Efter att ha avslöjat en mullvad inom organisationen är Spiongänget nu redo för nästa uppdrag. Den här gången har de siktet inställt på Umbra: ett globalt syndikat av kriminella, terrorister, legosoldater och underrättelseagenter. Umbra försöker rekrytera en nordkoreansk kärnkraftsfysiker, men Spiongänget ligger steget före. Paris ska nu hålla uppsikt över fysikerns son - ett schackspelande underbarn - genom att åka till hans turneringar i Moskva och Beijing. Under tiden har Sydney tagit sig in som ungdomsreporter på en tidning och befinner sig på turné tillsammans med ett popband och en miljardärsdotter. Det tycks finnas mystiska kopplingar mellan bandet, miljardären och ett färskt hot från en gammal sovjetisk militärbas. Vågade inbrott, riskfyllda undercover-uppdrag och en desperat jakt och räddningsaktion på Beijings gator - Spiongänget är tillbaka! I översättning av Helena Stedman.
James Ponti is the New York Times Bestselling author of three Middle Grade book series: the DEAD CITY trilogy about a secret society that polices the undead who live beneath New York City; the Edgar Award-winning FRAMED! series about a pair of Sherlockian tweens who solve mysteries in Washington, D.C.; and the all-new CITY SPIES about an unlikely squad of five kids from around the world who form an elite MI6 spy team.
James grew up in Atlantic Beach, Florida and lives in Orlando. He's a die hard fan of the Boston Red Sox, the USC Trojans, and the Italian National Soccer Team. He loves travel, writing, and spending time with his amazing family.
Pack your bags! The City Spies are on the job in London, Moscow, and Beijing in this third installment. There are some fantastic elements included this time around. There is a Simon Cowell-like British man and the boy band that he discovered/produces in the mix. Sydney gets the chance to travel with the producer's daughter and do social media posts. Paris is using his chess skills as part of an international tournament. Kat is solving puzzles as they go along. Rio is rating the new food he gets to sample while using his magic skills to charm and distract. Brooklyn is initially stuck in summer school and not loving it. Don't worry, she will still get the chance to help the team. Mother (code name) has adopted all of them and he worries about the line between father and spy. Mixed in with all the action are some great moments of character growth. Also included is a dossier with individual info on each spy at the end. If you have been loving this series so far, I quite sure you will also find this new title to be a page turner. This operation is hot. We are a go.
Thank you to Aladdin and Edelweiss+ for a DRC in exchange for an honest review.
As with the first two books there was a lot of humor. Great characters. Suspense. Great fun! Great characters that have some complexity. Great relationships. Yes, the spy kids (and adults) force the reader to suspend disbelief but somehow it all works for me. Learning a bit about other countries/places is also a plus.
I’ve been struggling to read but it’s at least partly the books I was reading because I found it easy to read this book and my last book, Stella Peabody's Wild Librarian Bakery and Bookstore: A Novel-in-Stories, two very different sorts of books, but I was able to focus and concentrate on both, and thoroughly enjoyed them both. I wish that was true for all books I have interest in reading, at least the ones that arent’ too dense.
Kids who play chess might really enjoy this book. I liked how chess had a featured role in the story, and even the chapter titles.
This is a great series for reluctant readers, for girls and for boys.
It was weird reading this book right now given what Putin is doing right now in the Ukraine. Russia is one of the settings for this book.
I was told that the name Mother would be explained in this book and it was. I hate it less than I did before knowing the reason for it but I still don’t like it.
This author has two other short series. There are now three books in each of the three series. I hope that doesn’t mean that this will be the last book in this series. I love these characters and their relationships and the stories and the settings.
I loved reading the hardcover edition. I still prefer paper books o e-books but during the pandemic I’ve been reading a lot of e-books.
Fantastic audiobook! I love following these smart spy kids and their adventures!
In this installment, Brooklyn is upset because she's being left out on adventurous missions. But one team member sure knows how to make her feel better.
The story started with an adventure. Hiding in plain sight, pretending to be invited to a party. It helps to speak the language. I like the audiobook for the foreign language pronunciation. This story deal with chess tournaments, social media, and foreigners. The story has different puzzles to crack. One was the father and son duo. The spy kids team have to keep them from being napped by the bad guys. Then there's the mystery with the big maps and the different color cathedrals.
I do like the view of the bad guys but it's not enough especially in the end. I would have liked to see their reaction... it's up to reader's interpretation but I prefer the author write it.
