Thursday, June 29, 2023

The In-Between Goth Girl Novel - Goth Girl and the Pirate Queen

I don't normally read series books out of order, but I did not discover this little gem until after I had read the four-book Goth Girl series by the super-talented Chris Riddell.  For those who are not in the know, Goth Girl is a series of fun mystery tales starring young Ada Goth, who father, Lord Goth, owns Ghastly-Gorm Hall.  Over the course of the four books, Ada has made friends with Kinglsey (the chimney caretaker), Emily Cabbage (her best friend) and her brother William (who has the uncanny ability to blend in with his background), and Arthur Halford (the hobby-horse groom).  These youngsters have formed the Attic Club, and they have been instrumental in helping Ada solve the mysteries that seem to abound in and around Ghastly-Gorm Hall.

Goth Girl and the Pirate Queen is a short story (at only 81 pages) that takes place between books 2 (The Fete Worse Than Death) and 3 (The Wuthering Fright).  It appears to have been written and published as a part of the 2015 World Book Day celebration.  Having never heard of this (yes, it's true - World Book Day was a mystery to me at this point!), I looked it up and discovered that World Book Day is a charity that operates in the United Kingdom and Ireland, created back in 1995 as a way to celebrate books and reading, and to encourage young people to read.  More information about this celebration can be found online at their website, World Book Day.
 
Thus, I opened this special edition of Goth Girl with much anticipation, as I had truly enjoyed the series and was missing the fun and completely outrageous Goth Girl.  In this particular story, Ada Got is a guest of Lady George, who received a coveted invitation to attend the Prince Regent's World Frock Day Ball (in which the ladies of the land show off the most unique and sometimes horrific creations in hopes of impressing the oversized Prince).  Lord Goth provides his daughter with the money to buy a splendid new dress, but through a series of mishaps and misdirections, the money is stolen and Ada is left without a dress - but a chance meeting with a real, live pirate queen leads her to a navy surplus store where she comes up with the perfect idea to not only find a new dress, but to help save the businesses of two fledgling store-owners!

One of my favorite things about this Goth Girl series are the various names that Riddell gives his characters.  You have the Goth family's cook, Mrs. Beat'em; you've got Tristram Shandy gentleman, "the most fashionable man in England (p. 13); there's also the beach beddler, Dowdy O'Dodds; Roald, the parrot (hmmm, perhaps in honor of author Roald Dahl?); then there's Willamina Wonkers, the confectioner (a la Willie Wonka, the candy man!); and we musn't forget the pirate queen's mother, Victoria Frankenfurt (yeah, you can figure that one out); oh, I would be remiss if I did not mention one of the D'Uberville builders, Tess ... and Beau Peep and his little lamb, Charles ... and Horatia Hornblow, the woman who runs the Navy Surplus Store ... it always manages to keep a smile on my face as I read the Goth Girl stories and catch the numerous puns Riddell plays with his characters' names.  This is only one of the many things that makes his stories so enjoyable to read.

And while there's not really much of a mystery to this one (it's more of an "Ada helps out Hornblow and Wonkers to become successful with their clothing and candy stores, respectively" kind of tale), it's always a treat to follow along with Ada as she stumbles into another adventure.  This one may be short and sweet (pun intended!), but it is definitely on part with the four full-length stories and definitely one that is not to be missed.
 
Oh, and I can't wrap up this post without mentioning the beautiful interior illustrations so masterfully rendered by Riddell himself.  They add character to the tale, and they are so unique in style that I long for more - wishing Riddell would do a full-length comic book story of Goth Girl and her ghastly cast of supporting characters - THAT would be an instant best-seller, no doubt!

RATING:  10 sticks of rock out of 10 for giving this reader an extra dose of the enjoyable treat that is Goth Girl!

Monday, June 26, 2023

Short(est) Lived Comic Series #26 - Walt Disney's Clint and Mac (Dell Comics)

Sometimes you come across something, and you're not sure why, but you just know that you have to have it.  This comic book is one of those things.  While on a recent trip to New York (State, not the City), my friend and I were browsing through an antique store we chanced upon - and while it was definitely filled with antiques, the store reminded us both of the front yard from Sanford & Son - and I happened upon an old Dell comic book with a photo cover featuring two young boys with a tagline that read: "A MYSTERIOUS errand leads to exciting adventure in old London."  Being a fan of children's mystery series, this piqued my interest enough, and while the cover is chipped here and there and the comic is well-read, I paid the $1.00 to purchase the comic.

Walt Disney's Clint and Mac
is the story of Clint Rogers, the son of a United States Air Force captain, and Alastair MacIntosh (a/k/a "Mac"), the son of a Scotland Yard detective inspector.  The Rogers are in England while Clint's father is stationed there, and during that time, Clint and Mac have become fast friends.  When Mac informs Clint that his father is commanding the police detail at the lavish birthday party being given for Prince Charles (yes, that truly dates this book, since the current King Charles has not been a boy for a VERY long time!), the boys decide to find the perfect gift for a prince who has everything.  They come across a turtle that they believe will make the perfect gift, but they don't have enough money - so what are a couple of boys to do?  Why, find a job, of course!  And thus starts their adventure, because when they talk a book seller into hiring them as errand boys, little do they realize their first job is to deliver a stolen manuscript to an unscrupulous buyer!  The mystery leads the boys to meet young Pamela Stuart, a proper young girl who takes an instant liking to the boys and who ultimately plays a crucial part in rescuing the boys from the hands of the villains in the story.  They unwittingly give the parcel to the wrong person and as they travel throughout London trying to get the package back, they discover that what's inside is way more valuable than they could have realized.  There is plenty of danger, adventure, and mishaps that makes for an enjoyable story, and, as with any good children's mystery, they manage to solve the puzzle and capture the criminals in a dramatic climax.

