This boldly illustrated graphic novel series kickoff by Tunnicliffe (A French Wedding, for adults) and Harrison (The Honey Bear Hive) stars a pancake-loving, Sherlock-style black and white dog with floppy ears and piercing eyes as the eponymous sleuth. While eating breakfast on what should have been his first day of retirement ("The only puzzles he'd be solving would be jigsaws"), Stanley receives an urgent plea to dust off his deerstalker cap: someone has left the local art museum in disarray, yet nothing appears to be missing, not even Composition Deux, a prized abstract painting by Bleat Mondrian (a playful nod to Piet Mondrian, the subject of the book's afterword). Despite a brief setback-jealous rhino Superintendent Shiro imprisons him for alleged watch theft-Stanley's keen nose and oil painting knowledge lead him to uncovering the crime and its culprit. Clear line drawings and single-plane compositions propel the meaty, joke-punctuated plot at a brisk pace and echo the crisp geometry and vibrant colors of Mondrian's work.

Publishers Weekly

A canine gumshoe has a case to solve.
The newly retired Detective Stanley has just sat down to a stack of fresh pancakes when a mysterious letter arrives. [...] Stanley must crack the case-his very freedom depends on it. This Poirot-esque pooch quietly uses his powers of observation to gather evidence until the climactic scene in which he elegantly ties everything together. Bustling, precisely constructed panels give the settings plenty of life and personality. The museum is full of homages to well-known artists; a work of art by "Bleat" Mondrian is an especially winsome addition. The scenes are bursting with other eye-catching details, particularly those in the prison[...]The book concludes with some context about oil paintings, playfully presented inside modernist rectangles of color.
The arrival of a plucky new detective on the scene is cause for celebration.(Graphic fiction. 6-9)

Kirkus Reviews

Detective Stanley has an unerring nose for solving any case, and you, dear reader, will love this lovely book.

- Laura Suàrez, author of Monster Support Group

Se alle

Art and mystery collide in this first in a new series, in which a doggy detective is called to investigate a case at the Art Museum. Readers will learn about the art of Piet Mondrian while accompanying Stanley as he attempts to unravel the clues.

- Charlotte Eyre, The Bookseller Children's Previews February 2025

In clear, crisp art, brief text and a smidge of humor, this early graphic novel mystery is an entertaining art-related read. [...] Early grade mystery lovers who enjoy a smart, literary but easy to read mystery will snap this one up.

- Stephanie Tournas, Youth Services Book Review

Aiming at young readers with a mystery that educates. Hannah Tunnicliffe and Erica Harrison have pitched Detective Stanley almost perfectly. Like an Agatha Christie detective he's bland and polite while nothing escapes his notice, and he's placed in eye-catching environments with plenty for readers to study. [...] The mystery is good, and the solution well foreshadowed and presented, the latter also a la Christie with everyone gathered in the one room for the revelation. This is a delight. More please.

- Frank Plowright, Slings and Arrows Graphic Novel Guide

Highly illustrated animal detective mystery for young readers. Detective Stanley has barely sat down for his breakfast pancakes when he receives an invitation he cannot refuse. The Art Museum has been raided on the opening day of the Bleat Mondrian show and Stan has been called to investigate. The most perplexing thing about the case: Nothing has been stolen! But now Stanley finds himself in a tight spot even his powers of deduction could not detect. Can he get himself out of trouble and can he solve the mystery of the Art Museum?
Les mer
Chaos at the Art Museum, can Detective Stanley solve the case?

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781838742119
Publisert
2025-02-06
Utgiver
Vendor
Flying Eye Books
Høyde
225 mm
Bredde
163 mm
Aldersnivå
JC, 02
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
64

Illustratør
Forfatter

Om bidragsyterne

Hannah Tunnicliffe is the author of several books for kids and adults including Canadian bestseller, The Colour of Tea and trilingual picture book, Marjory and the Mouse. Her work has featured in the New York Times Book Review and she is the founder and host of the podcast, Bod Almighty. She lives by the sea with her family which includes one licky dog and an aloof cat. Erica Harrison is an illustrator and children's book designer from a small village in Norfolk. She moved to the big city to complete her art foundation at Norwich Art School, then took a degree in graphic arts at Leeds Metropolitan. After her studies, she moved to London where she landed her first job at Usborne Publishing. Here she spent the next 12 years designing and illustrating too many titles to mention. Since then, she has continued her travels, working from creative studios in Brighton, New York and Auckland, where she currently lives with her partner and daughter.