
About This Book:
What would happen if you accidentally bought a doodle worth millions? Edwin Hodge finds out in this middle grade novel by Dan Gutman, bestselling author of My Weird School series.
There were so many things Edwin Hodge didn’t know when he paid $10 for a cool poster of Kobe Bryant at the local flea market.
He didn’t know that hidden within the frame of the poster was an original drawing by Pablo Picasso, one of the most famous artists in history. He didn’t know the Picasso might be worth millions of dollars. He didn’t know that kids at school were going to treat him differently, or that he would become a world famous social media superstar.
And he sure didn’t know that people would tap his phone, follow him home, break into his house, or threaten to burn it down. He didn’t know the Picasso was going to ruin his life.
*Review Contributed By Karen Yingling, Staff Reviewer*
Fantastic Garage Sale Find!
There is a good bit of information about the Mona Lisa theft and Picasso’s artwork that will appeal to readers who are interested in art books such as Day and Helquist The Mona Lisa Vanishes: A Legendary Painter, a Shocking Heist, and the Birth of a Global Celebrity, Blue Balliett’s Chasing Vermeer, Hicks’s The Van Gogh Deception, or Asselin and Malone’s The Art of the Swap.
Gutman’s books are always such fun, and he is such an asset to the world of children’s literature. He clearly spends a lot of time listening to what young readers want. The blurb for this book quotes Gutman as saying “I want my readers to think that reading my books is like watching a movie. One where you never know what’s going to happen next.” He certainly accomplished that with this fun and funny story of an unlikely flea market find. Readers who enjoyed Gutman’s My Weird School books will appreciate the humor in The Picasso Curse, and pick up some history along the way.
