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Freddy the Detective [School & Library Binding]

Walter R. Brooks (Author), Kurt Wiese (Illustrator)
4.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (29 customer reviews)


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School & Library Binding, June 2001 --  
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Book Description

9 and up4 and up
There's trouble on the Bean farm. First a toy train disappears. Then Prinny the Dog's dinner is missing and Egbert the Rabbit is nowhere to be found. The animals of Bean Farm need a detective, and fast! Luckily, Freddy the Pig is on the case. Having just finished reading Sherlock Holmes, Freddy and his partner Mrs. Wiggins the Cow set up a detective agency in the barn. But when Freddy's best friend Jinx the Cat is framed for a dastardly deed, all of Freddy's detecting skills are put to the test.
--This text refers to the Paperback edition.

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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

"Oh, I am the King of Detectives, / And when I am out on the trail / All the animal criminals tremble, / And the criminal animals quail..." boasts Freddy, the poetry-prone, Sherlock Holmes-obsessed pig who stars in Walter R. Brooks's beloved series. From 1927 to 1958, Brooks wrote 26 Freddy books--including Freddy Goes to Florida--all focused on the well-rounded pig, who has been described by various fans as ingenious, intelligent, loyal, and resourceful. Since Brooks's books fell out of print, librarians across the country have scrounged up copies wherever possible, even resorting to photocopying the books and binding them with hockey-stick tape! To the delight of thousands, the fabulous Freddy books have been reprinted by Overlook Press!

The intrigue of Freddy the Detective begins on the Bean Farm (Freddy's upstate New York abode), when a toy train is discovered missing from young Everett Bean's room. Freddy jumps at the chance to prove his sleuth skills: "I'll find that train, you bet! There are a lot of mysteries on a farm like this and I'll solve 'em all!" he proclaims. The pig can't gracefully outfox the rats (and they sing derisive songs about him), but eventually he does solve cases from "The Mystery of Egbert" (about a bunny who'd wandered off from his family) to "The Case of Prinny's Dinner" (about a white woolly dog's missing food). The shenanigans all sound innocent enough, but Brooks is hilariously tongue-in-cheek; his insightful descriptions of animal characters are always compassionate; and his subtle appeal to a child's instinct for justice is no less than masterful. As Adam Hochschild of the New York Times Book Review writes, "The moral center of my childhood universe, the place where good and evil, friendship and treachery, honesty and humbug were defined most clearly, was not church, not school, and not the Boy Scouts. It was the Bean Farm." Welcome back, Freddy! (Ages 9 to 12, but great for reading aloud to younger children.) --Karin Snelson --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

From Publishers Weekly

Available for the first time in paperback, Freddy the Pig stars in two adventures. In the first, fresh from reading about Sherlock Holmes, Freddy is drafted to solve several disappearances on Bean farm. In the second, the porcine hero and his friends escape the drafty barn for a vacation in sunny Florida. Ages 9-12. (July)
Copyright 2001 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to the Paperback edition.

Product Details

  • Reading level: Ages 9 and up
  • School & Library Binding
  • Publisher: Tandem Library (June 2001)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 061336063X
  • ISBN-13: 978-0613360630
  • Product Dimensions: 7.8 x 5.1 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 13.3 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (29 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #8,355,743 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

29 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.9 out of 5 stars (29 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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30 of 31 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Pig Investigates., September 14, 2001
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This review is from: Freddy the Detective (Paperback)
A long time ago (as people count these things) a somewhat overweight, near-sighted 8-year old boy wandered up to the young readers section of his local library and took down a strange volume entitled "Freddy the Detective." To be frank, the boy had only just realized that there were books to read beyond Dick and Jane. Bored, he took the book back home and discovered an entirely new world. And changed his life forever.

That same boy, now much older, has recently discovered that, far from disappearing from the shelves, Freddy the Pig still is available and is still being read. Curious to see if the magic was still there, this reviewer once again took it home. I am pleased to report that Freddy remains one of Americas greatest heroes.

"Freddy the Detective" is one of the early books in a series that stretches from 1928 to include 25 volumes of delight for both children and the adults they are bringing up. Freddy is not your ordinary barnyard animal. Not only do all the animal's on Mr. Bean's farm talk and help with the chores. Certain of them have taken the trouble to learn to read and write. Freddy's latest conquest is "The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes" and he has decided to become the world foremost porcine investigator.

Freddy, his best friend Jinx the cat, and the sensible Mrs. Wiggins the cow confront many difficult challenges. These include the case of Everett Bean's stolen toy trains, the case of the missing rabbit, the countless plots of Simon the rat and his dishonest clan, and the case of the robbers in the hermit's cabin. And, in a grand finale, Freddy defends Jinx himself from charges of murder. Throughout all of this, our indomitable pig keeps up his plucky attitude. There is as much action in this story as there is in most efforts at more recent fiction. And a lot more fun as well.

Brooks' farm world is a microcosm of real world about us, but one were the animals are often wiser than the people. With the exception of the dastardly Simon the animals treat each other well even when they disagree. Many of them parody our own silliness, like the pompous rooster judge, but they all are likeable. I also appreciate the positive attitude that permeates Brooks writing. "Freddy the Detective" is still good reading 70 years after it was written. And the farm setting gives it a certain timelessness. It combines humor and strong values in an entertaining package, and has convinced more than one young reader that the world of books is a very fine place.

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11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Freddy books are many things, but most of all they are FUN!!, September 13, 1998
By A Customer
This review is from: Freddy the Detective (Hardcover)
Like the other reviewers here, I grew up on Freddy books more decades ago than I care to remember. They were always entertaining, they were frequently exciting, and most of the time they were not only funny, they were thigh-slappingly, guffaw-inducingly hilarious. In fact, they were so amusing that I was unaware at the time that I was getting lessons on kindness, responsibility and all of the values that many authorities are now saying that we as a nation lack. In spite of a few stereotypes (the Irish cop with a thick brogue, etc.) and a few situations that show the Freddy books were supposed to take place in a less complicated time, I have found that when read aloud to today's generation, the books are as appreciated by them as by me and my contemporaries. I had the pleasure of reading them to my two children (until they took them away from me and read the books themselves) and my grandchildren (ditto). Freddy the Detective is one of the best Freddy books in setting the scene of the Bean farm, delineating the characters, and showing how much funnier these animals are than Bugs Bunny, Mickey Mouse, and all the other cartoon characters on television. Not all of the many Freddy books are as outstanding as Freddy the Detective, Freddy the Politican, Freddy the Magician, and Freddy Goes Camping, but they still beat a lot of the children's books that are out there today.
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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Walter Brooks had a genius for character, even animal., September 15, 1998
By A Customer
This review is from: Freddy the Detective (Hardcover)
The Freddy the Pig adventures are almost unique in children's literature. Few series, whether for children or adults are so full of the sense of community, and the character's place in that community than the Freddy books are. I've just reread six of them (two aloud) with my children. I'm amazed to find that you can read this series, end to end, in much the same way that you would read Trollope's Barchester novels, or Anthony Powell's Dance---as life caught in microcosm, studied, and loved and laughed at, and to hell with the fact that these are animals. I step off the subway each day and enter an office that is remarkably like Freddy's world, except we have few adventures. These are great books and I hope the publisher will find a ready audience for them.
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