Publisher's Hardcover ©2019 | -- |
Boarding schools. Juvenile fiction.
Schools. Juvenile fiction.
Libraries. Juvenile fiction.
Boarding schools. Fiction.
Schools. Fiction.
Libraries. Fiction.
As Daphne waits to depart St. Rita's School for Spirited Girls, she is asked to return a mystery book to the school library, where she meets Emily Lime, the "assistant librarian," though a head librarian is seemingly nowhere to be found. As Daphne becomes the "assistant assistant librarian" and befriends Emily and George, the only boy in the school, she finds that St. Rita's is not quite what she expected. Classrooms are numbered in an incoherent manner, and the school's attendance policy is unconventional, for starters. After the school library is broken into, another book is almost stolen, and a classmate goes missing, Daphne, Emily, and George must work together to solve the mystery. Brief chapters, expressive illustrations, and an increasingly complex mystery will allow readers to be quickly enveloped in the world of St. Rita's. Readers will see dynamic friendships develop from uncertain first meetings to the ultimate suspenseful events. Perfect for fans of unique characters, loyal friendships, and boarding-school mysteries.
Kirkus ReviewsAt her new school full of horsenappers, bootleggers, and jam thieves, Daphne becomes a detective.When English schoolgirl Daphne arrives at the imposing gates bearing the legend "St. Rita's School for Spirited Girls, est. 1873," all she knows is that she's been offered a scholarship and a job as an assistant librarian. There's a crater in the driveway from an accident with stolen chemistry supplies and a massive hole in the dormitory floor made by a falling cannonball. The students (all apparently white) pick locks and forge Monets. As the deputy head explains, "you'd need to be bonkers in the noodle to want to be here. It's a dreadful place!" Even Daphne's job as assistant librarian is a mess: The gorgeous library is nearly empty after a fire that destroyed the old library, the head librarian who hired Daphne is on indefinite sick leave, and her replacement is a small girl who doesn't seem inclined to trust Daphne. But somebody needs to solve all the skulduggery and shenanigans: break-ins, thefts, and even a missing student. The school is so odd that the mid-20th-century time period is easy to miss, and both the third-person narration that shifts between limited and omniscient and the narrative voice's adult tone are similarly unmooring. Cartoonish illustrations by the author are comical but as slightly off as St. Rita's itself.Fans of David Walliams will enjoy the formulaic nonsense, but there's no shortage of higher-quality slapstick mysteries for eager readers. (Mystery. 8-11)
Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)In this post-WWII-era British romp, Daphne earns a scholarship to the boarding school -St. Rita-s School for Spirited Girls, Est. 1873.- Upon arrival, Daphne meets George, the only boy in school, and signs on as the -assistant assistant librarian- to enigmatic student assistant librarian Emily Lime, to work in the school-s stunning beautiful library, which contains only a few books after a recent fire. Amid the -rum crowd- of rough girls, these three form an unlikely detective trio and set off to solve a series of mysterious break-ins, thefts, and the whereabouts of a missing student. Shelton (
Gr 4-6 There are strange and ridiculous goings-on at an extremely odd and wacky 1950s British girls' boarding school. Daphne discovers this even before her arrival when she's asked to return a lurid hard-boiled detective novel to the school by a train conductor. While there is indeed a mystery at the heart of this tale, the author muddies the plot development in favor of world-building, done through entertaining scenes featuring goofy but clichéd characters. For example, the titular Emily Lime turns out to be an unlikable, holier-than-thou library helper, replete with "wonky" glasses and a beret, who gets outraged at the thought of people mishandling books. All characters are white and British. Chapters cover one or two simple scenes with a good balance of dialogue, description, and action, and are liberally illustrated with cartoonish ink drawings of the characters, usually in poses suggesting the extreme emotions vividly conveyed the text. VERDICT This over-the-top story may tickle the funny bone of fans of Andy Griffiths's "Treehouse" series. Rhona Campbell, Georgetown Day School, Washington, DC
ALA Booklist (Mon Apr 01 00:00:00 CDT 2019)
Kirkus Reviews
Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)
School Library Journal (Wed May 01 00:00:00 CDT 2019)
A hilarious illustrated book about a crime-solving heroine who enters a boarding school filled with very peculiar girls, from Bransford Boase Award-winner Dave Shelton.
Daphne is off to an exclusive girls' boarding school, where she'll be given a brand-new start after her expulsion. But St. Rita's school for girls is not your ordinary school. And these are certainly not ordinary girls. As it turns out, nothing is quite what you'd expect at St. Rita's. But then she meets Emily Lime, a crime-solving genius, who's looking for a new library assistant. And the book smart Daphne is just the girl for the job. Mystery and intrigue are about to strike St. Rita's and Emily Lime is going to need all the help she can get.