Enola Holmes: The Case of the Left-Handed Lady
by Nancy Springer · Enola Holmes Mysteries #2
A fourteen-year-old girl outsmarts Sherlock Holmes — and Victorian London — in Book 2 of the series behind the Netflix movie.
The story
Hiding in London as 'Ivy Meshle,' assistant to the fictitious perditorian Dr. Ragostin, Enola Holmes takes on the case of missing aristocrat Lady Cecily Alistair. Cecily's charcoal drawings — done with her left hand, the hand her family forbids — lead Enola into a network of suffragettes, a dying radical's final hours, a garrote attack in a London alley, and a rooftop rescue from her own family's attic cell. All while evading Sherlock, who is closing in on his runaway sister one deduction at a time.
Age verdict
Sweet spot 11-13. Strong 10-year-olds with historical-fiction experience can handle it; 9 is a stretch.
Our take
A grown-up mystery: parents and teachers see more here than kids do. The Victorian register, suffragette history, and bittersweet ambiguity reward readers with stamina; the strong-girl-outsmarts-Sherlock hook is the kid entry point.
What stands out
Each audience's top 3 dimensions. Out of 30 scored per book.
Kids love
- Character voice Strong
Enola's first-person voice is unmistakable: dry, self-deprecating wit about her 'figurines' (bust improvers hiding supplies), candid about loneliness hiding in Mrs. Tupper's boardinghouse, fiercely pragmatic about disguise — a voice distinct enough that readers who know Book 1 recognize her in a sentence.
- Mental movie Strong
1889 London is painted in sharp, sensory detail — fog on Baker Street, the gas-lit Alistair drawing room, the cramped attic cell with its one window, Enola's Dr. Ragostin office with its false nameplate — every location lodges as a specific picture, aided by Springer's eye for period texture (crinolines, calling cards, perditorian shingles).
Parents love
- Vocabulary builder Exceptional
Exceptional period vocabulary load: perditorian, garrote, crinoline, calling card, suffragette, Tyburn, smelling salts, bustle, boarding house, matchgirl, mesmerism — plus Victorian register phrasings ('I took the liberty,' 'I am persuaded') threaded through Enola's narration; rich enough to be a genuine word-growth book.
- Stereotype-breaker Exceptional
Enola, at 14, opens her own perditorian practice under a male pseudonym ('Dr. Ragostin') to outsmart Sherlock Holmes himself — the book's spine is women finding ways through a system designed to erase them (Cecily's radical drawings, the dying suffragette, Enola's runaway independence), not tacked-on girl-power but structural.
Teachers love
- Cross-curricular value Exceptional
Touches history (suffragette movement, 1880s London), social studies (women's legal status, asylum reform), art (Cecily's left-handed drawings as coded protest), literature (Sherlock Holmes canon), and vocabulary (period English) — few MG titles hit five disciplines this cleanly.
- Classroom versatility Strong
Fits cleanly into mystery units, Victorian-era historical fiction units, women's history month, and introduction-to-Sherlock units; the series installment nature (Book 2) means it pairs naturally with Book 1 as a compare-contrast, and the Netflix tie-in gives film-vs-book lesson hooks.
✓ Perfect for
- • strong readers 11-14 who want history with teeth
- • girls hungry for a protagonist who never asks permission
- • Sherlock Holmes fans ready for a fresh angle
- • kids who came to the series via the Netflix movie and can handle denser prose
- • mystery lovers ready to graduate from Encyclopedia Brown
Not ideal for
Reluctant readers, kids under 10, and readers who prefer light or purely comedic adventure — the Victorian register and the somber suffragette thread ask for stamina and a willingness to sit with ambiguity.
⚠ Heads up
At a glance
- Pages
- 234
- Chapters
- 17
- Words
- 45k
- Lexile
- 980L
- Difficulty
- Challenging
- POV
- First Person
- Illustration
- None
- Published
- 2007
Mood & style
You'll know it worked when…
Readers who finish typically race to Book 3. The Netflix-movie viewer who powers through Ch 1-3 will stay for the rest.
If your kid loved this
Matched across 30 dimensions — interest hooks, character appeal, tone, pacing, emotional core. Not by what other people bought. By what fits the same reader profile.
The Case of the Missing Marquess
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Same genre (mystery). Same emotional weight (moderate)
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The Reptile Room
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Chasing Vermeer
by Blue Balliett
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The Mysterious Benedict Society
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