From the Mixed-Up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler

by

E. L. Konigsburg

Jamie is Claudia’s younger brother. At nine years old, he is the second-youngest Kincaid sibling. Claudia chooses him to accompany her in running away because he’s quiet, sometimes funny, and he hoards his money. He’s “rich” because he saves his allowance and rarely buys anything. Plus, he gambles when he plays cards with his friend Bruce on the school bus and, because he cheats, he’s saved up almost $25. Though Jamie doesn’t seem to share Claudia’s sense of “injustice” about their home life, he is adventurous and agrees to run with Claudia when she reveals her plan to him. Jamie is a clever kid with a precocious dry wit and lively imagination. He enjoys “complications” and even encourages Claudia to make their running-away scheme more complex; his proposed embellishments sometimes clash with Claudia’s fussily detailed plans. Because he’s so good at handling money, Claudia appoints him treasurer of their trip, a role Jamie relishes. In overseeing their budget, Jamie is especially strict about walking everywhere instead of spending money on bus fare and skipping expensive desserts. By the end of their adventure, however, Jamie has become a little less stingy, just as Claudia has stopped correcting Jamie’s grammar so much. Though he and Claudia argue throughout their adventure, the siblings grow closer by the time they return home.

Jamie Kincaid Quotes in From the Mixed-Up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler

The From the Mixed-Up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler quotes below are all either spoken by Jamie Kincaid or refer to Jamie Kincaid. For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
Growing Up Theme Icon
).
Chapter 1 Quotes

“I’ve picked you to accompany me on the greatest adventure of our mutual lives,” Claudia repeated. […]

Despite himself, Jamie felt flattered. (Flattery is as important a machine as the lever, isn’t it, Saxonberg? Give it a proper place to rest, and it can move the world.) It moved Jamie. He stopped thinking, “Why pick on me?” and started thinking, “I am chosen.” He sat up in his seat, unzipped his jacket, put one foot up on the seat, placed his hands over his bent knee and said out of the corner of his mouth, “O.K., Claude, when do we bust out of here? And how?”

Related Characters: Claudia Kincaid (speaker), Jamie Kincaid (speaker), Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler (speaker), Kevin Kincaid (speaker), Steve Kincaid (speaker), Saxonberg
Page Number: 9
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 2 Quotes

And in the course of those miles Claudia stopped regretting bringing Jamie along. In fact when they emerged from the train at Grand Central into the underworld of cement and steel that leads to the terminal, Claudia felt that having Jamie there was important. […] And his money and radio were not the only reasons. Manhattan called for the courage of at least two Kincaids.

Related Characters: Claudia Kincaid, Jamie Kincaid
Page Number: 26-27
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 3 Quotes

(You’ve missed all this, Saxonberg. Shame on you! You’ve never set your well-polished shoe inside that museum. More than a quarter of a million people come to that museum every week. They come from Mankato, Kansas where they have no museums and from Paris, France, where they have lots. And they all enter free of charge because that’s what the museum is: great and large and wonderful and free to all. And complicated. Complicated enough even for Jamie Kincaid.)

Related Characters: Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler (speaker), Claudia Kincaid, Jamie Kincaid, Saxonberg
Page Number: 31
Explanation and Analysis:

What happened was: they became a team, a family of two. There had been times before they ran away when they had acted like a team, but those were very different from feeling like a team. Becoming a team didn’t mean the end of their arguments. But it did mean that the arguments became a part of the adventure, became discussions not threats. To an outsider the arguments would appear to be the same because feeling like part of a team is something that happens invisibly. You might call it caring. You could even call it love. And it is very rarely, indeed, that it happens to two people at the same time—especially a brother and a sister who had always spent more time with activities than they had with each other.

Related Characters: Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler (speaker), Claudia Kincaid, Jamie Kincaid
Page Number: 38
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 4 Quotes

“Manning their stations” meant climbing back into the booths and waiting during the perilous time when the museum was open to the staff but not to visitors. They washed up, combed their hair, and even brushed their teeth. Then began those long moments. That first morning they weren’t quite sure when the staff would arrive, so they hid good and early. While Claudia stood crouched down waiting, the emptiness and the hollowness of all the museum corridors filled her stomach. She was starved. She spent her time trying not to remember delicious things to eat.

