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Everyone who told me to read this was right on the money. I think this may be my favorite Raskin book. It's a little hard to describe, but it feels more human than her other books, with the possible exception of The Westing Game.

Tattooed Potato is structured as a series of mysteries, sort of like an Encyclopedia Brown book (without the upside-down solutions). Dickory Dock, who silently suffers numerous jokes because of her name, manages to get a job as an assistant to Garson, a slick portrait painter who also occasionally helps the police paint portraits of crime suspects. Garson actually reminds me of Lymond a little (then again, pretty much everything does nowadays) -- he's extremely facile and Dickory senses that he only presents certain facets of himself to the world to protect himself, but it also must be said that Lymond would probably never take on the alias of Inspector Noserag.

The first few crimes that they have to solve are very fun and zany and felt like Raskin's other books (esp. Leon/Noel), but as Dickory's powers of observation and deduction get better and better, and as everything starts coming together, the mystery of Garson starts to unravel. And while I guessed most of what was going on with Garson (a rarity in a Raskin book), I wasn't prepared for the final ending. And it was good, and everything fit in that wonderfully satisfying way when all the clues and hints in a world come together. Kind of like a well-built sci-fi book actually...

Links:
- [livejournal.com profile] rilina's review
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(Typing this on the old laptop missing an E key, which may result in strange misspellings)

Wow, this is only slightly less strange than I remember. For some reason I always thought the sequence in Capri lasted much, much longer. I suppose I used to read slower back in grade school, or whenever I first read it, so it did take longer in terms of my own time.

It might be the strange familiarity, despite not having read it (or remembered that it existed) for years, but I liked it better than her mysteries. I am also a bit of a sucker because it talks about used books and first editions and whatnot, which makes me happy.

I also liked it because despite the real weirdness of the Figgs, it was mostly about Mona feeling alone and unappreciated and embarrassed by her strange family, and really, who hasn't felt like that? And also, it deals with grief, which I had never realized before. I have vague memories of never being sure of what happened to Florence.

It's very strange rereading and finding that I do remember a good deal of it (I must have reread it when I was a kid too). I think when I first read it, I didn't know what "nigger" meant, and thereby didn't understand Mona's hesitation at saying "The Nigger of Narcissus." Sometimes it's nice being a kid and not understanding stuff.

I'm very glad it was still good -- I remember one book I had loved maybe in fourth grade, on a golden bird and a girl fighting a witch, and I found it again in sixth grade, and it turned out to be badly written and cliched.

Links:
- [livejournal.com profile] rilina's review

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Fri, Jul. 2nd, 2004 01:54 am
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Wow! So I was reading [livejournal.com profile] minnow1212 and [livejournal.com profile] melymbrosia's old book posts (I love the memories function), and I stumbled onto Mely's post on Ellen Raskin, which I clicked on because I just recently read Leon/Noel. And there's this little comment in there that says she wrote Figgs and Phantoms!!

That was the weirdest book I read as a kid, and I still remember the uncle's funny armbands and Mona and the pirate guy and the strange isle of Capri, which always reminded me of those drinks in foil packages. I can't believe Ellen Raskin wrote that! Wow! It was like being in the bookstore and discovering someone relatively famous wrote Half Magic, which was another one of those books I read as a kid (always associated it with Five Children and It, for some reason). But, wow! I'm going to have to dig up that book again to see if it's as weird as I remember.

In other news, a friend from work drew me from my picture with Fool-Rat here. I look like me! It's so funny! And my glasses are half slipping off my nose and I don't quite know where I should be looking.

Hee, I've always been fascinated with having my portrait done.
oyceter: Stack of books with text "mmm... books!" (mmm books)
Quite fun. Although I was completely stumped by the puzzle, much like the one in The Westing Game. I can never quite decide if I like watching the mystery unfold or if I like watching the absolutely random and strange characters do their thing.

The mystery is that of the disappearance of Leon/Noel, and Mrs. Carillon (his wife) and her very long search to find him. Along the way, she gathers twins who are not really Siamese, lots of purple-flowered dresses, and lists of places beginning with "New."

It's just a weird and charming little book that reminded me a lot of The Westing Game and made me quite happy.

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