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The Case of the Cryptic Crinoline: An Enola Holmes Mystery
 
 

The Case of the Cryptic Crinoline: An Enola Holmes Mystery [Kindle Edition]

Nancy Springer
4.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (8 customer reviews)

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Sold by: Penguin Publishing
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Editorial Reviews

From School Library Journal

Grade 5-9–From the riveting prologue to the satisfying conclusion, readers are hurled headlong into Enola Holmes's latest case. Still eluding her brothers, Sherlock and Mycroft, who will, she fears, place her in a finishing school, Enola is horrified one day to find that her beloved landlady, Mrs. Tupper, has been kidnapped. Using her wealth of disguises, Enola sets out to solve the crime. Much to her astonishment, the trail leads to a meeting with Florence Nightingale, with whom Mrs. Tupper was acquainted. The atmospheric setting and the voice of the heroine are so compelling that even though readers may not know what a crinoline is, they will want to find out. Kids who enjoy the details of historical settings and solving mysterious ciphers will cheer this feisty heroine as she leaps out of windows, jumps onto the backs of coaches, and fights evil villains in the dark streets of London to rescue her dear landlady. Well done!–Tina Martin, Arlington Heights Memorial Library, IL
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

Sherlock Holmes’ 14-year-old sister, Enola, makes her fifth appearance, as clever as her much older brother and still determined to be on her own after being abandoned by her mother and threatened with boarding school. But now that freedom is in jeopardy when her landlady is abducted, seemingly because she has carried a message from the “Bird.” The mystery itself, concerning smuggling during the Crimean War, won’t be of much interest to kids, but the appearance of the enigmatic Florence Nightingale adds appeal, as will the cat-and-mouse game Enola must play with Sherlock. Mostly, though, it’s Enola, strong and determined, who carries this one. Grades 5-8. --Ilene Cooper

Product Details

  • Format: Kindle Edition
  • File Size: 329 KB
  • Publisher: PHILOMEL (November 10, 2011)
  • Sold by: Penguin Publishing
  • Language: English
  • ASIN: B001TMCEPM
  • Text-to-Speech: Enabled
  • Average Customer Review: 4.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (8 customer reviews)
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Customer Reviews

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Average Customer Review
4.9 out of 5 stars (8 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Sherlock Holmes' Little Sister Strikes Again, June 2, 2009
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While this author writes for children, her books are very enjoyable for adults as well. She does not write down to children. Her description of Victorian English life strikes me as very accurate. The premise of this series is that Sherlock and Mycroft Holmes have a much younger sister, Enola Holmes. Enola (which is "alone" backwards), as a late in life surprise for their parents, is a bit of an embarrassment to the Holmes brothers. When their mother, a liberated woman, goes missing, Enola flees as well in order to avoid being shipped off to a boarding/finishing school, where she would be trained to become nothing more than a decoration to a wealthy man's life. Enola abhors the mere idea.
Enola fled in the first book in this series, and in subsequent stories she has inadvertently encountered older brother Sherlock, who has been searching for her. Affection is growing between the two siblings through their brief encounters. Sherlock is also developing a growing respect for his clever, daring little sister.
In this story, Enola and Sherlock independently encounter Florence Nightengale, who helps guide Sherlock to some understanding of why his little sister flees at the mere sight of him.
I really enjoy this series and look forward to more installments of the on-going saga of Enola and Sherlock Holmes.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Enola goes four for four as a successful "perditorian"!, December 27, 2010
By 
Paul Weiss (Dundas, Ontario Canada) - See all my reviews
Pitched at a reading level considerably higher than the justifiably famous Nancy Drew series, THE CASE OF THE CRYPTIC CRINOLINE continues the adventures of Enola Holmes, the hitherto unknown, late-arriving younger sister of Mycroft and Sherlock Holmes, who was introduced so capably in THE CASE OF THE MISSING MARQUESS.

A budding young feminist, intelligent far beyond her tender age of only fourteen years, Enola Holmes is living incognito in London, hiding from her brilliant brothers for fear that they would force her into the stultifying life of a Victorian boarding school for young ladies. Sherlock and Mycroft are portrayed as typical 19th century men in their attitude toward women and whatever intellect they may possess. That is to say, they are at least patronizing and chauvinist and perhaps, in Mycroft's case, downright misogynist.