As with most comics back in this time period (this was published in 1958), there are no credits given for the writer and artist(s) of the book.  However, some online research indicates that comic legend Alex Toth provided the art for this issue (and possibly the story, as one website suggests).  Toth is a prolific comic book artist, having worked on a number of comics for DC Comics, Dell Comics, Gold Key Comics, and even some Marvel Comics throughout the 1940s, '50s, '60s, '70s, and even into the '80s.  His comic panels go back and forth - from very detailed backgrounds to non-existent backgrounds (showcasing the characters against a plain colored background) - but the style works well for the story, as it keeps the attention on the characters and dialogue when needed, while allowing the reader to still get the full import of the London setting in the detailed panels.

Since the cover to the comic featured what a photo of real boys, I had to assume this was a Disney film or television show from back in the day - and I was not wrong.  It turns out "The Adventures of Clint and Mac" was a serialized story that aired back in 1957 during the third season of the original Mickey Mouse Club.  Well, my friend and I were both curious, so we looked it up and YouTube and discovered that all fourteen (14) episodes, as well as the introduction, were available to watch - and watch we did!  The acting was probably not award-worthy, but Neil Wolfe and Jonathan Bailey did a fairly decent job as Clint and Mac, respectively.  It's funny how the director (Terence Fisher) visually emphasized the difference between the American (wearing a white t-shirt and jeans throughout the episode) from the British boy (who wore shorts with matching jacket, knee-high socks, and a cap).  From what we discovered online, the serial was filmed entirely on location in London.  While neither of these actors went on to film or television success, it is interesting to note that Bailey (Mac) did go on to act in a film version of Enid Blyton's The Famous Five.  The comic does leave out a number of scenes that were in the serial, and the ending in the comic deviates from the serial (leaving one to wonder if the comic is based on an earlier version of the script that was later changed).

While online sources indicated "The Adventures of Clint and Mac" did not fair very well, thus ending any potential for sequel serials, I found it rather enjoyable.  I would have liked to have seen additional tales with these two characters, and it's rather a shame Dell did not produce any additional comics with the further adventures of these two young crime-stoppers.  While they were not brothers, it was clear that they were based on The Hardy Boys, with Mac being the analytical, think-before-you-act "brother" (a la Frank) and Clint was definitely the more physical, jump-head-first into the situation "brother (a la Joe).  With the London setting, I think more stories would have provided the American viewers (and comic readers!) with an opportunity to see more of what life is like across the pond!
 
The comic book is a part of Dell Comics' "Four Color" series, identified as issue no. 889.  What is interesting (at least to me) is that there are no ads whatsoever in the comic - the inside front cover features scenes from the television serial, while the back cover and inside back cover feature short stories by Alex Toth about canine detectives and fingerprinting.  While doing some online research about this comic, I discovered that it was apparently translated into the Dutch language, where it was republished in a serial format, where it was issued in three-page installments.  These can be seen online at Clint and Mac - Dutch.

I'm definitely glad I picked this one up, as it opened me up to an entirely new "detective" pair that, up until now, I had never known!

RATING: 8 exploding fireworks out of 10 for preserving in comic book form this wonderful little piece of Mickey Mouse Club and children's mystery stories history!

Friday, June 23, 2023

Nancy Drew Mystery Stories #19 - The Quest of the Missing Map

And so we continue our journey through the Nancy Drew books written by Mildred Wirt (Benson), reaching the nineteenth book in the series.  After the jumble that was the last mystery, I was hoping this one might be a bit of improvement - especially since this is the first original text book with dust jacket that I ever bought at a used bookstore (prior to that, I only had the yellow-spine picture cover editions).  It was this book that started my journey to hunt down all the dust-jacketed editions.  And because of this book's place as my first dust jacketed Nancy Drew, I have spent years collecting every version of this book that I can find - this dust-jacketed version, the two yellow-spine versions, the various British editions, and numerous foreign editions for France, Norway, Malaysia, Finland, Sweden, as well as others.  I also have a model ship a friend gave me that is nearly identical to the one on Russell Tandy's original cover art.  So, I maintained some level of hope that when I re-read this story, it would hold up to my original enjoyment of the story.

The Quest of the Missing Map (original text) was first published in 1942, written by Mildred Wirt as outlined by Harriet Stratemeyer Adams.  That same year, Wirt also had published The Clue of the Rusty Key in the Dana Girls series, as well as The Clock Strikes Thirteen and The Wishing Well in her own Penny Parker series.  In addition, she also wrote the serialized story, "The Mystery at the Lookout," for the Calling All Girls magazine.  The title to this particular book was originally listed at the end of the previous book as "The Quest of the Telltale Map," but at some point, the title changed from "Telltale" to "Missing."  In any event, this particular book holds a special place for me, which I'll go into later in this post.

