Colin Fischer Audiobook By Ashley E. Miller, Zack Stentz cover art

Colin Fischer

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Colin Fischer

By: Ashley E. Miller, Zack Stentz
Narrated by: Jesse Eisenberg
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About this listen

Solving crime, one facial expression at a time

Colin Fischer cannot stand to be touched. He does not like the color blue. He needs index cards to recognize facial expressions.

But when a gun is found in the school cafeteria, interrupting a female classmate's birthday celebration, Colin is the only for the investigation. It's up to him to prove that Wayne Connelly, the school bully and Colin's frequent tormenter, didn't bring the gun to school. After all, Wayne didn't have didn't have frosting on his hands, and there was white chocolate frosting found on the grip of the smoking gun....

Colin Fischer is a modern-day Sherlock Holmes, and his story - as told by the screenwriters of X-Men: First Class and Thor - is perfect for listeners who have graduated from Encyclopedia Brown and who are ready to consider the greatest mystery of all: what other people are thinking and feeling.

©2012 Ashley Edward Miller and Zack Stentz (P)2012 Penguin Audio
Detective Disabilities Fiction Growing Up Humor Mysteries & Detectives Young Adult Comedy Mystery Fantasy Celebration
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Critic reviews

"Colin Fischer is like an alien anthropologist stranded on Earth, with no choice but to master the local social codes and try to pass as human, or perish." (Lev Grossman, New York Times best-selling author of The Magicians)
“Evok[es] Mark Haddon’s The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time . . . Readers will be drawn into the mystery and intrigued by Colin’s vision of the world.” ( Publishers Weekly)

What listeners say about Colin Fischer

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I love Colin and his logical, literal, Mr Spock like way of looking at the world

Wow did I love this funny, heartfelt, intelligent little book. Colin is autistic. He sees the world in a very unique way which can get him in a lot of trouble but which also helps him solve mysteries, overcome adversity, and in the end benefit everyone around him. This is a really heartwarming book

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love it

love it, although the footnotes can be disturbing and annoying sometimes. jesse's performance makes me feel he is collin himself.

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Kinda like a children’s book

The book is interesting overall. Those footnotes are funny yet factual. Always love Jesse’s performance. His tone and speed really match the characteristics of the roles. But I do wonder if this book is for children. The twist cannot even be called “twist”. It’s too simple and plain. But anyway, the perspective from Collin is really interesting, those analyses and stuff. Overall, it’s not bad.

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