Review by Booklist Review
The Mysterious Benedict Society is back! The cast has aged, but the criminal contingency, amped-up action, and derring-do remain the same. Now teenagers, bright-bulb Reynie, intrepid Kate, and Sticky, he of the photographic memory, have the biggest fight ever on their hands. All of the bad guys from previous books (a baker's dozen of them) have returned with revenge on their minds and nefarious plans in their pockets, along with all sorts of instruments of evil. Also in attendance is the ever-contrary Constance Contraire, now a preteen, and with her is a telepath like herself, the adorable, five-year-old Tai. There's no point in trying to describe the ins and outs of the adventure, other than to say that at times it's convoluted but always high octane. What Stewart does so well here is hearken back to the first book, where the characters were introduced and readers got inside their heads and their evolving relationships. Now old enough to think about lives outside the Society, Reynie, Sticky, and Kate are doing just that. But the notion that things might and can change, depending on their own decisions, brings a new awkwardness to their relationships, along with the trepidation that even kids who aren't geniuses face. And then there are the telepaths: Constance, who's as obnoxious and angry as ever, though this time she's tempered by discovering her true feelings; and the pure sweetness that is Tai. A welcome return full of the right stuff. HIGH-DEMAND BACKSTORY: This highly acclaimed, beloved series has legions of fans, and this latest installment is getting an impressive marketing campaign to build further buzz.--Ilene Cooper Copyright 2019 Booklist
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Horn Book Review
Reynie, Sticky, and Kate are now teens, and cranky telepathic genius Constance is not yet a tween, in this latest series entry (The Mysterious Benedict Society, rev. 3/07, and sequels). The Ten Men, diabolical henchmen of Mr. Curtain, break out of prison and plan to free their boss from the maximum-security KEEP, where the childrens mentor, Mr. Benedict, has locked himself in with his twin and nemesisbut Mr. Curtain has poisoned them both to force the Society to attempt a rescue. There follows a puzzle-lovers extravaganzaplans to the KEEP are in code, with riddles and clues to be solved and security measures to be finessed. A new character is introducedfive-year-old telepath Tai Liand theres also time for the group members to talk about their feelings, revealing some ambivalence about the idea of parting ways as they grow older. The schemes and counterschemes involve some unexpected reversals, testing the friends abilities to the utmost. With the series typically strong plotting and wily wordplay, fans will enjoy another chance to spend time with the witty, brilliant Mysterious Benedict Society. anita l. burkam September/October 2019 p.102(c) Copyright 2019. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
(c) Copyright The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review
When deadly minions of archvillain Ledroptha Curtain escape from prison, the talented young protgs of his twin brother, Nicholas Benedict, reunite for a new round of desperate ploys and ingenious trickery.Stewart sets the reunion of cerebral Reynie Muldoon Perumal, hypercapable Kate Wetherall, shy scientific genius George "Sticky" Washington, and spectacularly sullen telepath Constance Contraire a few years after the previous episode, The Mysterious Benedict Society and the Prisoner's Dilemma (2009). Providing relief from the quartet's continual internecine squabbling and self-analysis, he trucks in Tai Li, a grubby, precociously verbal 5-year-old orphan who also happens to be telepathic. (Just to even the playing field a bit, the bad guys get a telepath too.) Series fans will know to be patient in wading through all the angst, arguments, and flurries of significant nose-tapping (occasionally in unison), for when the main action does at long last get under waythe five don't even set out from Mr. Benedict's mansion together until more than halfway throughthe Society returns to Nomansan Island (get it?), the site of their first mission, for chases, narrow squeaks, hastily revised stratagems, and heroic exploits that culminate in a characteristically byzantine whirl of climactic twists, triumphs, and revelations. Except for brown-skinned George and olive-complected, presumably Asian-descended Tai, the central cast defaults to white; Reynie's adoptive mother is South Asian.Clever as everif slow off the markand positively laden with tics, quirks, and puns. (Fiction. 11-13) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.