A royal conundrum

Lisa Yee

Book - 2024

An elite group of underdogs trained to fight crime must save their unique school from shutting down.

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Children's Room Show me where

jFICTION/Yee Lisa
2 / 2 copies available
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Subjects
Genres
Detective and mystery fiction
School fiction
Novels
Published
New York : Random House [2024]
Language
English
Main Author
Lisa Yee (author)
Other Authors
Dan Santat (illustrator)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
276 pages : illustrations ; 22 cm
Audience
Ages 8-12.
ISBN
9781984830296
9781984830302
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Olive Zang has always felt invisible and out of place. Even her mom and dad barely register her presence, and as they leave on yet another lengthy work assignment, Olive is deposited at a new boarding school for children with artistic temperaments. The island manor turned prison turned reform school turned art school is a wonder, but a series of unusual aptitude tests sees Olive assigned not to an art class but rather to a super-secret training division for elite crime fighters. No one is more shocked than Olive herself, but the small, disparate group of similarly skilled students quickly forms a bond, which is soon tested when a criminal mastermind interrupts a school gala and puts the future of Olive's newly beloved academy at risk. This absorbing series opener wastes no time throwing Olive headlong into adventure. There are hilarious high jinks and outlandish plot points aplenty, plus an astonishingly inventive array of technology that would make even James Bond jealous. It's easy to root for the delightfully diverse spy squad, and readers will eagerly await the next installment of their crime-fighting capers.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Ever since her grandmother Mimi's death, East Asian American tween Olive Cobin Zhang--who "never fit in" at school and hardly sees her busy parents--has felt especially alone. Worse, her mother abruptly sends her to a former castle that had been turned into a prison before being converted into a "reforming arts school." But the prestigious boarding school is a cover; soon, Olive is recruited for an experimental group of covert child operatives to serve as the eyes and ears of the pseudo-government crime-fighting organization No One Can Know, or NOCK. She quickly befriends fellow operative and computer genius Philomena, as well as tough girl Iggy, bookworm James, and laid-back Theo; together, they deem themselves the Misfits. Yee (Maizy Chen's Last Chance) builds suspense in this spy-adjacent series opener by utilizing an immediate feeling third-person perspective to depict Olive's grief over Mimi and attempts to make friends while contending with secretive and dangerous circumstances. An in media res opening alongside expressive and animated b&w pencil illustrations by Santat (A First Time for Everything) add dynamism to the text and heighten the rapidly paced narrative. One of the Misfits wears a hijab and another is Black; other supporting characters are depicted with varying skin tones. Ages 8--12. (Jan.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by School Library Journal Review

Gr 4--7--Olive Cobin-Zang's parents are on another one of their business trips, and Olive is off to…reform school? She knows she hasn't always made the best decisions, but this seems a bit extreme. Then she sees RASCH (Reforming Arts School) for the first time, a mystical island campus that emerges from the fog, and she is even more confused. What is this place and why is she here? Strangely, when Olive is placed in what initially appears to be a class of leftovers, she starts to feel a part of something. Soon, Olive and her fellow misfits realize that there might be something extraordinary about themselves after all. In the meantime, a series of high-end jewelry heists have swept across San Francisco and threaten some of RASCH's most important benefactors. If Olive and her friends can't put a stop to these thefts, not only will RASCH lose its money, but Olive might lose the only place that has felt like home in a very long time. Readers will be quick to follow Olive and her diverse friend group as they chase actors/pirates/thieves, search for priceless pastries, and hunt down jeweled cat collars. With quick pacing and over-the-top action, this humorous caper is full of plot twists and zany antics. At times, the pacing may move too quickly, not giving readers enough time to absorb the action or build more suspense. However, the clever clues and outrageous antics will be enough to pull readers through the pages and into the story. VERDICT Clever and funny, this rousing mystery-adventure will be a hit with a wide audience.--Louie Lauer

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Horn Book Review

In this series opener, twelve-year-old Olive Cobin Zang is a lonely homebody who feels invisible and uncool. She doesn't play sports and is only good at things she thinks nobody else cares about: board games, trapeze, acrobatics, and tightrope walking. She loves Meggie & Her Fun Family comic books, which portray a lively family's adventures and home-cooked meals -- most unlike her own family. Her parents are always traveling for business, and now they have shipped her off to the Reforming Arts School -- RASCH -- near San Francisco. A former castle turned prison, the building is now a school (think Alcatraz meets Hogwarts) for the "artistically adventurous." Among the other misfits Olive finds she's a good fit, at least within the team of crime-fighting preteens assembled to thwart an expected jewel heist on campus. This reunion of Yee and Santat (Bobby vs. Girls (Accidentally), rev. 9/09; Bobby the Brave (Sometimes), rev. 9/10) offers an entertaining mystery with good kids working together to defeat the bad guys and, in the process, finding their place in the world. Conversational prose, offbeat similes ("Emotions swirled like a smoothie in a blender"), and Santat's black-and-white illustrations (final art not seen) add up to a madcap escapade featuring likable heroes and dastardly villains. Readers will look forward to further installments. Dean SchneiderJanuary/February 2024 p.104 (c) Copyright 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

