Harriet the Spy
Book - 2000
Eleven-year-old Harriet keeps notes on her classmates and neighbors in a secret notebook, but when some of the students read the notebook, they seek revenge.
Publisher:
New York :, Delacorte Press,, [2000]
Copyright Date:
©1964
ISBN:
9780385327831
9780440416791
9780440416791
Branch Call Number:
KIDS FIT
Characteristics:
300, 16 pages : illustrations ; 22 cm


Opinion
From the critics

Community Activity
Age Suitability
Add Age Suitabilityb
blue_dolphin_3008
Sep 03, 2020
blue_dolphin_3008 thinks this title is suitable for 9 years and over
r
red_lion_353
Jul 21, 2014
red_lion_353 thinks this title is suitable for between the ages of 14 and 7
Summary
Add a SummaryHarriet M. Welsch is a spy. In her notebook, she writes down everything she knows about everyone, even her classmates and her best friends. Then Harriet loses track of her notebook, and it ends up in the wrong hands. Before she can stop them, her friends have read the always truthful, sometimes awful things she’s written about each of them. Will Harriet find a way to put her life and her friendships back together?
Quotes
Add a Quotea
ashleeewis
Jul 28, 2016
If you can keep your head when all about you are losing theirs and blaming it to you

Comment
Add a CommentTruly one of my favorite books of all time. A peek into a sort of life I knew nothing of.
Really thoughtful and specific writing.
Just a pleasure.
Very much looking forward to reading "Sometimes You Have to Lie", the biography of author Louise Fitzhugh.
Harriet THE SPY. This genius of this book does not seem to age as it speaks to young and old... Who wouldn't have wanted an Ole Golly in their childhood? And even the bridge-playing mom and the dad who channels Mad Men are portrayed as genuinely caring parents in the crazy brownstone edging Central Park and the East River...
Harriet (aka Louise Fitzhugh) was a fly on the wall in so many niches of the Upper East Side. To read this book is to read a slice of history through a child's eye.
Not just one of the finest children's books, also one of those children's books that adults get something out of too. Harriet is acerbic, a little neurotic, sharp as a tack, naive. The book has a slight bittersweet edge to it. Partly from the narrative, but partly from the realization that Harriet's New York is almost (if not completely) gone, forced out by gentrification gone wild. Hers was a more nuanced, more delightful New York, a New York to be a child in. A New York of family grocery stores, without a Starbucks or cupcake boutique to be seen.
Put it on the shelf next to "Stuart Little" and "A Tree Grows in Brooklyn." Every generation and socioeconomic group has "its" New York. Harriet owns her piece of the city, all the way up to the sky.
Though there are references to a different time, the story still remains timeless. A true classic!
One of my favourite childhood books. I love the creativity and could always relate to Harriet, since she was always writing. Awesome plot and great ending, I would definitely recommend this book!
My eight-year-old daughter absolutely loved this book. I heard her laughing out loud while she was reading it, and she finished it in two days. Wonderful writing and character development! It was one of my own childhood favorites.
Eleven-year-old Harriet M. Welsch lives in New York City and aspires to be a writer. She enjoys the role of being a spy as she writes down everything she observes about her family, friends, and classmates. When her friends get their hands on her notebook and read the bluntly honest things she has written about them, Harriet realizes the difficulties of being a spy.
This book is another of my childhood favourites. After rereading it as an adult, I am glad to say that it held up pretty well. I still loved Harriet, even though this time there were definite times where I thought that she was acting like a spoiled brat. I now have more of an appreciation for the complexity of Harriet, who is a wonderfully complicated, honest, and interesting little girl. Bonus: The illustrations are fun and brought back memories of reading the book as a child.
I am Pretty sure I read this when I was a kid but memories of the 1996 movie have replaced my childhood reading of it. Reading again at 36 years old if found it wonderful. for a book written in 1964 it was amazing how many emotions it dealt with that real kids feel. Many other books of that era had not reached that point. that why
I think kids of today will not find it too dated. one issue that I have seen come up is that Harriet is not always a likeable person. that is true but I think that is what makes her more of a real a believable character.
I the love the essays that end this 50th anniversary edition!