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A. E. Parker

Author of Who Killed Mr. Boddy?

15 Works 2,187 Members 14 Reviews

About the Author

Includes the name: A.E. Parker

Disambiguation Notice:

This is a nom de plume used in place of the names of the four authors of the Clue Series.

Series

Works by A. E. Parker

Who Killed Mr. Boddy? (1992) 334 copies, 5 reviews
The Secret Secret Passage (Clue Books) (1992) 255 copies, 1 review
The Case of the Invisible Cat (Clue, Book 3) (1992) 250 copies, 2 reviews
Mystery at the Masked Ball (1993) 192 copies, 1 review
Midnight Phone Calls (1994) 173 copies, 1 review
Revenge of the Mummy (1996) 159 copies, 2 reviews
The Screaming Skeleton (1995) 143 copies
Booby-Trapped! (Clue, Book 6) (1994) 123 copies, 1 review
The Picture-Perfect Crime (1994) 116 copies
Death by Candlelight (1995) 106 copies
The Clue in the Shadows (1995) — Creator — 103 copies
Mystery in the Moonlight (1995) 100 copies
The Haunted Gargoyle (1996) 75 copies, 1 review
The Dangerous Diamond (1996) 56 copies

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Common Knowledge

Gender
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Disambiguation notice
This is a nom de plume used in place of the names of the four authors of the Clue Series.

Members

Reviews

14 reviews
As a child I adored these books (in part because of my love of that eminently classic 1985 film) but I also hope/think it gets better as the series goes on. This book is enjoyable enough for child sleuths, but it stumbles in that most of the mysteries here are essentially elaborations on what could be a single-paragraph riddle. "If person X went through these rooms in this order, and still had an item in room C but had lost it by room E, what room could it be in?", or "if there were crumbs show more on A, B and C, mud on the shoes of B, C and D, and chalk powder on B and D, which one of them had all the telltale signs of the murder?" (with the book helpfully telling you what you need to do). Sometimes even something as simple as a sentence worded in such a way as to be at first exonerating but in fact guilt-proving. These are intended for kids, but not little kids, and I'd like something a bit meatier. I think the later books have a bit more fun with creating miniature puzzles where the reader has to do a touch of work. The narrative voice is good fun, though. show less
It's one of those mystery books with the answers at back, like the Encyclopedia Brown books. Unlike those, it doesn't depend on knowing some more-or-less obscure fact; it requires answering a simple logic problem, like really tiny versions of the ones sold in magazines at the drug store. I'd say it's for a younger audience than Encyclopedia Brown books, and certainly not an older audience; say, eight to twelve maybe. (Take with salt.) As such, there's the murder of a pet, lots of theft, show more violence, fake death, and capping it off the real death of Mr. Boddy, all done with the same comic lightness you'd expect from a Clue book. show less
Mr. Boddy has invited his six best friends to be guests at his mansion for the weekend. When this weird and wacky crew get together, anything can happen. Follow along with their antics as you match up characters and crimes. Exciting mind-bending mini-mysteries to test your ability as a sleuth.
Mr. Boddy has invited his six best friends to his mansion for the weekend, and when he outwits them with security cameras, they plan revenge.

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Statistics

Works
15
Members
2,187
Popularity
#11,726
Rating
½ 3.5
Reviews
14
ISBNs
30

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