Olive's move to a new school leads to friends, adventures, and greater self-confidence in this series opener. Invisible at school and forgotten by her distracted parents, 12-year-old Olive Cobin Zang is lonely and drifting. Her only source of solace is memories of her loving grandmother's wise words. So, when Olive's parents transfer her to the Reforming Arts School, a Bay Area boarding school located in a former prison, she is ambivalent but curious. The school's unusual approach includes both individual and group placement auditions. These challenges reward often-overlooked skills that Olive and four other idiosyncratic new students turn out to embody: creativity, teamwork, and reasoning. The new pod of five coalesces, exuberant upon learning that they will "join an elite force of specially trained operatives" and become the youngest group ever to go undercover and bring fresh ideas to solving crime. The self-styled Misfits have finally found their calling, but will it last? A crisis is unfolding: The villainous Bling King could keep the school's main benefactor from attending the annual fundraiser, threatening the school's existence as well as the Misfits' own ambitions and newfound feelings of sanctuary. The straightforward storyline has more telling than showing, making it accessible to younger and reluctant readers. Readers will delight in the cartoonlike worldbuilding, zany capers, and plentiful and expressive illustrations. Olive is Chinese American and white; there's racial diversity among the remaining cast. A fantastical blend of quirky characters and goofy adventures. (Adventure. 8-12) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

