Saturday, November 29, 2025

Agatha, Girl of Mystery #4 - The Heist at Niagara Falls

It's been over a year now since I read my last Agatha, Girl of Mystery book, so I figured it was about time to pick up the next book in the series.  This truly has been a fun series to read thus far, and I have to smile with each character's name - author Sir Steve Stephenson is clearly having loads of fun using names associated with many well-known crime-solving literary sleuths!  Agatha (as in Christie), Dashiell (as in Hammett), Mr. Marlowe (as in Philip), Chandler (as in Raymond), Watson (as in that certain doctor of Holmes fame), Scarlett (a game of Clue, or perhaps Cluedo, anyone?) and the list goes on!  It's literally a smorgasbord of famous sleuths, and the stories remind us that of all them, none can hold a candle to the queen of crime herself - Agatha Christie!
 
The Heist at Niagara Falls
follows Agatha and her inept brother, Dashiell, along with their butler, Chandler, and Agatha's pampered and obnoxious Siberan cat, Watson, as they cross the Atlantic to stop a jewel thief on the Canadian border.  As always, it is starts with poor Dashiell, as he receives an urgent message from Eye International, sending him on a new mission - there has been a theft from the Overlook Hotel at Niagara Falls, and Dashiell is to get there, find the culprit, and recover the stolen jewels (p. 24).  Of course, Dashiell knows he could never do it himself, so he rushes to Agatha and asks for her help (and, as an aspiring mystery writer with a mind just chock-full of information, she's more than willing to help!).  Thus, it's a rush to the airport to catch the next flight to New York, where they are picked up by their cousin, Scarlett Mistery, who just happens to be a journalist and joins them on their quest to catch the crook.
 
What I found amusing is that the "Overlook Hotel," which is the scene of the crime where Madame Hofstetter's jewels were stolen (Hoffstetter?  Any relation to Leonard?), is the name of the hotel from Stephen King's horror novel, The Shining.  That book came out in 1977, while this book was originally published in Italy in 2011, so there is a possibility that the author used that name for the hotel as a nod to King.  There is no actual "Overlook Hotel" in Canada.
 
Stevenson has Agatha utilize her exceptional skills of observation and deduction to pick up clues and connect the dots that most people miss, and she soon comes to the conclusion that the thief was none other than Ratmusque, Canada's most notorious thief (who is actually a man named Rick Moriarty - hmmm, that last name sure sound familiar, doesn't it?).  But according to sources, he gave up his criminal activities years ago, so why start back up now?  Agatha and her crew are determined to find out.   They track the mastermind to a secluded cabin, where they nearly run down a Canadian Royal Mountie, who agrees to help them find the culprit.  The trail leads them to the Dark Sky Preserves, which is an actual location in Canada that allows you to get away from the bright lights of the city and gaze up at the stars free from any distracting lights (Dark-Sky Preserves).  Thus, without any distractions, it is here that Agatha realizes they have been chasing after the wrong crook all this time, and she reveals the identity of the true thief before he can disappear with the fortune in jewels!
 
These books are not meant to be heavy reading - at just a little over 100 pages in length, they are simply fun mysteries starring a young Agatha (Christie?) tracking down criminals in order to help her brother succeed at his school for spies.  They are similar to the 10-book Greetings from Somewhere series by Harper Paris, which also features a brother/sister team of kids who travel around the world solving mysteries everywhere they go - only the Agatha series is aimed an audience with a bit high reading level.  As the blurb on the back cover says, "With the smarts of Nancy Drew and the charm of Eloise, Agatha is an exciting addition to the girl-detective canon." (School Library Journal)  If you are looking for something light and quick to read, these are the books for you!
 
RATING:  9 stolen magnetic key cards out of 10 for mystery and adventure in Canada, from the Falls to the Muskoka, and plenty of places in-between! 

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