Frankweiler is a bit of a nuisance and an offhand, rather bemused reference to dope addiction is unnecessary but not inappropriate. Frankweiler, she goes home a heroine only to herself (and happy) and she knows something about secrets she hadn't known before-they have to come to an end. Midweek, a marble angel of dubious origin arrives Claudia is convinced that it is a Michelangelo and determines to prove it: she will authenticate Angel and become a heroine before going home. For a week the children elude the guards and exploit the opportunities of the museum: they sleep in a royal bed, bathe in the cafeteria pool, and pass part of each day in study on the fringe of lecture tours. Claudia has planned every detail: escape on the empty school bus, change of clothing in a violin case, sanctuary in the Metropolitan Museum. Tired of being her same old taken-for-granted self, Claudia decides to run away, and Jamie goes along because he is flattered at being asked. Frankweiler comes the chronicle of Claudia Kincaid, almost twelve, and her brother Jamie, who is nine. Elaine Konigsburg's first sharp bite of suburban life, Jennifer, Hecate, Macbeth, William McKinley, and Me, Elizabeth, was a dilly this one's a dandy-just as fast and fresh and funny, but less spoofing, more penetrating.
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