3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A good book, 14 Jan 2006
This review is from: Chasing Vermeer (Hardcover)
This is a really intriguing book, written in a style similar to Lemony Snicket. It follows the story of two kids, Calder and Petra and how they try to unravel the mystery of the robbery of a priceless Vermeer painting. It is a really good light read.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Chasing Vermeer, 2 Jan 2008
This review is from: Chasing Vermeer (Hardcover)
I loved this book, it is absoloutley brilliant!! I got it for Christmas a year ago and I have read it 10 times since! The charactors are great, not just typical kids because they get themselves into trouble! I think Calders a real puzzler and that Petra is VERY interesting and Miss Hussey is one of the best teachers ever!It is a mystery of a stolen Vermeer painting which Petra felt a connection with! It is a classic adventure story that thrills you at every turn. Plus you learn alot about Vermeer paintings! A MUST READ!!!
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Courtesy of Teens Read Too, 14 Oct 2006
I think the fact that I had never heard of CHASING VERMEER before I picked up a copy at the bookstore helped in my enjoyment of it. After I finished reading the book, I read with interest other reviews posted on Amazon, which is usually my habit after I've written my own review. I like to see what other readers thought of a story, or how similar--or, in some cases, dissimilar--my own thoughts and feelings are from other readers. I was surprised to see that many had touted CHASING VERMEER as a DA VINCI CODE for the younger set. I was surprised by the supposed hype that the book had generated. I was surprised, in fact, by the way I was caught up in the story myself. Although I can't comment on it's similarity to THE DA VINCI CODE (I'm one of probably only a handful of humans on the planet who hasn't read it!), I can say that CHASING VERMEER is a mixture of mystery, art, precociousness, and ingenuity that made it a joy to read.
Petra Andalee and Calder Pillay live down the street from each other in Hyde Park, share the same birthday, and have as the same sixth-grade teacher, the wonderful Ms. Hussey, at University School. It's rare to find a teacher who allows her students to have a say in what material they will cover, and both Petra and Calder are aware of this. When Ms. Hussey asks the students to discuss with an adult a letter that changed their life, most students are baffled. When the assignment fails, Ms. Hussey instead takes them on a field trip to the Art Institute--where the worlds of Petra, Calder, Ms. Hussey, and Vermeer collide.
Who was Vermeer? An artist, it turns out, who has several paintings attributed to him that some members of the general public don't agree were done by the painter himself. Suddenly, Petra and Calder's world is filled with a strange book entitled "Lo!", a painting known as "A Lady Writing," an old lady named Mrs. Sharpe, a man who owns a bookstore, a set of twelve pentominoes, a bunch of frogs, and a few bags of blue M&M's.
CHASING VERMEER is, quite simply, an art mystery in the style of Nancy Drew or The Hardy Boys, but more interesting and complex. This is a delightful read, and I can't wait to read THE WRIGHT 3, the next story in the adventures of Petra and Calder.
Reviewed by: Jennifer Wardrip, aka "The Genius"
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