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Someone was watching [sound recording] / David Patneaude.

By: Material type: SoundSoundPublisher number: C2168 | Recorded BooksPublication details: Prince Frederick, MD : Recorded Books, p1997, c1993.Description: 4 compact discs (ca. 5 hrs., 30 min.) : digitalISBN:
  • 1402551886
Subject(s): Genre/Form: Cast: Narrated by Jeff Woodman.Summary: When his little sister disappears from the river near their summer home, eighth grader Chris won't believe that she has drowned, especially when his video of that day contains evidence that something entirely different has happened to her.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Shelving location Call number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Adult Audiobook Phillipsburg Free Public Library YA Audiobooks YA Audiobooks YA AV FIC PAT [CD] Available 674891001485271
Total holds: 0

Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

Someone was Watching

Unabridged.

Narrated by Jeff Woodman.

When his little sister disappears from the river near their summer home, eighth grader Chris won't believe that she has drowned, especially when his video of that day contains evidence that something entirely different has happened to her.

Reviews provided by Syndetics

School Library Journal Review

Gr 5-8-- Fans of the Hardy Boys are sure to find Patneaude's first novel even better. Chris and his best friend, Pat, have a couple of weeks of summer vacation in which to defy disbelieving parents and fly from Wisconsin to Florida on a special mission: to rescue Chris's three-year-old sister, presumed drowned, from kidnappers. While there is some evidence that Molly is dead and that the clues Chris gleans from a video are only wishful thinking, Patneaude quickly has readers as hopeful as Chris that she is alive. Middle schoolers will love it--and hopefully not get the idea to withdraw their savings accounts and head for who knows what part of the world. (Questioning 13-year-olds doesn't seem to be part of the travel agent's or hotel clerk's agendas). Light (considering the potentially tragic subject matter), lightly sexist, and capably written, the novel doesn't hit readers with guilt like, say, Marion Bauer's On My Honor (Clarion, 1986), but touches on personal tragedy, fear, counseling, hope, and spirit in a contemporary buddy/action story.-- John Sigwald, Unger Memorial Library, Plainview, TX (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Booklist Review

Gr. 6-9. Mystery lovers will delight in this suspenseful, realistic detective story. Thirteen-year-old David suspects that, perhaps, his baby sister has not drowned at the family summer home, but has been kidnapped instead. While his parents don't believe him, his best friend gives him the support he needs to follow the clues and solve the mystery. The two boys, knowing their parents won't approve, take off on adventures destined to support their theories. What young sleuth hasn't dreamed of withdrawing money from the bank and flying across the country to apprehend the criminal? The boys stay in a motel, eat in restaurants, and snatch the child back from the kidnappers, all without help from adults. Not a realistic scenario, but Patneaude makes it believable. The story really works; readers won't be able to put it down. ~--Susan DeRonne

Horn Book Review

Thirteen-year-old Chris and his family are trying to move on with their lives after his little sister disappears and is presumed drowned. Then Chris discovers evidence that Molly was abducted, and he travels from Wisconsin to Florida with his best friend to solve the kidnapping. An improbable scenario with some inexpert writing, but Patneaude does a great job of maintaining suspense. (c) Copyright 2010. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Kirkus Book Review

The sadness pervading the first few pages of this decently written first novel is almost overwhelming: Chris and his parents return to the summer home where his toddler sister Molly apparently drowned three months earlier; the family is just beginning to come to grips with their loss. Viewing a videotape made that terrible day, Chris interprets it with poignant optimism--maybe Molly was kidnapped, maybe she's alive, maybe he can find her. With longtime best friend Pat (and without the knowledge of his parents, who are suitably skeptical about the scenario he envisions), Chris travels to Florida and locates the elderly couple who have convinced Molly that she belongs to them. So much of this mild adventure works that it seems almost curmudgeonly to point out its faults: the boyish eighth graders encounter no real difficulties in their journey; the kidnappers' motives, arrest, and punishment are barely hinted at; there's an unsettling shift to Molly's point of view that all but confirms the outcome, diffusing any lingering suspense. But holding everything together are the characters' feelings; their grief and reactions to various dilemmas are so pure and credible that readers will willingly put doubts aside to join in the search. (Fiction. 11-13)
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