A review by larryerick
The Wright 3 by Blue Balliett

2.0

This book is written for children, apparently for 6th graders, since it's about 6th graders at a University School in the Hyde Park neighborhood of Chicago, home of the University of Chicago, the Museum of Science and Industry (a place I visited many times in my own youth), and the Frank Lloyd Wright creation, the Robie House, which I have not visited, but I have visited other house designed by Frank Lloyd Wright, so I have a better than average feel for what the Robie House may be like compared to more typical homes. The author was an Art History major, lived in Hyde Park, and taught at the University School. That explains a lot about the story of this book. It does not explain the use of pentominoes, why only a limited number of letter combinations are used, why one of the characters carries them around all day in his pocket using them like a ouija board, why the 6th graders act so badly to each other's friends, or why everything is regarded not as a possible coincidence, if any coincidence at all, but as something directly connected to something they are thinking about or has happened to them. Oh, and they seem really hung up on ghosts. Apparently, just because. I thought the funniest part of the whole book was when the main three 6th grade characters feel horrible about one of the characters never having had a home of their own. And to think, he isn't even a Millennial yet. Ha. I will not be going back to partake in other books in the author's series.