Front Cover: Claudia's not sure she wants to find out who's on the other end of the line.
Back Cover: Kristy, Claudia, Mary Anne, and Stacey have had some strange adventures since they started the Baby-sitters Club. But nothing's been as spooky as what's going on right now. The baby-sitters have been getting mysterious phone calls when they're out on their jobs. When a phone rings and they pick up, there's no one on the other end of the line.
Claudia's sure it's the Phantom Caller, a jewel thief who's been operating in the area. Claudia has always liked reading mysteries, but she doesn't like it when they happen to her. So she and the baby-sitters decide to take action - with some very mixed results!So the main plot is yeah: the girls are plagued by weird phone calls while they're sitting and pretty much everyone except Stacey thinks it's the Phantom Caller. The girls start getting freaked out and they invent a code to use on the phone if they think they might be in trouble. Nothing in particular really happens though. Aside from a few hang-ups, most of what happens is in the girls' heads.
Claudia's next-door neighbours, The Goldmans, do end up getting robbed, but it turns out that it's just a copycat, and not the actual Phantom Caller.
In the meantime, Claudia's crushing on a boy, Trevor Sandbourne, and is hoping he'll ask her to the Halloween Hop, happening at the end of the book. The problem is that they don't have any classes together and don't exchange words at all. Claudia is convinced he doesn't even know she exists. This distracts Claudia immensely, and she's put on a homework lockdown by her family, so there's many passages of her doing homework under someone's supervision.
Eventually, the girls find out that their mysterious phone calls have been Alan and Trevor trying to work up the nerve to ask Kristy and Claudia to the Halloween Hop. Claudia is super-happy and all's well that ends well.
Random Thoughts
- I always hated this cover. That girl does not look Asian at all. MAYBE half-Asian, but yeah. That is definitely not a full-blooded Japanese-American girl.
- I really like Janine. She's a bit insufferable at times, but I think Claudia's too hard on her. I imagine that if Claudia just toughed out a conversation for more than 5 minutes, Janine would loosen up and talk about normal things again.
- No wonder the Kishis are on Claudia's case: she hasn't done ANY of her homework at all so far this year (two months). I get the feeling that while the Kishis would obviously prefer Claudia to have super awesome A++ grades, they'd be fine with her achieving Bs or whatever, so long as she's trying. But obviously she's not trying. At this point, Claudia does come across as just simply a student who isn't applying herself and who maybe needs a bit of help. There's a difference between someone who isn't "academically inclined" (Claudia as she's being portrayed now) and someone who is mentally handicapped (the way later Claudia comes across in her handwritten entries)
- Apparently Claudia has an above average IQ, but just doesn't apply herself. Her mispellings in this book and the last book ("cuzin", "Ocober", "thier", etc) reflects that. She has other things on her mind, probably her art and boys
- She gets a 70% on an English quiz. This is actually a pretty damn decent grade. Again, her parents probably want better for her (as they should), but 70% is not dumb at all. It's definitely not "hold you back, you're failing this grade" bad. She gets marked off for stupid mistakes, which again probably comes from just not paying attention.
- Claudia also ends up getting an 86% on her math test, which is also REALLY GOOD. Here, I learned that an 86% is a "B or B+, depending on how the rest of the class does". Up here in Canada, an 86% is an A.
- I'm sad that the "red ribbon/blue ribbon" code never comes up again
- I love how Kristy spends the whole book hating Alan Gray, but when it turns out he's just been bugging her cuz he likes her, she goes along with it. I mean, it's terrible, but it's very realistic to how a 12 year old would react. Plus I like this well-rounded Kristy. She's not horribly into boys, but does get a little starry-eyed at the idea of one liking her.
- I love how their dance outfits are pretty much the opposite of what they'd wear in the later books. Claudia and Stacey wear baggy jeans and large sweaters (this just sounds like too much material and very shapeless; I would've thought they'd wear either leggings or tight jeans) and Kristy wears a plaid jumper and turtleneck. In later books, Claudia and Stacey would most definitely be wearing dresses/skirts or oversized sweaters with leggings (essentially being very dress-like), while Kristy would be in the one in jeans.
- I miss Mimi
- I like how Kristy and Claudia seem kinda close in this one. Not as close as Mary Anne and Kristy, but yeah. I don't think we ever see Claudia and Kristy hangout or confide deeply in each other like they do in this one again.
- Claudia mentions how Kristy and Mary Anne still bring their lunches to school, and how that makes them babies, but then she immediately follows with how gross the school lunches are. Why would you waste money on something gross, when you can bring foods that you like from home??
- Related to that: because of this, I thought high school cafeteria food would be like it is in the series. Everyone always had the same proportioned lunches. It's not like that here at all. There's a daily special, but you can always choose from a bajillion other options and mix and match and buy as much or as little as you want of whatever you want. These books gave me such unrealistic expectations of high school xD haha
Author's Note:
AMM talks about the sitting adventures she used to have with her best friend Beth, and how the two of them came up with a code in case either of them ever got into trouble. She admits that they never needed to use the code, but that it was fun to have and being scared sometimes. She goes on to reassure the reader that it's okay to get scared while baby-sitting at night, like she sometimes did. Apparently AMM read a lot of mysteries as a child, and this was her first attempt at writing one. She mentions that she does several more over the course of the series, and that they became so popular that they eventually became a regular installment. (On a personal note: I love the Mysteries, and upon seeing the publishing order of the books, I was surprised to see how late in the series the Mystery series came in.)
Notebook Pages
The person who previously owned this book actually filled out the notebook pages. Her name was Sarah, and she was 10 years old. Her favourite part was when they found out who was doing the calling, her favourite character is Claudia and she is most like Kristy. I'm going to fill in the pages specific to this book with my own answers now.
Claudia and the Baby-sitters were really afraid of the phantom caller. The time when I was the most afraid was when the first thing that popped into my head was this one time, when I was 8 years old: I was staying at a neighbour's house because my parents were in the hospital for the delivery of my brother. I really had to go to the bathroom, but the only bathroom available was in the master bedroom, and they had a giant dog in there and it was 5am and the husband scared me. I had no real reason to be afraid of neither the husband nor the dog, but I guess it was because I was young and unfamiliar with either of them.
Other things that I am afraid of are doctors.
Things that don't frighten me are uh, lots of things??
If I were baby-sitting like Claudia and I kept getting scary phone calls, I would call my boyfriend, or my mom haha
The scariest book I have read is hmmm... I dunno; the first thing that popped into my head was Super Mystery #2, Baby-Sitters Beware!, but I know I have read far scarier books than that haha
The person I like to talk to on the phone the most is my boyfriend.
Other people I talk to on the phone are my mom haha
My phone number is 314-2875.
My favourite phone number is my boyfriend's because it's my boyfriend haha
The most surprising phone call I ever got was nowadays, pretty much any phone call is surprising to me haha
The kind of phone that I have or would like to have is a:
[] Princess phone (like Claudia's), [] Old-fashioned phone, [] Cordless phone, [] See-through phone, [x] Cellular phone
Not all US schools curve their grades like Claudia mentions, and it's more common in college than younger grades.
ReplyDeleteI was in middle school about ten years after this book was set, and having options of different lunches was just becoming thing.
Yeah, here in universities, they occasionally curve their grades, but definitely not in elementary and high schools.
DeleteMy middle school didn't have a cafeteria. None of the elementary/middle schools in my city do. We don't get to experience cafeteria life until high school, which I started 15 years after the first books were published. Again, when I was 10 or so, I didn't realize that the books had been published in the 80s and were therefore not indicative of how middle school would actually be anymore, crazy dramas aside haha