Related Characters: Claudia Kincaid, Jamie Kincaid
Page Number: 44
Explanation and Analysis:

Every day they would pick a different gallery about which they would learn everything. […] Jamie considered learning something every day outrageous. It was not only outrageous; it was unnecessary. Claudia simply did not know how to escape. He thought he would put a quick end to this part of their runaway career. He chose the galleries of the Italian Renaissance. He didn’t even know what the Renaissance was except that it sounded important and there seemed to be an awful lot of it. He figured that Claudia would soon give up in despair.

Related Characters: Claudia Kincaid, Jamie Kincaid
Page Number: 49
Explanation and Analysis:

Claudia was lost in remembrance of the beautiful angel she had seen. Why did she seem so important; and why was she so special? Of course, she was beautiful. Graceful. Polished. But so were many other things at the museum. […] And why was there all that commotion about her? The man had come to take pictures. There would be something about it in tomorrow’s paper. They could find out from the newspapers.

Related Characters: Claudia Kincaid, Jamie Kincaid
Related Symbols: Angel
Page Number: 52-53
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 6 Quotes

Claudia didn’t think about their close calls. They were unimportant; they wouldn’t matter in the end, the end having something to do with Michelangelo, Angel, history, and herself.

Related Characters: Claudia Kincaid, Jamie Kincaid
Related Symbols: Angel
Page Number: 94
Explanation and Analysis:

Now is the time for all good men to come to the aid of their party;

Dear Museum Head,

We think that you should examine the bottom of the statue for an important clue. The statue we mean is the ocn you bought for $225.00. And the clue is that you will find Michelangelo’s stone* mason’s markk on the bottom. If you need help about this clue, you may write to us at Grande Central Post Office. Box in Manhanttan.

Sincerely, Friends of the Museum

Related Characters: Claudia Kincaid, Jamie Kincaid
Related Symbols: Angel
Page Number: 98-99
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 8 Quotes

Thus, when the tour was finished, Claudia was no expert on the United Nations, but she had discovered something: saris are a way of being different. She could do two things, she decided. When she was grown, she could stay the way she was and move to some place like India where no one dressed as she did, or she could dress like someone else—the Indian guide even—and still live in an ordinary place like Greenwich.

Related Characters: Claudia Kincaid, Jamie Kincaid
Page Number: 112
Explanation and Analysis:

“Yes,” Claudia sighed. “Just a week. I feel as if I jumped into a lake to rescue a boy, and what I thought was a boy turned out to be a wet, fat log. Some heroine that makes. All wet for nothing.” The tears flowed again.

“You sure are getting wet. You started this adventure just running away. Comfortably. Then the day before yesterday you decided you had to be a hero, too.”

“Heroine. And how should I have known that I wanted to be a heroine when I had no idea I wanted to be a heroine? The statue just gave me a chance … almost gave me a chance. We need to make more of a discovery.”

Related Characters: Claudia Kincaid (speaker), Jamie Kincaid (speaker)
Related Symbols: Angel
Page Number: 118
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 9 Quotes

They walked behind Parks through my living room, drawing room, and library. Rooms so filled with antique furniture, Oriental rugs, and heavy chandeliers that you complain that they are also filled with antique air. Well, when a house is as old as mine, you can expect everything in it to be thickened by time. Even the air. My office surprised them after all this. It surprises everyone. (You once told me, Saxonberg, that my office looks more like a laboratory than an office. That’s why I call what I do there research.) I suppose it does look like a lab furnished as it is with steel, Formica, vinyl and lit by fluorescence. You must admit though that there’s one feature of the room that looks like an office. That’s the rows and rows of filing cabinets that line the walls.

Related Characters: Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler (speaker), Claudia Kincaid, Jamie Kincaid, Saxonberg, Parks
Related Symbols: Files and Filing Cabinets
Page Number: 126-127
Explanation and Analysis:

I was sitting at one of the tables wearing my customary white lab coat and my baroque pearl necklace when the children were brought in.

