Discover millions of ebooks, audiobooks, and so much more with a free trial

Only $11.99/month after trial. Cancel anytime.

Unavailable
Harriet the Spy
Unavailable
Harriet the Spy
Unavailable
Harriet the Spy
Audiobook7 hours

Harriet the Spy

Written by Louise Fitzhugh

Narrated by Anne Bobby

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

4/5

()

Currently unavailable

Currently unavailable

About this audiobook

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?
LanguageEnglish
Release dateSep 23, 2003
ISBN9781400085781

Related to Harriet the Spy

Related audiobooks

Children's Mysteries & Detective Stories For You

View More

Related articles

Reviews for Harriet the Spy

Rating: 4.053158512788906 out of 5 stars
4/5

1,298 ratings60 reviews

What did you think?

Tap to rate

Review must be at least 10 words

  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Mystery about a girl who wants to be a spy and decides to practice by spying on all her friends and neighbors, but things turn nasty when someone finds one of the notebooks that has all of her spy-secrets in it.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This was a childhood favorite and will always hold a special place in my heart.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I thought by picking this children’s book, it would be fun/funny and quick. I have to say it was more serious and went a little deeper than I expected. I remember liking the movie when it came out, but I don’t remember if I ever read the book. The book follows Harriet, who wants to be a spy when she grows up. So she gets a notebook and writes down observations about the people she spies on. And she spies on people by following them and looking in windows and even climbing into dumbwaiters.

    When I started reading I expected kids pretending to be spies and learning life lessons about being kind. I guess those things happened. But there were tons of other life lessons there. About doing what you love, and having to do things like dancing lessons even if you think they are dumb because they will be good for you in the future. I love how Harriet struggles with questions of privilege and affluence even if she doesn’t quite figure everything out. At least by paying attention to details she at least thinks about other people.

    But I also have to say that even as Harriet learns that not everyone has the same life goals as she does, even as she learns that not everyone goes to private lessons and has a nanny, I don’t think she ever really gets out of the upper-class mentality. Harriet being spoiled never really changed. I also thought the drama and reactions of Harriet and her friends were childish, but I remember what it was like in middle school, so I’d say this is pretty realistic. I like to judge books based on who they are meant for, and this book is not meant for a jaded 20-something. It’s meant for a kid just now trying to figure out how to behave in society without parental supervision. I think it does a good job of showing the consequences of letting your unfiltered thoughts into the world. Harriet still has a lot of growing up to do, but I think this book really shows her learning how to behave more like an adult and learning to think complexly about the world and the people in it.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I first read Harriet the Spy when I was about eleven years old; the same general age as the title character. I remember that I quite enjoyed the book, and I'm fairly certain I spent a good several months trying to be a spy just like Harriet. But beyond that I had very little recollection of the story.

    The story holds up fairly well, even given the huge technological advances that have been made since it was written in 1964. I actually think the most telling thing as to the age of the story was the fact that Harriet's class at school had ten students. That class size seems more or less unheard of these days, even in private schools.

