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Book Reviews of The Secret Life of Copernicus H. Stringfellow

The Secret Life of Copernicus H. Stringfellow
The Secret Life of Copernicus H Stringfellow
Author: Lorin Barber
ISBN-13: 9781599559292
ISBN-10: 1599559293
Publication Date: 3/6/2012
Pages: 304
Rating:
  • Currently 2.8/5 Stars.
 4

2.8 stars, based on 4 ratings
Publisher: Cedar Fort, Inc.
Book Type: Paperback
Reviews: Amazon | Write a Review

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

donkeycheese avatar reviewed The Secret Life of Copernicus H. Stringfellow on + 1255 more book reviews
What a fun story! Even though it's geared toward a younger audience, anyone can find enjoyment in the Secret Life of Copernicus Stringfellow! Nick thinks that twinkies are brainfood, and although I've not heard that before, he is certainly knowledgeable in most things.


Nick just wants to help people and that's how he spends his life. From one area to the next, he's helping people in his own way. There is alot of trivia in these pages that not only educated me, but really made Nick look super smart. The secondary characters paled in comparison to him. Some of their actions and responses weren't credible. The writing is compelling and entertaining; the pages just raced by as I was immersed in Nick's adventure. With some laugh out loud moments and a good moral - do good unto others, The Secret Life of Copernicus Stringfellow is a great read that I would recommend to anyone. Although Barber's debut, I look forward to his next work!
crytal avatar reviewed The Secret Life of Copernicus H. Stringfellow on + 155 more book reviews
This book was very fun! It has a bit of everything in it, and I mean everything. Math, physics, mystery, comedy, romance, history. And the Puget Sound, which is where I've always lived.
joann avatar reviewed The Secret Life of Copernicus H. Stringfellow on + 402 more book reviews
Copernicus (Nick) H. Stringfellow is an average-looking, very tall man. He is driving in Washington and has picked up a hitchhiker, Molly, who claims she is sixteen, although Nick can tell that she probably isn't any older than thirteen.


Nick has a conversation with Molly and convinces her to go back to her home, which is in a pretty run-down area in a tenement complex. Molly's mom is worn out and tired and unemployed. Nick pulls out a roll of bills and tells Molly's mom to just love her daughter and has guaranteed her a job with a friend of his. Good deed accomplished!

Nick arrives at Harborview Hospital and consults with Theodore S. Furney, M.D., the medical director. Dr. Furney, an old friend, offers many positions to Nick, but Nick would like the position of Nurse-At-Large. Dr. Furney believes that the position is not good enough, a waste of Nick's talent.

Nick then proceeds to go about purchasing a run-down house, paying an outrageous amount in $100 bills. He then advertises, at the hospital, for a gardener, housekeeper, and interior decorator. He hires 3 people who have become down on their luck and assures them salaries of between $3,000 to $4,000 per month.

Nick's work at the hospital brings him into contact with some very good people and some not-so-good people. Nick seems to

have knowledge about everything, from medical to languages to protective instincts. He is consistently running into a woman who he considers the most beautiful woman he has ever seen, Dr. Prescilla Spurbeck. They are butting heads, as Nick seems to be everywhere and looking in on patients in all areas of the hospital.

It seems that Nick has a nutritional secret. He ingests Twinkies, sometimes 20 at a time, that make him become a superhero. He has many cute little names for his dietary super-food including Fantastic Focus Factors, Salubrious Segments of Sagacity, etc.

Nick performs many heroic acts throughout the book, although on a quiet basis and never seems to be conscious of his super-hero abilities. He really is just an ordinary guy with some very intelligent means of accomplishing super feats.

He acquires a group of friends at the hospital and watches over these people surreptitiously. We learn about his childhood, how intelligent he was and the history of his always learning and the fact that he entered college(s) at the age of eleven, even though he could have been entered at the age of six.

This is a very cute story, although some of the medical jargon was a little much, although that is exactly how Nick would be thinking, so tolerable. I hope that Lorin Barber writes a second novel so that we can follow Nick on his next adventure.