Last week, I reviewed the Disney fantasy Christopher Robin, prompting Sim to share her take on the same movie. Gaele reviewed Amanda's Wedding by Jenny Colgan and The Hopes and Dreams of Lucy Baker by Jenni Keer. Becky reviewed Evelina by Fanny Burney, 4:50 From Paddington by Agatha Christie, Winnie's Great War by Lindsay Mattick and Josh Greenhut, Sweep: The Story of a Girl and Her Monster by Jonathan Auxier, and Finding Winnie by Lindsay Mattick.
Book: The Case of the Missing Moonstone by Jordan Stratford
Genre: Middle-grade mystery
Publisher: Knopf Books for Young Readers
Publication date: 2015
Pages: 240
Source: ebook borrowed from the library
Summary: In this playful book using historical characters, Ada Lovelace (my hero since I was a young computer science student - most recently mentioned in L is for Lovelace during last April's A to Z challenge) and Mary Godwin (the future author of Frankenstein) share a tutor. Young Ada is bossy and preoccupied with whatever her current obsession happens to be. Mary Godwin is quiet and keenly aware of her lack of social status. Mary, though, is wise in the ways of the world and society and so she is a good influence and helpful partner when Ada is forced to interact with people outside her household. Ada's eccentricities are tolerated by the staff, but she comes across as decidedly odd to others.
A mystery develops and takes our characters around 1826 London and brings them into contact with other characters from history.
Thoughts: I don't read many middle-grade novels because they, too often, over-explain everything. The Case of the Missing Moonstone turned out to be a delightful story.
My favorite part, though, was probably the historical note at the end where the author confessed that Ada and Mary were too far apart in age to share a tutor and introduced us to all the other historical characters. That note is probably why there wasn't a need for too much explanation in the text.
This is the first installment of The Wollstonecraft Detective Agency series. Three other books have been published since, so I have more to look forward to - starting with the next in the series, The Case of the Girl in Grey.
Appeal: This is mostly a book for girls, with two strong female characters, but there are some good male characters for a boy to latch onto as well. Adults with a willingness to play with history will enjoy it, too. If you take your history seriously, the poetic license taken in The Case of the Missing Moonstone will be annoying.
I don't know how I heard about this book. I thought it would have been Becky or Jean, but I didn't find it reviewed on either of their blogs. Let me know if it was you!
About Joy Weese Moll
a librarian writing about books