Confessions of a Junior Spy: The Mean Girl Mission

81rYT4cvr5L
Author(s)
Age Range
9+
Release Date
January 13, 2026
ISBN
978-1250363824
Buy This Book
     
A spy-in-training must infiltrate her best friend's school to investigate a mean girl who might just be an undercover assassin in the thrilling second installment in this fun, fast-paced middle grade series.

Bea is training hard to become a spy. Growing up in the Pangean Hotel, a secret sanctuary for spies, she spends her time studying self-defense, languages, codebreaking, and field medicine. And now she has extra lessons with her new mentor Ms. Halliday, not to mention a new babysitting job with her best friend Tommy.

But when her friend Chantal sends her a telegram about a mean girl named Mabel (who is almost certainly part of an international league of Assassins), Bea knows she has to go undercover at Chantal’s school. Except the closer Bea gets to Mabel, the rockier her friendship with Chantal becomes. Bea knows she needs to take down the Arctic assassins... but she never thought that could mean losing a friend.

Editor review

1 review
The wacky side of spying
(Updated: June 08, 2026)
Overall rating
 
4.3
Plot
 
4.0
Characters
 
5.0
Writing Style
 
4.0
Illustrations/Photos (if applicable)
 
N/A
What worked:
The most entertaining part of the book is Bea living among adult spies. Everyone in the world has a Knack, and Bea has a special talent with knives. Her father has the same Knack, and he uses it as the chef at the Pangean Hotel. Her mother’s Knack is with guns, and she’s frequently off somewhere in the world on a secret spy mission. Bea wants to become a spy too, but her parents don’t like the idea. Bea receives training to master her knives and learn other spy skills, but her parents would like her to attend a public, non-spy school. This gives Bea the perfect opportunity to infiltrate her friend’s school and catch an evil spy with a people Knack.
Much of the humor comes from Bea’s lack of knowledge about the world of Normals, non-spy people. While registering on her first day of school, she’s asked to place anything distracting, such as a cellphone, into a bag. Bea surprises the administrator by removing several knives that are hidden under her clothes. Answering questions in class is an adventure, since all of her knowledge revolves around spies and the history of spying. She must bite her tongue to reveal the truth about the history being taught in the school. You can imagine how Bea behaves during her first sleepover. The story is told from Bea’s first-person point of view, so readers will fully appreciate
The story shares a perspective on the issues of bullying and friendship. Bea suspects Mabel has a people Knack and is trying to control the minds of her classmates. She bullies and picks on Bea’s friend Chantal and another girl named Dodie. Bea decides she must get closer to Mabel, but doesn’t foresee the consequences. How will Chantal react to Bea hanging out with the girl bullying her? Tommy is Bea’s best friend, and he offers mission support from the Pangean. However, there are moments of embarrassment when the two friends struggle with their maturing emotions.
What didn’t work as well:
Bea tries to confirm the identity of the person with the people Knack, and all of her observations are tainted with a preconceived notion of guilt. Readers will realize Bea’s mistake and recognize the enemy agent well before she does.
The final verdict:
This fun, fast-moving mission will appeal to young readers. Bea’s character is the highlight, as her love for the Life (the spy world) and her lack of knowledge about the Normal world make for an entertaining story. This book can be read independently of the first book in the series, and I recommend giving both a try.
Comments (0) | Was this review helpful? 0 0

User reviews

There are no user reviews for this listing.
Already have an account? or Create an account