“Claudia and James Kincaid,” Parks announced.

I allowed them to wait a good long while. Parks had cleared his throat at least six times before I turned around. (Of course, Saxonberg, you know that I hadn’t wasted the time between Parks’s announcement that Claudia and James Kincaid wanted to see me and the time they appeared at the office. I was busy doing research. That was also when I called you. You sounded like anything but a lawyer when I called. Disgusting!)

Related Characters: Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler (speaker), Claudia Kincaid, Jamie Kincaid, Saxonberg, Parks
Page Number: 126
Explanation and Analysis:

“If only you’d tell me if the statue was done by Michelangelo. Then I would feel that I could go home again.”

“Why would that make a difference?” I asked.

“It would because … because …”

“Because you found that running away from home didn’t make a real difference? You were still the same Greenwich Claudia, planning and washing and keeping things in order?”

“I guess that’s right,” Claudia said quietly.

Related Characters: Claudia Kincaid (speaker), Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler (speaker), Jamie Kincaid
Related Symbols: Angel
Page Number: 138
Explanation and Analysis:

“The adventure is over. Everything gets over, and nothing is ever enough. Except the part you carry with you. It’s the same as going on a vacation. Some people spend all their time on a vacation taking pictures so that when they get home they can show their friends evidence that they had a good time. They don’t pause to let the vacation enter inside of them and take that home.”

Related Characters: Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler (speaker), Claudia Kincaid, Jamie Kincaid
Page Number: 139
Explanation and Analysis:

I was glad that I wasn’t dealing with a stupid child. I admired her spirit; but more, I wanted to help her see the value of her adventure. She still saw it as buying her something: appreciation first, information now. Nevertheless, Claudia was tiptoeing into the grown-up world. And I decided to give her a little shove. “Claudia. James. Both of you. Come with me.”

Related Characters: Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler (speaker), Claudia Kincaid, Jamie Kincaid
Related Symbols: Angel
Page Number: 141
Explanation and Analysis:

The other side of the paper needed no translation. For there, in the midst of sketches of hands and torsos was a sketch of someone they knew: Angel. There were the first lines of a thought that was to become a museum mystery 470 years later. There on that piece of old paper was the idea just as it had come from Michelangelo’s head to his hand, and he had jotted it down.

Claudia looked at the sketch until its image became blurred. She was crying.

Related Characters: Claudia Kincaid, Jamie Kincaid, Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler
Related Symbols: Angel, Files and Filing Cabinets
Page Number: 145
Explanation and Analysis:

“Returning with a secret is what she really wants. Angel had a secret and that made her exciting, important. Claudia doesn’t want adventure. She likes baths and feeling comfortable too much for that kind of thing. Secrets are the kind of adventure she needs. Secrets are safe, and they do much to make you different. On the inside where it counts.”

Related Characters: Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler (speaker), Claudia Kincaid, Jamie Kincaid
Related Symbols: Angel
Page Number: 149
Explanation and Analysis:

“I’m a collector of all kinds of things besides art,” I said pointing to my files.

“If all those files are secrets, and if secrets make you different on the inside, then your insides, Mrs. Frankweiler, must be the most mixed-up, the most different insides I’ve ever seen.”

Related Characters: Jamie Kincaid (speaker), Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler (speaker), Claudia Kincaid
Related Symbols: Files and Filing Cabinets
Page Number: 149-150
Explanation and Analysis:

Claudia said, “But, Mrs. Frankweiler, you should want to learn one new thing every day. We did even at the museum.”

“No,” I answered, “I don’t agree with that. I think you should learn, of course, and some days you must learn a great deal. But you should also have days when you allow what is already in you to swell up inside of you until it touches everything. And you can feel it inside you. If you never take time out to let that happen, then you just accumulate facts, and they begin to rattle around inside of you. You can make noise with them, but never really feel anything with them. It’s hollow.”

Related Characters: Claudia Kincaid (speaker), Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler (speaker), Jamie Kincaid
Related Symbols: Angel
Page Number: 153
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 10 Quotes

Well, Saxonberg, that’s why I’m leaving the drawing of Angel to Claudia and Jamie Kincaid, your two lost grandchildren that you were so worried about. Since they intend to make me their grandmother, and you already are their grandfather, that makes us—oh, well, I won’t even think about that.

