Reviews for The case of the missing marquess Enola holmes series, book 1. [electronic resource] :

Horn Book
(c) Copyright The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

After a purple-prosy introduction to the sights, sounds, and smells of Victorian London, readers meet fourteen-year-old Enola Holmes, Sherlock's kid sister. Plucky and insightful, Enola deciphers why her mother disappeared, and she bolts for the same reason: to avoid the strictures of a patriarchal society. While on the run, Enola solves a second mystery, again beating Sherlock to the punch. (c) Copyright 2010. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted. All rights reserved.


Kirkus
Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

With gleeful panache, Springer introduces an innocent but capable young sleuth—the younger sister of Mycroft and Sherlock Holmes, no less—and takes her from wild English countryside to the soupy filth of Victorian London. Having led a free-spirited but cloistered life on the ancestral country estate, 14-year-old Enola Holmes is thrown for a loop by her mother's sudden disappearance—not to mention the subsequent arrival of her long-absent big brothers, both of whom turn out to be overbearing and dismissive of women. Rather than meekly knuckle under, though, Enola makes careful preparation (she thinks) and slips off to track her wayward parent down. On the way, she falls into the furor surrounding an apparent kidnapping (see title)—and then, barely does she arrive in the big city before some authentically scary ruffians snatch her, too. Naïve but a quick study, and more resourceful than even her renowned siblings, Enola resolutely surmounts each challenge that comes her way. By the end, she has rescued the spoiled young aristocrat, eluded her brothers, gotten a lead on her mother thanks to a series of cleverly coded messages and even set herself up as a "Perditorian"—a finder of lost things and people. A tasty appetizer, with every sign of further courses to come. (Fiction. 10-12) Copyright ©Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

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