I started reading this series at book 4 last year. So glad to start at the beginning of the series this year 😊 I will have to restart book 4 again this year because book 5 is coming out soon!! 2/6/24 to be exact!! And it's called Mission Manhattan.
Thank you SimonKids for the opportunity to read and review. I listened to an audiobook via Libby App.
~ “. . . questions are what enlighten us.” ~ — Paris
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
Favorite Characters: ▶ Sydney 💥 • Australian, good with explosives, loves the ocean ▶ Kat 🧮 • Nepali, great with math and patterns, loves the number 73,939,133 ▶ Paris ♟️ • Rwandan, chess master, loves soccer
Favorite Part/s: ☆ KB5 band operation with Paris in the beginning 🎸 ☆ The chess tournament and Paris winning♟️ ☆ Brooklyn and Charlotte figuring out the hex coded message 💻 ☆ Sydney being a journalist for All Roads Lead to Audrey 📸
What I Liked: ✦ Transitions between the point of views ✦ Character fun facts and descriptions at the back of the book ✦ How the City Spies interacted with each other ✦ The locations in the book
What I Disliked: ~ Not as much action and mystery as book 2
Overall: (can be sentence or bullet points but should be sentence) • Great and entertaining writing style • I would recommend this to fans of mystery and spy books
While on a recent mission, Paris discovered some bonus intel, and that turns out to be a valuable find. It leads MI6 to believe that the evil organization Umbra is going to kidnap one of North Korea’s nuclear scientists. If MI6 wants to get him to defect first, they need to find a way to approach him. Given North Korea’s secrecy and security, that won’t be easy. However, the scientist’s son is a top chess player, and he is planning to enter a couple of international tournaments. So Paris tries to upgrade his own chess skills so he can join the tournaments. Will Paris and the rest of the team be able to make contact with the scientist? Is he even interested in defecting?
Having enjoyed the first two in this series, I was looking forward to this book, and I wasn’t disappointed. This book is Paris’s time to shine, but all the other characters get their own smaller moments, and I continue to love their relationships. We get some surprising advancement on one series plot thread, although others are only mentioned in passing. I do feel like the other books in the series had a bit more action, but with all the angles the teams uses to approach their mission, I was never bored. We get a few laughs along the way, and even when we aren’t laughing, it’s just fun to be around the characters. Fans will enjoy this latest book. I’m already looking forward to their next mission.
2024: Reread (audiobook) to get ready for the new release. I love how there are different interpersonal issues that happen as part of the team/family and how they are handled.
2022: I love this series, and this third book was just fantastic. the team/family dynamics feel realistic and relatable. The mystery and action are featuring teen spies, so you have to be ok with that, but the whole thing is so fun. I loved the chess elements in this one especially.
I finished this a while ago but I haven't gotten to obsess about it yet because... school. BUT. Seriously. This book is amazing. Usually with a series about spies, the first book is the best and then it kind of goes downhill. BUT NOT THIS SERIES!!!! I never would have seen this new mission coming. And, let's face it, I'm emotionally attached to the characters at this point :)
Code name Mother and her group of teenage spies (with city code names) are once again deployed to prevent a catastrophe. The evil organization Umbra is stealing nuclear weapons and intends to recruit or kidnap one of North Korea’s nuclear scientists. MI6 wants to get him first, but need an approach. The scientist’s son is a top chess player, is planning to compete at a multi-city youth tournament sponsored by Sir Reg Banks. Paris is then given a Scottish chess mentor so he can win enough tournaments to compete. Meanwhile, Tabitha Banks is a huge socialite and is enjoying partying with a young rock band so Kat gets a job blogging for a popular lifestyle website, All Roads Lead to Audrey, so she can monitor Sir Reg and his twin Russian bodyguards. Brooklyn is left home to help crack a code, using postcards of a famous Russian church, which was pretty obvious (at least to me.) Ponti spins another good yarn.
The young spies at MI6 have a new mission. The sinister organization Umbra wants to recruit a North Korean nuclear physicist and the City Spies need to put a stop to that, and preferably recruit the physicist themselves. In order to make contact without arousing suspicion Paris is going to play in the same chess tournaments as the physicist's son. The mission includes the whole gang - except for Brooklyn, who has to stay back to go to summer school - and it takes them to both Russia and China.
