The Lost Girl of Astor Street
The Lost Girl of Astor Street
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HarperCollins
Annotation: When her best friend Lydia disappears, Piper Sail goes searching for answers in the dark underbelly of 1924 Chicago, uncovering deep corruption that may lead back to her affluent neighborhood.
 
Reviews: 4
Catalog Number: #165276
Format: Perma-Bound Edition
Publisher: HarperCollins
Copyright Date: 2018
Edition Date: 2017 Release Date: 02/13/18
Pages: 352 pages
ISBN: Publisher: 0-310-75840-8 Perma-Bound: 0-7804-1724-0
ISBN 13: Publisher: 978-0-310-75840-2 Perma-Bound: 978-0-7804-1724-3
Dewey: Fic
LCCN: 2017275190
Dimensions: 22 cm.
Language: English
Reviews:
Voice of Youth Advocates

Piper Sails is the eighteen-year-old daughter of a widowed mob attorney in 1920s Chicago. Her best friend, Lydia, is Piper’s idea of the ideal young woman: beautiful, gentle, kind. Piper, on the other hand, motherless, finds herself caught between the traditional expectations of her parents’ generation and the wild lifestyle of the flappers she sees around town. When Lydia goes missing, Piper compiles lists of suspects and motives, and drafts siblings, friends, and even a police detective to help her search for answers. After Lydia’s body is found, Piper sinks into a depression. More sleuthing turns out to be her salvation. In this engaging mystery, the dilemma of a teenager trying to find her place in the middle of drastic societal change is nicely blended with intrigue in the vivid setting of 1924 Chicago.  Piper is realistic, with just the right amount of early twentieth-century teenage innocence.  Fans of history or historical fiction will enjoy the details Morrill provides, including references to the Emily Post etiquette book, which was fairly new at the time, and find themselves researching who and what is real. The story has romance too, although it is subtle enough not to scare off non-romantics (like Piper herself at the start of the story). Morrill’s latest book is a welcome addition to most public library and school fiction collections, and will likely be hard to keep on the shelf.—Beth Karpas.

School Library Journal

Gr 7 Up-Eighteen-year-old Piper Sail, daughter of a well-to-do 1920s Chicago mobster attorney, isn't an average society girl, like her best friend, Lydia, who is always the perfect lady. Piper is surprised and concerned when Lydia shares her plans to proclaim her love for her quiet and mysterious family chauffeur, Matthew, and she grows even more concerned after Lydia disappears. Consumed with grief over the loss of her best friend, Piper vows to solve the mystery of her disappearance, even if it means resorting to some unconventional and risky investigative methods. Piper has never been one to swoon over boys, but she nonetheless finds herself falling for Det. Mariano Cassano as she searches for clues. As Piper matures and begins to understand her father's profession, she questions her judgment and the character of the handsome detective because of his family's relationship to her father. This coming-of-age tale describes the struggles of a child growing up without a mother to reinforce the behavior so expected of women at the time. It's also the story of a young woman experiencing loss and first love and learning to accept circumstances and people for what and who they really are. Morrill successfully captures the dark side of 1920s Chicago and the mobster mentality. Strong supportive characters add depth to the novel, and the author keeps readers guessing on multiple fronts. VERDICT An enjoyable yet sobering mystery with a surprising twist for inquisitive readers. Susan Harris, Ridgeway High School, TN

ALA Booklist

Piper Sail, 18, lives in the choicest area of 1924 Chicago, but that doesn't stop her best friend from disappearing. That event causes headstrong Piper to throw off her socialite trappings and get down and dirty, combing the seedier parts of the city as she tries to discover what happened to Lydia. Because this is almost as much a romance as it is a mystery, Piper has several able fellows hovering about: a police detective, a baseball player, and a journalist. There's a good, solid mystery here, but the many subplots (Piper's family situation; her acquisition of a dog; the inner workings of the Chicago underworld) sometimes intrude, and the Roaring Twenties setting seems more affect than effect. But Piper is a strong, sharp heroine, and her abilities om stretching the truth to often foolhardy bravery event her from being a paper doll. Fans will note that the final pages indicate Piper will have a future seeking out Chicago's "underbelly." So more chances to solve another mystery: who's the right guy for her?

Kirkus Reviews

A debutante eschews convention to investigate the suspicious disappearance of her best friend.With her bobbed hair and plucky attitude, Piper Sail pushes boundaries, but she isn't quite a flapper. Living in 1920s Chicago with her brother and father—a powerful and wealthy attorney—the white teen has enjoyed a life of privilege alongside her best friend, Lydia LeVine, also white and the daughter of an affluent doctor. Lydia suffers from devastating seizures, which her father dismisses until they occur publicly. When Lydia suddenly disappears, Piper, unable to quietly sit by with her hands folded, launches her own investigation. Soon the spirited ingénue finds herself entrenched in a dark web of secrets, speak-easies, and Mafiosi, and everyone—from Lydia's family to their hired help (including a black housekeeper with distressingly stereotyped speech patterns) to Lydia's employer—seems like a prime suspect. Aided by a handsome young detective, Piper plunges herself further into the case, going undercover in an effort to bring Lydia justice, which leads Piper to face some hard truths about her society life. After a somewhat slow and stiff start, readers will be rewarded for their patience as tensions grow and red herrings abound. Morrill has a keen eye for historical details and setting, making Jazz Age Chicago Piper's invisible yet omnipresent sidekick. Here's hoping this won't be the last case for this strong and admirable female sleuth to solve. A mostly well-crafted historical whodunit. (Historical mystery. 12-16)

Reviewing Agencies: - Find Other Reviewed Titles
Voice of Youth Advocates
School Library Journal
ALA Booklist
Kirkus Reviews
Word Count: 91,448
Reading Level: 4.6
Interest Level: 7-12
Accelerated Reader: reading level: 4.6 / points: 13.0 / quiz: 191150 / grade: Middle Grades+
Reading Counts!: reading level:4.7 / points:22.0 / quiz:Q72356
Lexile: HL650L

Perfect for fans of Veronica Mars and Downton Abbey, Stephanie Morrill's atmospheric mystery, The Lost Girl of Astor Street, will take readers from the glitzy homes of the elite to the mob-run streets of 1920s Chicago. Endorsements for the book: "The Lost Girl of Astor Street boasts a strong, smart, and courageous heroine, a note-perfect Jazz-Age Chicago setting, and a terrifically engaging plot that kept me reading into the middle of the night." Jennifer Robson, international bestselling author of Moonlight Over Paris "Here's hoping this won't be the last case for this strong and admirable female sleuth to solve. A...well-crafted historical whodunit." Kirkus Reviews Lydia has vanished. Lydia, who's never broken any rules, except falling in love with the wrong boy. Lydia, who's been Piper's best friend since they were children. Lydia, who never even said good-bye. Convinced the police are looking in all the wrong places, eighteen-year-old Piper Sail begins her own investigation to solve the mystery of Lydia's disappearance. With the reluctant help of a handsome young detective, Piper goes searching for answers in the dark underbelly of 1924 Chicago, determined to find Lydia at any cost. When Piper discovers those answers might stem from the corruption strangling the city--and quite possibly lead back to the doors of her affluent neighborhood--she must decide how deep she's willing to dig, how much she should reveal, and if she's willing to risk her life for the truth.


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