by Pseudonymous Bosch (Author)
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Gr 4-6--The pseudonymous author of this droll mystery insists that he cannot disclose the real names of its characters, or where they really live. The book is about a secret that cannot, under any circumstances, be revealed, so the author gives the story's fictional heroine and hero, two eccentric 11-year-olds, false names (think about that for a moment): Cassandra and Max-Ernest. Cass always expects disaster and carries a backpack filled with survival equipment; Max-Ernest tells jokes that nobody finds funny. They team up after discovering a secret message from a deceased magician in a box of his things delivered to Cass's substitute grandfathers' antiques shop. To learn more, they must break into the magician's house, where they find a hidden room, and, in it, his journal. They also run into a mysterious man and woman who are looking for the notebook, but Cass and Max-Ernest grab it and flee. They learn that their pursuers appear to have kidnapped several children in the past. Cass sees them kidnapping one of her classmates, but nobody believes her. Full-page illustrations incorporate chapter headings. "Secret" seems to want to be a blend of Lemony Snicket's books in their tendency to warn readers, Ellen Raskin's "The Westing Game" (Puffin, 1997) puzzles, and the oddly matched detectives of Blue Balliett's "Chasing Vermeer" (Scholastic, 2004). The author tries to make the mixture funny and mystifying, only partially succeeding."Walter Minkel, New York Public Library"
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