There's quite a bit going on in this mystery, which centers around a man who has spent most of his life searching for his twin brother, as they were separated as young boys.  At the time their father separated them, he ripped in half a map he claimed would lead them to a treasure, but they would have to work together to find it and share it.  Tomlin Smith, the twin in the story, only had half the map, so he was never able to find the treasure on his own.  Nancy becomes involved in the search for his twin and the map because his daughter, Ellen, who is studying music at a nearby school (Blackstone Music College), visits with Hannah Gruen - and it is revealed that Hannah used to work for the Smiths before she came to work for the Drews (p. 2).  This is interesting information, since in more than 90 plus years of history, we have never really learned much at all about Hannah's background before she came to work for the Drews.  Small tidbits such as this are dropped here and there, but they add up to very little indeed.  (Of course, compare that to what we know about Nancy's mother, and it seems like a lot!)

So, one of the things I did like about this story are the Gothic elements that appear here and there.  Such as the house in which Mrs. Chatham lives - Rocky Edge (p. 3).  The name alone evokes images of a high cliff overlooking the crashing waves of the ocean below.  Then there's the description of the house - an "old-fashioned place, half-hidden from the road by masses of high, overgrown shrubs" with a "curving drive [that] led to a pillared porch" (pp. 4-5).  It is easy to picture an old mansion falling into disrepair, dark and gloomy.  And, of course, there's the obligatory ghosts that are said to haunt the old "Ship Cottage" behind the main house (p. 7).  And let's not forget the reflection that Nancy sees in the mirror, which "sent icy chills racing down her spine" (p. 8).  Hidden wall panels, secret passages, threatening and disembodied voices, all of which provide a very Gothic setting - there's even a piano that makes no sound when played, yet moments later, it plays just fine (pp. 8-9).  Honestly, it's a shame the whole mystery did not take place in Rocky Edge, as it truly was a perfect setting for a great mystery.

But, no, instead the mystery quickly turns to the twins - Tomlin Smith and his missing brother - and the missing half of the treasure map.  Mr. Smith (whose name is actually Mr. Tomlin, as Smith is the name of his adoptive parents) tells Nancy that his mother died when he and his brother were fourteen (p. 19), and that his father was a sea-faring man, the captain of a freighter named the Sea Hawk (p. 19).  Unfortunately, the ship went down, but before it did, the boys' father gave them each half of the map and put them in separate life boats and sent them on their way (pp. 20-21).  What is interesting is that there was an armed motorboat named the U.S.S. Sea Hawk which served in the United States Navy from 1917 to 1919, and after World War I, the ship was stationed at Key West - until September 10, 1919, when a hurricane tore the ship away from the docks and it was never seen again.  While this story was written a little more than 20 years later, one does wonder if perhaps the name of the ship (and the fact that it was lost at sea) played a part in this element of the story.

Now, one would think that it would be quite difficult for Nancy to track down the missing twin, since it has obviously been many years since the boys were separated (since Mr. Smith is now not only grown, but has a twenty-year old daughter!) - but, there are SO MANY coincidences and convenient connections in this book, they border on the very unbelievable.  First, Nancy meets a boy named Bill Tomlin at an Emerson University dance just a day or so after talking with Mr. Smith (p. 50), and he tells Nancy that his grandfather's brother was a sea captain who had twin sons (p. 51).  Well, as "luck" would have it, Bill's father is the cousin of John Tomlin, who was a sea captain who was known for collecting shells, but who died on a voyage to Japan (p. 63), leaving behind a wife that no one has been able to locate.  He does recall that John had an excellent singing voice (p. 64).  Hmmm, a musical talent - any guesses here?  Anyway, back at Rocky Edge, Nancy discovers that Mrs. Chatham's first husband has a large collection of shells (p. 81) - so, needless to say, Nancy asks his name and (no surprise here), his name is John Tomblin (p. 82).  Well, through a series of too many coincidences to name here, Nancy finally uncovers the location of the other half of the map, but now they can't get a boat to take them to Little Palm Island   It seems every ocean-going ship has been pressed into special service (p. 157) - which could potentially be a veiled reference to the war going on at the time.  But wait! At that very same time, Mrs. Chatham's young daughter disappears (she has a habit of doing that in this book), and they find her walking down the street with a middle-aged man (p. 159) - uhm, wouldn't any normal person be concerned that a young girl like that would just take off with a middle-aged man?  Anyway, he turns out to be a sailor (p. 159) and he happens to know of a yacht available for rent (p. 160).  I mean, there are only so many coincidences that one can take before the story becomes too fictional to believe.

Aside from that, however, there is one thing about this book I found to be rather interesting.  Normally, the Nancy Drew Mystery Stories are all told from Nancy's point-of-view, and rarely do we read any portion that is not through her eyes (on rare occasion, we read a scene through Carson's or Bess's or George's eyes, but those are very far and few between).  In Missing Map, though, we get NINE instances where the point-of-view of the story is through the eyes of someone else - eight of those are through the eyes of the villains, and one is through the eyes of young Trixie (Mrs. Chatham's daughter).  I found it odd that Wirt would switch POV like that, and to basically let us see what the villains are thinking and saying outside of Nancy's earshot.

