Friday Barnes, Girl Detective

Friday Barnes, Girl Detective
افزودن به بوکمارک اشتراک گذاری 0 دیدگاه کاربران 5 (1)

Friday Barnes Mysteries Series, Book 1

مشارکت: عنوان و توضیح کوتاه هر کتاب را ترجمه کنید این ترجمه بعد از تایید با نام شما در سایت نمایش داده خواهد شد.
iran گزارش تخلف

فرمت کتاب

ebook

تاریخ انتشار

2016

Reading Level

4

ATOS

5.8

Interest Level

4-8(MG)

نویسنده

Phil Gosier

شابک

9781626722989
  • اطلاعات
  • نقد و بررسی
  • دیدگاه کاربران
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نقد و بررسی

DOGO Books
tim0706 - This books is awesome and usually I don't get books that make me stay up till midnight but this book right from the start has hooked me into the book. This author is a very clever writer of drawing your attention and making you keep thinking of what is going to happen next. This book has gave me a big laugh and also is a very cool mystery book. Usually mystery books start with a problem and ends with a solution but this book has multiple mysteries and multiple solutions leaving you with a thought of what will happen next in the next book. I thought the author did a really good job of writing this amazing book. The book is about this peculiar 11 year old girl named Friday Barnes who only gets to watch TV when her uncle is here. One day Friday and her Uncle were talking and Friday found out you can get a $50,000 reward if you find the imposter of the diamond. The next day, Friday does not go to school and goes to the bank instead to find out who stole the diamond and with evidence from surveillance cameras, she figures who it is. After receiving $50,000, she plans to go to the most expensive boarding school, Highcrest. She gets hit by a truck and gets hurt. She wakes up in a room with a teacher. Then, she goes back to her dorm room and find a girl name Melanie. She also meets a handsome/smart boy name Ian Wainscott who sabotages Friday for having a better IQ. After a while of solving crimes/mysteries of stolen homework, missing assignments, stolen clocks, and other mysteries, she has a reward from the Headmaster to find info of the Swamp Beast YETI!!! Then, Friday finds who it is and the accuses a teacher. Then at the end of the story the author does a surprising thing he leaves the book with a TO BE CONTINUED... of Friday being arrested by the police. The author just leaves you with a cliffhanger that makes you really mad but happy for the next sequel. Like I personally like and hate cliffhangers since they leave you thinking but you will have to wait a long time to know what really does happen. I thought this was a really really extremely AWESOME book and now this book has changed my FAVORITE BOOK and FAVORITE AUTHOR place to this Author and this Book Series. I mean will these 2 people (Ina and Friday) who are pretending to be enemies that are secretly in love with each other express a relationship? Will Friday get arrested? Will Ian and Friday stop being fake nemesis? I want to read the 2nd book so bad that I wish there were time machines and I can go to the future to read it. I give this book a 130% A++++ and a 10 star out of 5 stars. I recommend this book for and age of around 8-14 around the elementary school and middle school kid but I would also recommend this amazing, fabulous book to everyone from kids to teen to young adults to adults. This book will give you a great and amazing laugh and it will bring your spirit up. This book is for anyone who loves funny books (like me), who loves great, great mystery books (again like me), or who likes a very interesting story with a well thickened detailed plot (also like me). This is a great realistic fiction book and you will never forget this book. I will suggest you try to be like a Detective Hercule Poirot and try to solve the mysteries yourself before she solves it and who did the crime to have some fun while reading this book...Now find a cozy chair a bed to relax on and you shall start reading this fabulous amazing book, Friday Barnes, Girl Detective, By R. A. Spratt.

Publisher's Weekly

Starred review from October 26, 2015
Ignored by her theoretical physicist parents, 11-year-old Friday Barnes has gotten used to going unnoticed, aided by her ordinary looks and brown cardigans. Having immersed herself in her family’s extensive library, she has little to learn from teachers, so she devours detective novels during class. She has also watched so many Agatha Christie films “she was beginning to speak with a trace of a Belgian accent,” and her newfound investigative skills help her solve a jewel theft. With the reward money, Friday funds a year of tuition at an elite boarding school, where she brushes off the taunts of her well-to-do classmates, cracks some outlandish cases, and bests her nemeses. Spratt’s (the Nanny Piggins series) effortlessly funny narration will keep readers laughing from start to finish, and she gives Friday a wonderfully dry wit—one she isn’t even aware of herself—to accompany her exceptional deductive powers and knowledge. Gosier’s angular b&w cartoons don’t draw much attention to themselves, but readers have plenty of reasons to look forward to future adventures from this irresistible young sleuth. Ages 8–12. Illustrator’s agent: Jodell Sadler, Sadler Children’s Literary.



