This children's bedtime story is about a brave little girl who deals with ridding her room of monsters in a clever way. It has rhyming and great vocabulary. Teachers might want to go over with younger students that monsters do not exist and this book is just for fun. The ending is so sweet and lovea...
I was a bit hesitant to start book 3 in this series. Even though I enjoyed the first two books, they were both extremely violent and the content was very graphic. Both books 1 and 2 were page-turners with a gripping story line that naturally sucked you in from one chapter to the next... impossible t...
I received a copy of this book for free in exchange for an honest review. I liked this book much more than the first. It really clarified the first book, though. However, you do not have to read the first book to understand this one. I feel like this one was written better and easier to understand.
I received a copy of this book for free in exchange for an honest review.I liked this book, but it was a little confusing. I encourage anyone who reads this book to read the sequel. The second book will explain a lot.
Briefly: this is a disappointment. The whodunit aspect was a nice twist, but it's otherwise kind of bland and fairly two-dimensional. Also, from the jacket blurb I expected the mysterious missing papers to be more exciting than what they were - this is not pirate gold orHollywood scandals or anythin...
I liked this one a lot more than the first one (The Baker Street Letters). There was more of both brothers in this one, whereas, the first one was mostly from Reggie's point of view. I thought the mystery was pretty good. I liked the twists and turns that it took. There were also a couple of red ...
Cute little mystery. I liked Reggie. Very reminiscent of the Holmes books. He deduced the solution with clues that I never saw, just like Holmes did. I felt like the end left me hanging though. I look forward to the next one.