Oh, and I would be remiss if I did not mention the "Little Red Riding Hood" scene.  You know, the one were the wolf dresses up like Red's grandmother, hides under the covers and tries to trick the young Red?  Well, in this story, the villainous pair of Fred and Irene (who are only two of the numerous villains in this book - believe me, there are a LOT of people after this missing map!) have been working overtime to get that map away from Nancy, and at one point, they trick Nancy into coming into a house in the bad part of River Heights, where Irene pretends to be a young boy's grandmother, sick in bed, and when Nancy's back is turned, she jumps up out of bed, and her husband jumps out of the closet (literally, not figuratively!), and they kidnap the young sleuth (pp. 170-71).  As I was reading the scene, all I could think of was, "my, Grandmother, what big ears you have!"
 
And we aren't going to mention the elephant that blocks the road.... (and, no, I'm NOT kidding!).

As with every Nancy Drew book, she manages to outwit all of the crooks, and she, along with quite a large crew - Ned, Bill Tomlin, Mr. Smith and his wife and daughter, Bess, George, the two boys who have grown fond of them (who remain unnamed in this book, but we can assume this is perhaps Burt Eddleton and Dave Evans), as well as the Captain of the yacht, along with Mrs. Chatham and her daughter Trixie - well, it's quite the crew that manages to eventually find the buried treasure on Little Palm Island (as seen in the frontis piece), and Nancy is even rewarded with "a beautiful jeweled bracelet, by far the finest piece in the collection" (p. 211).

On a side note - those who saw John Maclay's play, Nancy Drew: Her Biggest Case Ever, when it was being produced, there are a number of elements from this book that are in the play (it is heavily based on The Bungalow Mystery, but includes parts of this book as well).  Needless to say, as I was reading the book, whenever I got to scenes that were in the play, I immediately started picturing those scenes!

Overall, I would say this book is one of the better Nancy Drew books from that era (especially when compared to the previous one, the original text Moss-Covered Mansion!).  


Now, to answer that question - why does this book have special meaning for me?  Well, that's because this book was the first Nancy Drew book I ever bought in dust jacket.  I grew up with the matte yellow spine editions and, later, the Wanderer paperbacks.  I never really collected any of the dust jacketed editions until MANY years later.  At a local used bookstore, I came across this book in dust jacket for a very affordable price, so I figured, what the heck - I bought it!  Well, after that, I had to hunt down all of the other dust jacketed books, then all the various editions (white spine, wrap spine, etc.).  But, because this was my first, it remained special.  And somewhere along the line, I started finding some of the foreign editions of Missing Map, and let's just say my completist nature had me looking for every possible version I could find!  I'm not sure if I have them all yet, but I definitely have quite a few - and I have them displayed, along with the ship model and some Barbies that I selected to represent more modern takes of Nancy, Bess, and George as they are following the clues in that map!  You might say I am always on the quest for the Missing Map.

RATING:  8 tiny desks imported from the Orient out of 10 for a crazy quest of improbable and impossible proportions that wraps up quite nicely in the end!

Tuesday, June 20, 2023

stranger things happen - a short story collection

This book is an oddity with me.  I rarely buy books that are not a part of a series, but this one was recommended to me by a book dealer at the Florida Antiquarian Book Fair earlier this year.  I had been talking with this dealer, explaining my love of children's mystery series and, in particular, the character of Nancy Drew.  She told me about this book she had read that featured a unique take on the character and that I HAD TO check it out!  She showed me the cover to the book, and that was enough to sell me.  A blond-haired female detective shining a flashlight into the dark woods - such a spooky, haunted scene, how could I possibly pass it up?  I mean, I have plenty of other one-off books that celebrate, parody, or in some way utilize the world's most famous teen detective, so why not this one?  Well, nothing in the world could have prepared me for the ride I was in for, that's for sure!

stranger things happen is a collection of short stories by author Kelly Link.  And, yes, the lack of capitalization in the title is not a mistake - that is how the title is actually written on the book.  Nine of the eleven short stories in this collection have been previously published, between 1995 and 2000.  And the blurb on that front cover is so perfectly accurate - there is no way anyone could possibly label this genre-bending set of stories, as they do not fit any one particular form.  They definitely deal with romance - except when they don't.  They feature supernatural elements - except when they don't.  They have a certain amount of horror in them - except when they don't.  And they definitely have a sense of mystery to them - except when they don't.  The stories are blunt - they are moving - they are horrifying - they are sad - they are shocking - they are subtle - they are subverting - they are over-the-top - they are unbelievable - they are reality.  Link has a most unique style of writing that, well, quite frankly, does not fit any other style I've ever read.  Which is why it is so extremely difficult to pin down a simple description to her stories and her writing.

I'm not going to say I liked all of the stories, because I did not.  The first story, "Carnation, Lily, Lily, Rose," just didn't do it for me.  It was different, but I just didn't feel it.  I tried to like it, I tried to make sense of it, but it just fell flat for me.  But I didn't give up.  I knew that there was a story about a girl detective waiting for me at the end (why, oh why, didn't they start off with that story - of course, if they had, I would probably have not read any of the other stories, and might have missed out on a few good ones....).  Some of the others were okay, but they just didn't strike me as all that likable.  And who knows, maybe they weren't meant to be.

