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The Long Secret

The Long Secret

List Price: $5.99
Your Price: $5.39
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Great Characters
Review: "Harriet the Spy" is undoubtedly one of the best children books ever...the sequel ""Sport" however was a disappointment and did not match HTS fine standards. I therefore hesitated before starting to read "the Long Secret", but this time I was not sorry (the right reading order should have been HTS, The Long Secret and then Sport).
The long secret holds the same kind of eccentric, incredible characters as HTS. Especially lovable are Bible loving Jessie Mae, her fat brother Norman and their incredible Mama Jenkins (including their outstanding way of speech - supposedly Mississippi style). The Long Secret also gives us a special look on Harriet as she looks "from the side". Once you see Harriet through Beth Ellen eyes, you also see all her flaws, although she remains one of a kind ...; This "round look", the ability to portray a character as a real human person with qualities and flaws is one of the writer's remarkable abilities.
The heroine of this book is Beth Ellen, a shy timid person who does not talk or act a lot and is usually a very passive friend to Harriet. Beth Ellen undergoes an inner growth through this book and Harriet too learns to regard her friend in a different light.
Not all of my questions were answered at the end of The Long Secret and the ending seems a little too simplistic to accept, but all in all a fun read.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: The Messy Secret
Review: First off: "The Long Secret" is no "Harriet the Spy."

Don't get me wrong. It's a good book. Louise Fitzhugh is a pretty amazing writer and there is no doubt she did some interesting things with the form. She does children like nobody else. You have to read her books to understand that.

No. The thing is. "The Long Secret" is a little like that period just prior to adolescence. You're not a kid and you're not a teenager. You're lodged, briefly, in a place that no-one has found a name for yet. It's neither a good place or a bad place, either. It's just a sort of neither-one-thing-or-another place. "The Long Secret" is a book that cannot make up its mind quite what it wants to be.

"The Long Secret" is, to all intents and purposes, a sequel to "Harriet the Spy" (and as such a book I put off reading for YEARS because, let's face it, what can live up to "Harriet the Spy"? - it's like making a sequel to "Casablanca" or something).

Harriet is spending the summer at the beach with her best friend Beth Ellen. Somebody is leaving mysterious notes around - notes that act like mean fortune cookies telling people what they are really like, notes that appear to be paraphrasing the Bible (the mean fortune cookie almanac). Harriet, as you would expect, is on the case.

Or she would be, if that was the story that "The Long Secret" wanted to tell. As often as not, we find ourselves watching Harriet ride home from Beth Ellen's front porch. Beth Ellen lives with her rich grandma. Her mother lives in Europe and can't be fussed raising a child. Tagging along with Harriet on the beach-version of her spy route, Beth Ellen looks in through the windows of a bar and watches a piano player called Bunny. She also finds herself caught up with a religious family, in particular a little girl called Jessie Mae (who Beth Ellen maybe likes more than Harriet for a little while, maybe, maybe, she's not sure). "The Long Secret" is Beth Ellen's book. The association with Harriet M Welsh does her a disservice because you long to compare this book with Harriet's book and the two are just fundamentally different fish.

Mix the return of Beth Ellen's mother from Europe, Harriet's ruminations on God and faith, a kid called Norman who can't park cars and an old guy called The Preacher who lives in a shack in the woods and you start to feel like: enough already.

There are lots of good things here. The problem is that all of the good things feel like they have emerged from three other slightly more sensible books.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: The Messy Secret
Review: First off: "The Long Secret" is no "Harriet the Spy."

Don't get me wrong. It's a good book. Louise Fitzhugh is a pretty amazing writer and there is no doubt she did some interesting things with the form. She does children like nobody else. You have to read her books to understand that.

No. The thing is. "The Long Secret" is a little like that period just prior to adolescence. You're not a kid and you're not a teenager. You're lodged, briefly, in a place that no-one has found a name for yet. It's neither a good place or a bad place, either. It's just a sort of neither-one-thing-or-another place. "The Long Secret" is a book that cannot make up its mind quite what it wants to be.

"The Long Secret" is, to all intents and purposes, a sequel to "Harriet the Spy" (and as such a book I put off reading for YEARS because, let's face it, what can live up to "Harriet the Spy"? - it's like making a sequel to "Casablanca" or something).

