DELIVERY & GIFT DETAILS:
Usually ships within 24 hours
Delivery Time and Shipping Rates
Eligible for gift wrap & gift message.

Reserve it at BN.com & pick it up in 60 minutes at your local store.
Enter a zip code
(Paperback - REPRINT)
Dazzling readers and critics alike, Laurie R. King's bestselling mystery series featuring Mary Russell and her partner-in-crime Sherlock Holmes has been described by The New York Times as a “lively adventure in the very best of intellectual company.
In 1968, eleven-year-old Jaynell's life in the town of Moon, Texas, is enlivened when her eccentric Grandpap comes to live with her family.
Constructed like a series of vignettes, this novel focuses on the relationship between a child and her widower grandfather, whom the family suspects is losing his grip on reality. In PW's words, the novel "captures a child's sense that time stretches endlessly before her." Ages 10-up. (Nov.) Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information.
More Reviews and RecommendationsThe daughter of a Navy chief, Kimberly Willis Holt lived all over the world during her childhood. But Forest Hill, Louisiana, became the place she called home. "Forest Hill is the kind of town where neighbors care when you're sick and show up at your door with chicken and dumplings. I wanted Tiger to be from a place like that," says the author. She currently lives in Amarillo, Texas, with her family. This is her first novel for young readers. Her second novel, When Zachary Beaver Came to Town, won the National Book Award.
From the Trade Paperback edition.
Reader Rating:
See Detailed Ratings
January 26, 2007: This book is just so fun to read~!~!~!~!
Reader Rating:
See Detailed Ratings
October 16, 2006: I think this book had a very good plot and it was a good read, i could not put it down. I really recomend this book to any reader out there looking for a good book to read.
Laurie R. King's Mary Russell novels aren't just pallid Sherlock Holmes imitations. Indeed, Holmes's marriage to Oxford theologian Mary Russell seems to have revitalized the Baker Street investigator. Justice Hall picks up where The Moor left us so breathlessly. Mary and her pipe-smoking partner-in-crime-solving are now threading their way back through paternity secrets and purloined documents to the real story of the Hughenfort family.
Read by Kimberly J. Brown
Approx. 4 hours
3 cassettes
Eleven-year-old Jaynell is taught to stay away from the Pickens—the poor family from the wrong side of the tracks. Fact is, nobody in Moon, Texas, has much, but everybody is real aware of who's got what and how much. Except Grandpap. He always makes time to visit with the Pickens, even after he buys a '62 emerald green Cadillac convertible. When Grandpap dies, Jaynell learns a secret about Grandpap that changes the way she will look at poverty forever.
Constructed like a series of vignettes, this novel focuses on the relationship between a child and her widower grandfather, whom the family suspects is losing his grip on reality. In PW's words, the novel "captures a child's sense that time stretches endlessly before her." Ages 10-up. (Nov.) Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information.
In this poignant story, eleven-year-old Jaynell, a tomboy who lives with her family in a poor section of Moon, Texas, learns an important lesson about kindness and compassion from her elderly grandfather. After her grandmother dies, her Grandpap has a difficult time living by himself, so he moves in with her Uncle Floyd and Aunt Loveda for a short period of time. After a few incidents, he comes to live with Jaynell and her family. Although she's not thrilled about having to share a room with her ten-year-old sister, she makes the sacrifice because she's so excited to have her grandfather so close by. When her father asks her to keep an eye on their new houseguest, she decides to follow her Grandpap everywhere he goes--on daily walks to the local cemetery, on a boat ride at a nearby lake and on leisurely Saturday drives in a newly purchased Cadillac. While on their special outings, they visit various people around town, and on a few occasions, Jaynell receives driving lessons. After her parents put an end to her Saturday drives, her grandfather goes out on a solo ride and has a heart attack while at the wheel. Unfortunately, he dies and everyone is left heart-broken, especially Jaynell. However, before her grandfather dies, he performs a secret act of generosity that no one in her family knows about--he offers his house and its belongings to the poor, downtrodden Pickens family. When the truth is eventually discovered and a series of dramatic events unfold, Jaynell becomes a heroine and everyone agrees to let the Pickens stay at Grandpap's house. This touching novel focuses on the emotional ups and downs of family life and the importance of intergenerational relationships.