I'm always having a great time hanging with the smart kids from City Spies! Their intelligence is far above my level in many areas, but in others they behave like regular teenagers. Brooklyn is grouchy because she has to go to school when the others can go and "have fun", but since she was the last to join she's got some catching up to do. And since Mother has adopted all young spies he's not only their spy leader anymore, but also their father, and his decision to put Brooklyn in summer school was a parental one. They becoming more and more like a family is so sweet, including the kids fighting as siblings would!
Ahhhhh, loved the focus on Paris in this one! (Am I allowed to have favorites? Or am I supposed to be like a parent and love them equally? Because they're each special in their own way, but...yeah, Paris is my favorite. <3) The chess aspect was super interesting, even though I've never been a good chess player. And I was really curious how they were going to get messages through with all the protections in place! Also, seeing how things were handled when a mission hits a serious snag... It doesn't happen often, but there was one clue I caught a little early, which I was probably unjustifiably proud of. ;) Brooklyn had me a little worried with certain developments, but the character and team growth continues to be so deep and realistic! And that one talk between Mother and Paris...MY HEART!!! The family dynamic and the way it's continuing to deepen and grow is just beautiful, and I love it so much! <3<3<3
These just keep getting better. Yes, it's about teenage spies, so you have to suspend your disbelief a bit, but not only are they totally fun, but you get the occasional moment that elevates this series above some middle grade. In this one, it's a conversation between two spies about figuring out your identity when your job is to be someone else. Highly recommend.
This was probably my favorite yet. I really loved the encouraging way each of them dealt with each other, and how they made up after arguments. I especially loved how welcoming Brooklyn was.
Absolutely one of my favorite series. I love the way Ponti writes these adventurous mysteries because it certainly keeps me turning the pages! In this story, we get to know Paris a bit more and see how he uses his wit and passion for words to help out his fellow spies. Hoping we have at least 2 more in this series since there are 2 more characters who haven't had their story told. And I think there should definitely be one for Mother. Keep them coming, Mr. Ponti!
A lovely third installment of one of my favorite middle grade series. This time the plot mainly revolves around Paris as he is sent undercover to a chess tournament. I love the push and pull of the relationships between the spies as they navigate being a family and coworkers while also being young teens. I also love how we get to see them develop into better spies and people as the books continue. This book includes not only the fun chess tournament element but a popular boy band, social media, nuclear weapons being stolen, and of course some intense code breaking. This spy book may be written for middle grade readers, but I think the layers of intrigue and spycraft are on the same level as most adult spy novels.
Thank you Simon Audio for the gifted audiobook. No review required. All opinions are my own. _____
2025 REREAD:
These spy books may be written for middle grade readers, but I think the layers of intrigue and spycraft are on the same level as most adult spy novels. Plus the found family aspects are so heartfelt that you can't help but fall in love with all these characters!
I love that there are responsible adults in this series. While these kids are professional spies, there are involved adults who are parenting them and guiding them through their personal and professional lives.
Don’t be silly, read these in order. _____
I love the push and pull of the relationships between the spies as they navigate being a family and coworkers while also being young teens. I also love how we get to see them develop into better spies and people as the books continue. This book includes not only the fun chess tournament element but a popular boy band, social media, nuclear weapons being stolen, and of course some intense code breaking.
Another really solid book in this series. The main reason I did not give it 5 stars is that I was able to predict the ending on several points. As of this book, my favorite of the series is probably the second book. Still, despite the predictability (or strongly foreshadowing?), I still enjoyed this book and I continue to love this family of spies. One of the things that would make it better is if the kids were to age from book to book, but from what I can tell, Brooklyn is still 12, the same age she was in the first book and the others are the same age as well. Allowing them to age would also help them show a bit more growth over the course of the books. This one took place in Scotland, their home base and where Brooklyn has to take summer school, Russia, and China. I enjoyed the cryptography part of this and how it took several of them to puzzle out the code. Overall, I'd say this was a very solid story and if you liked the first two books, you'll likely enjoy this adventure as well. I'm already anticipating the fourth book!
This book is being released on February 1, 2022. I received an advance review copy from NetGalley for free, and I am leaving this review voluntarily.
What great books these have been! I love stories where kids are spies or secret agents, it's a fun plot with plenty of action. This also has a found family aspect too, with kids from all over the world joining up to uncover secrets and stop people with nefarious intentions. This book went all over the world, from Russia to China to London. I had such a fun time listening to the audiobook and I hope there will be many more books to come in this series!
