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This category is for mystery and detective novels written for children and young adults. Also see: Category:Junior spy novels; Category:Young adult mystery fiction; Category:Children's mystery short story collections. Also of interest: List of Edgar Allan Poe Award for Best Young Adult Novel winners
Tired and frustrated at their lack of progress, Pip plays a practical joke on the others, wearing a pair of giant boots and leaving giant footprints for the others to find and again search in vain for the thief. When found out, the others are angry with Pip - until suddenly Fatty declares that Pip has solved the mystery.
It follows two schoolgirls in 1930s England solving their first murder mystery and is the first book in the 'Murder Most Unladylike' series. The story is written in the style of a casebook and follows two fictional boarding schoolgirl detectives, Daisy Wells and Hazel Wong, as they try to find the murderer of their science teacher.
The first book in a culinary cozy mystery series, Arsenic and Adobo finds 0ur protagonist, Lila, moving back home from a horrible break-up. But when her ex-boyfriend, a food critic, drops dead ...
Mystery authors Pip Drysdale, Alex Segura and Jonathan Ames answer our burning questions, including their go-to book for holiday gift-giving this season
These classic book recommendations are ones everyone should read, based on contemporary bestsellers. Choose from our favorites, including Little Women. The 8 Best Classic Books to Get Lost In
This is a list of classic children's books published no later than 2008 and still available in the English language. [1] [2] [3] Books specifically for children existed by the 17th century. Before that, books were written mainly for adults – although some later became popular with children.
The Rockingdown Mystery (1949) The Rilloby Fair Mystery (1950) The Ring O' Bells Mystery (1951) The Rubadub Mystery (1952) The Rat-a-Tat Mystery (1956) The Ragamuffin Mystery (1959) Each of the Mysteries begins with the letter "R" as one of the characters disingenuously points out towards the end of the series. [1]