A weekly recommendation to level up your book matchmaking.
Genre: Mystery
Age Range: 13-18
Summary: 16-year-old Gigi is many things — terrible at math, a victim of IBS, and secretly in love with Mari — but she didn't expect to become a detective. When her favorite teacher, Mr. Ford, is found dead in his classroom, Gigi is shocked but also suspicious. Since the police have written it off as an accident, Gigi and her friends start to poke around. They learn that Mr. Ford had uncovered a cheating scandal, one that could implicate hundreds of their classmates. Was someone desperate enough to keep their wrong-doings buried that they murdered Mr. Ford?
Teaching with One Killer Problem
Recommend this book to students who:
*If they want another title that is a combo of BOTH bullet points above, they can try the slasher-thriller Your Lonely Nights Are Over by Adam Sass (ages 15+).
Why bother reading and recommending One Killer Problem?
The characters offer representation for several LGBTQIA+ identities. This makes it more than a mystery for students who are figuring out their own identity: they might see something in one of the characters that unlocks a bit of understanding about themselves.
Gigi is a great teenage character. She is brilliant at some things (Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu, for one), struggles with others, and rides the roller coaster of believing in herself at one moment and seeing herself as a failure the next. She has great friends who help her recognize her best self — the type of friends we all want for our teenagers.
My final two cents: I have loved mysteries since my first Nancy Drew at age 6. They are fun and you can't put them down — which is exactly how I want my students to feel about reading. The teacher in me loves mysteries even more when they highlight social issues kids care about. One Killer Problem does all that.
Resource of the Week
**NEW**
Give students a new pathway to figuring out the theme in ANY story by teaching them how to analyze the obstacles characters face. This is a standards-based activity and there are specific versions for sixth, seventh, and eighth grades.
Have a good one and learn everything you can,
Hannah