    With my most recent reading--nearly eighteen years later--I found myself more interested in the behavior of the people Harriet observes on her "spy route" than I was in her antics. It was interesting to see how they were described, and the little hints and clues as to who they might be (outside the rather limiting filter of an eleven-year-old's perspective).
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I am giving this book 5 stars but with trepidation as I LOVED it as an 11 year old and I am now 55, and not everything that I adored as a kid continues to appeal now, though much does. ( I can watch Mr Ed, I love Lucy and The Twilight Zone - but I draw the line at Gilligan's Island and The Donna Reed show ), ditto for books as a little kid I loved Carolyn Heyward, there is no way I could endure such a squeaky clean boring book now, but in terms of kids lit, I love William Steig and Roald Dahl. I have no idea what I would think of HTS now, but I remember loving it as a young kid.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    Wow. This was TERRIBLE. Harriet is a heinous little **tch who never learns her lesson. How the **ck does anyone enjoy this?
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I loved Harriet the Spy as a kid -- I'm pretty sure it was one that I read several times back then.Recently, after 40 years or so (!), I revisited this book and I can definitely say that it is a very different experience reading as an adult. Then: I thought Harriet was so cool because she got to spy on her classmates, friends, and neighbors and record her observations in a notebook. The meanness amongst the kids (especially after they turn onto Harriet after discovering her notebook with nasty observations) were just a part of life back then -- not right, but cruelty was something we were somewhat resigned to in the days before "zero tolerance policies" were implemented in some schools. Now: Notice that Harriet lives in a tony part of Manhattan, and that her parents are socialites who often goes out to parties. Her dad has some kind of high-powered job and her mother is a housewife who frequently goes out to play bridge. Harriet frequently overhears them gossiping and making catty remarks about their friends -- possibly where she gets her mean streak. As a result, Harriet (an only child) is deeply attached to Ole Golly (who frequently quotes from Shakespeare and the classics), who is called a nurse in this book but actually a nanny. Harriet also interacts a lot with the live-in cook, whose name we never learn.As an adult, I "got" a lot of what was going on with the adults in this book that went completely over my head as a kid. I found that very interesting. But,definitely, the final message which is that one must be careful of sharing negative thoughts that might be hurtful to others, is an important one to both kids and adults. Especially in today's internet culture where there are trolls everywhere.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    A childhood favorite
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Harriet the Spy is one of the greatest children's novels ever written. It is a true classic.In the 1970s my father, who was blind, when to NIH for an operation. He shared a room with a crusty old Navy man. One afternoon my Dad was listening to Harriet on records. His roommate spoke up and said, "Would you mind turning that off for awhile?" "Oh, sure, no problem," said my Dad, "I didn't mean to disturb you." "Oh, it's not that," said the fellow, "I have to go downstairs now for some tests and I don't want to miss anything." Harriet the Spy is that suspenseful. It is also a highly amusing and touching story.Harriet is extremely bright and curious and trains her intelligence on becoming a spy. Not to give away too much, but her spy rounds introduce her to a wide range of personalities -- each with their own flaws and virtues. Through her observations, Harriet is learning how people make their way through life. One man lives for his cats, another feeds hungry children from goods stolen from the shop he works for, another woman decides to spend all day in bed until her doctor orders her to stay all day in bed. All of these people are flawed, and they are all interesting and of value in their own way. What better lesson to learn?When her notebook is accidentally dropped and her classmates read her true thoughts about them, they are deeply hurt and angered at her frank evaluation of their flaws. After she endures much at their hands and receives some of the same pain they felt upon reading her notebook, Harriet gains true empathy forthem and begins her journey into maturity. And if you think this sounds "too preachy," I will just refer you to the scene where Harriet plays the part of an onion and her father joins in. Louise Fitzhugh captured the essence of what it means to be a child.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    A re-read. This book reminds me of summer reading. Watched the movie on Netflix, which I thought was pretty good.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Harriet is my idol.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This was a fun read. I was shocked by the straight-forward entries in Harriet's notebooks, and her innocence. I haven't read this book as child, and I think if I have, I wouldn't see those entries as shocking, but rather honest and funny. This book has good lessons, and bad ones. The good was the importance of friendship, and the lessons Ole Golly has taught Harriet, which are both street-smart and book-smart. The bad was the mean notebook entries and the message that Harriet gets what Harriet wants, even when demonstrating bad behavior. Nonetheless, it was a fun read.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    SOMETIMES I CAN'T STAND SPORT, WITH HIS WORRYING ALL THE TIME AND FUSSING OVER HIS FATHER, SOMETIMES HE'S LIKE A LITTLE OLD WOMAN. -Chapter 10, from Harriet's Spy Notebook Harriet wrote that about one of her best friends. Granted, she never expected him, or anyone else to read it, but still. I can forgive Harriet for what she writes in her notebook, but I can't forgive her bratty behavior. I remember loving this book as a kid and I was excited to read it again. I am doing a paper for graduate school about children's books (ages 9-12) with strong female protagonists. This book comes up often in lists on that subject. I have to say I was disappointed. I don't mind that Harriett doesn't follow all the rules, and I don't expect her to be a perfect little child. But I found her tantrums and acting out very annoying. I did some research on the internet and discovered that this book was often challenged and/or banned back in the 1960's, since "Harriet was a poor role model for children because she exhibited delinquent tendencies" (Harriet the Spy - (childrensbooks.about.com)). I also found her parents cold, distant, and completely oblivious throughout most of the book. When Ole Golly (Harriet's nurse/nanny) got married and left, they were at a loss as to how to raise their own child. If my experience (and those of my friends around my age) is any indication, this book appealed to children everywhere. The librarian I volunteer with even dressed up as Harriet the Spy and carried a notebook around when she was a kid. And she wasn't alone. Kids loved Harriet as a rebel character. They weren't bothered by her bratty behavior; they were inspired by her rebellious streak. In the end, I guess that's what is unique about this book. In a time when female characters in books were pretty, decorous, and obedient, Harriet went against the grain. She was herself, warts and all and she was unapologetic about it. She didn't want to go to dance school; she wanted to be a spy. Recommended to:Grades 3 - 5, kids who are rebellious or different and want to find a character they can relate to. Then again, in my opinion, there are books with more likable rebel girls out there.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    6years old. I liked the story, but not the bad habbits.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I remember liking this very much from reading it in grade school in the sixties. However, I really only remembered one episode, and very little of that. I didn't remember that Harriet "learned" the wrong lesson about being a spy, which was to lie to her friends.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Such an interesting character! I can understand why it is so popular.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I am sad I didn't read this as a child. Harriet is exactly the kind of precocious character I loved to read about. Harriet is interested in everything. She is going to be a writer and is practicing by keeping a spy journal. When she loses it one day and the people she's been writing about see the cruel things she writes about them, including her best friends Sport and Janie, they start a Spy Catchers Club to make Harriet's life miserable. Harriet is a bit of a jerk and can be very unkind and retaliates out of anger and embarrassment, but what kid isn't a jerk sometimes? This is a great book for any kid who has ever done something they are sorry for and any kid who has felt rejected or like an outcast. This is a great classic that stands the test of time.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This book was mostly a "wow" for me. Wow in the sense of "How did I not read this as a child?" Wow in the sense of "How does Fitzhugh capture so well both middle-schooler behavior/thoughts/emotions and the confusion and obliviousness of their parents?"