Kirkus

October 1, 2015
She's only 11, but she's smarter and better informed than most adults, and she's determined to solve mysteries for a living. Friday's academician parents barely even know she's there, and that suits Friday just fine. She tries to avoid contact with people as she pursues her own interests, which include reading her parents' entire extensive library. But when she solves a mystery for her detective uncle and wins $50,000, she decides to spend it on a year in the area's most prestigious boarding school. There, she finds she can't blend in, but she also becomes embroiled in various mysteries that she solves with the aplomb of Sherlock Holmes. She irritates the school headmaster, among others, with her know-it-all attitude but makes a good friend in her roommate, Melanie, a girl who constantly notices small details]a trait that will help Friday in her detective pursuits. From solving petty crimes and finding missing homework, she moves on to an enthusiastic investigation of the monster hiding in the school swamp. Spratt begins this new series with a nifty, engaging protagonist who can keep readers laughing and help young geeks feel good about themselves. Friday and Melanie make a great team that clearly will continue to detect their way through the coming sequel. Gosier's animation-inflected illustrations are a nice complement. Delightful, highly logical, and well-informed fun. (Mystery. 8-12)

COPYRIGHT(2015) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.



School Library Journal

October 1, 2015

Gr 4-6-Nine-year-old Friday Barnes is used to being invisible. In fact she works hard at it. But when she uses the $50,000 she earned for solving a bank robbery in order to attend the exclusive Highcrest Academy, she discovers that her usual drab brown cardigans actually make her stand out from the other well-dressed students. She is soon noticed for another reason: her uncanny intellect and ability to solve crimes. Before long, she finds herself with a number of students willing to pay for her detective work, as well as her first nemesis: the handsome Ian Wainscott. Eventually even the headmaster asks for her help investigating sightings of a terrifying beast-man in the nearby swamp. The strength of this novel lies in its quirky, tongue-in-cheek writing style and pervasive humor. The characters are all delightfully eccentric, and middle grade readers will especially enjoy Friday's Holmesian analysis of the various crimes and the criminal's flaws, as well as the lengths she is willing to go in cracking the case (one episode has her trailing the school dog and sending his poop off to a lab in order to prove that he ate a fellow student's homework). The final mystery, focusing on the swamp yeti, is reminiscent of Scooby-Doo, with a surprise villain. The book ends with a cliff-hanger, followed by a teaser chapter from the sequel. Gosier's cartoony black-and-white drawings add appeal for a broad audience, although the vocabulary may make this a better fit for stronger readers. VERDICT A good choice for voracious readers who enjoy a blend of humor and mystery.-Ashley Larsen, Pacifica Libraries, CA

Copyright 2015 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.



Booklist

Starred review from December 15, 2015
Grades 3-6 *Starred Review* Friday is the youngest, most overlooked Barnes child. But being overlooked has given her the time to develop into a top-notch detective. After handily solving a particularly tricky jewel theft, she's given a hefty reward, and she's going to use it the best way she knows how: tuition for fancy boarding school. When she arrives, she discovers her new school is full of mysteries to be solvedall for the right price. To do so, she must avoid cute but devious Ian Wainscott and keep from getting in so much trouble she gets expelled. That, and deal with the bully who convinces their classmates to cruelly ignore Friday. Spratt has created a sharp, plucky main character, whose brainy investigations and candid, sometimes tactless observations will appeal to mystery lovers of any gender. The diminutive detective's not so great at social conventions, which gives Spratt a great opportunity to playfully skewer stereotypical middle-school plots. Spratt's matter-of-fact tone and punchy sentences bring Friday to life, and the age-appropriate touch of romance is a sweet addition. With off-the-wall plot turns and small mysteries scattered throughout, this is the perfect choice for mystery fans with a silly sense of humor, and the cliff-hanger ending promises more sleuthing on the horizon. Gosier's black-and-white spot illustrations add to the charming atmosphere. A sheer delight.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2015, American Library Association.)




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