Friday means Friday’s Forgotten Books hosted by Patti Abbott. Make sure
you check out the full list over at Todd Mason's blog.
THE
MALTED FALCON (2003) by Bruce Hale
Reviewed
by Barry Ergang
No ordinary fourth-grader at Emerson Hicky Elementary, Chet Gecko,
along with his mockingbird partner Natalie Attired, is a private detective. In
this, his seventh case, he’s hired by a female frog whose “eyes shone large and
luminous” who says her name is Dot Maytricks. She claims her sister is in love
with a roughneck fifth-grader, Bert Umber, to whom she sent a valentine. Dot
wants Chet to retrieve the card to prevent her sister’s reputation from being
sullied.
Chet has hardly begun when Principal Zero and Vice Principal Shrewer haul
Bert away for setting off a fire drill, and Natalie identifies “Dot” as a
classmate by her real name that I won’t reveal here. But when Chet and Natalie
look for her, they discover that “(S)he was as hard to find as a bully’s
conscience.”
Not long after, a prairie dog named Freddie Nostrils wants to hire Chet
to recover the winning ticket for the Malted Falcon, a giant dessert a local
candy shop will serve the winner once a week for an entire year. Nostrils says
a friend of his lost the ticket. When Chet says he already has a case, Nostrils
says he’ll double the fee. Chet can’t resist. His investigation puts him up
against a hostile tuatara named Little Gino, a pair of muskrats who are the
henchmen of the mysterious Mr. Big, Mr. Big himself, and trouble in the form of
“dames” from whom Chet fears he might contract cooties.
Despite the title of this particular entry in the series, Chet Gecko is
stylistically far more akin to Philip Marlowe than to Sam Spade. He has irreverent
wisecracks for every occasion. The book is loaded with Chandlerian similes—e.g.,
“He staggered under the impact like a soap opera queen at cancellation time.” “Freddie’s
skinny body twitched like a silkworm in a light socket.” “My mind was racing
like a cheetah on espresso.”
The series is obviously targeted at a
young audience. I’ve seen one site that claims it’s aimed at 7-10 year
olds, another that says 9-12. It’s unlikely that anyone in the former group
will have any sense of the kind of adult fiction the series is spoofing. It’s remotely possible that some precocious
mystery readers in the latter group might. Regardless, this is a great and very
entertaining series by which parents can introduce their children to fun reads,
and have fun themselves if so inclined.
I recently discovered this series by accident, stumbling upon mention
of it while looking up on the Internet something entirely unrelated. With
titles (fifteen, as of this writing) like Farewell,
My Lunchbag, The Hamster of the
Baskervilles, and Hiss Me Deadly,
I had to check out one of them. I’m
glad I did and, despite having no kids of my own, the kid in me thoroughly
enjoyed meeting Chet Gecko. One of these days I might read some of his other
cases because they’re clever and comical, and I imagine many other adult
private eye-fiction fans will get a kick out of them as well.
Definitely recommended.
For additional information see http://brucehale.com/series/chet-gecko-series/
© Barry Ergang 2018
Derringer Award-winner Barry Ergang’s “The Mall Tea’s Fall Kin” is
among the stories in PUN-ishing Tales:
The Stuff That Groans Are Made On, which is available at Amazon
and Smashwords.
Sounds great, Barry! I'll be looking for a copy.
ReplyDeleteI'm going to try The Hamster of Baskervilles.
ReplyDeleteJerry & Rick, I'll be interested to hear what you think of whichever titles you read.
ReplyDeleteCan't stop laughing at the title. Great find, Barry! This series looks to be one helluva hoot!
ReplyDeleteAnything called The Malted Falcon has to be worth a look. Many thanks for the tipoff!
ReplyDelete