    As a person who, in eighth grade, got in trouble with my peer group for something I wrote that was read by people I didn't intend to see it, I'm in awe at the realness of Harriet's reactions to her classmates turning on her.

    As a parent, I'm in awe at the realness of Harriet's parents' reactions and their cluelessness about both what's going on and what to do about it.

    The only thing I wasn't quite on board with was all the household staff. I just don't get it. Was this a 60's thing? Were these particularly wealthy people? I know Harriet's school is a private school, but...a live-in nanny and a cook and a maid? It was interesting---and commendable---how much empathy Fitzhugh was able to employ in her portrayal of Harriet's parents. Here are people who try to outsource all of their child-rearing and just ignore their daughter until they absolutely can't anymore. Had I written this, I would not have had so much compassion for people who put themselves in this situation, but Fitzhugh did well, I think, showing them as human. They made choices, things happened as a result of these choices, and they adjusted. That's all we can expect of anyone---ourselves included---regardless of the exact nature of those choices.

    And thank goodness the adults in the story didn't try to show Harriet "tough love" or send her to some middle-schooler boot camp to straighten out her bad attitude. Instead the adults, after a while, showed compassion for this child who was clearly reacting to pain that she didn't know how to express in a more socially acceptable way. Fitzhugh lets everyone in her book make mistakes, which is something I see way too little of in real life these days. We're so keen on zero tolerance and labeling and categorizing and pathologizing that we sometimes forget to see one another's humanity.

    Okay, down off my soapbox now.

