Harriet 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?
Louise Fitzhugh (1928–1974) was born in Memphis, Tennessee. She attended Bard College, studied art in Italy and France, and continued her studies in New York at the Art Students League and at Cooper Union. Her books Harriet the Spy, The Long Secret, and Sport have been acclaimed as milestones of children’s literature. These classics delight readers year after year.
A New York Public Library's 100 Great Children's Books 100 Years
selection
"Finding Harriet as a young writer in the mid 1960s was inspiring.
It meant I wasn’t the only one who wanted to tell stories about
kids who were real."—JUDY BLUME
“I don’t know of a better novel...that made more readers of my
generation want to become fiction writers. I love the story of
Harriet so much I feel as if I lived it.” —JONATHAN FRANZEN, author
of Freedom and The Corrections
"Harriet the Spy bursts with life."—School Library Journal
"The characterizations are marvelously shrewd."—The Bulletin
A New York Public Library's 100 Great Children's Books 100 Years
selection
"Finding Harriet as a young writer in the mid 1960s was inspiring.
It meant I wasn't the only one who wanted to tell stories about
kids who were real."-JUDY BLUME
"I don't know of a better novel...that made more readers of my
generation want to become fiction writers. I love the story of
Harriet so much I feel as if I lived it." -JONATHAN FRANZEN, author
of Freedom and The Corrections
"Harriet the Spy bursts with life."-School Library
Journal
"The characterizations are marvelously shrewd."-The Bulletin
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