Thea Stilton and the Dragon's Code
by Thea Stilton
Thea Stilton (1), Geronimo Stilton (Thea Stilton — 1)
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Thea Stilton and her journalism class try to find a missing student.Tags
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Written by Italian author Elisabetta Dami under one of her pseudonyms, this is a children’s chapter book, aimed at (I would guess) ages 6-8.
Thea Stilton is a star alumna of Mouseford Academy and has been invited to return as a professor of journalism. On the ferry ride to Whale Island, on which the Academy is situated, she meets five young mouselings who will be her students: Nicky, Colette, Violet, Paulina and Pamela. Once they arrive, however, things start to go missing and they join together to solve the mystery.
Okay, I get that I’m not the target audience (by a couple of generations), but I don’t think I would have liked this when I was a young kid. I find the “cuteness” of using “mouse” as an alternative spelling show more for any adjective normally ending is “mous” (e.g. famous) and adding all sorts of “special effects” to the printing by changing fonts and colors irritating. Just tell a good story! And this one isn’t all that good.
I also do not get why the author uses as a nom de plume the name of her main character, who is a mouse!
I’ll give it two stars because I know she’s sold bajillions of books and kids, apparently, really like them. But, frankly, I wouldn’t buy them for any kid I know and I wouldn’t encourage them to read them. There are many far better children’s books out there. show less
Thea Stilton is a star alumna of Mouseford Academy and has been invited to return as a professor of journalism. On the ferry ride to Whale Island, on which the Academy is situated, she meets five young mouselings who will be her students: Nicky, Colette, Violet, Paulina and Pamela. Once they arrive, however, things start to go missing and they join together to solve the mystery.
Okay, I get that I’m not the target audience (by a couple of generations), but I don’t think I would have liked this when I was a young kid. I find the “cuteness” of using “mouse” as an alternative spelling show more for any adjective normally ending is “mous” (e.g. famous) and adding all sorts of “special effects” to the printing by changing fonts and colors irritating. Just tell a good story! And this one isn’t all that good.
I also do not get why the author uses as a nom de plume the name of her main character, who is a mouse!
I’ll give it two stars because I know she’s sold bajillions of books and kids, apparently, really like them. But, frankly, I wouldn’t buy them for any kid I know and I wouldn’t encourage them to read them. There are many far better children’s books out there. show less
Y4 : It is fantastic
Very suspenseful and gives clues along the way.
Theas first book
¿Qué ocultan los sótanos de la antigua Universidad de Ratford? ¿Quién ha raptado a Hans RAtonilo? Un misterio que sólo podrían resolver cinco chicas muy especiales: ¡el Club de Tea! Ésta es la historia de su primera e increíble aventura.
Jul 16, 2013Spanish
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Author Information

1,271 Works 101,709 Members
Geronimo Stilton was born in New Mouse City, Mouse Island. He is Rattus Emeritus of Mousomorphic Literature and Neo-Ratonic Comparative Philosophy. In his spare time, Mr. Stilton collects antique cheese rinds and plays golf. But what he most enjoys is telling stories to his nephew Benjamin.
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Common Knowledge
- Canonical title
- Thea Stilton and the Dragon's Code
- Original title
- Il codice del drago
- Original publication date
- 2005
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- Members
- 916
- Popularity
- 29,095
- Reviews
- 5
- Rating
- (3.81)
- Languages
- 9 — Catalan, Dutch, English, French, German, Hungarian, Italian, Russian, Spanish
- Media
- Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 32
- ASINs
- 7





























































