Pages: 321
Intended Audience: Teens
Genre: Murder Mystery
Notes for Parents: Contains coarse
language, drinking, drug use, smoking, death, and other mature scenes
The Back Cover
The last thing Jamie Watson wants is a rugby
scholarship to Sherringford, a Connecticut prep school just an hour away from
his estranged father. But that’s not the only complication: Sherringford is
also home to Charlotte Holmes, the famous detective’s
great-great-great-granddaughter, who has inherited not only Sherlock’s genius
but also his volatile temperament.
From the moment they meet, there’s a tense energy
between them, and they seem more destined to be rivals than anything else. But
when a Sherringford student dies under suspicious circumstances, ripped
straight from the most terrifying of the Sherlock Holmes stories, Jamie can no
longer afford to keep his distance. Jamie and Charlotte are being framed for
murder.
What the cover doesn’t tell you:
This is the first book in a series.
What’s good?
The descendants of the legendary Sherlock Holmes
and John Watson find themselves at the same American boarding school and become
embroiled in, you guessed it, a murder mystery. Jamie Watson is a typical
awkward teen that has fantasized about solving crimes with the Charlotte
Holmes, but when the opportunity presents itself, it’s more than he bargained
for. The plot is strong and the pace is steady. There’s mystery, romance,
humour, danger, and lots of deductive reasoning.
Best Part: Jamie Watson.
What isn’t good?
The chapters were long, the action was sparse, and
Charlotte Holmes was impossible to like. In an attempt to make Charlotte like
her great-great-great-grandfather Sherlock Holmes, the author made her smart,
obnoxious, a gambler, a narcissist, and addicted to drugs. Unfortunately, she
had none of the charisma that made Sherlock entertaining despite his many
flaws. Heavy topics like rape, drug addiction, and murder were treated lightly
while family and friendship issues were overdramatized.
Worst part: Charlotte
Holmes.
Recommendation ☺☺ (2.5/5)
I just didn’t buy it. The
story was trying to be a modern day retelling of the original, but it didn’t
translate well with gender reversed teens playing the parts of a crotchety
detective and his sidekick. It has murder, mystery, and even sophistication,
but it’s missing the idiosyncrasies of the original. There are better Sherlock
reincarnations out there.
Cavallaro, Brittany. A Study in Charlotte. New York: Katherine Tegen Books, 2017.
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