That being said, I did rather like "Vanishing Act."  This was a different kind of tale about a young girl who is basically invisible and another young girl who wishes she could disappear like her.  I think, to a degree, there are a lot of us who wish we could wish ourselves away, to go be with ones that we love that have gone away in one fashion or another.  For the characters in this story, that wish became a reality - but it took a lot to get there.  I also enjoyed "Shoe and Marriage," which was a re-imagining of sorts of some very familiar fairy tale stories.  You will probably recognize some, but perhaps not all, of the characters in this short tale.  And "Survivor's Party, or The Donner Party" is a strange story that leads you (the reader) in some different directions, and when you think you understand it, you realize you really don't, and so you go back and read it again.  This one would definitely make for a great horror film!

The others I'll just pass over, as none of them was the story for which I bought the book.  "The Girl Detective, that final story that begins on page 245, is the one I was dying to read.  It is not quite what I expected, but based on the rest of Link's stories, it's pretty par for the course.  The story is told from an observer's point of view - who is the observer?  Who knows.  It could be the author.  It could be a fan.  It could be a neighbor.  There's not clear definition.  And maybe that's the point.  The girl detective is not given a name, but it is clear who she is supposed to be (uhm, Nancy Drew, anyone - or maybe Kay Tracey - or perhaps Penny Parker - or possibly any of the other plethora of girl sleuths that have filled children's mystery stories for so many years....).  Her mother disappeared (died) years ago.  She lives with her father and her housekeeper. As so perfectly described on page 251, she is courteous, brave, and well-groomed.  She loathes injustice, and is good at finding things.  On page 258, we read about Fred or Nat, you know - that boy that was in love with the girl detective, but somehow always ended up on the sidelines.  As fans of children's mysteries, it is often easy to spot a villain based solely on superficial factors.  For the girl detective in this story, it is the same - only she sizes people up by their names. And in-between the glimpses back and forth into the past, present, and future of the girl detective, we are treated to an off-beat mystery involving an overweight father and his twelve dancing daughters.  The observer (the reader?) follows along with the girl detective as she searches for her mother (solves the mystery of the twelve dancing daughters), and he/she (we?) are there when the girl detective disappears in the end ....and then reappears - or does she?

To say it is a very odd story is truly putting it mildly.  But it definitely pays homage to Nancy Drew and all of her sister sleuths down through the decades.  The mystery certainly isn't any less crazy than some of the children's mystery stories I've read (Mystery at the Moss-Covered Mansion, anyone?).  I give Link credit for taking a shot at the girl detective genre and writing a story that looks beneath the surface and makes the reader really think about what he or she is reading.  

The title to this book is definitely fitting - Stranger things happen in this book than any other that I've read (although The Prescient Wisdom of Nancy Drew certainly comes a close second to this one).  Would I recommend it?  Well, if you can handle out-of-the-norm, truly off-beat stories, then yes, this is for you. If you prefer the more straight-forward, linear tales in third person only, you might find this a difficult read.  But if you are a Nancy Drew completist that must have anything and everything even tangentially Nancy Drew-related, then you need to pick this up.

RATING:  7 aisles of breakfast cereal and canned tomatoes out of 10 for viewing the girl detective genre through an entirely different kind of lens with no apologies or explanations!

Saturday, June 17, 2023

Whitman Mystery Stories - Patty O'Neal on the Airways

This was a Whitman title I had never heard of before, so when I chanced upon it in DJ at a used bookstore, I went ahead a picked it up.  I've been discovering, much to my surprise, just how enjoyable these Whitman books are (even if they were published on inferior paper and rarely had any ongoing series characters, unless they were reprints of other publishers' works), so I figured this book was worth a couple of bucks.  Besides, based on the title and description, I thought perhaps the story would be similar to the Vicki Barr or Shirley Flight series (which featured stories about stewardesses who traveled the world having adventures and solving mysteries).

Patty O'Neal on the Airways is another Whitman title written by Ruby Lorraine Radford.  I have several Whitman titles written by her (Peggy Parker, Girl Inventory; Kitty Carter, Canteen Girl; Nancy Dale, Army Nurse), and the one that I have read (Peggy Parker) was very well written.  Thus, I had pretty high hopes for this one, and I was not disappointed.  While there was no real mystery, per se - other than perhaps the question of what happened to Patty's friend, John Nash, whose plane went down over the Himalayas and he has not been found since - the story is still engaging with a certain level of suspense and danger to it.

Radford opens the story with Patty getting ready to take her first solo flight.  She and her best friend, Ann Marsh, attend Carter College, where they are aviation students.  Also attending the school is another student by the name of Joan Sumerau, who is the "Nellie Olsen" of the book (and if you don't know who that is, go watch an episode of Little House on the Prairie!).  She is always berating and belittling Patty, to the point where she breaks down any self-confidence Patty has, which ultimately causes her to crash her plane, leaving her only slightly injured but very badly shaken.  While at home recovering, Patty begins to wonder if perhaps she should give up her dream of piloting a plane.

And then along comes Dal Warner...

