Product Details
The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time: Children's Edition

The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time: Children's Edition
By Mark Haddon

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Product Description

Christopher is 15 and lives in Swindon with his father. He has Asperger's Syndrome, a form of autism. He is obsessed with maths, science and Sherlock Holmes but finds it hard to understand other people. When he discovers a dead dog on a neighbour's lawn he decides to solve the mystery and write a detective thriller about it. As in all good detective stories, however, the more he unearths, the deeper the mystery gets - for both Christopher and the rest of his family.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #23833 in Books
  • Published on: 2004-04-01
  • Original language: English
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 279 pages

Editorial Reviews

From the Back Cover
Fifteen-year-old Christopher has a photographic memory. He understands maths. He understands science. What he can't understand are other human beings. When he finds his neighbour's dog lying dead on the lawn, he decides to track down the killer and write a murder mystery about it. But what other mysteries will he end up uncovering?

Longlisted for the Man Booker Prize
Shortlisted for the Booktrust Teenage Prize

About the Author
Mark Haddon:
Mark Haddon is an author, illustrator and screenwriter who has written fifteen books and won two BAFTAS. He lives in Oxford.


Customer Reviews

The curious incident of the dog in the night -time4
Mark Haddon's work shines with a humanity and warmth denied to many thrillers. The honesty and spartan humour of the book's hero bring new dimensions to main stream adult fiction. An ordinary tale of stressed out folk revolving in barely coping spirals of self destruction and one boy's attempt at making sense of the difficulties that surround him. Never sentimental and stark in its portrayal of the tense relationships that are magnified by Chritopher's problems. We are wound into the plot with increasing desire to see how our hero copes with the challenges that increasingly beset him.
Will he survive? Will he succeed? Who can cope? All this and who done it too!
Read it and laugh, or cry, either will enrich you greatly.

An autistic boy tries to make sense of his world.5
Mark Haddon's touching novel, "The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time," is the story of a British fifteen-year-old boy named Christopher Boone. Christopher has a form of autism. He is a genius in math and science, but he has trouble understanding facial expressions and he communicates with others without making eye contact. He abhors being touched by anyone, and he groans and withdraws when he is upset. Christopher goes to a special school and he clings to the routines that make his life bearable.

One night, Christopher's orderly world is shaken when he finds a neighbor's dog, Wellington, dead of stab wounds. Christopher loves dogs and he determines to use his sharp mind to find out who killed Wellington. Christopher's father orders his son in the strictest terms not to stick his nose into other people's affairs. However, Christopher ignores his father's orders and his investigation leads him down some unexpected paths.

Haddon's book is a brilliant journey into a world that few people can even contemplate. What must it be like to have a literal mind that can process only certain types of arcane information but is powerless to handle the everyday social interactions that we all take for granted? Haddon, who has worked with autistic individuals, has deep compassion for Christopher. By writing this book from Christopher's point of view, the author enables the reader to feel this boy's confusion, anger, and heartbreak as his life begins to unravel. Haddon not only lifts the curtain on an autistic's boy's world, but he also explores the strain that having such a child places on his parents.

"The Curious Incident" is eloquent, poignant, darkly humorous, and unforgettable. I predict that this book will become a classic and I highly recommend it to anyone who is interested in the intricate workings of the human mind and heart.

An Adults book in a Children's Cover3
If I were reviewing this as an adult's book then I would award it 5 stars without any hesitation. Any book that holds my attention to such a degree that I read it in one sitting certainly deserves that, despite the fact that towards the end I started to lose sympathy for the narrator.

However, this review deals with the so-called Children's Edition. Although the text is clear and simple, this is NOT in my opinion a book for children; young adults yes, but not children. The bad language and profanities throughout the text make it unsuitable. I lost count of the amount of times I read the 'F' word and worse. The narrator's mental problem means he remembers everything he sees/hears in detail and can repeat it verbatim. In one passage, he does this with words he sees written on a tube station wall, repeating something I wish no child of mine to read. Doubtless, kids hear language as bad, and worse, every day at school, but that doesn't automatically mean that responsible parents want them reading it at home.

Don't let the bright childlike cover-art on this edition, or the fact it is frequently seen displayed beside Rowling and Snicket, fool you into thinking it is suitable for ages 12 and under. If you are the broad-minded parent of a precocious child, then go ahead; however, discerning parents may wish to check this book out BEFORE ordering a copy for a child. I feel it only fair to make this clear. After all, television programmes that use bad language before the watershed are obliged to broadcast a warning beforehand.

This is already a best-selling adult book. Children aren't children for long; this book will be around for years, they can always read it a year or two later.

I know many will not agree with my opinion, and vote this review as 'unhelpful' simply because they think my view is outdated or narrowminded. Most people who take this view are not parents themselves - perhaps they'll see things differently as and when they are!
Please bear in mind: My aim IS to help, by simply alerting parents to the book's content. It is up to each individual to judge whether this is something they want for their children or not.