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The Postcard [Hardcover]

Tony Abbott (Author)
4.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (9 customer reviews)


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Book Description

3 and up
She died today. One phone call changes Jason's summer vacation-and life!-forever.


When Jason's grandmother dies, he's sent down to her home in Florida to help his father clean out her things. At first he gripes about spending his summer miles away from his best friend, doing chores, and sweating in the Florida heat, but he soon discovers a mystery surrounding his grandmother's murky past.


An old, yellowed postcard...a creepy phone call with a raspy voice at the other end asking, "So how smart are you?"...an entourage of freakish funeral goers....a bizarre magazine story. All contain clues that will send him on a thrilling journey to uncover family secrets.


Award-winning author Tony Abbott weaves an intriguing and entertaining mystery of adventure, friendship and family.

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Editorial Reviews

From Booklist

Abbott, author of Firegirl (2007) and the Droon series, sets no easy task for himself with this book, which contains a mystery within a mystery. Thirteen-year-old Jason is heading to St. Petersburg to help clean out the house of a deceased grandmother whom he’s never met. As soon as he arrives, mystery meets him. Who are those odd people at the funeral? And what about the strange phone call that leads him to a tinted postcard of a Florida landmark about to be demolished? The postcard points Jason to several old manuscripts that tell the story of his grandparents’ romance. Or do they? Abbott plays with style as he alternates between the contemporary mystery of finding the manuscripts with the manuscripts themselves, written in a hard-boiled detective style. The result is sometimes too convoluted, but the book is so enticing that readers will go along even when the going is rough. Jason (paired nicely with a neighbor girl as sidekick) is a hero worth rooting for. Kudos, too, to the book’s designer, whose use of old postcards heightens the appeal. Grades 6-9. --Ilene Cooper

About the Author

Tony Abbott is the author of over 60 books for young readers, including the extremely popular Droon series, which has sold over 4.5 million books to date, and the Golden Kite winner Firegirl. He has worked in a bookstore and a library, and currently lives in Connecticut with his wife and two daughters.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 368 pages
  • Publisher: Little, Brown Books for Young Readers; First Edition first Printing edition (April 1, 2008)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 031601172X
  • ISBN-13: 978-0316011723
  • Product Dimensions: 5.6 x 1.1 x 7.9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 14.4 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (9 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,318,364 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

To begin with, I was born in Cleveland, Ohio, and lived in a small house on top of a hill. Together, my mother, a school teacher, and my father, a returning World War II paratrooper pursuing his college studies, brought tons of books into our small house on Cliffview Road. I guess you could say that these books were my first introduction to the world of literature. My father was always writing, so the sound of the typewriter was like the background music of my early childhood.


When I was eight, we relocated, by car, to Connecticut where I finished elementary school and high school. I went to college at the University of Connecticut, majoring first in music (too hard), psychology (too many theories), and finally English (yes! lot and lots of books!). I graduated UConn with a bachelors degree in English Literature. After that, I traveled to Europe for quite a while, drank a lot of coffee, and wrote notebooks full of strange poetry. When I returned, I found work in a variety of bookstores and finally a library where I met my wife to be.


It was when I began reading bedtime stories to my children that the spark of writing I had had for so many years finally turned to children's books. After many failures, my first published book, Danger Guys, was written while taking a writing class with renowned children's author, Patricia Reilly Giff. That first book, and the series that it began, became the cornerstone of my writing career and has become something of a cult favorite, by virtue of its being difficult to find. Since then, I've written over seventy-five books for readers ages 6 to 14, including the cult favorit popular fantasy saga, The Secrets of Droon.


Over 8 million of my books have been sold worldwide, and my series and novels combined have been translated into Italian, Spanish, Korean, French, Japanese, Polish, Turkish, and Russian. Danger Guys was named a Children's Book-of-the-Month Club Main Selection, and the American Booksellers Association voted The Secrets of Droon among the "Top 10 List of Books to Read while Waiting for the Next Harry Potter." The series was also a Main Selection of the Children's Book-of-the-Month Club, and is on many school and library reading lists.


In 2007, my novel Firegirl won the Golden Kite Award for Fiction presented by the Society of Children's Book Writers and Illustrators. It is the only award given by children's writers to children's writers, a peer award I remain honored at having received. It was also a selection of the Junior Library Guild.