Related Characters: Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler (speaker), Claudia Kincaid, Jamie Kincaid, Saxonberg
Related Symbols: Angel
Page Number: 160
Explanation and Analysis:
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Jamie Kincaid Character Timeline in From the Mixed-Up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler

The timeline below shows where the character Jamie Kincaid appears in From the Mixed-Up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler. The colored dots and icons indicate which themes are associated with that appearance.
Chapter 1
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Claudia plans carefully. She saves up her allowance and chooses Jamie, the second youngest of her three younger brothers, to be her companion. He’s quiet, occasionally... (full context)
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...costs, Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler tells him: one-way fare costs $1.60, but since Claudia and Jamie are both under 12, they can travel for half price.) Claudia has to save up... (full context)
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...maids to do their chores for them. Claudia’s family just has a twice-a-week cleaning lady. Jamie, for his part, rarely spends money. A year and a half ago, he bought a... (full context)
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...it away. Claudia feels this is a stroke of good luck, since both she and Jamie can use the pass to get to New York. She decides they’ll leave on Wednesday. (full context)
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On Monday after school, Claudia tells Jamie she wants to sit with him on the bus so they can talk. Usually, the... (full context)
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At first, Jamie wonders why Claudia is picking on him instead of their brother Steve, but soon he... (full context)
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Claudia butters Jamie up by assuring him that if he runs away with her, he’ll be allowed to... (full context)
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Claudia feels justified for choosing Jamie, since they complement each other so well—she is cautious where he’s adventurous, and she is... (full context)
Chapter 2
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On Tuesday night, Jamie finds a list of instructions under his pillow. The first instruction is to forget about... (full context)
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The next morning, Claudia and Jamie get on the school bus and sit together at the back. After all the other... (full context)
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After Herbert parks and gets off the bus, Claudia and Jamie wait for just over seven minutes before they dare to look up. When they do,... (full context)
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Jamie tells Claudia they’ll need the compass for hiding out in the woods. He and Claudia... (full context)
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As they walk to the train station, Claudia stops to mail two letters. She tells Jamie the first letter was a note telling their parents that they’re running away and not... (full context)
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...in time to catch the 10:42 local train, which is relatively empty. During the ride, Jamie tries to convince Claudia that they should hide in Central Park instead. After she appoints... (full context)
Chapter 3
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When Claudia and Jamie reach the street, Jamie declares that, to save money, they’ll walk to the museum instead... (full context)
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As they make their way up Madison Avenue, Claudia’s violin case keeps bumping Jamie, so he walks a short distance ahead of her. By the time they reach the... (full context)
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When Claudia and Jamie reach the museum, the guard clicks off two numbers on his people counter. Guards don’t... (full context)
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...visit the museum each day, after all. They check their bags at the entrance, though Jamie briefly panics about how he’ll change into his pajamas that night. Claudia reassures him that... (full context)
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...want lunch, so they go to the snack bar, which is cheaper than the restaurant. Jamie is shocked at the food prices, but Claudia is just mad at their stingy parents... (full context)
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...before the guards leave. Claudia decides they should hide in the bathrooms; she explains that Jamie must go into a stall and “stand on it” (she’s reluctant to say “toilet”) with... (full context)
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Claudia knows she’s always been meant to sleep in a fancy bed like this, but Jamie finds this boring. Claudia shows him the card posted at the foot of the bed.... (full context)
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As they’d planned, Claudia and Jamie check out of the museum and reenter through the back. The guard at the back... (full context)
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The two lie there quietly for a while, feeling strange. Jamie points out that he didn’t brush his teeth. Claudia promises him that tomorrow will be... (full context)
Chapter 4
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Claudia and Jamie wake up early the next morning, while it’s still dark. Their stomachs feel empty, they... (full context)
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...can’t stop thinking about how hungry she is. And a few minutes after 10 o’clock, Jamie makes a mistake: he hears water running and thinks it’s a museum guest, so he... (full context)
