Copyright Date:
2003
Edition Date:
2004
Release Date:
04/01/04
Pages:
111 pages
ISBN:
Publisher: 0-15-216724-2 Perma-Bound: 0-605-38783-4
ISBN 13:
Publisher: 978-0-15-216724-0 Perma-Bound: 978-0-605-38783-6
Dewey:
Fic
LCCN:
2003001105
Dimensions:
19 cm.
Language:
English
Reviews:
Horn Book
(Thu Apr 01 00:00:00 CST 2004)
When super sleuth (and slacker student) Chet Gecko tries to expose a cheating ring, he's fingered as the prime suspect. To clear his name, the lizard and his mockingbird sidekick, Natalie, stage a food fight, which lands all of the suspects in the principal's office. As usual, Chet's quips and Natalie's puns pepper every page of this fast-paced mystery, which features comical black-and-white illustrations.
Publishers Weekly
(Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)
Another Chet Gecko mystery by Bruce Hale unfolds in Trouble Is My Beeswax. A test-cheating ring is operating at Emerson Hicky Elementary, and Chet's pal Shirley Chameleon is being framed as the chief operator. Luckily, Chet and his mockingbird partner, Natalie Attired, are on the case.
School Library Journal
Gr 3-6-Children will definitely relate to this funny installment in the series. Investigating the theft of answers for a history test leads Chet to a ring of dishonest students at Emerson Hicky Elementary school. As he and his loyal mockingbird partner, Natalie Attired, take this case to heart, they also throw out many one-liners and stabs at humor. It is inconsequential if readers fully appreciate or understand all of the humor because the story moves along smoothly and Chet's investigation techniques are clever, corny, and comical. The tale is told in an almost Mickey Spillane style; narrative is pretty much tongue-in-cheek, many character's names are perfectly hilarious, and snacks and treats are described in detail. This visit with Chet will be a popular choice.-Andrea Tarr, Corona Public Library, CA Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.
Cheat, Stink, and Be HairyIt was no use, no use. I had followed a lead as thin as a dragonfly wafer until it finally petered out here, in a blind alley. Swiveling my head right and left, I could tell-I was trapped. A whisper of fear tickled my neck.Then it hit me-foom! A shapeless something, heavier than a heartache, dropped onto my head and shoulders, dragging me down...down...when-"Chet Gecko?" A voice cut through the red darkness."Are you with us?" said my teacher, Mr. Ratnose.What was he doing in the alley?My eyes blinked open. "Wuzza?" With a supreme effort, I raised my head."If you can't stay awake, I'll have someone pinch you," he said.Several voices tittered.Mr. Ratnose's classroom swam into focus. Kids, chairs, chalkboards, and cream cheese-Bo Newt grinning, Shirley Chameleon simpering. I was back at my desk, at school, facing down Public School Enemy Number One: boredom.It was a humdrum morning at Emerson Hicky Elementary. You ask yourself, How dull can it get? Then you go to Mr. Ratnose's class, and you find out.The school newspaper on the corkboard said it all: BOREDOM EPIDEMIC FLATTENS SCHOOL. No duh.Mr. Ratnose shot me one last glare, then scrawled some numbers on the board. He claimed to be explaining fractions, but he might just as well have been describing his vacation in Left Armpit, Arizona.I longed for something, anything, to break the monotony.He turned with a flourish. "And now, time for history."Anything but that.But the lean rat had a surprise in store. He grabbed a stack of papers with one hand and thwacked them against his open palm."They say, 'History repeats itself,'" said Mr. Ratnose. "But I sincerely hope yesterday's won't."Bewildered faces greeted his remark.Mr. Ratnose began pacing. "I'm referring, of course, to your grades on yesterday's history test. I am deeply disappointed in you."Igor Beaver, a teacher's pet's pet, raised his hand. "Wh-what do you mean, teacher?" he whined. "Did I get a bad grade?"Mr. Ratnose's whiskers bristled. "No, Igor," he said, keeping his voice even. "You got a good grade. In fact, far too many of you got a good grade."Igor gasped. "You mean...?""I do. We've got cheaters!" Mr. Ratnose waved the stack of papers."B-but how do you know?" asked Igor."Because," our teacher snarled, "I added a dummy question."I thought, Giving a dummy question to these dummies is like sending snow to Eskimos. But I didn't say it.Mr. Ratnose looked like he was ready to take a bite out of our tests. "It was a trick question-none of you could've known the answer. But too many of you did."He tossed the offending tests onto his desk. His gaze raked the classroom. "Look at the student on your right."Igor and Cassandra the Stool Pigeon looked right. The rest of us stared at our teacher, beaming confusion like a country-western station beams corniness."Look right!" snarled Mr. Ratnose.We looked."Now look left."We looked again.Mr. Ratnose bared his
Excerpted from Trouble Is My Beeswax: A Chet Gecko Mystery by Bruce Hale
All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.
In these two wisecracking, sidesplitting mysteries from Chet Gecko's tattered casebook, the fourth-grade detective and his punning mockingbird partner, Natalie Attired, keep the peace at Emerson Hicky Elementary. In the first, the two sleuths blow the lid off a cheating ring in Mr. Ratnose's classroom, and in the second, they track down the winning ticket for the biggest, chocolatiest, most gut-busting dessert ever, the Malted Falcon. Danger has never been so delicious!