Homer on the Case is told from the perspective of the eponymous Homer, a homing pigeon and Dick Tracy fan who takes it upon himself to investigate a recent series of thefts. When I read the description for this book, I was expecting it to be a comedy or to have moments of humor, which it doesn't. I think humor would have helped immensely, since I wasn't quite sure what to do with a detective story told from a pigeon's perspective that tries to be serious (or serious at a level for kids). There's also not much in terms of character development. There are five main characters: Homer, his owner Otto, Otto's grandfather, Homer's friend Lulu, and Lulu's owner Charlotte. None of them really change much during the story, or have anything pushing them, aside from the very linear theft mystery. I gave this story two stars, since that means "it was okay." It wasn't a bad story, but there also wasn't much for a reader to chew on. Middle grade kids probably wouldn't find this story challenging enough, but younger children might like it.