Woof, A Bowser and Birdie Novel, by Spencer
Quinn (Scholastic Press, 2015, 293 pages, $16.99, grades 3-6)
But Can He Write for
Kids?
In a word, YES!
Spence Quinn (not his real name) is the best best-selling
author of the Chet and Bernie series of who-dun-its for adults told by Chet the
Dog, so when I saw Woof, I simply had
to grab it.
I was not disappointed - at all. Think of Woof as a Chet novel for grade-schoolers.
Then I found out that Quinn (really Peter Abrahams), writer
of crime thrillers, also has a crime thriller series for teens, The Echo Falls
Mysteries, starring a girl sleuth! Yippy skippy!
As a matter of fact, nobody knew that Quinn was Abrahams’
pen name until he was ‘outed’ by Sarah Weinman who did some sleuthing of her
own once Quinns’ first of seven dog thrillers, Dog on It, became so popular.
Back to Woof
If you love Chet like I do, you will love Bowser, a Poodle-Shepherd-Bernese
(probably), adopted straight out of a shelter in Louisiana by 11-year-old
Birdie and her Grammy to be in charge of security at 19 Gentilly Lane. If you
haven’t met Quinns’ Chet yet, chances are you will want to, after meeting
Bowser. I’ll wager even youngsters will start reading the adult Chet and Bernie
books – at least until another Bowser and Birdie book comes out, and one will –
there are plenty of hints in Woof along
with some rather loose ends that could be neatly tied up in a sequel. Or two.
The Voice
Bowser knows he’s happy when his tail begins to wag. He also
thinks his Birdie is the coolest thing since ice cubes during a steamy hot Louisiana
summer (he says she is ‘off the charts’). He likes to sit on Birdie’s foot,
nice and comfortable like.
He compares his teeth, which sometimes get a sudden urge to
bite (a bad guy) to the small, dull teeth of humans, and his extraordinary sense
of smell to the nearly non-existent sense of smell of humans, despite their big
noses. He states it best this way: “With her [Birdie’s] brains and my
everything else we were going places.” (p. 237)
Bowser is a lovable canine who just may keep you in
stitches. “I trotted over to Birdie. She didn’t turn off the flash[light],
instead pointed the beam down at the floor. The shadow of a real big dude
stretched across the floor. The fur on my neck rose straight up and stayed that
way until I realized the big dude was me.” (p. 100)
Birdie is far from a perfect little girl but she is full of
spunk and courage. Yes, she does get into trouble, sometimes at night when she
sneaks out of the house to go sleuthing but she always has her sidekick along –
big Bowser who helps protect her and also helps solve crimes.
The Plot Thickens
Birdie and Grammy run a bait and tackle shop in the bayou.
It is summer. Unfortunately, when the store clerk Snoozy falls asleep on the
job, an old stuffed marlin, Black Jack, hanging on the wall is taken. Rumor has
it that inside the prize marlin is a treasure map, a real treasure map.
To read more about this rumor and be entertained and educated in the meantime by Bowser, check out Woof at your local library this summer or get it at your independent bookstore.
Woof! It’s ‘off the charts!’
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