The Murder of Bindy Mackenzie by Jaclyn Moriarty: Book Cover

    The Murder of Bindy Mackenzie by Jaclyn Moriarty

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    (Paperback - Reprint)

    • Age Range: 12
    • Pub. Date: May 2008
    • 496pp
    • Sales Rank: 106,237

      Reader Rating: (16 ratings)

      Detailed Rating: "Story" See All

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      Product Details

      • Pub. Date: May 2008
      • Publisher: Scholastic, Inc.
      • Format: Paperback, 496pp
      • Sales Rank: 106,237
      • Age Range: 12

      Synopsis

      Bindy Mackenzie is the smartest girl at Ashbury High. She memorizes class outlines to help her teachers. She records transcripts of everything said around her. She offers helpful critiques for her fellow students. And she wears crazy nail polish to show she's a free spirit.

      But then Bindy's life begins to fall apart. She can't stop feeling sleepy and she fails an exam for the first time ever. And--worst of all--she just doesn't care. What could be the cause of all these strange events? Is it conspiracy? Is it madness? Is it . . . murder?

      Lots of people hate Bindy Mackenzie--but who would actually want to kill her? The answer is in Bindy's transcripts. The detectives are her fellow students. But Bindy has made every one of them into an enemy . . . and time is running out.

      Publishers Weekly

      Sure, she has ticked off the entire high school, but could someone actually be out to kill the heroine in The Murder of Bindy Mackenzie? by Jaclyn Moriarty, the companion book to Feeling Sorry for Celia and The Year of Secret Assignments. Bindy's journal entries and e-mail exchanges quicken the narrative pace. Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.

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      Customer Reviews

      The Murder of Bindy Mackenzie Review.by guard-girl

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      March 26, 2009: I just finished reading Jaclyn Moriarty's book, The Murder of Bindy Mackenzie. The Murder of Bindy Mackenzie is a Teen Fiction, Mystery novel. The main character of the novel is Bindy Mackenzie. She is an Australian girl, who attends Ashbury High School in Sydney, Australia. Bindy Mackenzie is a junior in high school. She is ranked number one in the junior class at Ashbury. Jaclyn Moriarty introduces Bindy Mackenzie through a series of diary entries, transcripts, and reports that she makes up that Bindy Mackenzie has written. Bindy Mackenzie is a unique type of girl. She has her hair in these funky kinds of hair styles, and yet is super smart. You may think she is weird and does not really belong, but really she is the same person that you are. The story of Bindy Mackenzie mainly takes place at Ashbury High School or in Bindys room at her Aunt Valerie's and Uncle Jacks house. You never really know where the setting is unless you read it one of the many diary entries or the transcripts, but everything in on Bindy Mackenzie's laptop.

      The Murder of Bindy Mackenzie has a lot of twist and turns in the story. Bindy is this academic girl who works hard for her grades and always gets in the 99.9 percentile in every single class she has. She has the most perfect life someone like Bindy could have then all of a sudden when she in enrolled in this class call Friendship and Development (aka FAD) everything goes downhill. She has these hallucinogens, starts getting sick, missing school, and not turning her homework. No one knows what is wrong with Bindy Mackenzie, not even herself.

      Jaclyn Moriarty used lots of diary entries and transcripts to tell this story. She also used some foreshadowing to tell about some of the events that happen in the middle of the book and that reappear in the end of the book. In the book, The Murder of Bindy Mackenzie, Jaclyn Moriarty uses some Suspense to keep us in the book, about how Bindy Mackenzie ends up listening to something that she should not have heard of. Jaclyn Moriarty also uses Figurative Language throughout the book. She has Bindy Mackenzie use words that are not fitting in to her age and more of the age of an adult.

      The point of view of the Murder of Bindy Mackenzie is in first person. I think that this point of view is important. If it were to be in a different point of view it would be totally different story and not make much sense. The story relies on Bindy Mackenzie to tell the story. There is one point in the story were that changes because Bindy Mackenzie has a very big issue that occurs.

      I recommend this book to anyone who has read any of Jaclyn Moriarty's books and enjoys them; I know I enjoy her books. Also, if you read teen fiction or even like a little mystery about teenagers you should try this book and I think you will enjoy it. I give this book thumbs up. I enjoyed reading it, keep me wanting to keep reading it and I never wanted to put it down.

      Interestingby MusiHolic

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      February 08, 2009: I really enjoyed this book. It is written in a very unusual format, made completely out of letters, transcripts, e-mails ect. I thought about giving it up in the beg. because it was kind of boring but I swear to you it does pick up. I would recomend it. It's about this girl Bindy's FAD group(Friends and Development) and a secret plot to put an end to Bindy once and for all. Or is it? It definitly keeps you guessing till the end and I really liked it. :)

      I Also Recommend: Feeling Sorry for Celia, The Year of Secret Assignments.


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