Charlie and Frog (Charlie and Frog, 1)

by Karen Kane

Charlie and Frog (1)

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While staying with his grandparents in Castle-on-the-Hudson, Charlie stumbles upon a mystery but must learn American Sign Language to keep up with Frog, a deaf girl who wants to help solve it.

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2 reviews
What liked best about this book: the friendship between Charlie and Frog. :) Charlie's ability to fingerspell and the way he's willing to learn new signs. The American Sign Language woven into the story is so much fun. Code you can spell silently is very useful in a mystery.

Charlie has his work cut out for him to win over his television-addicted grandparents. He rises to the challenge of getting them into new hobbies in one funny attempt after another.

A castle on the Hudson River is a fun setting for a boarding school. Libraries are at the center of the action. Bad guys litter gum wrappers. The police chief is building her vocabulary.

Sometimes the story was mysterious, but it is a mystery. I didn't quite figure out how the kids knew show more Aggie had gone up to the castle.

This is a fun story to read and might be even more fun to read in a group, where you can all act out the signs as the story moves forward. Worthwhile.

SPOILER: I liked that it wasn't a murder mystery after all.
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Ahearing boy and his deaf friend use ASL, gondolas, and the Dewey decimal system to solve a mystery in Kane’s debut middle-grade novel.

Charlie struggles to be heard. His parents traipse around the globe saving rare animals, leaving him in the care of his grandparents, who would rather watch TV than engage. That changes when he boards a rickety gondola to the Flying Hands Cafe, part of the Castle School for the Deaf. There he meets Frog, an energetic deaf girl intrigued by a mystery swirling around her favorite author. The solid narrative includes a zany cast of characters (none of whom are explicitly racialized), a fast-moving plot, and a low-stakes but suspenseful mystery. What makes this story stand out is the depiction of Deaf show more culture and community, likely drawn from the author’s education and work as an interpreter. Uninformed readers will learn some signs and letters of the alphabet, both from the writing and the finely detailed illustrations heading each chapter, as well as absorbing information about ASL and Deaf etiquette. (For example, Charlie’s grandmother asks if he and Frog are sweethearts; when Frog asks what Grandma said, the embarrassed Charlie “almost wrote ‘never mind’ before he realized how rude that would be. Frog had a right to know.”) Deaf readers, as well as hearing children with deaf family members and others enmeshed in Deaf community, will see familiar cultural markers, such as the “Deaf can” motto and the school’s importance in the local community.

An enjoyable read that artfully mixes adventure, heart, and cultural competence. (Mystery. 7-12)

-Kirkus Review
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Series

Common Knowledge

Original publication date
2018
Dedication
To David, Hayley, and Isa
and to my mom, Louise
to my dad, Billy
and to my grandma Vera,
who taught me Kings Corners
First words
Charlie's grandparents forgot he was in the room, which is how he ended up watching Vince Vinelli's Worst Criminals Ever!, wrapped in a blanket, terrified yet unable to look away.
Last words
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)Frog nodded. "That."

Classifications

Genres
Kids, Tween, Fiction and Literature
DDC/MDS
813.6Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican fiction in English2000-
LCC
PZ7.1 .K24Language and LiteratureFiction and juvenile belles lettresFiction and juvenile belles lettresJuvenile belles lettres
BISAC

Statistics

Members
288
Popularity
111,405
Reviews
2
Rating
½ (4.29)
Languages
English, Spanish
Media
Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
ISBNs
9
ASINs
2