I, Freddy by Dietlof Reiche

 

“The time has come.

“Enrico and Caruso, the guinea pigs, have settled down at last, old William the tomcat has retired to his blanket for the night, and Mr. John has gone out.

“Now it is the time to make a start on my life story….”

Those were the first words (and last) of I, Freddy, book one in the Golden Hamster Saga by Dietlof Reiche! This book is about a golden hamster named Freddy who wants to learn to read and write, but he runs into some problems I won’t tell you about… you’ll have to read the book. The main characters are Freddy, (hence the name “I, Freddy”) Sophie, (the girl who takes care of Freddy… temporarily) Sir William, (the civilized tomcat) Mr. John, (takes care of Freddy after Sophie does) and Enrico and Caruso (the guinea pig poets). I don’t know the country it’s in or anything, but it takes place in Sophie’s house and Mr. John’s house. It also probably takes place in the past, but not very far because Mr. John has a typewriter, but then he gets a computer.

 

Freddy is really smart because he learns to read books and write on a Macintosh computer. He’s also really sneaky because he made Sophie give him a pencil and then used it to get out of his cage. He’s also a risk-taker because when he gets out of his cage he goes into Sophie’s mom’s room (her mom is allergic to fur). Freddy wants to read and write. The learning part was actually pretty easy for him, but when he sees the typewriter he wants to communicate with humans via the typewriter. The problem is that the cat, Sir William, can help Freddy but won’t because the former doesn’t like the prospect of communicating with humans. I liked when Sir William and Freddy were talking about maybe Sir William helping him type and SW says, “If I lost a claw, I would lose my identity.” And Freddy says, “You’d lose your what?” And SW says, “My identity. I wouldn’t be myself anymore. Even a civilized tom is still a tom, but a clawless tom is just a pussycat.” Freddy goes back to Sophie’s place, but he wants to stay at Mr. John’s, so he hides in Mr. John’s bag and then goes into hiding in his house. But, obviously he can’t stay hiding in Mr. John’s house, so SW agrees to help Freddy communicate with Mr. John, to let him know Freddy’s there.

 

I really liked this book because it kind of stands out with the other chapter books I’ve read. Those have been action packed and agreeably violent; this book’s more like “oh, Freddy wants to read and write, but he needs to figure out how” (trust me, the second book has way more action). I would recommend this book for people who like animals and reading. Also, if you like the book, it’s a series, so you can keep reading about Freddy Auratus the golden hamster!!! I think the book is fiction. A connection to another book would be the Moomin books because the Moomins look like animals, but they talk and interact with humans.

My rating of the book is:

⭐⭐⭐⭐☆= I really liked it!!!
I give this book 4 out of 5 stars.

 

4 thoughts on “I, Freddy by Dietlof Reiche

  1. This sounds like a good and cute book because I like hamsters and I like when animals get involved with human things. Your post made me very interested in the book.

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