This book will hold interest through its unique set of characters and the conflicts they face. Jaynell's family is so realistic and believable that by the end of the book, they feel like old friends. Jaynell tells us the story as one would tell one's own best friend. The author's heartfelt message also is the most important part of the book. It tells us that sometimes the best way to help ourselves is to help others. VOYA CODES: 5Q 4P M J (Hard to imagine it being any better written; Broad general YA appeal; Middle School, defined as grades 6 to 8; Junior High, defined as grades 7 to 9). 2001, Putnam, 176p, . Ages 12 to 15. Reviewer: Rosie Servis, Teen Reviewer SOURCE: VOYA, April 2001 (Vol. 24, No.1)
The time is 1968 and the place is Moon, Texas. Eleven-year-old Jaynell Lambert, a tomboy at heart, is full of dreams and boyish playfulness especially as she climbs into abandon cars in Bailey's Automobile Salvage, pretending to drive motionlessly. Life, though, takes on new meaning when her aging grandfather comes to live with them upon the death of their grandmother. Jaynell watches over her saddened grandfather, hiding his depressed, strange behavior, and trying to avoid his going to a nursing home. Instead, Grandpa impulsively purchases a Cadillac, taking Jaynell driving, and even, letting her learn how to drive while her youngest, more girlish sister, Racine, dances in the car's headlights. Sadly, Grandpa dies of a heart attack while driving, leaving Jaynell and her family to adjust to still another loss, and to cope with Grandpa's quirky past and the financial security that he has provided for them including real dancing lessons for Racine. Younger readers will enjoy this sensitive story of life in a rural Southern town which manages to teach "true values" without being preachy. Genre: Coming-of-Age/Death and Dying. 2001, G. P. Putnam's Sons, 167 pp., $15.99. Ages 12 up. Reviewer: Edna Earl Edwards; Oxford, Mississippi
Mary Russell and husband Sherlock Holmes in their sixth outing. Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information.
Adult/High School-Who will be the Seventh Duke of Beauville, and heir to the breathtaking Justice Hall? Certainly not Maurice Hughenfort, the current heir, if he has his druthers. When Sherlock Holmes and his wife Mary Russell first met Marsh, they knew him as Mahmoud Hazr; he and his cousin Ali were guides and spies in Palestine in O Jerusalem (Bantam, 2000). Now they discover that he is the heir to a dukedom he finds an encumbrance to his chosen profession and also, as a result of this succession, a target for murder. His cousin Ali, now Alistair, comes to Holmes and Russell to help Marsh find the answers to several questions involving other possible heirs. Thoroughly captivated by the glories of Justice Hall and bemused by the 1920s' social whirl created by Marsh's sister and her husband, present caretakers of the Hall, Mary sets out to find some answers while Holmes goes off to London to sleuth and consult his brother Mycroft. Trench warfare and shooting parties as well as ocean voyages and Canadian flyers all fit together to help solve the puzzle, and teens will see much of another world and time while following this tricky tale of missing heirs and murder. There is less of Holmes and more of Mary in this sixth adventure, and a charming new character in Iris, Marsh's wife in a marriage of mutual convenience.-Susan H. Woodcock, Chantilly Regional Library, VA Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information.
Returning in autumn 1923 to Baker Street from their adventures in The Moor (1997), Sherlock Holmes and his wife, Oxford theologian Mary Russell, find a whopping surprise waiting for them: Ali Hazr, the Bedouin spy of O Jerusalem (1999), is actually English aristocrat Alistair Hughenfort, and his cousin Mahmoud, a.k.a. Marsh, is the seventh Duke of Beauville. But aging, weary Marsh is an unwilling Duke who wants nothing more than to return to Palestine after turning the fabulous estate (much Anglophilic drooling here) over to the heir presumptive-assuming his credentials check out. The problem with the heir apparent, nine-year-old Thomas Hughenfort of Paris, is that it's hard to understand why Thomas's father Lionel, who died of pneumonia soon after his son's birth in 1914, would have taken up with a woman older and plainer and commoner in every way than himself, especially since Lionel was notoriously partial to non-paternal relationships with young boys. Following Ali-oops, Alistair-to Justice Hall, Holmes and Russell aren't in time to prevent an untimely shooting accident, but with the help of endless interviews, family trees, and revelations of birthright, they do straighten out the Hughenfort line, and solve a particularly vicious murder to boot. Holmes is muffled, but the mystery, after a sluggish, implausible start, broadens and deepens as the tension rises until all WWI seems to come under indictment. The least successful of King's six Holmes pastiches is also the most accomplished-if you don't mind seeing the master detective sidelined.
Loading...
loading...
loading...
loading...
Terms of Use, Copyright, and Privacy Policy
© 1997-2009 Barnesandnoble.com llc