little of anything (which is why I became a writer in the first place) -- or maintaining such a humble pretense. But I don't know myself well enough to be certain. That kind of exploration would be a whole other story - but it would be unsafe to say that I lived happily ever after reading this book. The End
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on October 11, 2012

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