Colin Fischer
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4.2 • 20 Ratings
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- $8.99
Publisher Description
In this modern-day Sherlock Holmes, a brilliant young mind armed with index cards decides to step in and prove that the school bully is . . . innocent?
“The tension between the brilliant crime-solver and the boy more in need of friendship than he ever realized is what makes Colin such a memorable character.”—J.M. DeMatties, award-winning author of Brooklyn Dreams
“Colin is like an alien anthropologist stranded on Earth, with no choice but to master the local social codes and try to pass as human, or perish.”—Lev Grossman, New York Times bestselling author of The Magicians
Solving crime, one facial expression at a time . . .
Colin Fischer just started his freshman year of high school. He has flash cards with hand-labeled facial expressions, an uncanny knowledge of genetics and classic cinema, and a tattered, dog-eared notebook that he uses to record his experiences with the “very interesting” population around him.
But when a handgun goes off in the school cafeteria, interrupting a female classmate’s birthday celebration, Colin is the only one for the investigation. It’s up to him to prove that Wayne Connelly, the school bully and Colin’s frequent tormenter, didn’t bring the gun to school. After all, Wayne didn’t have frosting on his hands, and there was white frosting found on the grip of the smoking gun. . . .
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
The screenwriting team behind X-Men: First Class and Thor make their YA debut with the story of a teenager with Asperger's syndrome solving a crime, a premise that can't help evoking Mark Haddon's The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time. Kids constantly target high school freshman Colin, who struggles to understand their facial expressions or jokes, and who sometimes barks when upset. When a gun goes off in the school cafeteria, Colin uses his considerable observational skills and powers of logic to prove that Wayne, a bully who put Colin's head in the toilet on the first day of school, wasn't responsible (when an incredulous Wayne asks Colin why he is helping, Colin simply replies, "You're innocent"). Through journal entries that begin each chapter and footnotes about everything from genetic chimerism to false dichotomies, readers get a strong sense of how Colin's brain works. Beyond Colin and his parents, though, the other characters are somewhat flat. Even so, readers will be drawn into the mystery and intrigued by Colin's vision of the world. Ages 12 up.
Customer Reviews
I love this book
So in the beginning it was kinda boring and I guess that because it was summer break and I didn't want to do my summer reading so I didn't enhance it at first but now I honestly 100% love I would recommend this to anyone
Best book ever
I read the hard copy and it was great! Best book ever!