Signed by Zelda
By (Author) Kate Feiffer
Simon & Schuster
Paula Wiseman Books
1st July 2013
Reprint
United States
Children
Fiction
Childrens / Teenage fiction: Relationship stories
Childrens / Teenage personal and social topics: Friends and friendships
Childrens / Teenage fiction: Nature and animal stories
Childrens / Teenage: Social issues / topics
FIC
Paperback
240
Width 130mm, Height 194mm, Spine 18mm
168g
An aspiring handwriting analyst tracks down her missing neighbor in this gratifying mystery (Kirkus Reviews) from the author of The Problem with the Puddles.
More than anything, eleven-year-old Lucy wants to be the worlds most famous handwriting expert. You can learn a lot about a person through how they write their Is, she tells her friend, Pigeonwho just so happens to be a talking bird. When Lucys neighbor Zelda goes missing and the only clue is a cryptic handwritten note, Lucy is determined to crack the case using her graphology skills. With some help from Nicky, who lives upstairs, and plenty of advice from Pigeon (who just so happens to be very opinionated), can Lucy decipher the whereabouts of her apartment buildings missing resident
The plot in this mystery turns on one of the young main characters' passion for handwriting analysis. Lucy has just reluctantly moved with her parents from Savannah to New York City. Her one consolation is having a new pool of people whose handwriting she can analyze. The family's new apartment is right below that of Lucy's classmate Nicky, who drives her crazy with his incessant jumping around upstairs. Nicky has a more pressing concern: his beloved grandma Zelda has suddenly disappeared from their building, leaving behind a note that says, "Help me." What Nicky doesn't know is that Lucy intercepted an earlier note sent by Zelda because she loved the writing. Since the story moves forward and backward through time, readers learn the facts out of order, heightening both the mystery and the confusion. There are some serious issues raised in the book: Nicky's father isn't a nice guy, and the way he treats Zelda is appalling. But Feiffer keeps the tone light, incorporating a talking pigeon and lots of handwriting analysis tips that readers may find intriguing.
Eleven-year-old Nicky has mostly stayed in his room ever since his mother moved to India two years ago, and his "Time-Out Average" has spiked to .750. One floor below, Indian-American Lucy, also 11, a budding forensic scientist and graphologist interested in the study of handwriting, has just moved to the city. Although she's been unlucky making new friends and gathering more samples for her handwriting journal, she's reluctant to get to know Nicky. But when the resident talking pigeon intervenes, Lucy soon finds herself putting her sleuthing skills to the test to help Nicky find his missing Grandma Zelda, who never leaves her apartment (only one floor above). Believing "you are what you write," Lucy offers witty writing rules (e.g., "Life changes lead to letter changes"), which guide the suspense. Simulated writing samples and actual signatures of such notable individuals from history as Eleanor Roosevelt, Al Capone and, of course, John Hancock, fuel Lucy's forensic applications. When Nicky's father becomes a prime suspect, his grandmother's disappearance also becomes a moral dilemma.
A quick and steady story for readers who like some substance to their mystery but are not quite ready for the complexity of Blue Balliett. (author's note) (Mystery. 8-12) --"Kirkus Reviews", April 15, 2012
Publishers Weekly
Kate Feiffer is a writer, a filmmaker, and a mother. She is the author of the picture books No Go Sleep!; President Pennybaker; But I Wanted a Baby Brother!; The Wild, Wild Inside; Which Puppy; My Mom Is Trying to Ruin My Life; and Double Pink; and of the middle-grade novels Signed by Zelda and The Problem with the Puddles. She lives with her family on Marthas Vineyard, Massachusetts. Visit her at KateFeiffer.com.