“Can you spot a fake?
Brady Hart knows the He's not a normal sixth-grade boy. Armed with a keen sense of justice and a photographic memory, he's on a mission to sniff out bad guys and use God's wisdom to set things right in the world.
If he can figure out how. After all, he's just a kid.
His best buddy, Sunday from Kenya, keeps him calm and laughing most of the time. Gladiss Finkel annoys him, but she has his back. That's a hard fact to ignore, since she always shows up wherever there's trouble, including Colby's department store right as he's about to bust a shoplifter.
Brady can't ignore something else. Counterfeits are popping up everywhere. Headphones with a tweaked logo, a sneaky store manager, and even a new leader at church--suddenly nothing adds up, yet everything fits together. Brady decides it's time to strap on his Belt of Truth (the one he made out of aluminum foil in third grade), call in Special Agent Max Dunham from the FBI, and uncover the lies threatening to destroy the people he loves.”
Series: Book #1 in “The Belt of Truth” series. (Set after to “The Good News Shoes” series by the same author, but does not have to be read first.)
Spiritual Content- Ephesians 6:14 at the beginning and a few Scriptures at the end; Scriptures are mentioned, memorized, quoted, read, & prayed; Church going; Talks about God, Jesus, the truth, trusting God, God putting people in our lives for a reason, Bibles, & those and events in the Bible; ’H’s are not capital when referring to God or Jesus; Brady meets a young woman who didn’t think people actually read the Bible and that makes Brady realize she doesn’t know God gave her her talent and invites her to church (which she hesitates at first because she thinks people will look at her weird, but ends up coming; A discussion with her reveals that she doubts that Jesus died for her sins (but Brady and Sunday disagree) and how she has been called a “mistake” her whole life; *Spoilers* At the end, she comes to church again willingly and wants to hear more about Jesus *End of Spoilers*); Mentions of God & Jesus; Mentions of prayers, praying, & thanking God; Mentions of Bibles, Bible reading, Bible studies, & memorizing Bible verses; Mentions of those and events in the Bible; Mentions of churches, church going, pastors, Sunday school classes, services, & hymns; Mentions of missionaries & missions; A couple mentions of Christians; A couple mentions of baptizing others; A couple mentions of being blessed; A couple mentions of a Christian radio station; A mention of sin having consequences;
*Note: Religious phrases like: “for the love of Pete”, “Heavens to Betsy”, and “Good heavens” are all exclaimed once; When confronting a shoplifter that the Bible says that stealing is wrong, the man tells Brady that the Bible isn’t true and that “[his] truth” tells him he can take whatever he wants (which makes Brady angry); Brady hopes that a pastor at his church hasn’t “moved on to the great cinnamon roll kitchen in the sky” (a nod to the cinnamon rolls that are always at his church); Brady thinks “Hallelujah” when Gladiss has to leave; When making notes on all those involved in the counterfeit ring and/or he has met recently, Brady draws a couple people with devil horns and a couple others with halos (one girl he draws with a black halo because she wears all black); Brady gets into Gladiss’ mom’s car and thinks that he has “died and entered girly-heaven surrounded by a perfumed glitter cloud”; Brady plays a video game called “Aliens with a Conscience” that gives him reasoning puzzles to solve; Mentions of aliens; Mentions of a man’s goons being called “cavemen”; A few mentions of luck & being lucky; A couple mentions of Solomon in the Bible starting to worship the gods of his foreign wives; A mention of someone looking hypnotized; A mention of Santa; A mention of a peace sign.
Negative Content- Minor cussing including: A ‘gah’, a ‘sucker’, three ‘blah, blah, blah’s, and five forms of ‘stupid’; Brady says a spoof off of a “Holy ____ ____, Batman” phrase; When in pain, Brady thinks that if he was “the type of person who says bad words”, that would be the time; Eye rolling; A bit of lying or withholding the truth; Being threatened, Being locked in a van, Being grabbed/pinched, & Pain (up to semi-detailed); Seeing someone being threatened and choked & another person having a medical emergency (barely-above-not-detailed); Brady gets into a car with an FBI agent, but is concerned he could end up dead if the man is a corrupt agent (only his friends know that he is with the man); Brady doesn’t tell his parents about his suspicions about the thieves/counterfeits even though he thinks he should and another adult says to tell them (Brady blames another for distracting him at one point; When the FBI agent if Brady trusts him, Brady pauses because the man is secretive, but realizes he has also been that way recently and it hasn’t been a good thing for him while also noting that it’s good for the FBI agent because it’s his job); *Spoilers* Brady didn’t realize how bad it was in the “real world” and his father comments that he is glad their family knows the love of Jesus; His dad comments about Brady growing up and finding out there is a lot of darkness out there & Brady hates it and says that people “just need to follow the truth”; At the end, Brady is grounded for two months by his parents; His mother asks him to promise that he won’t get involved in another FBI mission, but he can’t promise that *End of Spoilers*; Brady finds a girl (Gladiss) annoying at times because she’s very loud, always talking, and thinks she is constantly following him (he asks for help with her from his best friend, thinks about it being torture to be with her for two hours, and praying for her to disappear); Gladiss calls him obnoxious at times and he apologizes when it’s possible he has hurt her feelings once; *Spoiler* Towards the end, Brady realizes why God put Gladiss in his life *End of Spoiler*; Brady has one moment of wishing for his sister to go away, but she ends up helping him; Brady chastises himself for jumping to a terrible conclusion about someone he didn’t even know and thinking of her as a “numb brain” (not smart) and prays for forgiveness for it; Brady deals with bullies taunting him for being smart at school; All about & many mentions of counterfeits, counterfeit rings, criminals, & cons/scams; Many mentions of children working in sweatshops overseas & being enslaved; Many mentions of shoplifters, thieves, & stealing; Mentions of being threatened with loved ones being harmed; Mentions of prisons/jails & arrests; Mentions of cancer & heart attacks (including one senior citizen Brady knows has been battling different kinds of cancer for twenty years); Mentions of bullies, their taunts, & kids being mean; Mentions of lies, lying, & liars; A few mentions of identity theft; A few mentions of injuries & blood/bleeding; A couple mentions of a weapon & gunfire; A couple mentions of the possibility of being hit by a car; A couple mentions of car chases; A couple mentions of gossip; A couple mentions of throwing up; A mention of terrorism; A mention of a possible gunshot (but it was a car backfiring); A mention of the concern of being shot; A mention of someone possibly being held at gunpoint; A mention of cigarettes;
*Note: Brady meets a young woman who has always been told she was a mistake, how she ended up in the foster care system because her parents didn’t want her in their lives, and getting kicked out of places, but now that she’s eighteen she doesn’t “have to answer to anybody” (Brady and his friends encourage her and talk to her about God); Brady sometimes does “hulking out” which is when someone challenges what he knows to be true and he goes “angry and go ballistic and do things a scrawny sixth-grade boy whose voice hasn’t changed should never do”; Brady’s parents talk to him about how conflicting a shoplifter wasn’t a wise thing to do because the man could have hurt him; Brady’s best friend is a boy named Sunday who is originally from Kenya and is in remission from leukemia treatments (no details on the treatments beside prior when people were praying when it seemed like Sunday might die from complications from his leukemia); Brady says he “had to go” when avoiding telling Gladiss about something, but she takes it as if he used the bathroom outside and that it is so gross; Brady, Sunday, and Gladiss all have “dumbphones” that only allow them to take grainy pictures, text, and make phone calls (Brady makes a few comments about it being a “sorry excuse” for a modern cell phone, that they are “technology-deprived children”, and it was invented two decades ago; *Spoilers* At the end, Brady asks when he can upgrade his phone and his mother says when he can buy it himself and get someone to take him to the phone store; Both of Brady’s friends get new cellphones from their parents after being in a dangerous situation *End of Spoilers*; A woman in a return line at a store is rude to the customer service agent; An adult tells Brady to embrace his first school tardy for “all it’s worth” and that “something good will come out of it” (he plans to argue her point, but she hangs up before he can); Brady and others go to Starbucks; Mentions of car brands; Mentions of brand names (Fruit Loops, Goldfish, Cheetos, Kit Kat, Nikes, & Old Spice); Mentions of places (Starbucks, Salvation Army, & Macy’s); Mentions of fictional characters (Thor, Hulk, Bruce Banner, Batman, & Spider-Man); As a regional note, Brady calls someone a “bugger” which is not derogatory in the USA.
Sexual Content- Sunday says that he thinks Gladiss likes Brady, but Brady thinks that’s ridiculous; Someone asks if Gladiss is Brady’s girlfriend and he quickly says no; Brady meets a nice customer service agent at a store and decides he is going to marry her in “twenty years or so” (he later refers to her as his “future wife” twice and says he isn’t getting married until he is at least thirty-five); A few mentions of boyfriends/girlfriends (adults);
*Note: Brady tells his sister about learning about Solomon in the Bible and how he eventually had seven hundred winds; Brady is called stinky and sweats often; A nod to puberty (a mention of a boy’s voice changing).
-Brady Hart, age 11
1st person P.O.V. of Brady
218 pages
~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*
Pre Teens-
New Teens-
Early High School Teens-
Older High School Teens-
My personal Rating-
Well, that was fun! At times it reminded me a bit of an old Disney Channel movie—young heroes trying to save the day after accidentally becoming involved with the FBI, a counterfeit ring, and some probably slightly unrealistic adventures (which are fun to read regardless). In this book, there’s some humor and lessons learned plus a good amount of faith content.
I’ve actually been meaning to read this series for years, but I totally would have read it sooner had I known this series was about Riley’s younger brother! I loved the “Good News Shoes” series that was about Riley Mae, so it was such a fun surprise to see her again and added to my enjoy of this book! You don’t have to read that series first, but if you do, you can see when Brady and his best friend, Sunday, first met.
There’s a couple comments from Brady’s friend that a girl likes him, but Brady doesn’t think so. Brady isn’t the nicest to the girl because she’s very girly, loud, and talks a lot which some families made not like at the beginning. By the end he realizes why God put her in his life, though they still tease each other. I think this book would interest boy readers and girl readers because it’s a fun adventure. Definitely looking forward to reading the next book in the series soon!
See y’all on Friday with a new review!
*BFCG may (Read the review to see) recommend this book by this author. It does not mean I recommend all the books by this author.