1. Old School Weird things had a tendency of happening to Olive Cobin Zang, but this morning was weirder than most. First, her InstaFriends social media account had vanished entirely--never mind that she had fewer than five followers. Then, when she opened her locker to grab her books before class, all traces that Olive had ever been there had been removed, including her Meggie comics and flower power stickers. And at the school library, when Olive tried to apologize for her overdue library books, she learned that all the fines had been wiped clean. By the time Olive reached second period, she was so deep in thought that at first she didn't notice the black cat perched on the classroom's window ledge. Unlike her classmates, who never paid any attention to her, the cat was staring right at Olive. When she finally noticed it, it seemed to wink at her before running away. Olive watched the cat disappear, wishing she could run away, too. She hated school. A lot. Turning to the front of the room, Olive heard the school's PA system crackle. Then a tinny voice said, "Olive Cobin Zang"--Olive tried not to panic--"please report to Principal Gates's office immediately." Instantly, prying eyes were on her. She felt her face flush red. Often overlooked, Olive did not long for this sort of attention. As she began to gather her books, the teacher shook her head. "Leave those. You won't be needing them anymore." Olive bolted from the classroom, her heart racing. The last time she was called out of class, a mere month earlier, she had been informed that her beloved grandmother Mimi was gone. Who would it be this time? Upon entering the principal's office, she saw her mother seated across from Principal Gates. Olive was instantly relieved--then panicked. "Is it Dad?" Her brown eyes began to fill with tears. Olive's mother, Dr. Cobin Zang, arched an eyebrow and handed her a tissue. As usual, she looked perfectly polished, often making her daughter feel like a "before" photo in a fashion magazine. "Hello to you, too," Dr. Cobin Zang said gently. "Your father is fine." "Then . . . ," Olive sputtered. "Then why are you here?" It wasn't even 10:30 a.m. She paused to note that her mother's new short haircut made her look stylish and chic, two words that were never used to describe Olive. Dr. Cobin Zang offered Principal Gates a perfunctory smile before turning back to her daughter. "I'm taking you out of school," her mother said. Principal Gates yawned, flipped open a magazine, and stuck his nose in the pages. Still holding the tissue, Olive asked hopefully, "For the day?" "Yes . . . ," Dr. Cobin Zang said cautiously, "and then some." Her mother bit her lip the way she did when she suddenly remembered something Olive-related. "I meant to tell you yesterday, but I got swamped." Now that Olive knew no one had perished, she could feel her heartbeat returning to normal. Maybe they were going on a girls' day? That's what Mimi had called it when she'd let Olive cut school so they could go to the movies or the mall. On occasion, Olive even did this on her own, though she usually ended up at the library. Principal Gates squinted at Olive over his magazine. "You are Olive . . . ?" When the principal couldn't remember her last name, Olive could feel herself shrinking. Not literally, of course, but in the oh-here-we-go-again-I-feel-invisible sort of way. Olive tamped down her discomfort. Invisibility had its benefits, she was quick to remind herself. Say assassins were chasing you, or a teacher asked about cell homeostasis and you hadn't done your homework--if they couldn't see you, you were safe from embarrassment or death, which often felt like the same thing. Still holding his magazine in one hand, Principal Gates clicked through his computer with the other. His unkempt black hair stuck up in two places, reminding Olive of the cat from second period. "This is odd, but we have no record of you. Did you say you were a student here?" Olive began to deflate like a tire with a slow leak. "I've been a student here since kindergarten." She pushed her student ID across the desk as proof. Principal Gates examined the dented plastic card. "Per this, you're Olive Cobin Zang, age twelve?" "She's not twelve, she's eleven," Dr. Cobin Zang said without looking up. She was now furiously tapping on her cell phone. Olive winced. "Actually, I am twelve." Her mother stopped mid-text and studied Olive. "When did that happen?" "Same time as last year," Olive muttered. She eyed her mother's phone. Even though everyone at her school had a cell phone, she could never bring herself to ask her parents for one. Besides, who would she call? It wasn't as if there was ever an emergency, anyway. Olive's life was so boring. "Well then!" Dr. Cobin Zang straightened the lapels of her gray wool suit. "We shall have a belated birthday celebration when your father and I return." When your father and I return. How many times had Olive heard that before? She pretended to be pleased about the celebration, but she knew they'd forget. They always did. She had no doubt that her parents loved her. Still, they never hesitated to go on their endless business trips. They always brought her back a snow globe, as if this made up for leaving. Olive tried to convince herself that a missed birthday wasn't that important. After all, her grandmother Mimi had said, "I wouldn't mind skipping a few birthdays now and then!" Suddenly Olive was hit by a discomforting thought. In her parents' eyes, maybe the thing that wasn't important . . . was her. She was barely three months old the first time her mother and father had left her in the care of Mimi. "You were always very adaptable," her parents would say with pride. "You never cried." It was no wonder Olive loved the Meggie & Her Fun Family comic books. She dreamed of uproarious family adventures by day and home-cooked meals every night. Meggie's mother and father never went on business trips. If Olive had learned to cry, would her parents have stayed home more? Principal Gates set his magazine down. The headline--"GLORIOUS DAME GLORIA!"--blared merrily up at Olive. The cover showed an older woman with unnaturally smooth skin, wearing an overflow of snazzy jewels on her neck, ears, wrists, and fingers. But it was the small black cat brooch with glittery green eyes on Dame Gloria's gown that caught Olive's eye. "Well!" Principal Gates declared. "Bon voyage to you, Oliver Corbin Zing!" He hoisted his mug in the air, spilling coffee all over Dame Gloria. "Olive Cobin Zang," Olive and her mother corrected him. Both looked at each other, startled but pleased to be in sync for a change. Was this a mother-daughter bonding moment? Olive wondered. Meggie and her mother had one at least every five pages. "Where will you be going?" Principal Gates mopped up the coffee from the magazine. Dame Gloria's face was starting to wrinkle. Dr. Cobin Zang beamed. "Olive will be attending the acclaimed Reforming Arts School near San Francisco," she announced proudly. Principal Gates looked stunned. "The prison?!" Olive tried to speak, but no sound came out. "Former prison," Dr. Cobin Zang said firmly. "They haven't had a prisoner there for years." 