    The key is, I felt good while reading this book. It reminded me to reserve judgment and to see both adults and children as human beings, especially when they're doing things of which I disapprove.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This is the story of a young girl named Harriet and how she wishes to be a spy. She observes the things that go on in her neighborhood and takes notes. Eventually, she tries to solve a mystery, which may or may not land her in trouble.This is a fun book for 3-5 graders to read. It is captivating for young readers because you never know what Harriet will get into next.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    How did I miss this in 1964 ?
    Can't believe I didn't read it and are there others in the series.
    Longer than I thought it would be.
    Great book - kids are awful, aren't they ? And then they grow to adults and here we all are with all our foibles and quirks.
    HUGE reminder to never write down your snarky, mean thoughts and then get caught at it !
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    It's funny how different you read a book as an adult than when you were a child. As a kid I felt so bad for poor Harriet, what with her mean classmates invading her privacy and reading her journal... As an adult... Harriet is a brat. She is mean, spoiled, negative and has horrible things to say about those around her. However it's pretty obvious that, like most children, she is a product of her parents who sit around the dinner table insulting all of her friend's parents each night. It's really no wonder she doesn't write kindly, however she never truly learns that lesson, either! She simply learns to lie about her friends and continue to insult those on her spy route!

    That being said, this book inspired me as a child. It made me want to write, and it still has that effect on me. However, I wouldn't want my child to strive to be like Harriet... just try one of her screaming sessions in my house...
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Harriet M. Welsch is going to be a writer some day. For now, she is observing everything she can, from her family to her classmates to the neighbors she observes on her "spy route." She writes candidly (and often cruelly) in her notebook, but when that notebook is discovered and read by her classmates, Harriet is headed for trouble!I haven't reread this book in years, and what struck me this time is how well Fitzhugh wrote about the experience of childhood. Harriet is kind of a brat, and I wouldn't want to be around her in real life, but she manages to be sympathetic in the context of the story. This childhood classic is one I highly recommend for both children and adults.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Harriet loves to write down everything in her notebook. Some of it is nice. Some of it is not-so-nice. And then Harriet loses her notebook.And then Harriet loses all her friends.You don’t often find a story with the emotional resonance of Harriet the Spy.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Found this on one of those 'books every child should read' lists and then immediately downloaded it as an ebook from the library. I enjoyed it, although I'm sure I would have enjoyed it more when I was a child. The same list had 'Peter Pan' and 'Wind in the Willows' on it, neither of which I've enjoyed as an adult, so I suppose I shouldn't be surprised at being underwhelmed by this one.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I'm not even sure when exactly I first read this amazing book but it defined my childhood for sure. It was one of those books I read and dreamt of being like Harriet. I even went as Harriet the Spy for Halloween BEFORE, I might add, the stupid movie came out. Which, of course, I loved the movie because I mean, it was awesome. This book and Matilda = books I read over and over and over again.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Truly a classic -- one of the rare books that holds up well, decades after first reading. I highly recommend it for boys AND girls. Harriet is a wonderful protagonist, curious and independent, but also flawed. In other words: Real.
  • Rating: 1 out of 5 stars
    1/5
    I vaguely remember reading this as a kid and not liking it much. I picked it up again last night and feel much the same. I don't find the characters engaging, in fact I think Harriet is an over-privileged little bucket of smarm stirred with entitlement & attitude. The ending is both improbable and unsatisfying.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I never fell in love with Harriet the way other people do. Maybe it is just me, but I felt she was too mean. I felt it was authentic and a good idea of how kids act and react.. but it wasn't for me.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Harriet the Spy is about a typical young girl, except for the fact that she spies on everyone and writes everything down in a notebook that she carries around with her all the time. One day, Harriet's book ends up in the hands of her friends and they discover all of the things that she has been writing about them. Harriet must find a way to put her friendships back together. This book is great for teaching children about the consequences of gossiping.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Harriet is just a normal 6th grader who hates having to sit in school, does not like it when things don’t go her way and enjoys spending time with her friends except that she spies on everybody. Not even her friends or family, are safe from Harriet and her notebook. Harriet writes everything down - like why the new kid always wears purple socks and why the neighbor lady never gets out of bed. She carries the journal with her wherever she goes until one day it lands in the hands of the wrong people - her friends. The very friends she wrote mean things about. “Harriet the Spy” does a great job of discussing the consequences of gossip and the realities of middle school. It may be set in the 1960’s so where Harriet writes notes, modern day teens would text, but the lessons are the same - what happens when your friends find out you gossip about them? Are you writing for a purpose and if so, what is it? Recommended for ages 9 -14 and any aspiring writer out there, “Harriet the Spy” is a story like no other about growing up, being a good friend and consequences life hands you.