Christie & Company Books in Order
Part ofKatherine Hall Page Books in OrderSee the Christie & Company books in order by Katherine Hall Page, with brief summaries, series background, and tips on the best place to start.
Last updated: June 9, 2026
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Publication Order
4 books
Christie & Company
by Katherine Hall Page
1996
At a boarding school outside Boston, new eighth-grade roommates Christie, Maggie, and Vicky are blamed for a rash of thefts. Instead of keeping their heads down, they start investigating on their own.
Down East
by Katherine Hall Page
1997
A summer at Maggie's parents' Maine inn sounds peaceful until practical jokes grow steadily more dangerous. Christie, Maggie, and Vicky dig into the trouble before someone gets seriously hurt.
In the Year of the Dragon
by Katherine Hall Page
1997
When their friend Bi Yun's family is threatened by a Chinese gang, Christie, Maggie, and Vicky step in. The trio's loyalty is tested as the case pulls them into real danger.
Bon Voyage
by Katherine Hall Page
1999
A long-awaited trip gives Christie, Maggie, and Vicky another mystery to solve. Away from school and home, the trio has to lean on nerve, friendship, and sharp eyes when the fun goes sideways.
Series background & context
Christie & Company is Katherine Hall Page's younger-reader mystery series, and it starts with three girls who are not planning to become a detective team so much as getting pushed into it. Christie, Maggie, and Vicky arrive as new eighth-grade roommates at a boarding school outside Boston, and they quickly learn that being the newcomers makes them easy targets.
That outsider feeling is important. The series is not just about clues and suspects. It is also about friendship forming under pressure. Christie, Maggie, and Vicky each bring a different personality to the group, and the fun comes from watching them figure out how to work together. They notice things adults miss, they make mistakes, and they keep going anyway.
The first book, Christie & Company, uses the boarding-school setting well. Dorm life, rumors, cliques, and thefts give the mystery a closed-world feel without ever making it too dark for younger readers. Later books open things up. Down East takes the girls to Maine, where a summer at Maggie's parents' inn is spoiled by practical jokes that turn increasingly dangerous. In the Year of the Dragon raises the stakes when the trio tries to help a friend whose family is being threatened, and Bon Voyage keeps the sense of movement and adventure going.
The map gets wider, but the appeal stays the same.
These are brisk, accessible mysteries for readers who want smart kids, clear clues, and real friendship at the center. Page writes the girls as curious rather than impossibly brilliant, which helps. They are not miniature adults. They are young teens learning when to trust their instincts, when to be brave, and when a problem is bigger than it first looked.
There is also a nice balance between everyday life and actual danger. School rules, parents, travel plans, and social awkwardness all matter, but the books still deliver secretive behavior, suspicious accidents, and the satisfaction of putting pieces together before the last page. Because Page had already built Faith Fairchild into a successful adult series, she knew how to pace a mystery. Here she scales that skill down for younger readers without talking down to them.
If you like boarding-school stories, vacation mysteries, and detective teams that grow closer with every case, Christie, Maggie, and Vicky are easy company. The books are compact, readable, and rooted in the pleasure of watching three girls become a real team.
Edited by
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