DRC was provided courtesy of NetGalley.
A solid sequel to what is becoming a reliably smart, witty and interesting series. Jeremy Wilderson, "retrieval specialist" (re: thief) and his arch rival, preteen detective Becca Mills, are back solving another case for the under thirteen middle schoolers of Scottsdale. This adventure centers around an art competition and the skullduggery, fraught rivalries, and friendships between the characters make for a good read. Jeremy and Becca's complex rivalry and partnership adds tension to the twisty narrative. The debates about what constitutes "real" art, the pressures on kids to succeed no matter what, how to be a good friend, and whether stealing and revenge can ever be justified no matter the motives, kick the themes up a notch to ambitious and relevant. Becca can be an overly brutal character, both physically and personally, and Jeremy is a naturally duplicitous and slick operator, charming but untrustworthy. As always, parents stick to the margins and the amount of lowgrade criminality in Scottsdale is slightly exaggerated. But the day long timeline races to a tidy conclusion, and ends on a cliffhanger that guarantees return readers curious to see what Jeremy and Becca have in store for themselves next time.