Harriet is spending the summer at the beach with her best friend Beth Ellen. Somebody is leaving mysterious notes around - notes that act like mean fortune cookies telling people what they are really like, notes that appear to be paraphrasing the Bible (the mean fortune cookie almanac). Harriet, as you would expect, is on the case.

Or she would be, if that was the story that "The Long Secret" wanted to tell. As often as not, we find ourselves watching Harriet ride home from Beth Ellen's front porch. Beth Ellen lives with her rich grandma. Her mother lives in Europe and can't be fussed raising a child. Tagging along with Harriet on the beach-version of her spy route, Beth Ellen looks in through the windows of a bar and watches a piano player called Bunny. She also finds herself caught up with a religious family, in particular a little girl called Jessie Mae (who Beth Ellen maybe likes more than Harriet for a little while, maybe, maybe, she's not sure). "The Long Secret" is Beth Ellen's book. The association with Harriet M Welsh does her a disservice because you long to compare this book with Harriet's book and the two are just fundamentally different fish.

Mix the return of Beth Ellen's mother from Europe, Harriet's ruminations on God and faith, a kid called Norman who can't park cars and an old guy called The Preacher who lives in a shack in the woods and you start to feel like: enough already.

There are lots of good things here. The problem is that all of the good things feel like they have emerged from three other slightly more sensible books.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Amazingly well-drawn characters and hysterically funny.
Review: How can anyone not LOVE this book? I can't imagine growing up without having read it, and still, like so many other fans, reread it and reread it faithfully. I've never loved a character more than Harriet. And how can you not love Zeeney and Wallace? hup. This is a terrifically funny and warm book about friendship, acceptance, and growing up. Excellently written and true to life.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Hup!
Review: I am a creative writing major in college and I reread Louise Fitzhugh's Harriet The Spy, Sport and especially The Long Secret over and over again. Her writing is unflinching, honest, observant and doesn't make young adults "childlike". Her characters are so very real, they express the good, the bad, and the funny of being human.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: I LAUGHED UNTIL IT HURT!
Review: I got this book when I was a child and I thought it was a scream! I actually laughed so hard it hurt!

Beth-Ellen, Harriet's shy and retiring friend is the perfect foil to the outspoken, brash, wonderfully assertive Harriet of Harriet the Spy fame. Both girls have summer homes in Water Mill, Long Island, their families' retreat from Manhattan when school gets out. Beth-Ellen lives with her kindly grandmother, who has some rather neanderthal ideas about imparting information concerning puberty, but who is a nice sort after all.

Harriet has not put down her pen and notebook. Seems that somebody else has taken up writing that summer. Quotes from the Bible and parodies of Scripture are seen throughout the Water Mill community. Naturally suspicion turns to a summer girl named Jessie who aspires to be a preacher when she grows up. Chock full of Biblical knowledge, Jessie has a morbidly obese mother and twin brother and a cute preschool sister. There is no mention of a father.

Beth-Ellen, on the other hand becomes reacquainted with her mother. Seems that Beth-Ellen's mother was a society lady, preferring parties and travel to raising a child. Beth-Ellen's natural father left some years earlier.

The reunion is a bust. Beth-Ellen's mother, Zeeney, is just as flighty and superficial as ever. Her stepfather just says "hup" and loves martinis. They try to make Beth-Ellen over, straightening her hair and choosing her clothes and insisting that she leave her grandmother and come with them. Beth-Ellen refuses, wins her case and Harriet cracks THE case -- the identity of the Secret Writer!

This book is a riot!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: I LAUGHED UNTIL IT HURT!
Review: I got this book when I was a child and I thought it was a scream! I actually laughed so hard it hurt!

Beth-Ellen, Harriet's shy and retiring friend is the perfect foil to the outspoken, brash, wonderfully assertive Harriet of Harriet the Spy fame. Both girls have summer homes in Water Mill, Long Island, their families' retreat from Manhattan when school gets out. Beth-Ellen lives with her kindly grandmother, who has some rather neanderthal ideas about imparting information concerning puberty, but who is a nice sort after all.

