School Library Journal Review
Gr 4-6-Ten-year-old Stuart is unhappy about moving to a new town with his academic parents, especially the small British town of Beeton where his father grew up. But when he discovers a challenge in a note from the legendary Tony Horten, his magician great-uncle who disappeared years earlier, to find his hidden workshop of "miraculous mechanisms," the summer becomes an adventure. By finding Tony's hidden clues and following them on a sort of scavenger hunt to the past, Stuart dodges the nosy triplets next door, makes a friend, helps two sisters reunite, outwits a greedy villain, gets out of some dangerous scrapes, and inherits a magical legacy. Fans of mysteries, puzzles, and Trenton Lee Stewart's The Mysterious Benedict Society (Little, Brown, 2007) will be happy to make Stuart's acquaintance, and they will look forward to the promised sequel.-Laurie Slagenwhite Walters, Peachtree Montessori International, Ann Arbor, MI (c) Copyright 2012. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Publisher's Weekly Review
Evans borrows several classic tropes and themes-magic, riddles, a quest, and even a night at a museum-for the entertaining story of 10-year-old Stuart Horten (often nicknamed "Shorten" for his small stature) who stumbles into a family mystery when he and his parents move to the small British town of Beeton. There, -Stuart discovers that his Great-Uncle Tony Horten, who disappeared years ago without a trace, was both an inventor of mechanical devices and a magician. A chance phone call in a broken phone booth is the first step in a journey that leads Stuart around town, as he unearths his great-uncle's legacy and secrets. Stuart also draws the attention of April, May, and June (the journalistically inclined triplets next door), as well as Beeton residents with more sinister intentions. Evans has crafted an old-fashioned mystery of the kids-besting-clueless-adults variety. Stuart's dweeby parents are particularly hapless (his father, a crossword puzzle creator, regularly drops lines like "Behold, I bring hydration for your powwow"). First published in the U.K., Evans's story leaves the door open for the sequel due in September. Ages 8-12. (Apr.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.