I’ve seen this book on the bookshop shelves many times, and never bought it because of the overly blatant ‘does exactly what it says on the tin’ title and the somewhat garish cover. But I finally noticed that it was by Siobhan Dowd, and belatedly bought it for my 11 year old, who stayed up very late one night to finish it (it’s the Christmas holidays, so that was fine) because, as she said, it’s about a boy who goes missing, and she REALLY needed find out if he was ok…
So, on her recommendation, I’ve just read it too. And it is a very good mystery! (A mystery set around the London Eye, so it does do exactly what it says on the cover…)
Salim gets on the London Eye, watched by his two cousins Ted and Kat, and they never see him get off again. While the adults around them (parents, aunts, uncles, police) do all the usual things (ask friends and neighbours, put appeals on the TV) Ted and Kat try to think through all the possibilities logically. And as Ted’s brain works on a differently operating system from everyone else’s – his own words - (it’s never spelled out, but there are hints of autism) he is very persistent and logical. He is prepared to examine all potential theories (even spontaneous combustion and timewarps – though he dismisses those two quite early on) and he might just manage to solve the mystery before it’s too late…
The story is beautifully straightforward – a problem, potential solutions, chasing down leads and eliminating possibilities – which leaves plenty of time to enjoy spending time with weather-obsessed Ted. He wants to be a meteorologist, and while he has a problem with most metaphors and figures of speech, he does love language and phrases based on weather.
It’s a simple story, but with real depth (especially when a body matching Salim’s description is found near the Thames) and great characters. I really should know better than to be put off by covers and titles…