It’s not easy being a kid detective.
You can’t make a citizen’s arrest, you can’t beat up the villains, you can’t interrogate suspects. The usual cozy mystery detective’s posse of police, doctor, lawyer won’t talk to you unless they’re your parent. And you can’t even track bad guys if it’s after your bedtime.
When the bad guys catch, gag, and tie you up—and they will because they’re bigger, faster, can drive legally, and don’t have to get home in time to finish their homework—there’s only one thing you can do. (Well two things, if you forgot, again, to do one of them before you left home.) You can bang for attention. With surprising frequency, kid sleuths find themselves tied up and often gagged. Nancy Drew did it so often, it’s amazing her non-boyfriend Ned had time for college between rescues.
Of course, kid detectives do have a couple of advantages. The adults in their lives are oddly complacent about having children roam freely, follow criminals, and get into dangerous situations. The kids know a lot more about technology than almost all adults, they’re used to lying to grownups, and—especially if they’re younger siblings—they can sneak and snoop like nobody’s business. Plus, after that whole reveal regarding Santa and the Easter Bunny, they are naturally suspicious of anything adults tell them.
One of the most entertaining additions to my favorite kid detectives is Amanda, Darlene Foster’s heroine of the Amanda Travels series. Please see my review below of Amanda’s newest adventure, Amanda in Ireland.
BLURB:
Amanda in Ireland: The Body in the Bog (An Amanda Travels Adventure Book 11) by Darlene Foster
Twelve-year-old Amanda Jane Ross is invited to be a bridesmaid for her cousin’s wedding in Ireland! She falls in love with the Emerald Isle the moment she lands in Dublin. The warm, friendly Irish people immediately make her feel at home. Towering castles, ancient graveyards, and the stunning green countryside are filled with fascinating legends, enthralling folktales, and alarming secrets.
Things take a dark turn when disaster strikes. Amanda wonders if there will be a wedding at all. As she joins the search for a missing horse, she stumbles upon a world of screaming banshees, bloody battles, and dangerous peat bogs. The closer she gets to the truth, the more dangerous things become. Will she become another body in the bog?
MY REVIEW:
5 stars for Amanda in Ireland: The Body in the Bog (An Amanda Travels Adventure Book 8) by Darlene Foster
As I’ve said in earlier reviews of Amanda’s adventures, kid detectives have a long history. From the Bobbsey Twins and basically everything Enid Blyton ever wrote, to Swallows and Amazons, from the Hardy Boys, Nancy Drew, Encyclopedia Brown, and even three young wizards who go away to magic school—young sleuths never cease to capture our imagination.
As I’ve read her globe-trotting adventures over the past eleven (!) books, my favorite by far is Amanda Ross, the twelve-year-old heroine of the Amanda Travels series. But I am so jealous of Amanda! She seems to have zero problems with ditching her parents to jet off to exotic international locales, especially when her tax-accountant mom is in the middle of tax season. There Amanda always has a usefully negligent adult who is content to let her roam a foreign country as she investigates the mysteries she inevitably encounters, while also making sure she has a chance to experience all the local highlights, food, and natural wonders.
Usually Amanda is accompanied by best friend Leah, her boy-crazy bestie sidekick. But this time when she arrives in Ireland, Amanda is on her own. In keeping with the kid detective genre-defining Nancy Drew, the villains are quick to kidnap, threaten, and tie people up. But Leah is still online, the Watson to Amanda’s Sherlock. And interestingly, this seems to bring out a more serious side in both girls, as Leah proves to be the sounding board who lets Amanda work out the identity of the villains. Also new is the sense that the evil isn’t black and white, as we discover that some of those involved in the plot have gray areas of motivation.
I appreciate that Amanda is far from perfect and she knows it. She hesitates to share the clues she finds with the busy adults around her. She makes mistakes while trying to figure out who is to blame, who to trust, and when to reveal what she’s discovered. She’s brave but not always careful. Like any young teen, Amanda makes bad choices for what she thinks at the time are good reasons.
As Amanda works to save the day, she takes readers on a tour of rural Ireland’s features sure to capture the attention of her pre-teen audience. Who could resist a bog that swallows bodies for thousands of years?
Intrigued by Clonycavan Man, Amanda read that his head and torso had been discovered in 2003. He had a scrunched-up nose and a head of reddish hair in what looked like a Mohawk. The write-up explained that his was the oldest bog body found that included skin, hair, and internal organs, and it was over two thousand years old. Evidence suggested he had been murdered in his early twenties. It also mentioned that he styled his hair with a sort of gel. —Amanda in Ireland
I just can’t recommend this new book highly enough. If you have a preteen in your life, please give them this latest (or any) of the Amanda Travels series. They will come for the adventure, accidentally learn about the world, and leave with a new book bestie who is curious, adventurous, brave, occasionally a klutz, smart, self-rescuing, and always entertaining.
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it sounds soooooo cute, and you know, I was a kid detective, one of the four crows, my neighborhood detective gang. I have skills. this is right up my alley, and I am just out of the preteen range
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That is so cool that you were a kid detective, Beth. You will love Amanda! (and maybe be able to give her some tips.)
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we were not good at it, but we loved it – still love ‘solving cases’
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What was your biggest case as a kid detective?
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oh, barb, our crew, the four crows, were a disaster, we were constantly interfering in neighbors’ business, I blogged about it. should I repost the ‘four crows’ blog? p.s. I loved every minute of it.
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Amanda and I thank you from the bottom of our hearts for this fabulous review, Barb. (I often wonder what my parents would think if they knew some of the things I did when out of their sight…)
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What a great review of your new book, Darlene! Congratulations to you and thanks to Barb for taking the time to read and review it on her blog.
