Skip to main content

Furious Jones and the Assassin's Secret


Furious Jones and the Assassin's Secret
by Tim Kehoe
Simon and Schuster, 2014.  325 pgs.  Mystery

     Furious Jones has good reason to be furious. His mother has recently been killed in what was supposed to have been a "wrong time, wrong place" drive by shooting in Galena, Ohio, and when he goes to see his father give a lecture, his dad is gunned down in front of him. Furious actually got his name as a baby when he was born swinging and punched the doctor in the face, but now he is both frightened and angry because everyone he loves has been taken from him, and he is on the run from everyone because he doesn't know whom to trust.  Furious Jones and the Assassin's Secret not only strains credibility, it rips it to shreds and stomps on it: could a great group of people in the witness protection program really all be safely relocated to the same small town?  and if those people started dying, one after the other, in gruesome "accidents," wouldn't everyone else want to get out of town? and could a twelve-year-old boy really outwit and outrun the full resources of the FBI?  Still, Furious is a fine young man in a bad spot and no matter how often you think "huh?!" while you are reading, you keep on going to find out what happens, which itself is pretty strange.  An excellent book for young people (6th grade and up) who enjoyed Anthony Horowitz's Alex Rider series.  

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Stand Tall by Joan Bauer

Stand Tall By Siena Siegel by Joan Bauer Putnam, 2002, 182 pgs Realistic Fiction Tree is 12 years old and over 6 feet tall. That would be great if he were a basketball player, but he is not. Dealing with his unusual size is not Tree's only challenge. Tree's parents have recently gone through a divorce, and his grandfather has had his leg amputated as the result of an old Vietnam War injury. The strength of this book is the characterizations. All of the main characters are dimensional and sympathetic. Bauer sets the characters in real and often funny family situations. Best of all is the character of Tree. He is boy with a heart to match his stature. This is a great book for boys or girls ages 9-12, as a read aloud or for individual reading. This book could also be a good Rx book for children whose families are going through divorce, or for anyone who feels like they don't fit in.

Review: The New Girl

The New Girl By Cassandra Calin New York: Graphix, 2024. Comic. 261 pages. 12-year-old Lia and her family have just moved from Romania to Montreal, and she's doing her best to keep up with the changes. But, she's homesick. She misses the rest of her family, her friends, and her favorite Romanian treats. She doesn't speak French and her English is shaky, which makes it hard to make friends, even in her international immersion class. And she's dealing with super painful menstrual cramps every month. But before long, Lia starts to hit her stride. She befriends the other bilingual girls in her class, she gets a spot as the artist for her school's magazine, and even has a new crush -- Julien. Though she may be the new girl, Lia is starting to fit in. This slice of life graphic novel is an adorable choice for middle grade readers and young teens. Lia is a likable protagonist and readers will have little difficulty relating to her adjustment to school. The text speaks to a...

Review: Cincinnati Lee, Curse Breaker

  Cincinnati Lee, Curse Breaker By Heidi Heilig New York: Greenwillow Books, 2025. Fiction. 291 pages. Thanks to Cincinnati Lee's no good, dirty rotten, artifact stealing great great great grandfather, Cincinnati's family is now cursed and Cincinnati feels like it's up to her to break the curse. Which involves trying to steal the artifacts back from museums that her grandfather robbed from graves and archeological sites around the world and return them to their countries of origin. But when Cincinnati's first artifact stealing mission goes awry, she decides it might be more effective to steal an all-powerful artifact herself that she can use to break the curse - The Spear of Destiny. Unfortunately her race for the spear will pit her against art smugglers and thieves intent on finding the ancient artifact themselves. If you are looking for an Indiana Jones read-alike, this is the perfect for you! Heavy on the adventure with similar levels of mysticism to those seen in th...