Donald J. Sobol was an award-winning writer best known for his children's books, especially the Encyclopedia Brown mystery series. Mr. Sobol passed away in July of 2012.
Neo and I finished another collection of Encyclopedia Brown mysteries. The ten year-old super detective is back, keeping Idaville USA free from crime and ensuring those pesky Tigers stop pulling the wool over the eyes of unsuspecting children. Encyclopedia battles the wits of the Tigers’ leader, Bugs Meany, helps locate a wanted felon, and proved a money hungry teenager is cheating kids out of change. These five-minute mysteries prove to be the perfect way to exercise the brain and spend a little time thinking. Neo and I use them as a before bedtime stumping, though we are getting better at solving them. Young sleuths in the making may want to sharpen their skills with the massive collection of stories.
Neo says he really likes the stories, as they keep him thinking. I had these stories read to me when I was young as well, helping me want to pass along the tradition. Neo thoroughly enjoys listening to the stories and making an effort to uncover the clues that will help solve the cases. He mentioned that these are perfect stories for parent-child reading, but would be great for a good reader when they have time or are on a road trip. A note to parents: the stories are dated (1960s) and some of the terminology or word choices might not be as correct as you would like your young reader to use on a daily basis.
We finished another collection of Encyclopedia Brown mysteries! The ten year-old super detective is back, keeping Idaville USA free from crime and ensuring those pesky Tigers stop pulling the wool over the eyes of unsuspecting children. Encyclopedia battles the wits of the Tigers’ leader, Bugs Meany, helps locate a wanted felon, and proved a money hungry teenager is cheating kids out of change. These five-minute mysteries prove to be the perfect way to exercise the brain and spend a little time thinking. My dad and I use them as a before bedtime stumping, though we are getting better at solving them. Young sleuths in the making may want to sharpen their skills with the massive collection of stories.
I really like the stories, as they keep me thinking. My dad had these stories read to him when he was young, and now wants me to have the same experiences. I enjoy listening to the stories and making an effort to uncover the clues that will help solve the cases. These are perfect stories for parent-child reading, but would be great for a good reader when they have time or are on a road trip.
In this volume, Encyclopedia solves the theft of several items including a silver bowl, a candle shaped like one of Snow White's dwarves, a diamond ring, and jewels and furs - there's a lot of robbery going on in his tiny town!
Dug this up out of a very old box and decided to read it for nostalgia’s sake. (I loved this whole series as a kid.) Yeah, it’s aged quite a bit and is fairly corny in some parts now, but it’s still as much fun as I remembered.
The other thing I remembered is that a good portion of the mystery solutions are based on very obscure facts or specific wording in the stories that no one but the author could ever possibly guess! But that was always part of the charm.
Hey, still fun, and I got 6 out of 10 of these, which is good enough for me.
These books were the source of my still expanding love of mysteries. Also my great desire to have a detective agency in the garage, marry Sally Kimball, and to live in a town flat enough to ride my bike everywhere.
This one is not the best of them, but I really like “The Case of the Falling Woman.” And I will always love when Bugs Meany gets his.
With his unconventional knowledge, he solves mysteries for the neighborhood kids through his own detective agency. But his dad also happens to be the chief of the Idaville police department, and every night around the dinner table, Encyclopedia helps him solve some of the most baffling crimes.
Sometimes you just need a break from adult issues and return to your childhood. I couldn't solve them then...I can't solve them now! Maybe a bit too stressful...Maybe I need to return to my true crime genre...
A decent collection of mysteries of varying difficulty. This didn't come across as the strongest batch, although the writing and setups are pretty solid for some of them. Some specific thoughts:
Silver Fruit Bowl - An okay story, but it kind of forced the solution on you. Maybe it's a confidence builder to get readers into the book.
Dwarf's Beard - Yet another one where Bugs Meany gives slightly too much information. Sometimes less is more, Bugs.
Bugs Meany's Revenge - A bit more of the same. A pretty easy solution.
Cave Paintings - Far too obvious, but I like the concern about Elmer's breath holding championship.
Wanted Man - Just enough of a hint to steer the reader in the right direction--one of these things is not like the others. But maybe trying a bit too hard to unite the clues, as it's an unlikely plan for the wanted man.
Angry Cook - I like the idea behind the answer. It's a small detail, but it stood out a bit too much.
Missing Ring - Again, the idea is really good. It just ends up too precise for me to suspend disbelief.
Money Changer - The setup makes the solution a bit too obvious for me.
Falling Woman - Same as the previous story.
Red Boat - The book ends with one of the stronger stories. The suspense is build from the third paragraph, and the solution takes a bit of thinking.
Great book for 10 year olds! I **LOVED** this series as a kid, and I still enjoyed it re-reading it as an adult (so that I could discuss it with my 10 year old son). This time through, I even solved about 70% of the puzzles! :)
One of the crooks was caught from saying "you brought me back to this place" after saying that he'd never been to the place before, but I could argue that the terminology is commonly misused and not a guarantee that the man had been there before - and even if he was, it could be assigned to the cop who had been there before and was bringing him "back".
TL;DR - Some of Encyclopedia's evidence is awfully thin, and the criminals could get away with it if they wouldn't confess at the first bit of pressure.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
We have been reading some old Encyclopedia Brown books through our Corona isolation journey.
They've been fun to revisit, to see them through my daughter's eyes - to have to explain so many references and moments because culturally they are so very different to now.
Overall, they've aged fairly well. A few of the answers aren't actually 100% correct but I remember thinking that when I was young as well.
We have been enjoying reading them together, for sure.
Six gotchas, and one half as close to getting it. The rest this reader didn’t get. Still, clever way to use words trick any armchair sleuths in getting the wrong answer. Yet, one has to use “grey cells” to work out solutions. Still enjoyable, outdated or not. Recommended.
This showed up on my little free library and I wondered if I would love it as much as I did when I was 9. I did! And, almost 40 years later, I still remembered all of the solutions. I loved Encyclopedia Brown as a child and it is always a relief to reread a book from childhood and still love it!
Okay, so reading these two were neat! It's weird having to intensely read a chapter book to look for symbols that could realistically be added onto new editions covers, but it was silly! Also the first Ency Brown I've ever read, so that's pretty neat!
The boy is at it again solving crimes and mysterys in his town new ones come.Nothing can go wrong cause of him and his smartness in town.Helps with kids and his dad the chief of police.Go to 4-6
Another good one, although again, details are dated and some stories don’t work anymore (a teenager going home to get his flashbulb camera, for example). But these are still good bite-sized stories.