
Reach for this book when you notice your child struggling to understand a grandparent's cognitive decline or memory loss. It is a perfect bridge for the middle-grade reader who feels the shift in a family dynamic but lacks the vocabulary to express their confusion and sadness. This story offers a safe space to explore the changing roles between children and elders while maintaining a sense of agency and hope. Through the lens of a classic neighborhood mystery, Scarlett and her friend Bournemouth investigate why Gran is frightened and where her precious photos have gone. While the plot moves with the excitement of a detective case, the heart of the book is a realistic and empathetic portrayal of dementia. It normalizes the fear of a loved one's illness and teaches children that while memories may fade, the emotional connection remains a powerful force that can keep a family together.
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Sign in to write a reviewA grandmother goes missing in the night, causing temporary panic and search efforts.
Depicts the realistic and often upsetting confusion associated with a loved one's dementia.
The book addresses dementia and age-related cognitive decline directly and realistically. It is secular in nature, focusing on the science of memory and the emotional weight of caregiving. The resolution is hopeful but grounded in reality: while they find the pictures and improve Gran's safety, the illness itself is not cured.
A 10-to-12-year-old who is a fan of Nancy Drew or Sherlock Holmes but is currently facing the real-world 'mystery' of a grandparent who no longer remembers things quite right.
Read cold. The book is very supportive of the child's perspective. Parents should be ready to discuss that dementia is a medical condition, as the book touches on Gran's fear and confusion. A parent might see their child becoming frustrated or even angry with a forgetful grandparent, or perhaps the child is withdrawing because they find the grandparent's new behaviors 'scary' or 'weird.'
Younger readers (9) will focus on the mystery and the 'bad guy' suspicions. Older readers (11-12) will better grasp the bittersweet nature of the ending and the nuance of the mother's struggle with her boyfriend and her mother.
Unlike many books about dementia that are purely sad, this uses the mystery genre to give the child protagonist agency. It frames the child as a helper rather than a bystander.
Twelve-year-old Scarlett Buckling is a natural detective, but her latest case is deeply personal. Her grandmother is experiencing significant memory loss and confusion, culminating in her wandering off at night and losing track of vital photographs. Scarlett, aided by her intellectual best friend Bournemouth, treats Gran's condition as a mystery to be solved. As they investigate the missing pictures and the suspicious behavior of Scarlett's mother's boyfriend, they navigate the complexities of a family in transition and the frustrating reality of a progressive illness.
This overview was generated by AI based on the book's content and reviews, and may not capture every nuance.