This book is inspired by The Westing Game, which I wish I had known going in since I've never been a fan of that book. Final Word, though, is even more convoluted and the whole concept is just preposterous. People faking their own deaths, using fake accents/disguises that no one notices, kids being allowed to run wild with no adult supervision while they try to "solve" a bizarre "mystery". Weirdest of all, the whole book is dictionary/spelling bee themed? What 10/12 year old kids are that interested in reading books about dictionaries??
Speaking of the spelling bee, why in the world do these people participate in it? I understand wanting to win the cash prize, but the fact that you have middle aged men and ten year olds in the same competition seems not only unfair but HIGHLY unlikely. Even the most petty 45-year-old man would not stoop to battle children in a spelling bee for some cash, and even if he did I'm sure his friends/family would badger him until he withdrew.
There were way too many characters to keep up with (made worse by the fact that I listened to this as an audiobook and the narrator gives all the male characters the same voice, even the 10 year old boy).
The Jane Austen references were so weird in a book meant for pre-teens. In general this is a bookish book but the constant dropping/listing of authors and novels felt forced, as if Johnson just wanted to give some shout outs to books she liked.
Also, the completely unnecessary child endangerment/attempted murder/kidnapping/forced captivity disturbed me and I did not feel that needed to be in this book at all. The fact that Hope and Gordon weren't traumatizing by their experiences just proves that that scene could've been left out or heavily edited.
CW: paternal death/abandonment, car accident, divorce, child endangerment