Something Queer at the Library (Something Queer Mysteries, Book 3) by Elizabeth Levy


Something Queer at the Library (Something Queer Mysteries, Book 3)
Title : Something Queer at the Library (Something Queer Mysteries, Book 3)
Author :
Rating :
ISBN : 0440481201
ISBN-10 : 9780440481201
Language : English
Format Type : Paperback
Number of Pages : 48
Publication : First published January 28, 1977

Jill's excited about entering her basset hound, Fletcher, in the big dog show, so she and her best friend, Gwen, go to the library to learn about training dogs.But they're puzzled and surprised to find that many pictures are cut out of the special dog books they've borrowed. Who would want to destroy library books? Luckily there's strange clue on one page and that's enough to get super sleuths started on their search.

The books are due back soon and Jill and Gwen don't want to be blamed for ruining them. But someone is to blame. Will they find the person in time?


Something Queer at the Library (Something Queer Mysteries, Book 3) Reviews


  • karen

    APRIL

    as part of my personal reading challenges for 2017, once a month i will be revisiting a favorite book from when i was a little bitty karen and seeing if it holds up to my fond memories and determining if i can still enjoy it as an old and crotchety karen.

    fingers crossed.

    so: first things first. in answer to the question 'does this book hold up?' yes, it does. it more than holds up, in fact - i think i may have liked this one even MORE reading it as an adult.

    baby-karen's review:



    i like doggies and books and what the heck is a lhasa alpo??*

    hahah - queer**

    adult-review:

    what a fun and truly heartwarming memory-ride i have just experienced! maybe this got an extra boost of nostalgia brought into the mix by seeing those familiar illustrations again, which cracked me up because they label EVERYTHING, completely unnecessarily, but so so cutely.


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    and check out mr. hobart - a black, male librarian? not bad, 1977!

    i so clearly remember gwen’s habit of tapping on her braces when deep in thought about queer things:


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    revisiting it just brought all sorts of warm floody heart-feelings into me.

    i’m not sure why i got such a kick out of this book here in my dotage - it’s barely a book - fewer than fifty pages with manymany illustrations. baby-karen no doubt responded to the fun adventure of little girls solving book-related mysteries and SO MANY DOGGIES, but surely grown-karen is more discriminating? more refined in her tastes? more - OH LOOK A CHUBBY DOGGIE!


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    it just oozes charm - a couple of pre-teen girls solve the mystery of “who is cutting out all these pictures from the dog books we just borrowed from the library and what if we are blamed for it?”


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    i love the gleeful-terrorist expressions on their faces in mr. hobart’s presumed imaginings of them. and also the inception-y thought-within-a-thought of the illustration.

    i loved all the ups and downs of their investigation, determining what is and what is not a helpful clue:


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    i love that they hang out in the library as much as i did when i was little


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    and i love their youthful confidence that all solutions can be found in books and that two days is plenty of time to read twenty books and to prepare a recalcitrant dog to win a dog show and ALSO solve a crime.


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    i mean, some of these things won’t happen, but they definitely do solve that crime! which satisfied baby-karen, although adult karen definitely would have preferred a harsher punishment than for such a ruthless book vandal.

    in any event, i’m really glad i reread this one; it’s practically a pamphlet, but it really did make me smile, which is exactly what one needs in april, this cruelest of months.


    * baby-karen did not live in a world with the internet, so here is where i help out all current-day baby karens. a lhasa apso is this:



    **baby-karen lived in a different time, where words like “gay” and “retard” were used as playground calls that had nothing to do with intolerance; just a child’s instinctive assessment of such words as loaded or taboo in some way. also, this was new england, and you can’t expect new englanders to excise the phrase “wicked retarded” from our vocabulary. we never used racial slurs, though, so retroactive props to us for that. wicked progressive.

    ******************************************
    this one might be the cheapest of them all ! LGM!


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    despite the evidence gleaned from rigorous archival research that tells me i read many of the books in this series*:


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    this is the ONLY one i remember.

    no bookplate, AGAIN, dammit, but admire my drunken decision to mark my territory, crookedly, just wherevs:


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    * and in which i made a mess beside the first book on this list, which i think is a result of my having mistakenly marked it as ‘read’ before i had in fact read it, dutifully correcting that error, and then adjusting/updating my records once i had read it, leaving confusing scrawls all over this very important official record of reading history, and causing me to resort to an all-new notation - the clarity of a gigantic arrow leading from the word “read” to the title of the book. you’re welcome, posterity.

    JANUARY:
    wait till helen comes

    FEBRUARY:
    the little gymnast

    MARCH:
    zucchini

    MAY:
    good-bye pink pig

    JUNE:
    the girl with the silver eyes

    JULY:
    the phantom tollbooth


    come to my blog!

  • YoSafBridg

    Something Queer at the Library concerns some vandalized library books, and Gwen and Jill's attempt to uncover the culpret and motive (actually not a bad subject to cover~though i wonder how many young readers would recognize the library of the late seventies~no matter.) Jill wants to enter Fletcher in All-State Dog Show and since he has never competed before she goes to the library to do some research (now there's a novel idea.) The two girls find certain pictures cut out and set out to discover which pictures are missing and why.

