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Isabel Spellman is all about privacy. Or more accurately, the lack thereof. Her own, her family’s, others’. Nothing is sacred, so it seems.
This is because almost all of her family members are private investigators. Her parents started the business before she was born, and she and her younger sister (age 14) have always worked for them. Only her “perfect” older brother doesn’t, at least not anymore. He’s a lawyer.
Isabel runs background checks on potential boyfriends. So do her parents. They routinely tail each other. Because it’s easier to follow a vehicle at night that has a missing light, they often smash each other’s headlights or taillights.
The Spellman Files has a couple of small mysteries in it, but it’s really all about the family and their wacky antics. They may be a bit abnormal in how they get on each others’ nerves — or how they show affection — but they are still somehow relatable because they’re a family. And most families have some kind of wackiness to them.
Lisa Lutz’s writing is absolutely hilarious. She uses footnotes to great effect, and her dry/wry style of wit is laugh-out-loud funny. I was hugely entertained.
Note: The book is the first of six.
Rated: High for language. Isabel Spellman, the main character, refers to herself as prone to use bad language, and she definitely does. There are probably 20 occasions of strong language or moderate language. No sex or violence, however.
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