Talk of the town, Stacia Deutsch
Type
Label
Talk of the town, Stacia Deutsch
Language
eng
resource.accompanyingMatter
technical information on music
Form of composition
not applicable
Format of music
not applicable
Literary text for sound recordings
fiction
Main title
Talk of the town
Medium
electronic resource
Responsibility statement
Stacia Deutsch
Summary
When an embarrassing message between Charla and Daniel goes out to the whole class, Jessie finds herself stuck between her feuding best friends. As she helps Charla investigate how this happened, they find that someone has been tampering with Charla's lawyer mom's computer, and it could spell trouble for her mom's legal case. In order to keep the culprit from walking free, Jessie and Charla need Daniel's help. But when some messages go out, they're hard to take back. When an embarrassing message between Charla and Daniel goes out to the whole class, Jessie finds herself stuck between her feuding best friends. As she helps Charla investigate how this happened, they find that someone has been tampering with Charla's lawyer mom's computer, and it could spell trouble for her mom's legal case. In order to keep the culprit from walking free, Jessie and Charla need Daniel's help. But when some messages go out, they're hard to take back. Stacia Deutsch is a New York Times bestselling author who has written more than 300 children's books, including Nancy Drew and Boxcar Children mysteries, as well as TV and movie tie-in novels, such as Girls Who Code: The Friendship Code and Hotel Transylvania. She lives in Temecula, California. Gertrude Chandler Warner grew up in Putnam, Connecticut. She wrote The Boxcar Children because she had always dreamed about what it would be like to live in a caboose or a freight car-just as the Aldens do. When readers asked for more adventures, Warner wrote more books-a total of nineteen in all. After her death, other authors have continued to write stories about Henry, Jessie, Violet, and Benny Alden, and today the Boxcar Children series has more than one hundred books
Target audience
juvenile
Transposition and arrangement
not applicable
Classification
Contributor
Creator
Subject
- Schools -- Fiction
- Electronic mail messages -- Juvenile fiction
- Reporters and reporting -- Juvenile fiction
- Friendship -- Juvenile fiction
- Best friends -- Fiction
- Email -- Fiction
- Best friends -- Juvenile fiction
- Mystery and detective stories
- Reporters and reporting -- Fiction
- Friendship -- Fiction
- Schools -- Juvenile fiction
Content
Author
Incoming Resources
- Has instance1
Outgoing Resources
- Classification1
- Contributor2
- Creator1
- Subject11
- Schools -- Fiction
- Electronic mail messages -- Juvenile fiction
- Reporters and reporting -- Juvenile fiction
- Friendship -- Juvenile fiction
- Best friends -- Fiction
- Email -- Fiction
- Best friends -- Juvenile fiction
- Mystery and detective stories
- Reporters and reporting -- Fiction
- Friendship -- Fiction
- Schools -- Juvenile fiction
- Content1
- Author1