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Book Reviews of Secret of the Emerald Star

Secret of the Emerald Star
Secret of the Emerald Star
Author: Phyllis A. Whitney
ISBN-13: 9780664323370
ISBN-10: 0664323375
Publication Date: 6/1965
Pages: 233
Reading Level: Ages 9-12
Rating:
  • Currently 2.5/5 Stars.
 2

2.5 stars, based on 2 ratings
Publisher: Westminster John Knox Pr
Book Type: Hardcover
Reviews: Amazon | Write a Review

3 Book Reviews submitted by our Members...sorted by voted most helpful

beabirder avatar reviewed Secret of the Emerald Star on + 12 more book reviews
I read this book when I was in elementary school and I LOVED it. The plot twists are very exciting, and the relationships between the various characters fascinating. I saved my old dog-eared copy, and read it to my own daughters chapter by chapter as a bedtime mystery. They LOVED it as well. I think this story stands the test of time, and I will always fondly remember it as one of my childhood favorites.
reviewed Secret of the Emerald Star on + 227 more book reviews
Prior library book. Young adult mystery.
pamgram1 avatar reviewed Secret of the Emerald Star on + 102 more book reviews
http://www.phyllisawhitney.com/SecretoftheEmeraldStar.htm

To Mrs. Devery, whose whole world is Staten Island, strangers are not people: they are Jews or Catholics or Cubans or whatever is unlike herself, and therefore very strange indeed. All of which is rather ironic, of course, since the children of the neighborhood look upon the provincial, autocratic old woman herself as a witch.

How well the label fits, thirteen-year-old Robin Ward is in a better position than most to know. She and her family are newcomers to secluded, fading Catalpa Court. From the window of her third-floor bedroom she commands a perfect view of the balconies and turrets of the house next door-can see everything that happens within the shrouded grounds of the big, forbidding Devery place.

None of that first weird scene seems real. Round and round on the front lawn turns a girl in a white dress, her arms out wide as if she were flying, her voice making the tuneless, high-pitched sound of an insect. Suddenly the white-haired mistress of the house, dressed in clothes of another era, rushes toward the girl, grasps her angrily by the arm and virtually drags her away.

A famous sculptor also living in Catalpa Court is willing to teach a limited number of talented beginners. Robin's eagerness to qualify becomes inextricably involved not only with the strange girl and her grim "jailer" but with the fate of a valuable pin made of emeralds and a diamond and shaped like a star. Mystery and menace progressively deepen with Mrs. Devery's behavior amid the ruins of an old house and her association with a short, fat man whose white moon face, bald head, and habit of sucking lemon drops add chills to each sinister moment he appears. Completely unmysterious is the point dramatized by this excellent and exciting book that prejudices about people can only harm the prejudiced.