Yes, Radford had to include a love interest, and it turns out Dal is a pretty experienced pilot.  He unexpectedly shows up flying a new commercial jet liner, and Patty gets a first class tour of the large plane.  While in town, Patty shares her feelings with Dal, and he convinces her not to give up on her dreams, but take a different path - become a stewardess first, and then once she regains her confidence, go back to obtain her pilot's license.  Patty takes him up on this idea, flying out to the West Coast to attend classes - and wouldn't you know it, Joan Sumerau (who was kicked out of Carter College for showing off and endangering herself and others) is at the very same training center, hoping to become a stewardess.  It seems Miss Sumerau has her eyes set on becoming a stewardess on Dal Warner's team - but Dal already has Patty set for the job, much to Joan's chagrin.

It is interesting to read about how stewardesses were supposedly picked for airlines back in the '40s, when this book was published.  "A stewardess has to promise she'll serve a year without marrying before they will train her," Patty is told (p. 118).  And Belton Airlines, the company Dal flies for, "is famous for its attractive stewardesses," so Patty is told she has to submit photos of herself - close up and full length, too (p. 124).  There is also an age requirement - between 21 and 26 (p. 124) - and a weight requirement of at least 100 pounds (p. 126), as well as a height requirement of 5' to 5'5" (p. 127).    Curious, I did some online searching, and I discovered that a number of ads from back in the '40s and '50s were indeed looking for these exact characteristics for their airline stewardesses - including the "attractive" part!  Talk about sexism at its worst!  But, that was all a part of the day, and thankfully, we have grown past that in today's society.

The description of the plane Patty serves on that flies over the Pacific is also rather interesting, as it is described as having an "observation lounge" (p. 170), and when passengers get restless, Patty and the other stewardess pass out decks of cards, checkerboards, and other games to keep them busy (p. 166). I was also surprised to read that when Patty woke up in the morning (the flight took several days), she "bathed and put on a fresh uniform" (p. 174).  I wasn't sure if this meant she actually bathed in a bathtub or shower, or simply used a sink to wash her face - I've never heard of an airplane having a full bath or shower in it, so I'm going to assume Radford simply meant Patty "washed up," as the saying goes.
 

There are a number of internal illustrations, by Henry E. Vallely, who seems to have illustrated a number of Whitman books (as I have seen his name in many of the books I have in my collection).  While his backgrounds are never overly detailed, I will say that his people are very nicely drawn - he captures expressions beautifully!  The joy on Patty's face (p. 125); the sadness of the missionary's wife (p. 167); the solemn seriousness of everyone as Dal points out a dangerous route to be taken (p. 195) - you can actually FEEL what the characters are feeling in each illustration.  Not every artist can capture that, but Vallely does it magnificently.

The book has a rather dramatic climax, as the crew of the passenger plane all take ill due to food poisoning (all I could think of was Peter Graves in Airplane!), and Patty is forced to call upon her days of training as a pilot to take over the huge commercial airliner and maneuver the plane through heavy clouds and around and over dangerous mountain peaks.  But, manage it she does, and she even lands the plane like a pro, something she has always had the most difficulty with.  And it's "all's well that ends well" with this story, as Patty regains her confidence and set out to get her commercial flying license!

While the mystery side of things was extremely light, the story was still enjoyable, and Radford creates some great tension and suspense there at the end, keeping the reader turning page after page to see whether Patty will succeed in getting the plane out of danger and back onto the ground.  And, oh, yes, the mystery about the poor missing John Nash is resolved as well, so no plot threads are left dangling.

RATING:  8 plates of good almond chicken out of 10 for preserving a bit of women's history in the aviation history with a dash of fiction and a just a hint of mystery!

Tuesday, June 13, 2023

Searching for the REAL Secrets of MIrror Bay - an Excursion Through Cooperstown, New York

Back in 2017, a good friend of mine, Pam Hancock, decided to take a deeper look into the 49th Nancy Drew Mystery Story, The Secret of Mirror Bay.  She knew that some of the places mentioned in the book existed in the real world, but as she delved into the book and began researching the area, she was shocked to discover just how much of the real world made it into that book!  Published back in 1972, The Secret of Mirror Bay was written by Harriet Stratemeyer Adams and takes place in Cooperstown, New York.  Nancy, Bess, and George help a young woman who is searching for a family heirloom, and along the way they encounter involved in a vacation hoax perpetrated by a woman who resembles Nancy and also face off against a weird, luminescent green sorcerer.  It is definitely a unique story that has plenty going on; but what is truly unique about this tale is just how many real-life locations Adams put into her story!

 
Pam and I, along with another friend, decided to do more than just read the book - we made plans to take a trip to Cooperstown, but things got waylaid by the COVID situation. The lockdowns and the closed borders made it impossible to take the trip we had planned in 2020.  So, we looked forward to 2021, but there were still restrictions in place.  So, we made plans for 2022, but our other friend dropped out, leaving Pam and me on our own.  While 2022 did not work out either, we decided 2023 was going to be the year!  Unexpectedly, the Nancy Drew Sleuths announced a convention the same year in Cooperstown, and while we had considered joining that excursion, the dates unfortunately conflicted with other plans (I will be going to Ireland in July 2023, and Pam's soon-to-expire passport had a slim chance of getting renewed due to labor strife), so we went forward with our originally scheduled plans of taking the trip in the Spring!  With a rather detailed list of places from the book that had been researched and mapped out several years prior, we were set to truly uncover all of the REAL secrets that lay hidden in and around "Mirror Bay" (a/k/a Otesgo Lake at Glimmerglass State Park).


