Will leave you dying to know more.Rick Riordan, author of the Percy Jackson series The New York Times bestselling author of the Peter and the Starcatchers and Kingdom Keepers series, Ridley Pearson, brings us the riveting first tale of the Lock and Key trilogy about the origins of the rivalry between literatures most famous enemiesSherlock Holmes and James Moriarty, told from the perspective of Jamess observant little sister, Moria. Before James grew up to be a ruthless, remorseless villain, he was a curious boy from Boston, with a penchant for trouble and an acid tongue. Thrown into a boarding school against his wishes, James winds up rooming with a most unlikely companion: a lanky British know-it-all named Sherlock Holmes (Lock to his friends). An heirloom Bible, donated by the Moriarty family more than a hundred years ago, has gone missing, and it doesnt take long for the two to find themselves embroiled in the school-wide scandal. The school is on lockdown until its found, strange clues keep finding their way to James, and a secret society lurks behind it all. Its a brave new reimagining of the Sherlock Holmes series as only master of suspense Ridley Pearson could envision. As Rick Riordan, author of the Percy Jackson series, says, This tale will change the way you see Sherlock Holmes and leave you dying to know more. The first installment in an exciting new series that’s ideal for fans of Pearson and those looking for a more modern take on Sherlock Holmes’s mysteries. - School Library Journal This novel spin on a familiar tale will pull in lots of fans. - Booklist Pearson skillfully dodges the worn paths of the trending “young Sherlock” genre and launches a series that handles character development as adroitly as it weaves its devilish mystery plot. Whodunnit fans will be well pleased with the twists and turns in this debut, and Holmes fans who wonder what makes Moriarty tick will be racing back for volume two. - Bulletin of the Center for Children’s Books James Moriarty is one of the greatest criminal masterminds the world has ever known. But before he became the scheming, remorseless villain he is now, he was just my older brother, James. James and I grew up like the Charles River and the cobblestone sidewalks that run alongside itseparate but inseparable. He was fast and rough as only a big brother can be, and I gave him boundaries, which he constantly rolled up against but which we both knew he needed. But that was before Father forced us to enroll at Baskerville Academy. That was before everything changed. At Baskerville, an elite private boarding school founded by our ancestors, James started drifting to the darkness. It was there he met his roommate, the insufferable Sherlock Holmes. From the very beginning, the two were at each others throats, literally and figuratively. But as much as the two frustrated each other, an incident at the schooland some would say destinyforced the two together. It started with a missing heirloom Bible and ended with blood spilled, bonds destroyed, and the first glimpses of the evil James Moriarty we think we know today. Every time I take stock of those years, of how much my brother has changed, I cant help but fault Baskerville, the evil that lies within its hallowed halls, and Sherlock, whose insistence on solving every mystery he finds, I believe, only pushed my brother to commit the crimes he did. And it all began with a simple note and ended with an initiation. Ridley Pearson is the bestselling author of over fifty novels, including Peter and the Starcatchers (cowritten with Dave Barry) and the Kingdom Keepers and Lock and Key series. He has also written two dozen crime novels, including Probable Cause, Beyond Recognition, Killer Weekend, The Risk Agent , and The Red Room . To learn more about him, visit www.ridleypearson.com.