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Since the snack bar won’t open for hours, Jamie and Claudia leave the museum and buy food at the automat. They also stop at... (full context)
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Jamie’s choice surprises Claudia, but she thinks she understands it—she took an art appreciation class last... (full context)
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...a Times photographer on the edge of the crowd and realize something unusual is happening. Jamie is eager to get his picture taken, but Claudia shoves him forward, knowing that if... (full context)
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...can find out what’s so special about this exhibit. Still mad about Claudia shoving him, Jamie argues about spending a dime on the newspaper. Finally, they detour to the Egyptian wing... (full context)
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Claudia, fascinated by the mystery, reads the article twice. Jamie isn’t impressed by the museum’s bargain, but Claudia explains that if this statue is really... (full context)
Chapter 5
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Claudia and Jamie have been hiding for three days now. Laundry is becoming an issue, so on Saturday,... (full context)
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...them to a different branch), Claudia is determined to remember everything she reads. She assigns Jamie to look through photographs of Michelangelo’s work while she studies. After realizing that her book... (full context)
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On the way back into the museum, Jamie finds an intact Hershey’s almond bar. Claudia warns him that it’s probably filled with marijuana... (full context)
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Eventually, Jamie hears more footsteps than usual, followed by two men’s voices by the sink. The men... (full context)
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Jamie realizes that they’re moving Angel, and that Claudia would have no way of knowing this.... (full context)
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...extra-long wait, they both emerge from the bathrooms and meet in their sleeping spot. When Jamie arrives, Claudia already knows they’re moving the statue; she saw it, dimly lit, on her... (full context)
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...climb into the fountain. They both enjoy the bath, even though the water is cold. Jamie especially enjoys it because he soon discovers coins on the bottom. The kids scoop up... (full context)
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...the statue, Michelangelo, and the Italian Renaissance as hard as possible before falling asleep. Instead, Jamie starts thinking about home. He figures they should be homesick and wonders if they’re bad... (full context)
Chapter 6
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When Claudia and Jamie wake up the next morning, a Sunday, they both notice that it feels distinctly like... (full context)
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Then they go to study Angel again. Jamie teases Claudia for wishing she could hug the statue; he says Mrs. Frankweiler must have... (full context)
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...on the velvet, which make her think a beer can must have rested there. But Jamie points out that a beer can would have crushed the velvet down, while this velvet... (full context)
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Wide-eyed, Claudia tells Jamie that’s not a W, but an M. Then Jamie remembers seeing the same symbol on... (full context)
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...the sidewalk traffic. By the time he comes inside and moves the platform, Claudia and Jamie have moved on to the museum bookstore, looking for books about Michelangelo. (full context)
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...museum to write back to them there. If the museum asks for help, Claudia and Jamie will reveal themselves “as heroes.” (full context)
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Jamie suggests that they go home instead of waiting here for a response, but Claudia’s voice... (full context)
Chapter 7
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On Monday morning, Claudia and Jamie go to Grand Central Station to rent a post office box. When the postal worker... (full context)
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Suddenly, they hear boys’ voices right outside the tomb door. Claudia claps her hand over Jamie’s open mouth. Then they hear a familiar teacher’s voice urging the boys onward—it’s Miss Clendennan,... (full context)
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Jamie says part of him wants to join the class and return to Greenwich with them—he’ll... (full context)
Chapter 8
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On Tuesday, Claudia and Jamie do laundry again—Claudia’s sweater has shrunk—and check their P.O. Box. There’s nothing there. They decide... (full context)
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...does, or she could be different by staying in Greenwich and dressing like somebody else. Jamie doesn’t understand, but Claudia is determined to figure out a way to be different—and Angel... (full context)
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...an envelope in their P.O. Box. Claudia feels ready to become a 12-year-old heroine. When Jamie unfolds the letter, they read it together silently. (Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler attaches a copy... (full context)
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Claudia and Jamie sit down in Grand Central Station’s waiting room, speechless with disappointment. The letter was so... (full context)