We decided if we were going to do this right, then we needed to truly follow the girls' steps in the book.  Nancy gives some historical background of the lake prior to the girls leaving:  "The Indians called the lake Otesaga and there's a lovely hotel named after it.  Later James Fennimore Cooper wrote stories about settlers and Indians in the area.  He found the water so much like a mirror that he called it Glimmerglass.  Now the official name is Otsego Lake" (p. 2).  She then proceeds to explain to Bess and George that her Aunt Eloise was taking a bus to Cooperstown, where Nancy would pick her up before driving to the cottage where they will be staying (p. 3).  So, to begin the journey properly, we had to start where the girls did - at the Cooperstown bus stop!  It turns out there is only one bus stop in the quaint, historical town, and Pam took a seat there, waiting for Nancy, Bess, and George to arrive!


From there, it was time to find the cottage, "Mirror Bay Bide-A-Wee," where the girls stayed during their time in Cooperstown.  Aunt Eloise directs Nancy to drive along East Lake Road, which we followed out of downtown Cooperstown.  Just as described in the book, "[o]n their left was the mirror-like water ... [t]o the right of the road was a steep wooded hillside, broken only now and then by a house or garage" (p. 8).  This pretty much describes the drive along East Lake Road exactly.  There are probably a few more houses along the way now, more than there were back in the early 1970s when Adams likely visited the area, but you still get the view of the lake and the woods are still pretty thick and steep!  Following the book's directions, we traveled six miles along East Lake Road.  We did not find a "small parking area on the left" as indicated in the book, but we did find a drive that led down to a house located right at this point.  (Being private property, we respected their boundaries and did not venture down to the lakeside, despite how much we would have loved to!)  We were able to discern this was the right location, because the book indicates that the cabin's porch had "a view west across the lake and north across the bay" (p. 10), which is precisely the view that would be available from that point!


In The Secret of Mirror Bay, the next morning finds Nancy, Bess and George trudging "up the hill to the road.  They turned right toward Cooperstown and presently met a group of boy campers on a hike with a counselor" (p. 14).  Now, first, let's make it clear - if the girls intended to walk all the way from the cabin to Cooperstown, that would have been quite a long six-mile jaunt!  Even driving it in a car, it seemed like quite a distance.  While Nancy and George may have been up for the challenge, somehow I can't imagine Bess making it all six miles to town!  In any event, we turned right like the girls did, and less than one mile down the road, we found a small parking lot for a Christian camp called Pathfinder Lodge.  Research shows the Lodge was established back in 1947, which means it would have been there when Adams visited the area.  Thus, one can suppose that Adams may have seen some campers and decided to incorporate the site into her story.



The book goes on to say that Mirror Bide-A-Wee is a "cola stop" for hikers, "which is why there is a coke refrigerator in the corner of the porch" (p. 15).  Since that property is now a private house, it is unlikely there is still a "cola refrigerator" on the premises; however, while in Cooperstown, we did manage to discover a Coke machine (which was quite the feat, because every restaurant we visited in the area only served Pepsi products!).  Obviously, this would not have been the same type of coke refrigerator referred to in the book, but it did strike us as a bit of fun to find a Coke machine amidst a town full of Pepsi cola!


Moving right along, that same afternoon, "Aunt Eloise and the girls started for town ... Part way there, where the wooded mountain rose steeply from the road, the air suddenly reverberated with an anguished cry for help" (p. 18).  Nancy and George head off into the woods, but don't go far before meeting a young woman who is terrified.  "The sorcerer!" she exclaims.  "It's true! He's up there! Don't go any farther!" (p. 19).  So, having already left the six-mile point and heading towards Cooperstown, and having passed the possible camp where the boys had been staying, Pam and I looked to our left to see the wooded area that rose steeply from the road.  There is actually quite a distance along East Lake Road that could fit this description, and so we pulled off at one area to check it out.  And yes, we can definitely say with all certainty that the woods rise very steeply from the road.  We walked a short distance in (as did Nancy and George in the book), and we could quickly feel the sharp rise in the ground.  Karen Jones, the botany major looking for luminescent mushrooms in the book (p. 20) must have been in great shape to be able to hike up that steep incline in search of the fungi!


Next on the agenda for Nancy and the gang (as well as Pam and me!) was the Cooperstown main boat dock (p. 24).  It is here on the dock where Nancy and her friends first meet Johann Bradley ("Yo"), a young man who loves to joke, but who also manages to know some things about Cooperstown and its history and legends.  It's here at the dock where Aunt Eloise rents the sailboat for the girls. Nancy and George headed back to the cottage in the sailboat, while Bess and Aunt Eloise drove the car back (p. 27).  To our disappointment, we discovered that Cooperstown doesn't really come alive, so to speak until after May 1st, and so there were no boats docked while we were there (except for the tour boat, which was under cover until the summer season starts).  But you can catch a beautiful view of Otsego Lake from the dock, and that we definitely did!