Harriet has not put down her pen and notebook. Seems that somebody else has taken up writing that summer. Quotes from the Bible and parodies of Scripture are seen throughout the Water Mill community. Naturally suspicion turns to a summer girl named Jessie who aspires to be a preacher when she grows up. Chock full of Biblical knowledge, Jessie has a morbidly obese mother and twin brother and a cute preschool sister. There is no mention of a father.

Beth-Ellen, on the other hand becomes reacquainted with her mother. Seems that Beth-Ellen's mother was a society lady, preferring parties and travel to raising a child. Beth-Ellen's natural father left some years earlier.

The reunion is a bust. Beth-Ellen's mother, Zeeney, is just as flighty and superficial as ever. Her stepfather just says "hup" and loves martinis. They try to make Beth-Ellen over, straightening her hair and choosing her clothes and insisting that she leave her grandmother and come with them. Beth-Ellen refuses, wins her case and Harriet cracks THE case -- the identity of the Secret Writer!

This book is a riot!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Excellent Book, But Very Disturbing
Review: I think if a child is going to read this book, that the parent shoud read it either first, or along with the child, and discuss it with the child. I LOVED Harriet the Spy, both as a child, as an adult. When I bought Harriet the Spy for my dauughter, I saw this book, and bought it, too, sight unseen. I have just read it, and am quite surprised that the topics discussed in this book could have been published in 1965, when society was more conservative today. I did not like the chapter on Janie having her period. Not that I object to the subject being discussed--I just didn't like the presentation of it in this book. I think what I found disturbing about this book are the particular identity issues it brings up. Maybe it touched too closely on some things I found disturbing as a child. I was shocked with the actions and behavior of some of the adult characters in the book--I didn't like it at all. However, I will concede that by the end of the book, the behavior of the characters I didn't like was completely discredited, and Beth Ellen REALLY ends up growing as a person in this book--that's what this book is all about. I was VERY surprised how the mystery of the notes ended--I didn't expect it, and that was excellent. I think Louise Fitzhugh tied up all the ends very well, and makes some excellent moral points for kids to think about. Another issue in this book is the extreme rudeness of Harriet's behavior--her behavior in the first book didn't bother me at all--but in this book it did. At least her extreme rudeness is pointed out to kids for them to think about (I'm not talking about her spying on people--I'm talking about the way she SPEAKS to people, and the way she treats her FRIENDS). Even though the book disturbed me, I felt it WAS well-written, and had some important points to make. I would recommend it, but would suggest parents read it, too, and discuss it with their children.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Excellent Book, But Very Disturbing
Review: I think if a child is going to read this book, that the parent shoud read it either first, or along with the child, and discuss it with the child. I LOVED Harriet the Spy, both as a child, as an adult. When I bought Harriet the Spy for my dauughter, I saw this book, and bought it, too, sight unseen. I have just read it, and am quite surprised that the topics discussed in this book could have been published in 1965, when society was more conservative today. I did not like the chapter on Janie having her period. Not that I object to the subject being discussed--I just didn't like the presentation of it in this book. I think what I found disturbing about this book are the particular identity issues it brings up. Maybe it touched too closely on some things I found disturbing as a child. I was shocked with the actions and behavior of some of the adult characters in the book--I didn't like it at all. However, I will concede that by the end of the book, the behavior of the characters I didn't like was completely discredited, and Beth Ellen REALLY ends up growing as a person in this book--that's what this book is all about. I was VERY surprised how the mystery of the notes ended--I didn't expect it, and that was excellent. I think Louise Fitzhugh tied up all the ends very well, and makes some excellent moral points for kids to think about. Another issue in this book is the extreme rudeness of Harriet's behavior--her behavior in the first book didn't bother me at all--but in this book it did. At least her extreme rudeness is pointed out to kids for them to think about (I'm not talking about her spying on people--I'm talking about the way she SPEAKS to people, and the way she treats her FRIENDS). Even though the book disturbed me, I felt it WAS well-written, and had some important points to make. I would recommend it, but would suggest parents read it, too, and discuss it with their children.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Excellent companion piece to HARRIET THE SPY.
Review: If you loved HTS, you'll definitely love this book. Beth-Ellen was the last person I expected the brash, outspoken Harriet to form a friendship with. The descriptions of BE's jet-setting, superficial socialite of a mother and her fussy boyfriend are a scream! And the sign-writing culprit was the last person I suspected.


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