Despite being of independent means with the financial resources that her mother provided in THE CASE OF THE MISSING MARQUESS, Enola has decided that she will live her life as a "perditorian", a "finder of lost things". In THE CASE OF THE CRYPTIC CRINOLINE, Enola tackles the disappearance of her own sweet landlady, the very deaf Mrs Tupper, when she is kidnapped after what modern readers would term a house invasion. The clues are sparse - a story about Mrs Tupper's history as a broken-hearted widow in the Crimean War and some old embroidery on a crinoline. But Enola is stubbornly determined to find her and repay the kindness that Mrs Tupper has shown her by acting, in effect, as a loving, thoughtful stand-in for the real mother that Enola hasn't seen since she left home so many months earlier. Of course, her sleuthing constantly places her in danger of being shipped off to that ever so repugnant boarding school for young ladies should her brothers, Sherlock and Mycroft, ever manage to penetrate her numerous disguises and lay hands on her.

Nancy Springer's wonderfully innovative and imaginative series is now maturing as it reaches its fourth title but it certainly isn't showing any signs of staleness or tiring. The portrayal of Crimean heroine and foresighted developer of the modern nursing profession, Florence Nightingale, adds a heightened verve and sense of possible reality to this mystery. Clearly the ideas, the atmosphere, the characterization and the plotting continue to flow and I'll be looking forward to the fifth title, THE CASE OF THE GYPSY GOODBYE. Highly recommended.

Paul Weiss
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars This was my First Enola Holmes Mystery, and I am a Converted Fan, July 1, 2009
By 
Enola Holmes first sprang onto the scene in THE CASE OF THE MISSING MARQUESS and then continued her adventures in three subsequent novels. Fans of Enola no doubt realize she goes to great lengths to stay hidden in London. She parades around in her alter-ego, Miss Meshle, in an attempt to stay free of notice from her much famous older brother, Sherlock Holmes. While Enola does maintain her freedom from such restrictions as a fancy boarding school or uptight social gatherings, she is nevertheless very much alone (her name spelled backwards is still "Alone").

In fact, the closest thing to family would be her dear landlady, Mrs. Tupper. Mrs. Tupper may be deaf and a dreadful cook, but she certainly doesn't ask questions concerning Enola's sometimes eccentric and erratic behavior. She also recognizes that there is more to Enola than meets the eye and confides in her concerning a mysterious message received in the mail. Apparently someone is after Mrs. Tupper to deliver a "bird-brained" message --- or else. While utterly clueless, Enola realizes this is no idle threat when Mrs. Tupper is kidnapped the very next day. Time is short for Enola to rescue perhaps the only person who really cares about her.

The smallest amount of clues is left behind for Enola to make sense of. These include Mrs. Tupper's brief history in the Crimean War, some old embroidery on a crinoline, and a brief encounter with a very famous nurse, Florence Nightingale. Enola's first encounter with the seemingly invalid Nightingale is fruitless and exasperating. The crinoline, however, proves more fruitful with a hidden Morse code in the embroidery. Armed now with an important secret message, Enola once again approaches Florence Nightingale with the hope of coming one step closer to locating the missing Mrs. Tupper. Florence informs Enola that she has also hired her own detective to solve the problem, and Enola comes face to face --- literally --- with the last person she expects or wants to see: her older brother, Sherlock.

Enola is now faced with two very difficult problems. She still has not found her beloved Mrs. Tupper, and time is running out. Also, now Sherlock is hot on her tail to bring her home and force her into a "proper" school and other "proper" engagements girls of her age should be experiencing. Will the cryptic crinoline lead Enola to Mrs. Tupper? Will Enola be able to maintain her freedom with the insatiable Sherlock Holmes on the case? Only the younger sister of the great Sherlock Holmes would be able to juggle the two problems with relative ease and a hint of danger mixed in.

Nancy Springer has successfully created a series of mysteries that capture the sincerity and complexity of the original Conan Doyle stories with a new and vibrant character in Enola Holmes. Enola proves once again that she is able to match wits with her male counterparts and perhaps has more fun in doing it. I appreciated the richness of language in relation to the time period and of course the wondrous and equally spooky setting of London. This was my first Enola Holmes mystery, and I am a converted fan.

--- Reviewed by Benjamin Boche
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More About the Author


"Conform, go crazy, or become an artist." I have a rubber stamp declaring those words, and they pretty much delineate my life. Conforming was the thing to do when I was raised, in the fifties. Even my mother, who spent her days painting animal portraits at an easel in the corner of the kitchen, tried to conform via housecleaning, bridge parties, and a new outfit every spring. My father, who was born into a British-mannered Protestant family in southern Ireland, emigrated to America as a young man and idolized the "melting pot" because at last he fit in. Once in a rare while he recited "The Ballad of Reading Gaol" or told a tale of a leprechaun, but most of the time he was an earnest naturalized American who expected exemplary behavior of his children. My mother was a charming Pollyanna who would not entertain negative sentiments in herself or anyone around her. As their only girl and the baby of the family, I was coddled, yet hardly ever got a chance to be other than excruciatingly good.

