472 reviews for:

Chasing Vermeer

Blue Balliett

3.68 AVERAGE


This novel would be a good pick for a Grade 5, 6, or 7 student who likes to read mysteries. Along with the intriguing and quick-moving plot surrounding the theft of a famous Vermeer painting, each of the pictures in the novel help to decipher a secret code using pentominoes. This may interest the critical thinkers, who might want more mystery to their stories.

This book is a lot of fun. As an adult I found it intriguing so being that it’s meant for middle grade kids, advanced readers should really enjoy it. I’m excited to read the other books in this series.

Fun middle grade mystery filled with art and secret codes. At times it felt a bit unnecessarily complicated, but most of the book club kids still really liked it. I am curious enough to read the other two books in the series.

I'll admit, I totally couldn't crack the code hidden within Brent Helquist's awesome pictures. I had to look it up online. Only to realize I had all the pieces, I just hadn't put them together yet. Sigh.

I feel bad reviewing and rating this, since at 44 I'm not the target audience. I read it with my 7 year old and by the end she was finally into it enough to finish the book off by herself. I found it a little slow moving and dull at times. But I enjoyed the fact that the author talks a lot about coincidences, and what are basically psychic powers of connection (though not labelled as such). You don't get stuff like that in a typical book. The whole thing about codes and puzzles really baffled me. I guess I'm not good at that sort of thing. I could see that a lot of the photos had pentaminos and frogs in them and that that was supposed to mean something, but I couldn't figure out what. My daughter actually got furthering into solving it than I did. She really liked that facet of it. For me, I was just happy that this was a story focused on two un-typical kids and their un-typical teacher, and about art.

I would put this at about 4th or 5th grade level as far as 'mystery' then maybe they wouldn't be questioning the very-convenient conclusions that happen throughout the book. It's a good intro to kids of puzzle-mystery type genres, but I had to question a lot of the leaps-in-conclusion. So not a YA book per se...

Molly loved this book, but I thought it was just ok. Not as clever or exciting as it promises to be.

Cute, fun read.

Am I glad that's over.

Between the mystery based on gut-instinct speculation and the audiobook narrator having a hard time deciding whether to pronounce the main character's name as "Petra" or "Peetra," this is one book that got old really quickly.

I'd had this on my radar since I first became a librarian, thinking it sounded really fun: a kid's mystery based around fine art? Count me in! Unfortunately, it just wasn't up to snuff. The details about Vermeer and Charles Fort were presented in an engaging way, and the two main characters were likeable at first. But then they started listening to their pentaminoes and pursuing their own suppositions without any physical evidence or other rationale.
SpoilerAND OF COURSE IT WORKS!. In the end, it's a really luck string of coincidences.
I felt a little cheated about the whole mystery. Fans of the 39 Clues might enjoy this one, too. But I won't be reading any further in the series.

This is a great book for both boys and girls in middle school. Fun mystery with great characters. I would love to have a teacher like they had!

This was a super quick and easy read - great for a reluctant reader who is intrigued by a little mystery.

I personally could have used more substantial evidence in solving the case, but I understand the intent with what the characters are investigating.

I also really loved that it was set in Chicago and that several prominent locations were highlighted.