In the Spring of 2008, my second novel for Little, Brown Books for Young Readers appeared. The Postcard is a comedy/mystery about a boy who finds a clue on an old postcard while cleaning his recently deceased grandmother's Florida house, and who has no choice but to follow the mystery wherever it leads. Among other things, The Postcard is my love song to Florida's Gulf Coast, where my grandparents lived, and to old Florida, its architecture, roadside attractions, and Wild-West origins. It is, not least, my homage to the great hardboiled tradition of Hammett and Chandler, translated to a Florida setting. The Postcard won the 2009 Edgar Allan Poe Award for Best Juvenile Mystery.

In 2009, The Haunting of Derek Stone, a series of four books for older readers, appeared from Scholastic Inc. Titles include: City of the Dead, Bayou Dogs, The Red House, and The Ghost Road.

My literary and cultural interests include the films of Preston Sturges, the Road pictures of Bob Hope and Bing Crosby, and the Marx Brothers, and the writings of Charles Dickens, Mark Twain, P.G. Wodehouse, Jules Verne, Dashiell Hammett, Raymond Chandler, Seamus Heaney, Emily Dickinson, Ted Hughes, F. Scott Fitzgerald, John Steinbeck, The Arabian Nights, Beowulf, James Thurber, Philip Roth, Ralph Ellison, and William Faulkner. I'm currently a member of the Society of Children's Book Writers and Illustrators, the Yale Center for British Art, and other esteemed organizations. With my wonderful wife, two delightful and brilliant daughters, and the best dog imaginable, I live and work happily in Connecticut.

 

Customer Reviews

9 Reviews
5 star:
 (8)
4 star:
 (1)
3 star:    (0)
2 star:    (0)
1 star:    (0)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.9 out of 5 stars (9 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Book Review, February 2, 2010
A Kid's Review
This review is from: The Postcard (Paperback)

The Postcard by Tony Abbott is about Jason who doesn't know anything about his grandmother. Jason keeps finding postcards which lead up to a story about his grandmother. He meets a girl named Dia, and they work together to find more postcards to help them learn about Jason's grandmother.


The story begins in Boston. Jason received a phone call and found out his grandmother died. His parents are divorced, and he has to go to his grandmother's old house to sort through her things.


The day Jason was at the funeral home, someone called his grandmother Marni. The next day he found a magazine and was reading through it. A story mentioned his grandmother as Marni. In those two pages, there was a postcard. This postcard had a pinhole. Where this pinhole was is were he would find chapter 2 of the story.


My favorite character was Miss K. She is a Japanese lady who was Jason's grandmother's neighbor. My favorite part was when Jason first met Dia. Dia was his grandmother's grass cutter. He didn't know she was so he told her to go away. Dia left with only one-half of the yard cut. Jason's dad got so mad.


I think the authors purpose of this book was to entertain. I liked the book very much. I almost thought I couldn't stop reading it. My eyes were glued to it. My recommendation would be to anyone who likes an adventurous mystery. That is all about Tony Abott's The Postcard.

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5 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An adventurous mystery that middle readers will love, June 17, 2008
By 
This review is from: The Postcard (Hardcover)
Jason's grandmother has died. They weren't close, in fact, he never met her. He'd heard his parents talk about her dementia, believing she could fly and being pursued by alligators, but their concern had never brought him into close proximity to his father's sometime mother. The trip to Florida to be with his father and help clean out her house is going to mess up his summer vacation. If he survives it.

A strange call from someone unknown sends Jason searching through his grandmother's things where he finds an old post card and a magazine. This is the start of an intriguing scavenger hunt for pages of a story that help him know his grandmother, and learn more than even his father knows about his grandfather. Jason and his friend, Dia, aren't the only ones looking for the clues. There were some eccentric-looking funeral attendees, and they seem to be showing up wherever the clues lead. How do they know about these old stories? Are they really part of the circus thugs introduced in the story? Are the stories fact or fiction? Can Jason and Dia run fast enough to find out?

The Postcard is a page-turning mystery with a humorous twist. The main characters are human, likeable, and smart. You understand the teenager's confusion about family. Besides never knowing his grandmother, Jason learns his father never knew his own father, his great grandfather may have been a sociopath, and he isn't sure his parents will continue living together when this trip is finished. Add some circus clowns and you have a story both entertaining and well plotted.

Tony Abbott, Connecticut writes humor, fantasy, adventure books that get kids to read, and love to write. His best-known series, The Secrets of Droon, has nearly five million copies in print since the first books were published in 1999, and it is one of the best-selling series for its age group-ages 7 to adult.

