Trust No One: Cahills Vs Vespers (39 Clues, Book 5) (The 39 Clues: Cahills vs. Vespers)
Trust No One: Cahills Vs Vespers (39 Clues, Book 5) (The 39 Clues: Cahills vs. Vespers) book cover

Trust No One: Cahills Vs Vespers (39 Clues, Book 5) (The 39 Clues: Cahills vs. Vespers)

Hardcover – December 4, 2012

Price
$17.34
Format
Hardcover
Pages
192
Publisher
Scholastic Inc.
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0545298438
Dimensions
5.38 x 0.6 x 7.68 inches
Weight
10.6 ounces

Description

From Booklist This fifth book in the 39 Clues: Cahills versus Vespers series is the work of Newbery Medal–winning Park and follows young teens Amy and Dan Cahill as they continue their worldwide quest to protect and preserve their large and illustrious family. It turns out that there’s a mole within their close-working group (thus the title), so off they go to Yale University (and beyond) to follow clues and get to the bottom of things. After one of their suspects pronounces that the brother-sister team doesn’t know a “rat’s ass” about loyalty, things get mildly violent, with a few gunshots; then tricky, with a couple boyfriend/girlfriend issues; and then dramatic, with some hostage-release attempts. All of these elements help to make this series popular beyond those interested in the more cerebral components, such as Ivy League medievalists and rare manuscripts. The corresponding online game and accompanying game cards (in the non-library edition) don’t hurt popularity either, and fans will be carried right along with a few answers and quite a cliffhanger until a different author produces the next volume. Grades 5-8. --Andrew Medlar Praise for The 39 Clues Featured on NBC's Today Show, Good Morning America, USA Today, The New York Times , NPR's Morning Edition, Associated Press "One blazing success." - The Huffington Post "An interactive mystery...it's more than just a reading adventure." - Boys' Life "This is a multi-media adventure where you also search for clues-in books, trading cards and online. Get searching!" - Girls' Life Praise for The 39 Clues Featured on NBC's Today Show, Good Morning America, USA Today, The New York Times , NPR's Morning Edition, Associated Press "One blazing success." - The Huffington Post "An interactive mystery...it's more than just a reading adventure." - Boys' Life "This is a multi-media adventure where you also search for clues-in books, trading cards and online. Get searching!" - Girls' Life Linda Sue Park became a professional writer when she published her first poem at age nine. She went on to become a journalist, a food critic, and an English teacher, but Park did not test her hand at writing fiction until she was in her midthirties, at the same time that she began to explore her Korean heritage in earnest. Her research resulted in a treasure trove of children's books, each of which delves into a different piece of Korean history. In 2002, Park was awarded the Newbery Medal for her third novel, A Single Shard becoming the first Korean American to take home the honor. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • When seven members of their family were kidnapped, thirteen-year-old Dan Cahill and his older sister, Amy, got ready for the fight of their lives. But their enemy, a terrifying group known as the Vespers, remained frustratingly elusive. They stay in the shadows, picking off Cahills one by one.And now the Vespers have landed their most serious blow yet - a blow that strikes at the very heart of the Cahill family. Because Amy and Dan discover that there's a Vesper mole in their innermost circle. Amy and Dan need to smoke out the traitor before the next hostage dies. They have just days to discover who has their back . . . and who wants to sink a knife into it.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(415)
★★★★
25%
(173)
★★★
15%
(104)
★★
7%
(48)
-7%
(-49)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Great series.

My son loves this series. I read a few just to know what they were--and was pleasantly surprised to find an engaging story line which was age appropriate. I was particularly pleased to find no witchcraft--so prevalent in stories for this age group. Also, kids love the clues and ways they can interact. I am thrilled to find something I find no objection with that captures his attention and takes him from reluctant to eager reader.
2 people found this helpful
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SO DISAPPOINTED!

