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Canaries and Criminals [Hardcover]

Kelly Easton (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)


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Book Description

8 and up3 and up
What do the Birdman of Alcatraz, a bizarrely painted turtle, and three bumbling criminals have in common? Find out in a funny, suspenseful new chapter of the Betts Pets mystery series.


There’s never a dull moment at Betts Pets, the neighborhood pet shop introduced in TROUBLE AT BETTS PETS. Now, in CANARIES AND CRIMINALS, the eminently likable Aaron Betts and pals Sharon Trout and Tony Wong - not to mention Loafer the Chauffer (now a poet) - are all back, along with a menagerie of offbeat new characters. When Aaron’s school project leads to an encounter with an ex-convict, and a turtle with an intricate map on its shell turns up at the shop, Aaron and Sharon are drawn into an all-new mystery and even manage to foil an ill-fated heist. Along the way, Aaron learns a few things about his family, his own artistic talents - and a world where not everyone succeeds as planned.

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Editorial Reviews

From School Library Journal

Grade 3-6-Aaron Betts, the star of Trouble at Betts Pets (Candlewick, 2002), is back and people still remind him of animals. Here, he finds a sickly turtle with a map painted on its shell and takes it in. When a man who looks like a giraffe shows up at Betts Pets looking for a turtle, the boy keeps quiet. Then a homing pigeon drops a threatening note asking that the reptile be returned and Aaron and his friend Sharon soon find themselves in danger. However, that's not all Aaron worries about. The pet store business continues to decline, his best friend's family is moving their restaurant out of the neighborhood, and his friend Bertha is not doing well now that she's in a nursing home. The sheer load of quirky characters and subplots overshadows the mystery, and the crooks turn out to be more inept and humorous than dangerous. Still, this fast-paced novel will appeal to kids who like funny stories tempered with sensitivity like Johanna Hurwitz's "Aldo" titles (Morrow) or Carol Gorman's "Dork" books (HarperCollins).-Tina Zubak, Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh, PA
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

About the Author

Kelly Easton is the author of TROUBLE AT BETTS PETS as well as an award-winning young adult novel. She says of CANARIES AND CRIMINALS, "We’re living in a time that seems to be about things rather than people. The Betts Pets series, though, is all about people in their zaniness and unpredictability." Kelly Easton is an adjunct professor at Roger Williams University. She lives on an island off the coast of Rhode Island with her husband, two children, and a collie and basset hound. She’s hard at work on a third Betts Pets mystery, PAW PRINTS AND PAINTED BIRDS.


CHAPTER 2

Guranga usually likes me to go with her when she’s helping me research, so she can show me how books are shelved and stuff, but this time she flew away. I guess she decided I could stay on the Net a little while longer.

I clicked on the next site. There was a cartoon of Alcatraz island. It said: last resort. free transportation: one way.

Guranga returned with the books and set them on a nearby table. "I’ll look for more," she said, and disappeared. I clicked on the cartoon, and a photo of Alcatraz appeared. It was like a giant factory of prisoners set on a floating rock. There were photographs of the cells, too. They were the size of walk-in closets, with a bed, a sink, and bars, of course. I logged off and went to the table to look at the books. In the couple of minutes since Guranga left them, some guy had plopped himself down in front of them like it was his report.

He was a big guy, about forty or so, with a rubbery face like a gorilla’s. One arm rested on my stack of books, while the other held up a book close to his face, like he’d forgotten his glasses.

"Hi." I sat down at the table, trying to figure out a polite way to ask for my books.

"Are you talking to me?" He sounded pleased, like he was surprised that human beings could speak.

"Uh, yeah."

"You gotta love it," he said, setting the book down. I slid it toward me. One down and the four under his arm to go. "They didn’t let him have birds there," he said.

"Huh?"

"At Alcatraz. They didn’t let the Birdman have birds there. He had them at Leavenworth. So why do they call him the Birdman of Alcatraz?"

"I dunno." I hadn’t done enough research to figure it out.

"Name’s TB." He held out his hand.

"Aaron Betts." I shook it. "I’m writing a report on the Birdman of Alcatraz."

"Interested in criminals?"

"Animals. My family has a pet store."

"A pet store? You gotta love it. Used to work with elephants myself, in the circus, but then there was a little mishap. What’s the name of the pet store?"

"Betts Pets." Business has been pretty slow the last couple of years; I always try to advertise our shop when I can.

"It rhymes! Isn’t that cute. You ever read Hocus Pocus?"

"No."

"It’s by Kurt Vonnegut. The very first page says, ‘While there is a criminal element I am of it. While there is a soul in prison I am not free.’"

"Sounds good." I peered at the books under his arm. One of them was Stroud’s book on canary diseases.

"Those words were on a tombstone. I only read that first page, then some guy got it from me and lit it on fire. I don’t think it’s right to burn books, do you?"

"No."

"They put him in solitary for that."

Solitary?

"They didn’t care about the book, but arson is frowned upon in the Big House. Uh-oh." He leapt to his feet. "There’s that librarian again. She’s one scary broad. Thanks for saying hi to me; you’re a good kid. I hope I can return the favor." He lumbered away.

"This’ll do ya." Guranga plopped three more books in front of me.

Product Details

  • Reading level: Ages 8 and up
  • Hardcover: 118 pages
  • Publisher: Candlewick; 1st edition (August 11, 2003)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0763619280
  • ISBN-13: 978-0763619282
  • Product Dimensions: 7.8 x 5.6 x 0.6 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 9.4 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,162,982 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Kelly Easton grew up in Los Angeles, California. From the time she can first remember, she was obsessed with the destruction of the beauty of the area, orange groves and strawberry fields and charming downtowns, by the suburban sprawl of the seventies. Her search for the perfect place has sent her all over the place, most recently North Carolina and now New England.

Kelly has an MFA in playwriting from UC San Diego. She teaches in a low residency MFA program in writing for children and young adults at Hamline University, and lives on islands in Rhode Island and Massachusetts. She also teaches creative writing to kids in summer workshops, and helps other writers edit their books. Kelly lives with her husband, Michael Ruben, and their children: Isaac, Isabelle, Mollie and Rebecca (plus their dog Garfield). She has just finished her first adult novel, Dreams in the Land of Photographs. You can reach her through her website: www.kellyeaston.com

Kelly's novels have won many awards, among them, the Asian/Pacific American Literature Award, the ASTAL Middle School Book of the Year Award, NYPL Book For the Teen Age, Kentucky Bluegrass Masterlist (Hiroshima Dreams); an ALA Quick Pick listing, and nomination for the ABE award, 2010 (Aftershock); Atlanta parents Best Book, and NYPL Book for the Teen Age (White Magic); a Boston Author's Club Award, Westcherster's Choice Best Book, CCBC Best Books selection (Walking on Air); and a Golden Kite Honor, Booksense Top Ten (The Life History of a Star). Her newest book, The Outlandish Adventures of Liberty Aimes, is a Jr. Library Guild selection.

She loves to hear from readers!


 

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars funny and great, August 11, 2005
A Kid's Review
This review is from: Canaries and Criminals (Hardcover)
I didn't know this book was the sequel to Trouble at Betts Pets when I started reading it. I just liked the cover. It was even better than Trouble at Betts Pets cause the mysterie was scarier and I loved it that the chauffer loafer ends up being a poet. Please, more Betts pets mysteries.
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