Armchair Interviews says: Middle readers especially will enjoy this adventurous mystery.
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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A Quirky, Entertaining Mystery/Adventure, July 7, 2010
By 
Silmarwen (Huntington Beach, CA United States) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)   
This review is from: The Postcard (Paperback)
Jason is unexpectedly sent to Florida to help his father clean up his grandmother's house. The temperature is sweltering, Jason is always damp in places he would prefer not to think about, the house is packed with all kinds of junk and his dad is losing it. See, Jason never really knew his grandmother and it seems like his dad didn't either. It turns out that Jason's dad doesn't even know who his father is! His grandmother was never married and spent most of her life as an invalid in wheelchairs. Jason is hoping that the funeral will be over quickly and he will back on his way home to Boston, but his dad seems to be falling apart. When his dad ends up in the hospital with a broken ankle after falling off a ladder, Jason knows that his dad needs his support and help.

Jason doesn't really want his mom coming down to Florida, as he knows that she won't understand what his father is going through (and he fears that they are on the way to divorce). He also doesn't want to tell anyone about the mysterious phone call that he received at his grandmother's which led him to a hidden postcard. The postcard has no message, but it has the address of an old hotel that is scheduled for demolition. Jason isn't sure what to make of it, but then he discovers an old mystery magazine with a story that seems to feature several of the people who showed up at the funeral - and his grandmother! Before Jason knows it, he is lying to the police, breaking into condemned buildings, hunting for postcard clues, and trying to unearth the truth of his grandmother and the love of her life.

I picked up this book on a whim and found myself unexpectedly captivated at the beginning. I love scavenger hunts and this one was a doozy! Jason is your typical 12-year-old boy who has a difficult time realizing that his parents and grandparents had a life like he does. He realizes that the relationship between his mother and father is strained, but doesn't know what to do to help out. He can't really get his dad to talk about anything in his past, but finds himself pulled into this crazy mystery anyway! Dia was the facilitator of the whole adventure. She is a strong-willed, Hispanic girl who lives in his grandmother's neighborhood and is one of the few people Jason confides in. Dia is determined to follow the clues to the end and pushes and prods Jason until he goes in the direction she wants. I actually really liked Dia and thought she was hilarious! She was ready to jump into any danger and pulled Jason along with her. The adults in the book are sketched in and did not seem like real people. I am sure that Tony Abbott did this on purpose as kids don't really see adults as "people" like they do other kids. I wish that there was more about the adults, however, as Jason's dad, Jason's mysterious grandfather, and all of the people chasing after the kids (the bearded lady in purple, the slouchy man in the black beret, the barrel-chested man with a tiny waist, the German man who clicks his heels, and the man who looked like walking death) were very interesting and I would have liked to learn more about them.

The Florida setting was interesting and you could feel the heat and the humidity in the air. I have never been to Florida and so I would have loved to learn more about it different Florida locations, but I did enjoy learning some new things about the state of Florida. The kids visited several cool, random locations, which were a lot of fun to read about! The kids do not go to Walt Disney World or any of the other theme parks that Florida is so well known for. Instead, they visited an old luxury hotel, the sunken gardens, a seaside pier, some historic homes and even the old palace of the man who founded the Ringling Circus! These were really cool to learn about and were such mysterious, unique locations so I was glad that Abbott went with something a little less traditional to keep the story grounded and make it a bit more realistic for 2 kids to be able to sneak in and find clues that had been there for several decades.

I loved the first half of the book and found it a real page turner, but I did not find the ending as interesting. I still wanted to know what the solution to the mystery was going to be and rushed through to get to the end, but I was ultimately a bit disappointed. I felt that Abbott relied too much on the story within the story. See, as Jason finds postcards, they lead him to different sections of a mystery story that is loosely based on his grandfather's experiences in trying to get near his grandmother. These stories get longer and longer and Abbott does put the whole story in there for you, the reader, to read along with Jason and Dia. I found that, once the kids found the last section of the story, the book was wrapped up pretty quickly and I didn't get the resolution with Jason and his father and his newly found grandfather like I was hoping for. It was kind of one of those "hopefully ever after" endings instead of a real closure kind of ending. It was just too open for me.

I will say that I can recommend this book for kids who like adventure books or mystery books. It is well written and has short little chapters so younger readers can make quick progress. There is a lot of action and there seem to be threats around every corner as Jason battle against the Secret Order of Oobarab to discover the truth for his father. Boys especially will enjoy this book as it is always so difficult to find a good, action-packed book about boys for boys. There are no mushy-gushy feelings here and, even though Jason and his dad talk a little bit, there are no heart-to-heart talks between them or anything like that. If you have a 9 - 12 boy at home, this is a great book to check out of the library for a summer adventure.
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