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Jamie tries to convince Claudia that just living in the museum for a whole week was... (full context)
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Jamie is still puzzled—don’t they go back to Greenwich on the New Haven railroad, the same... (full context)
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Claudia keeps insisting she has to know for sure if Michelangelo did the sculpture, while Jamie says that if the experts don’t even know, then he’s fine with not knowing. He... (full context)
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Jamie is surprised that Claudia has a “hunch”—she usually plans everything. But Claudia argues that the... (full context)
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...Hartford, Claudia feels happy and confident again. She hails a cab outside the station, and Jamie gets in without complaint. Claudia tells the driver to take them to Mrs. Basil E.... (full context)
Chapter 9
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The taxi drives up Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler’s long, tree-lined driveway. Jamie wonders aloud if Mrs. Frankweiler owns this “highway,” and the driver tells him this is... (full context)
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Jamie rings Mrs. Frankweiler’s doorbell, and the butler, Parks, answers. Claudia gives their names, and after... (full context)
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...vinyl, and fluorescent lights—and rows and rows of filing cabinets. When Parks brings Claudia and Jamie in, Mrs. Frankweiler is sitting at a table wearing her “customary” white lab coat and... (full context)
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...like wasting time. When she finally turns around, she demands to know whether Claudia and Jamie are the children who’ve been missing from Greenwich for the past week. (She notes that... (full context)
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...she can be rid of them. They humbly agree to stop. When Mrs. Frankweiler asks Jamie if he finds her frightening, he says she’s “not so bad looking,” and Mrs. Frankweiler... (full context)
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...but her intent gaze makes Mrs. Frankweiler uncomfortable, so she changes the subject. She commands Jamie to speak, and he stammers that they want to find out about the statue. Once... (full context)
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When Jamie finds out what Claudia is doing, he declares it “boloney” and goes to start lunch... (full context)
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...Mrs. Frankweiler already knows where they’ve been, and she says yes. Then Claudia glances at Jamie and sees he’s hiding underneath his napkin. He meekly confesses that the truth slipped out—he’s... (full context)
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Mrs. Frankweiler tells her about the deal she discussed with Jamie. But even a ride home in a Rolls-Royce isn’t enough for Claudia—she wants to know... (full context)
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Jamie immediately starts tearing through cabinets, but Claudia yells at him to stop. She says that... (full context)
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Independence, Capability, and Creativity Theme Icon
Art, Beauty, and Wonder Theme Icon
In desperation, Claudia asks Jamie what else they should search for, but when Jamie starts to say, “Look him up... (full context)
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Independence, Capability, and Creativity Theme Icon
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Claudia starts to cry, hugging the glass frame. Finally she tells Jamie that Michelangelo himself touched this paper over 400 years ago. Then Mrs. Frankweiler emerges from... (full context)
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...was a bad poker player, and Mrs. Frankweiler is a good one. But, she tells Jamie, she didn’t cheat. (full context)
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Jamie asks Mrs. Frankweiler why she didn’t sell the sketch, too. She explains that she needed... (full context)
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...tell her the story of their running away, and she will give them the sketch. Jamie wonders how she knows he won’t accidentally give her secret away, like he gave away... (full context)
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...Mrs. Frankweiler will keep the details of their story in her files—she collects such secrets. Jamie marvels that if secrets make a person different on the inside, then Mrs. Frankweiler must... (full context)
Growing Up Theme Icon
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...wants. Claudia figures out that she means that she wants to be a mother, and Jamie whispers awkwardly that Mrs. Frankweiler can’t be a mother because her husband is dead. At... (full context)
Chapter 10
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That night, Jamie and Mrs. Frankweiler play cards while Claudia records their story into the tape recorder. (Jamie... (full context)
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...Greenwich. Mrs. Frankweiler encloses a copy of Sheldon’s report for Saxonberg’s amusement. Sheldon reports that Jamie spent the first part of the drive pressing every button in the Rolls-Royce’s backseat. At... (full context)
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The kids plan to pool their money (Jamie won 34 cents at cards last night; Claudia has cornflake money coming) to visit Mrs.... (full context)
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Mrs. Frankweiler wonders if Claudia and Jamie will come to visit her again. She wouldn’t mind that, and she’s also got an... (full context)