Billy and his sister Jillian are the children of Ron and Tanya Crook, professional bank robbers who have raised their children to pick locks, tell lies, and steal money. Billy and Jillian have always gone along with their parents’ crimes, but lately they’ve begun to feel guilty. One afternoon, they go to the zoo to volunteer, hoping to perform some good deeds, but when their parents find them there, they think the kids are trying to steal a monkey to help them with their robberies. Before Billy and Jillian can stop them, their parents have taken a monkey home with them! Now the only way to make things right is for Billy and his sister to sneak the monkey out of the house and return him to the zoo without being caught.
Billy, who narrates Missing Monkey! is a good-hearted, funny, and interesting character. His tone is very chatty and occasionally sarcastic, and he describes even the most frustrating events of the story with a sense of humor. Repeated references to his love for bacon make the reader feel like he or she is in on an inside joke, and the piggyback song based on Clementine that he uses to round up the zoo’s elephants is funny enough that kids will be likely to sing it aloud when they reach that point in the book.
The story is very well-plotted. Each short chapter serves to advance the story just a bit more, and the events happen quickly, with little lag time in between action sequences. Readers never have time to lose interest because each chapter builds on the one before it, creating a pleasant sense of urgency that will make kids want to keep reading to find out how things turn out. The writing in general is very strong. Amato really captures the voice of an early elementary school boy, including some of the gross humor such a boy might enjoy, and she also plays with words a little bit, creating characters such as Saya Lott the news reporter and Sally Mander the zoo director. The highlight of the book for me is the list Billy makes of things a monkey will do in eleven minutes. The list format makes the information fun to read, and the content of the list perfectly matches the seven-year-old sense of humor.
Ward Jenkins’s illustrations are another highlight of this book. They are similar in style to artwork by Jim Paillot (My Weird School, Secrets of a Lab Rat) and they provide the visual cues chapter book readers need to help them decode new words and have a sense of context. The first illustration in the book, showing mug shots for all four members of the family, manages to set the tone for the whole story without any words, and the rest of the artwork, though not final in the ARC edition, looks like it will be just as spot on.
Missing Monkey! takes a fresh approach to the chapter book format. It can appeal easily to boys or girls and will be likely to engage animal lovers and adventure-seekers equally. The backwards family dynamics, the silly tone, and the action-filled plot will easily draw in the target audience (ages 5-8) and get them laughing as they read. Recommend the Good Crooks series to readers who enjoy Dan Gutman, Dav Pilkey, Jon Scieszka, and David Adler.