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The London Eye Mystery

  • Is it age appropriate?

    About our ratings

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    Not age appropriate for kids under 8, age appropriate for kids over 9; suggested age 9.

  • Is it any good?

    4.0
  • Common Sense says

    Gripping mystery told by kid with Asperger's.

Why We Rated This on for Ages 9 and Up

What to watch out for

  • Messages:

    Learning to lie to parents is seen as a sign of progress for the main character.
  • Violence:

    Not an issue.
  • Sex:

    Some kissing with tongue, a mention of "sex stuff."
  • Language:

    "Fags" is British slang for cigarettes.
  • Consumerism:

    Soft drink, motorcycle, candy brands mentioned.
  • Drinking, drugs, & smoking:

    Drinking and smoking, mentions of drugs and needles.

What Parents Need to Know

This review of The London Eye Mystery was written by Matt Berman

Parents need to know that the concerns are minor here: a mention of tongue kissing, some products, adults smoke and drink. Of more concern is that for the main character learning to lie to his parents is portrayed as a positive development.

Families Can Talk About

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  • Families can talk about the unnamed, presumably Asperger's, syndrome the main character has. What are its characteristics? Disadvantages? Difficulties? Are there also advantages? How do they balance out? What would it be like to see the world as Ted does?
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More on The London Eye Mystery

Book Summary

When Salim disappears while riding in a sealed pod on the London Eye, his cousins Kat and Ted, who has Asperger's syndrome, try to solve the mystery while their family falls apart and the police are baffled. Finding that the adults won't listen to them or take them seriously, they set off on their own to follow the clues and theories that Ted, whose brain works on "a different operating system," comes up with.

Is It Any Good?

The late Siobhan Dowd wrote this before some of her other books that have already been published. But just before she completed it, The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time by Mark Haddon was released to great acclaim, and it was decided that there were too many similarities to release THE LONDON EYE MYSTERY on schedule. Like Haddon's book, this one is told by a boy on the autistic spectrum (in this case, presumably, Asperger's Syndrome, though this is never stated), and involves the boy solving a mystery.

Aimed at younger readers than Haddon's novel, this one scores on two counts. The first is the mystery: it's tightly constructed and solid. Too often mysteries for kids feel bogus or trumped up, with logic holes a mile wide, but here both the event and its resolution make perfect sense. The second is Ted, whose quirks are mostly endearing, and whose eventual success is so satisfying. The author, though, is careful not to overdo it -- Ted's syndrome is real, not cute, and his own awareness of it is, at times, poignant. For kids who like their mysteries realistic, this will be a welcome addition to a genre that, right now at least, is not exactly burgeoning.

Publisher’s Details

Publisher: David Fickling Books, Publication date: 02/01/2008
Number of pages: 322, Price: $15.99 (hardcover)
Read Aloud: 9, Read Alone: 10

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Most Recent Reviews

  1. Parent Reviewer
    I rate this title on for age 2 and give it 2.0

    Improper Parenting....the root cause

    Because of nuclear family concept with both the parents working, there is no body at home to teach the children 'Moral and Ethical' values. In past, these jobs were done by grand parents, who with loving and caring eyes ,used to monitor even most minor subtle changes in children and then with careful dialog, used to make them understand the difference between Good & Bad. These days, from the days of infancy, parents start yielding to all the demands of children, as a result of which, they never learn to Hear 'NO' to even unreasonable demands , making them more aggressive and independent. They decide everything on their own. The end result : More violence,More intolerance and more more bad habits. It's a vicious cycle, which we must understand and take some concrete steps as a society on the whole, to break it, otherwise anticipate Future to be tending from Bad to Worse. With due regards; Mehrotra

  2. Adult Reviewer
    I rate this title on for age 8 and give it 5.0

    I cried in laughed

  3. Teen Reviewer Age 15
    Lives in North Carolina
    I rate this title on for age 2 and give it 1.0

    THE EAGLE EYE

  4. Parent Reviewer
    Lives in California
    I rate this title on for age 0 and give it 4.0

    Well-structured, effective mystery

    Interesting story with an especially well-done mystery. The family interactions are believable, if not always admirable. In particular, the parents repeatedly are too upset to listen to the kids (whereas a police official does listen), and the kids in turn deceive the parents in order to continue their investigations. Consider discussing with younger readers why Ted (with what is presumably Asperger's) managing to tell his first-ever lies is treated in the story as positive progress for him. Note that: family members smoke and drink, several instances of British usage of "bloody" as a swear word (and one use of "God"), mention of "skiving" (= playing hooky/ditching school), one mention of the potential for kids to be kidnapped for "sex stuff". For ages 10+.

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