  • Jon

    With a title like this I had to read it. With queer and library in the same title I was sure it would be good. It's not bad either. A nice mystery for the kids. The pictures keep the humor real light and fun. Gwen's tap, tap, taping of her braces is nice and she and Jill refer to the mysterious book-mangler as "the creep". Awesome.

  • Carmine

    Loved the Something Queer mysteries as a grade schooler and my daughter, who is in the midst of a great mystery/detective kick, is loving them now. I love that we currently live in the service area of a public library that still has lots of weird, old, beat up, out of print books on their shelves. I think they are about to do a big purge of their collection as part of a remodel to make it more new and shiny looking, but they are going to lose a lot of great older titles like this one.

    Best friends Jill and braces-tapping Gwen along with droopy basset hound Fletcher are on the trail of a library book vandal that leads to a thrilling confrontation at a dog show. (How could I resist the premise of this one?)

  • Dolly

    This is an entertaining story in the
    Something Queer Mysteries series by
    Elizabeth Levy. It's a fun hybrid between a graphic novel and a chapter book. It has lots of illustrations and short chapters and is a fairly quick read. Our girls enjoyed this book and we will look for more of the books in this series at our local library.

  • Eden

    Jill and Gwen borrow some books from the library for the dog show. But they discovered that pictures have been cut out of the books. They have to find who did it so they won't be blamed for the pictures being cut out.

    It was a cute and a little weird mystery book. It was fun and I think kids will like it.

  • HeavyReader

    This was one of my favorite books as a kid. It's a mystery that takes place in a library. That's cool! The book has the word "queer" in the title. That's even cooler!

  • Karl

    I've always like these books. The little details in the pictures, especially.

  • Catbird

    one of my favorites growing up, I loved this series but to be placed in a library made it the ultimate.

  • Caitlin

    I had been trying to find this book for a long time because I loved reading it (and re-reading it) at the local library in Aurora when I was young. I'm glad I know the title now.

  • Erin O'Riordan

    Childhood favorite.

  • Stephanie

    I adored these books when I was ten.

  • Aimee

    I am 47 and I can not believe I just found this book! This was one of my favorite books in elementary school. Because of starter mysteries like Something Queer at the Library, Encyclopedia Brown and Trixie Belden I am now an avid reader of mystery, thriller and suspense books. I enjoy being a beta reader and have been on several early reader teams for wonderful authors.

    As a young child I enjoyed reading Something Queer at the Library over and over. The mystery was entertaining, but easy to understand. I loved the characters and was fond of the art work. But there was also a comfort in checking this out at the library over and over.

    Now that I found this book again I can't wait to read it!

  • Theresa

    Something Queer Is Going On is my childhood top 5 favorite book. When I found out there were more books in the series, I knew I had to try to read them all.

    This book is almost as good as the first. I love how the girls followed all the clues to find the culprit.

    I almost giggled when Gwen tapped her braces. That is one of those things that stay with me.

    They still have all the close ups to add bits to the story. I love the art style. I think it influenced every bit of how I draw today.

    I think I might have to buy this one!

  • Denise

    Fun 1970's tale of a mystery with a library book. Enjoy the fact the girls solve the mystery and still fulfill all the things going on in life.
    Word use for the title is obviously dated, but true to meaning for the mystery.

  • JaTonna

    Very short read. It’s a chapter with entire story. My daughter would enjoy it. I was wishing it was more chapters and not so quick.

  • Jen

    While this was a cute little mystery, the title is really off-putting. Language evolves.

    Now, for the content about a library, it SHOULD be a little off-putting, since the librarian is checking out books the old fashioned way, but it's not for THIS librarian at HER library.

    So in a way it's kind of a perfect book, with perfectly colored drawings for the time it was published (1970's). But oh to have the language updated.

  • Emily Von pfahl

    One in a series of books featuring Gwen, Jill and Jill's dog Fletcher. Stylistically more like a graphic novel than a novel, the mysteries in these books are all logically solved and without sugary sweetness. I read this book in second grade and used it for my art project for Books on Parade and I won! I still have my clay Llasha Apso somewhere. A fun series for young kids who aren't that keen on reading.

  • Trin

    It's a pity that these children's mysteries had to be titled as they are, severely limiting their likelyhood of rerelease, because they're absolutely wonderful. Hilarious and crazy, and in my mind, far better than your Cam Jansen or your Nancy Drew.

  • liz

    this was one of my absolute favorite books growing up! all of my knowledge of lhasa apsos came from this book.

  • ღ Carol jinx~☆~☔ʚϊɞ

    My children loved this book and it prompted us to get a Lhasa Apso mix dog who is now 16 years old.

  • Goge (BARRONS) le Moning Maniac,

    2.5

  • Sam

    too short!

  • Ana LibrariAna

    A simple chapter book ideal for dog lovers and mystery introduction.

  • Bryn

    A genuine mystery... who has been cutting pictures out of the library books? And how will Jill and Gwen manage to solve this mystery and compete with Fletcher in the dog show at the same time???

  • Katie Fitzgerald

    No review.