2. Rash? "Prison?" Olive asked her mother as they got in the car. Her throat was suddenly dry. "I'm going to prison?" she finally managed to ask. Was Olive being punished because she repeatedly freed the neighbor's rabbits from their overcrowded pen? Or maybe it was because she broke into that abandoned haunted cottage to try to meet a ghost. . . . All right, maybe Olive had bent a few rules over the years. Invisibility had its benefits, and she wasn't about to let them go to waste. Yet she was sure she had never gotten caught. Dr. Cobin Zang's car backed out of the school parking lot, leaving skid marks in their wake. "You're not going to prison," she said brightly. "You're going to RASCH. You'll love it!" "Rash?" Last year, Olive had gotten a rash from her class nature field trip. One of the popular girls, Kelsey Lawrence, had pointed at a patch of poison ivy and said, "If you want to be my friend, touch that plant." The horrible itch lasted days longer than Olive's friendship with Kelsey, who later declared, "I don't hang around with misfits." "R-A-S-C-H, RASCH," her mother enunciated, though to Olive it sounded exactly the same as "rash." "It's the original Reforming Arts School, a top-tier boarding academy. Very prestigious, on its own quaint little island. You could learn how to swim!" Olive felt herself gasping for air as fear washed over her. They both knew what had happened the last time she tried to swim, or had her mother forgotten that, too? She had seemed scattered lately. "So, I'm being shipped off to a boarding school?" Olive could hear the distress in her own voice. Not that she was sad to leave her school, where she had never fit in, anyway. But at least there she knew what to expect--the boring classes, the bullies, the subpar cafeteria lunches. All Olive knew about boarding schools involved wizards, flying brooms, and house elves, but those were only in books. "Why--?" she started to ask. Dr. Cobin Zang held up a finger and angled her head toward the radio. The newscaster was reporting: "Jaguar Gems has been robbed, making this the fifth ultra-expensive jewelry store targeted in as many days. And now here's the countdown to this week's Top Ten Greatest Hits. . . ." Dr. Cobin Zang turned down the radio and swerved into the fast lane. "Olive, unforeseen circumstances are dictating this. Your father and I have an extended business trip. This one may be for months, and there's no one to take care of you, and you're still only eleven--er, twelve, and . . ." The more the excuses piled on, the more Olive missed her grandmother. Mimi had always been on call to stay with Olive when her parents were away. She even kept a packed suitcase by her door for those emergency trips her parents were sometimes sent on. Olive loved spending time with Mimi. Whenever they were together, her grandmother would stuff Olive with Chinese delights like take-out mapo tofu and slippery chow fun noodles. For dessert, they often split a container of peppermint ice cream. Tragically, she didn't even have a chance to say a final goodbye to Mimi. No one would even tell Olive what had happened. "She's no longer with us" was all her mother would say, tearfully. Olive was expected to zigzag through grief on her own. She had long suspected that her parents withheld information in a misguided attempt to shelter her. But from what--the truth? How much more painful could that be? In the Meggie comic books, her fun family discussed everything, including Meggie needing braces and Meggie's mom losing her job--but getting a better one. They had no secrets. Now, with Mimi gone, Olive felt empty and lost. To make matters even worse, she was being banished to a boarding school. ". . . and so," her mother continued as they pulled up to their unremarkable two-story house, "we decided that RASCH would be the best place for you!" In a failed attempt to sound cheerful, Dr. Cobin Zang's voice hit an unnaturally high pitch, like she was about to break into song. "That sound good to you?" "Not at all," Olive said glumly. But by then her mother was already out of the car. Olive unbuckled her seat belt and dragged herself inside. When she got to her room, her mother was standing by the window, grinning. She stepped aside and pointed. "I got us matching suitcases!" Dr. Cobin Zang sang with the enthusiasm of the lady in the detergent commercial who had just removed the stubborn stains from her husband's shirt. "Look, Olive! Orange, your favorite color!" "Orange is your favorite color," she reminded her mother. Olive's room was painted purple, with purple bookshelves weighed down by dozens of snow globes, plus a purple comforter Mimi had helped Olive pick. "Hurry and pack," Dr. Cobin Zang instructed. "I'll do the same. We have to get on the road soon." When did her mother even buy the suitcases? Didn't she say she'd just learned about the business trip? Eyeing the orange suitcase, Olive slumped into her desk chair and opened her laptop. She typed "RASCH" in the search bar. Instead of a school website, the first thing that popped up was an ad: "FOGGY ISLAND TOUR! EXPERT TOUR GUIDES! FAMILY DISCOUNTS!" Olive blinked and then rubbed her eyes. She was going to school at a tourist attraction? Relentlessly upbeat music accompanied images of a huge castle. "Foggy Manor mansion has been a monastery, a yoga retreat, and a prison," a woman intoned. "Over a hundred years ago, Remy Triste bought Foggy Island off the San Francisco coast for his bride and began building the grandest mansion in America. However, she perished under mysterious circumstances before it was completed, and Remy died of a broken heart. . . ." Mimi would have loved this, Olive thought. Her grandmother relished a good mystery, though it was a little odd that the school wasn't mentioned at all. "Are you almost done packing?" Dr. Cobin Zang stuck her head into Olive's room. "We don't want to be late!" Olive shut down her computer. She scribbled in her diary, held it briefly to her chest, and tossed it into the suitcase along with her clothes and Meggie & Her Fun Family comics. With a heavy sigh, Olive took one last look around her room, taking in her unmade bed, the vintage poster of the famous Flying Wallendas acrobat family, and an overabundance of snow globes. Could you feel homesick when you were still at home? Olive shut the door and then trudged back to the car. Her mother seemed lost in thought, which was often the case before a business trip. Olive knew enough not to bother her when she got this way. Anyway, the four-hour drive (three if Dr. Cobin Zang sped) allowed Olive time to overthink about what lay before her. Her parents' business trips had grown longer as she'd gotten older. They were gone three months for their last trip, and her mother couldn't even say when they'd be returning this time. Olive kept making the window go up and down until her mother asked her to stop. At least a new school meant she could start over, right? Maybe she'd even make a friend at RASCH. The hum of the car's engine was hypnotic, and Olive stared at the blur of trees rushing past. "This time, a trio of supermodels were targeted," the radio DJ was saying. "Rumors are swirling that there's a criminal mastermind on the loose who's overly fond of expensive baubles. . . ." Excerpted from The Misfits #1: a Royal Conundrum by Lisa Yee All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.