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The Treasure Of Alpheus Winterborn (1997)

The Treasure of Alpheus Winterborn (1997)

Book Info

Genre
Rating
3.8 of 5 Votes: 5
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ISBN
0140380094 (ISBN13: 9780140380095)
Language
English
Publisher
puffin

About book The Treasure Of Alpheus Winterborn (1997)

Books by John Bellairs were a huge treat for my brother and me as kids. Going back over them recently, I realized I couldn't remember anything about The Treasure of Alpheus Winterborn. After struggling to stay interested enough to finish the book at all as an adult, I have some idea why: it's pretty boring. The friendship between the two main characters remains all kinds of sweet, with white-haired librarian Miss Eells and impulsive 13 year-old Anthony Monday leading readers on mysterious adventures. And the setting of the small river town of Hoosac, Minnesota sometime during the middle of the 20th century is quite charming, especially to this native Minnesotan. But really, the riddles serving as the clues to the location of a hidden treasure were not hard to decipher, despite Anthony and Miss Eells being determinedly stupid about it. Most of the obstacles did not make for compelling reading either: a bully of a snobby rich person is the villain, Anthony falls down, Miss Eells falls down. A sudden illness in the Monday family did lend some urgency, but really it's the cliched climactic storm and near-flooding of Hoosac that finally lifted the tempo out of snoozeville. I don't believe that made up for the pervasive dullness of the first two thirds of the book.The book ends with a little description of a trip Miss Eells and Anthony take to Chicago. (OH! Spoiler Alert! Our heroes survive!) Somehow, I found the descriptions and conversation on those three pages more satisfying than anything else in The Treasure of Alpheus Winterborn

Another John Bellairs book, based on a new (for me) character: Anthony Monday. The story was fun, but I did not enjoy it as much as I have enjoyed the Lewis Barnavelt or Johnny Dixon stories. I did not find Anthony or Miss Ells as intriguing as characters in other books. There was mystery in the story, but no magic or anything supernatural, which I think contributed to the feel of the previous stories by Bellairs that I have read. I will probably read the next book in the Anthony Monday series to see if it gets any better.

Do You like book The Treasure Of Alpheus Winterborn (1997)?

I adore John Bellairs as a rule, and his uncoventional character use has always been a favorite of mine. Throughout his publishing career, his top three childrens series involved Lewis and Rose Rita, Johnny Dixon, and Anthony Monday. Of them all, I'm sad to say I'd probably list the series involving Anthony Monday as my least favorite, with Johnny Dixon and Professor Childermass coming in as my favorites, and Lewis and Rose Rita coming in second. While the Anthony Monday stories do involve the Bellairs "formula," (pre-teen hanging out with wacky offbeat adult figure in the 1950's and solving mysteries,) somehow Anthony and Miss Ells just don't do it for me. Miss Ells' consistent ineptitude starts to grate on my nerves, and when you combine that with Anthony's non-original "emo-kid" whining, it tends to get a little dull. Still, a few steps down from the amazing Johnny Dixon stories is still a good place to be, and I recommend ALL of these for Bellairs fans.
—Tara Lynn

This story falls squarely on the "mystery" end of the spectrum of Bellairs' children's books - there's some suspense and tension, but the story is without the supernatural and serious horror elements that play parts in many of his other books. I loved this book as a kid, Anthony Monday was having exactly the sort of adventure I wanted to have. He had the run of a mysterious old library with hidden rooms and stairways to explore, he discovered clues to a treasure, figured out the clues himself, a
—Anna

Not as enjoyable as the second Anthony Monday book, which I read first. I had come across the second book at the library giveaway months ago, read it, enjoyed it, and decided to seek out the rest of the series. I suspect that book 3 will be better than this one, because I simply didn't care for Anthony in this book. He wasn't at all the same kid he was in book 2, and his mother was just awful here. Since he was more enjoyable in book 2, probably those characteristics continued into book 3 and beyond. As for the treasure and the riddles, they just weren't very well developed. The reader can't figure out for themselves what it all means, there aren't enough clues and tidbits to satisfy most people, it's just a matter of waiting for Anthony to figure it out himself. Worth continuing the series, but not the strongest outing by Bellairs.
—Robyn

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