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Oooh! Things you did out of sight of your parents? Do tell!
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The list is long. Perhaps over a bottle of wine one day.
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Nice one, both😊💜
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Thanks, Judith. xo
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This was a fun way to start my week. I’m a little out of kid range myself, and I don’t write with younger characters but I enjoyed this, and I’m pretty sure I’ll enjoy Darlene’s new book (it’s waiting for me on my Kindle app like a homework assignment). Barb, Darlene, I hope you both have a great week.
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Dan, we are never out of kid range! I hope you enjoy Amanda’s adventures in Ireland.
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Thanks, Dan. It’s such a pleasure to read the Amanda books, even as an adult.
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This is such a fun post – and congratulations to Darlene for another fantastic review 🥰
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It is a fun post! And I really appreciate the great review. Thanks for your comments, Esther.
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Thanks, Esther! The Amanda series is so much fun! And Darlene does a fantastic job of sneaking in a huge amount of local information.
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This is a terrific and entertaining post,
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I know. I was in stitches.
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Thanks Robbie! So glad you liked it.
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That was fun. Nancy Drew–what great books those were.
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I agree, I loved the Nancy Drew books.
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Thanks so much Jacqui. My (7) sisters and I were huge Nancy Drew fans, so my mother became an expert at finding us “new” ones at garage sales and charity shops.
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7! Oh you are blessed.
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What a fun review…congrats to both of you. Now I need to get down my original Nancy Drew books and read them again. 😊
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They are worth a re-read! Enjoy.
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Happy re-reads!
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Barbara, you cracked me up with your kid-detective tips!
I recently read an enjoyed Amanda in Ireland, too! So fun!
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Wasn’t that brilliant!! Thanks for reading and reviewing Amanda’s adventure in Ireland.
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Thanks, Pricilla. These are such fun books (even for adults).
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What a fun blog tour stop! I have to say that I preferred the Hardy Boys to Nancy Drew. She always had to wait for Ned and Father to rescue, whereas the Hardy Boys could get out of scrapes on their own.
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I liked the Nancy Drew series, but I think I prefer Amanda. She’s brave, AND self-rescuing.
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👍
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For the times, the Nancy Drew stories were great books, but I decided that Amanda needed to work things out for herself. I liked the Hardy Boys also. Thanks, Liz.
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You’re welcome, Darlene.
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Awesome review for an awesome author!! Great post Barb, I got a kick out of it and not to loose track….awesome review of the book!! I’m getting our granddaughter into the series with Amanda…..
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Thanks, Kirt. I’m delighted your well-travelled granddaughter is enjoying these books.
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I love this jam-packed post and the way it has been presented. Thanks Barb. Congratulations Darlene, for another wonderful review.
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As you can imagine, I am delighted with this review and fun post. Thanks Balroop.
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Barb, when I first read Darlene’s Amanda books, I wrote, “Move over, Nancy Drew.” Since then, you’re the first blogger I’ve read to connect Nancy to Amanda. We both know it’s a natural. I love your post, especially your wonderful review. Your kid detective blurbs are pretty cool, too.
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I remember you said that, Jennie. I love that you both connected Amanda to Nancy Drew. Those memes are so funny!
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It’s true!
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Fun post! Nothing like a good kid detective and Amanda is a great one. Enjoyed this one a lot!
Thanks for hosting, Barb :)
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Thanks, Denise. This post certainly brightened my day!
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I never considered all the problems that adults (specifically parents) present to kid detectives! This post made me laugh, Barb. And a great review of Amanda’s latest adventure. I also enjoyed it. Congrats to Darlene.
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I agree, parents really can get in the way of a kid detective! Thanks for your wonderful review as well.
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:-)
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Yes, who indeed could resist a bog that swallows people for any number of years. That would be my first go-to as a teen, or maybe as an old adult. If euthanasia is outlawed, try the neighborhood bog. Your review is fabulous, Barb!
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Thanks, Marsha. Barb really does write a great review. It proves that she gets it. I read this review to my writer’s group today as an example of a well written review, without spoilers.
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Yes, she relies on the stories that have a similarity, and uses her own writing creativity to imagine how it must be for the child sleuth. To be honest, I suspended any disbelief I had when I read girl mystery solvers when I was a girl living a very sheltered life at the time. Have bike will travel, it seemed to me.
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What a fun post that made me laugh, Barb, especially this line: “And you can’t even track bad guys if it’s after your bedtime.” Congrats to Darlene on your fabulous review too. I’ve been entertained by Amanda’s adventures before and look forward to this one in Ireland. 💚
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There are so many funny lines in this post! Thanks, Lauren. I hope you enjoy the Irish adventure.
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So true, Darlene! And I know I will!
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A great review of Darlene’s book! I also liked your amusing take on how to be a kid detective.
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Thanks, Stevie. Barb is at her witty best.
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hahaha, THIS is the kind of content I need in my life. loving it!
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We all do, Maya. Thanks for commenting.
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Hey Darlene, since your content is pretty popular, any tips I can use to improve mine?
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I just finished reading this book and found it very entertaining.
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I am so glad you enjoyed the story! 😀
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Still chuckling over your expose of kid detectives, Barb. I read Enid Blyton from the local library, but I don’t think they stocked Nancy Drew. I’m strangely drawn to reading one of them now… Congratulations to Darlene on Amanda in Scotland.
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What a fun post, Barb. I also enjoyed your review. I liked your comparison of Amanda to your tips.
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Thanks, Carla. This was such a great post. Barb has such an amazing imagination and sense of humour.
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