My "conform" phase lasted right into adulthood. When I was thirteen, my parents bought a small motel near Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, and I spent most of my teen years helping them make beds and clean rooms. I did not date until I went to college -- Gettysburg College, all of seven miles from home. it was the height of the sixties, and I grew my hair long, but eschewed pot, protests, and "happenings." Instead, I married a preacher's son who was himself conforming by studying for the ministry. Within a few years I was Rev. Springer's wife, complete with offspringers, living in a country parsonage in southern York County, PA.

Here beginneth the "go crazy" phase.

Because I had never been allowed any negative emotions, I began to hear "voices" in my head. First they whispered "divorce" (not permissible), and later they hissed "suicide". They scared me silly. I couldn't sleep; images of knives and torture floated in front of my eyes even during the daytime; something roared like an animal inside my ears; my wrists hurt; I saw blood seeping out of the walls; panic jolted me like a cattle goad out of nowhere. Is it necessary to add that I was clinically depressed? The doctor gave me Valium and sent me to a shrink. The shrink took me off the Valium and told me I had a problem with anger. (No duh.) The next doctor zombied me on the numbing antidepressants which were available at that time. The next shrink said I had an adjustment problem. And so on, for several years, during which I somehow managed to stay alive, take care of my kids, handle the vagaries of my husband, sew clothing and grow vegetables to get by financially, cook, can preserves, show up at church, do mounds of laundry and publish "The White Hart" and "The Silver Sun"--yet not one of the doctors of shrinks ever suggested that I might be a strong person, let alone a writer. All of them were intent on "helping" poor little me "adjust" to being a housewife, mother, and pastor's wife.

Eventually I became resigned to the fact (as I perceived it) that I was an evil, sinful person with horrible things going on inside my head, and I stopped trying to fix me. I stopped going to doctors or therapists. Somehow I found courage--or desperation--to stop trying to conform or adjust or live a role.

"I am going to start taking an hour or two first thing in the morning to do my writing," I said to my husband.

"Fine," he said. He had reached the point where he would agree with whatever to humor the neurotic wife; to him it was just another of my brain farts. But to me it was the most important sentence I ever spoke. With that statement I stopped being a housewife who sometimes stole time to write, and I started being a writer.

Conform, go crazy--or become an artist.

By becoming a writer--by becoming who I truly was--I became well.

It was so simple. Although it did take years, of course; it takes a long time for good things to grow. Trees. Books. Me. Odd thing about books; they not only nourish growth but show it happening. In "The Black Beast, The Golden Swan" and many other of my early novels, you can see me dealing with the yang/yin nature of good and evil, struggling to accept my own shadow. In "Chains of Gold" and "The Hex Witch of Seldom" I start writing as a woman, no longer identifying only with male main characters. In a number of children's books I come to terms with my own childhood. And in "Apocalypse"--whoa, what a fierce, dark fantasy novel, the first thing I wrote after my income from writing enabled my husband to leave the ministry. I hadn't thought of myself as repressed when I was a pastor's wife, but obviously something broke loose when I shed that role. "Larque on the Wing"--whoa again, another breakthrough book that spiraled straight out of my muddled middle-aged psyche and took me places I'd never dreamed were in me.

It's been a long time since those days when I thought I was an evil person. I know better now, and I love and trust me even to the extent of writing "Fair Peril"--a more perilous novel than I knew at the time, interfacing all too closely with my life. Written two years before the fact, it foresees my husband's infidelity and my divorce. The most painful irony I've ever faced is that once I gained my selfhood, I lost my lifelong partner. He had supported me through episodes that would have sent most men screaming and running, but once I became well and strong, he transferred his loyalty to a skinny, neurotic waif all to similar to the young woman I once was. After supporting him through twenty-seven years of stinky socks, automotive yearnings, miscellaneous foibles, and the career change that put him where she could cry on his shoulder, I found this a bit hard to take. But I wouldn't go back to being Ms. Pitiful. Not for anything.

Now married to a rather remarkable second husband, after living 46 years in Pennsylvania I moved in 2007 to the Florida panhandle, where I spent a year living in a small apartment above the aforementioned husband's hangar in an exceedingly rural (swamps, egrets, snakes and alligators) airport. Now we have a real house about a mile from the airport on higher ground featuring tremendously tall longleaf pine trees with rattlesnakes and scorpions underneath them. Life is an adventure and I mean that sincerely.



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