Sydelle Pulaski did
Sydelle Pulaski did
Sandy didn't write the shorthand notes, Sydelle did
Sydelle Pulaski steals the shorthand notes in "The Westing Game" in order to protect her own secret. She then uses the knowledge gained from the notes to decipher the clues in the Westing game and advance in the competition.
Turtle took the broken shorthand typewriter upstairs to protect herself in the Westing Game. She believed that it could be used as a weapon if necessary.
Yes there is a movie version of this book.
Sydelle Pulaski wrote her shorthand notes in Esperanto, a constructed international auxiliary language designed for easy learning and use. This language choice added an extra layer of complexity to the puzzle presented in "The Westing Game."
There was no crime in The Westing Game.
There were 16 people who played the Westing Game in the book.
Westing is Sam Westing's last name, and the whole book is based on his game in the will, which is also titled the "westing game".
The Westing Game was created in 1978.
In the novel "The Westing Game" by Ellen Raskin, the character Sandy McSouthers, who is also Sam Westing in disguise, stole Sydelle Pulaski's shorthand notebook. Sandy McSouthers is revealed to be the mastermind behind the elaborate game set up by Sam Westing to solve his own murder. Sydelle's shorthand notebook contained valuable information that Sam Westing needed to carry out his plan.
In "The Westing Game," one of the bombs burned a corner section of the Westing house, causing damage to the building.