THIS BOOK WAS SOOOO GOOD!!!!!!! There were so many things happening at once, so there was always a problem that kept me reading. I felt bad for Brooklyn because she wasn't really in the mission, and Sydney saw Brooklyn and Charlotte together. Oof... My mind kept being like, "NOOO!!!!". That chess match and the kidnapping... that was like a whole different level. I LOVED IT ALL!!!!!!!!!!!!! Cannot wait for the next one!
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
I loved this 3rd book in the City Spies series by James Ponti! Once again, I totally enjoyed the daring do of the city spies and Mother and Monty as they race to stop Umbra from taking a father/son team from North Korea. There was adventure, mystery, friendship and more in this thriller that shows the team how to succeed as they each take their mission to fruition to fight evil. Highly recommended! I really hope there is another book in this series!
I didn’t finish this book… the first two were really good but I think I just got bored and had to read something else. The stars aren’t really real, just didn’t finish but I may came back sometime!
City Spies: Forbidden City by James Ponti was a book I read with my 10-year-old daughter, a voracious reader like her mom, and my library as well as my horizons have definitely been broadened now that she’s at an age to read Middle Grade fiction. Of course, she being the target audience for this series, it was also enlightening for me to get her perspective and opinion while writing this review.
As the third installment in the City Spies sequence, Forbidden City continues the adventures of a secret MI6 team made up of a group of teenage spies led by the agent known as “Mother.” Although I haven’t read the first two books, this did not pose an issue since the story was structured in such a way that even complete newcomers to the series can jump right in and not feel lost.
Unsurprisingly, the kids are the central focus of the novel, and they include Paris, Kat, Sydney, Rio, and Brooklyn (they’re all codenamed after the cities from which they’re recruited, which I thought was a nice touch). As the story opens, the City Spies are on a mission to infiltrate the mansion of billionaire music producer Sir Reg, using his daughter Tabitha’s birthday bash as the perfect cover. While sneaking through Sir Reg’s office though, Paris comes across some files which indicates the music mogul may be part of an evil organization called Umbra. The intel also suggests that Umbra may be planning to kidnap Park Jin-Sun, North Korea’s top nuclear scientist, no doubt to further their own nefarious agenda. Determined not to let that happen, MI6 decides to get Jin-Sun to defect to the British—but that can only if they get to him first.
Luckily, the scientist’s young son Dae-Jung is one of the world’s most talented chess players who is scheduled to appear at several international tournaments, giving MI6 a chance to get close. A plan is thus hatched to get Paris (a pretty good chess player himself) into the tournaments as well, so that Mother can work his magic on Jin-Sun. In the meantime, the other City Spies are working on their own projects, like trying to break the code Sir Reg and his agents are using to communicate with each other. Sydney is also going undercover as a social media manager for Tabitha as she travels around the globe with her father’s biggest client and the world’s hottest boy band, trying to figure out what Umbra may want with a nuclear scientist.
As with most MG, the plot of Forbidden City was easy to follow, but also quite predictable and admittedly a little silly and unrealistic. Still, it was a blast for both myself and my daughter, and as I always say, the best stories are those that can be enjoyed by everyone, no matter how old you are. As you’ve probably guessed, our favorite part of the book was hands down the globetrotting and reading about the City Spies traveling to all these incredible places, with the espionage angle making the entire premise even more exciting. Speaking as a parent, I also appreciated the opportunities this presented for learning more about the history and culture of different countries.
The relationships in this book were also very endearing. The Spies are made up of a diverse group of children, and they are more than just friends—they’re family! Mother is the leader of the group, and he’s one heck of a special agent, though he has a softer side as well. Nowhere is this more apparent than when he is trying to be the best father figure he can be to his adopted children, especially Paris, who gets to be in the main spotlight in Forbidden City. It’s also worth noting that while I have not had the pleasure of reading the previous books, I still felt as though I know these characters on a deeper level. Even the adults get their moments to shine, and in this one, Mother reveals the touching backstory for his codename, which made me warm up to him even more.
But the biggest indicator that Forbidden City was a hit? Right after she finished the book, my daughter expressed interest in checking out the first two volumes, and I’m right there with her—although I was able to follow this one with no issues, I feel like there’s a lot of history I’ve missed based on some of the references to previous events and past characters showing up, and I’d like to know more. Ultimately, this book was just plain fun, and if you’re someone who is open to exploring MG fiction, I highly recommend trying City Spies, especially if you’re intrigued by the author’s approach to a spy adventure.