By Sheila Turnage
Moses Lo Beau was a foundling. As a baby, she was found floating on a makeshift raft in a flooded river. She was adopted by the man who rescued her from the flood, Colonel Lo Beau. Together with his partner, Miss Lana, they raised the baby that Colonel named Moses because of the similarity of the baby's rescue to that of the Bible story of Moses. However, this baby was a little girl, which the Colonel claims he didn't know when he named her Moses. Mostly she goes by Mo.
Apparently Mo's birth mother placed her baby on the raft to save her from the flood. It is a mystery that Mo would dearly love to solve as she writes letters to her "Upstream Mother" and places them in bottles to be launched into waterways and rivers upstream of where she lives hoping someone will find them and that will lead to finding her birth mother. This is her fantasy, anyway.
But Mo has a good life in the tiny village where she lives. Colonel and Miss Lana are fairly strict parents, but loving and kind and well liked by the local community of which they are a vital part since they have the only eatery in the little town of Tupelo Landing, North Carolina. Their little café is the local gathering place and so Mo knows everyone and all their business too.
When one of the local people is found with his head bashed in, naturally Mo makes it her business to figure out what went wrong in the dead man's life. For this she enlists the help of her best friend, Dale, who is eleven years old just like Mo is. Together she and Dale start snooping around and getting into trouble and getting in the way of the police investigation being run by an out-of-town detective, Joe Starr.
I enjoyed this story quite a bit even though I usually find stories about precocious children annoying. However, Mo is not quite as mouthy and bratty as fictional precocious children are often portrayed, probably thanks to Colonel Lo Beau, who has raised Mo with military precision. So she is more disciplined than the usual fictional wunderkind.
The murder mystery is not the most interesting part of the story, it's mainly about Mo's antics and how she gets herself and Dale tangled up in the investigation. Dale even becomes a suspect even though he is just a kid and ends up being arrested. However that is just a ruse to lull the actual murderer into revealing him or herself.
So this was an entertaining read even though its intended audience is kids in the 12 to 20 year old range, I'm guessing. I'm not sure how I ended up with the book as I don't usually bother with kid lit. But I have nothing bad to say about the story, the characters or the plot. I liked it!