Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

Gangster müssen clever sein: Ein Krimi mit echter Milliardärstochter

Rate this book
Wenn ungleich und ungleich ermitteln.

Bei Jamie-Lees reicher Freundin Fee Ranzmeier wurde eingebrochen. Klare Sache, dass Jamie-Lee in den Fall ermittelt. Als die beiden ungleichen Freundinnen die Hobby-Detektive Mesut und Valentin kennenlernen, ist das Team komplett und die Einbrecherjagd kann beginnen. Die vier Spürnasen nehmen das ganze Umfeld der Millionärs-Familie Ranzmeier unter die Lupe. Und siehe da, sowohl der Chauffeur als auch der Bodyguard haben mächtig Dreck am Stecken. Und dann werden die Ermittlungen sogar richtig gefährlich … ein neuer Kinderkrimi von Kirsten Boie mit den bekannten Figuren aus ihren Detektivgeschichten Der Junge, der Gedanken lesen konnte und Entführung mit Jagdleopard. Wieder voller Spannung, Humor und witzigen Einfälle – und ganz nebenbei sozialen Themen von heute.


Arm, reich, aber immer Die Ermittler-Gang um Jamie-Lee und Valentin.

Kirsten Boies Detektivgeschichte ist ein Wiedersehen mit euren Held*innen ihrer beliebten Vorgänger-Werke.Triff Jamie-Lee und Fee aus Entführung mit Jagdleopard  und Valentin und Mesut aus Der Junge, der Gedanken lesen konnte wieder.Erzählt im Wechsel aus den Perspektiven der zwei Hauptfiguren.Ein spannender Krimi für Kinder, toll auch für den den modernen Deutschunterricht.Originelle Charaktere aus unterschiedlichen sozialen und kulturellen Milieus.

321 pages, Kindle Edition

Published August 4, 2022

4 people want to read

About the author

Kirsten Boie

284 books107 followers
Kirsten Boie was born in Hamburg in 1950. She studied German and English literature and wrote a doctoral thesis on a topic in the field of literary research. She worked as a secondary school teacher in Hamburg from 1978 until 1983. When she adopted a child she had to stop teaching and began to write. Her first book "Paule ist ein Glücksgriff" (1985) was very well received and won several awards.

Since then she has published more than 60 books for children and teens that have been translated into many languages. Special mention must be made of her novels for young adults that critically examine social issues and display literary innovation. In addition to the many awards she has won, her complete works have been nominated for the Hans Christian Andersen Award three times (in 1999, 2001 and 2003).
Kirsten Boie lives with her family near Hamburg.

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
2 (18%)
4 stars
6 (54%)
3 stars
3 (27%)
2 stars
0 (0%)
1 star
0 (0%)
Displaying 1 of 1 review
Profile Image for Jelka.
1,146 reviews
June 27, 2023
This feels like Kirsten Boie's version of the Rico and Oskar books, the first book of that series is even mentioned in here. Now, this book was a lot more fun, atleast to me.

However there are a few things that bothered me:
- The micro-agressions/ racism of Frau Jelkovic and Frau Schilinsky towards Mesut, this is commented on by the main character but never really challenged
- The character Jamie-Lee and her brother Chucky are often portrayed as uneducated and antisocial - but what eleven-year-old knows what a vernissage is? I feel like Kirsten Boie took the stereotypes too far sometimes
- fatphobia - you don't have to make a mean comment about every fat character

I didn't read either of the prequels but Boie wrote a novel that can be enjoyed regardless. Aside from my criticisms this was a fun reading experience.
Displaying 1 of 1 review

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.