The first set of books (11 of them) were pretty good. I shared them with my students hoping they would fall in love with them, just like me..... then.... the next set of 6 ARE NASTY!!! ... Just way too much violence... too much blood.... too much "strangeness" for me to EVER share with my students! Sending this last batch BACK to the authors!
2 people found this helpful
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Trust No One, including the author - inappropriate language for children

With a series that now has you hooked or you've already said goodbye (11 in the original series and six in the Vesper series), it seems such a shame to introduce bad language in book five of the second series. I might have expected it if it had been a series written for adults that children happened to pick up as well. This series was written for children and has been wonderful enough to keep children and adults enthralled by it. I was completely disappointed that I let my son read this one before I did. I was thankful that book six did not continue that line of thinking. I guess this is the problem you run into when you have various authors - some understand what it means to truly write for children, some don't. So sad that Linda Sue Park is in that second group. Perhaps "The 39 Clues" will be smarter about their author choices in the next series.

Would I recommend the book - yes, but only if an adult reads it first and uses white out for the necessary sentences - TRUST ME (pun intended), the sentences you white out will not take away from the story.
2 people found this helpful
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Good Ending does not make up for Inconsistencies

*May contain spoilers* From the start, this book just really bugged me. There are SO MANY inconsistencies with the rest of the series. The first and most important being the identity of Vesper One. Unless their assumptions are incorrect, it can't be who they think it is. In the first book, we discover that Vesper One is male and has a scar. And now it's someone completely different? Yeah, right.
And there was nothing with Casper and Cheyanne. Nothing with AJT. Nothing with Interpol or anything like that.
Then there's the part when Dan contacts Vesper One. I thought they couldn't do that? Vesper One is always a step ahead... he's supposed to /know/ when they acquire something.
There were also several other little things that really bugged me, but then I'm probably just nitpicking.
Some things did surprise me, some better than others. The ending, despite everything else, was actually pretty good. It surprised me most of all and was really intense and big. I liked that. Can't deny you will like the ending.
Don't get me wrong, I love the series. I have and read every book written for it. This one was just more disappointing than the rest of the books. Hope the next one is better.
2 people found this helpful
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Characterization? What Characterization?

You'd think that by the 16th book in a series, characterizations would be relatively stable, but Amy is so egregiously out of character for the later half of this book that I'm infuriated. It reads like poor fanfiction. I had to put the book down and walk away.

If there had been some form of subtle leading up to it, I could understand the crash of depression...
But there was no foreshadowing. How can someone who's been so strong for 15 books fall apart at the final hour? She's been there before and she overcame it without crashing this hard. And then she trained and trained and trained and has been preparing for this "second hunt" for two years but she falls deeper into a pit of depression than she ever has before? There's no precedent set that justifies her sinking into "a happy place" and becoming a comatose zombie.

I am irked.
1 people found this helpful
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I recommend it for tweens

My son loves this series. I recommend it for tweens.
1 people found this helpful
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Inappropriate content for target audience ages.

My elementary and preteen kids have loved the 39 clues series. This Cahills Vs Vespers series brings in a some more fighting and violence, but my kids are getting older so I didn't put the books down on that account. I was disappointed with the swear word from Sinead in this book and about Dan and Atticus giggling over drawings of unclothed women (on multiple occasions through the book). Completely inappropriate and very disappointing! I should not have pre-screen books written for 8-12 year olds.
1 people found this helpful
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Great book

My ten year old grandson is fascinated by the Cahill's adventures, and this was a page turner. He loved it!
1 people found this helpful
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New type of book for my grandson!

My grandson has not had any 39 clues books until now. He is a good reader but Has had a slight bit of trouble understanding it. It may be just a little too difficult for him. I am putting it away until he matures in his reading ability. This is not any fault of yours. He just thought it was a cool book and that he could understand it better then he does. I'm sure when he mature's a little more he will enjoy it.
1 people found this helpful
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Great Series

This is a wonderful series of books for kids my son really likes the clues and mystery of the series.
1 people found this helpful