The book describes how Nancy and George enjoy a leisurely sail up the river, and along the way they pass both Kingfisher Tower and Council Rock (p. 28).  Since there were no tour boats available, nor any rentals, Pam and I had to be diligent to find ways to catch a glimpse of both of these historical sites.  Council Rock was not overly difficult, as some locals gave us instructions how to get down past the docks and follow a path to a small inlet where Council Rock lay waiting for us.  Honestly, I think we were both a little surprised at how small the rock was (I guess we were expecting something larger - because at first, this appeared to be simply the back of a turtle sticking out of the water!).  But, just like in the book, the rock was indeed there.  And from that point, in the distance, we could see a glimpse of Kingfisher Tower.  But it took us driving up the west side of the lake in order to get a bit of a closer view of the Tower (since the property that leads to the Tower on the east side is privately owned and not open any more for the public).



Nancy also points out to George Mount Wellington, which is located towards the northern end of the lake (p. 28).  As she tells George, "...it's never been called that.  Instead, the mountain is known as Sleeping Lion because of its shape" (p. 28).  George instantly see the resemblance, but Pam and I looked at it from several different angles and had some difficulty trying to see the resemblance.  In fact, one of the locals admitted to us that she has never been able to see the "sleeping lion" either, so we weren't alone!


Another historical fact Nancy relates to George is that "...the village was founded by William Cooper, father of James Fenimore Cooper..." (p. 28).  Throughout the town, there is plenty of references to that, and we even came across a statue of good ol' James Fenimore Cooper, as well as his (and his wife's) grave.  Pam and I both agreed that it was great how much historical and factual truth Adams managed to integrate into this book, and we wondered if after reading this book, many kids did research, or even just asked their teachers, more about James Fenimore Cooper - perhaps even found and read some of his books - and all because of reading a Nancy Drew book!


The mystery in The Secret of Mirror Bay really heats up when Nancy, Bess and George, along with Aunt Eloise, decided to check out the story of the strange sorcerer in the woods and begin hiking up into the forest surrounding Otsego Lake.  The book has them hiking for some time up the "so-called trail" (p. 34), until the finally see "the strange apparition of the green man" a little ahead of them (p. 35).  The book describes him as being "swathed in a weird flickering light, and his face had an eerie greenish hue (p. 36)!  "Return to your cabin at once!" the voice of the apparition warns them (p. 36).  Pam and I knew it was not going to be easy, but we dared to find the trail that would lead up the wooded hillside to see if we could find any evidence of a strange sorcerer who glowed green.  What we discovered (and what we learned from locals in Cooperstown) is that the old trail had long worn away, and while there were attempts to mark the trial, it was not something easily followed.  Additionally, the hillside grew quite steep quite quickly, and it is evident that only people extremely fit and used to rigorous climbing would be able to really hike the full length of the trail!  We managed to make our way up the start of the hill, but immediately were confronted by our own mysterious man in green (okay, okay, yeah, so that was all in a bit of fun - but, hey?!  If Nancy Drew could have her glowing green sorcerer, we were entitled to have our own green giant!  And we marked the spot where we saw the green man with flowers - will they still be there when the Sleuth converge on Cooperstown...?).





Just as the girls settled back into helping Anne Armitage with the search for the child's Russian coach she wants to donate to the Fenimore Museum (p 46), so did Pam and I decide to check out the museum to see if there was ever a Russian coach donated there, or on display, in the past.  Located on the west side of the lake going up Route 80, the Fenimore Art Museum still stands open today.  The exhibits vary, and during our trip, the Museum boasted exhibits by Randy Johnson (Storytelling with Photographs) and Psychedelic Rock & Roll Poster Art.  There were other rooms and exhibits as well, including an old portrait of Otsego Lake that prominently featured the "Sleeping Lion."  From the lawns behind the museum, one can glimpse a beautiful view of the lake, across which you can see the Kingfisher Tower.  Right next to the Museum is the Fenimore Research Library, which unfortunately is only open by appointment for those doing specific research.


Right across from the Fenimore Art Museum is the Farmer's Market, which is home to the world-famous "Cardiff Giant" (p. 49).  Nancy and company visit the market, accurately described as being on the "west side of the lake" (p. 51).  The book provides a short, but apt, description of the museum:  "The exhibits were housed in a huge barn and several smaller buildings.  The adjoining grounds were laid out as a reproduction of a colonial village with separate offices for a lawyer, a doctor, and a printer.  There also were a pharmacist's shop with old fashioned candies, a blacksmith's, a pioneer homestead, a schoolhouse, and a church" (p. 51).  The only difference we noted is that the old fashioned candies are sold in the "general store," not in the pharmacist's shop.  And the pharmacist?  Well, the pharmacist on duty that day was quite the storyteller and had a deep, eerie voice that would probably give the luminescent green man in Mirror Bay a run for his money!  For me, though, it was the lawyer's shop that interested me the most (working as a paralegal, after all).  And Pam and I had a thrill riding the carousel (which appears to be a rather recent addition to the market).
 




Meanwhile, inside that huge barn, "the girls were intrigued by demonstrations of broom-making, spinning, and weaving" (pp. 51-52).  Pam and I saw the weaving and spinning instruments, but the only person who was active was a young man making brooms.  We stood and chatted with him for a bit, and he described the process by which he pulls apart the straw, binds them to the handles, and creates the hand-made brooms - which, by the way, are for sale, so that visitors can purchase their very own hand-made broom!  It was quite an interesting process, and it was easy to see the man was enjoying his work (and his hands moved so smoothly and with such skill, it was almost as if he were born to do it!).  And while we did not see any spinning or weaving in that barn, the colonial village did boast a weaver (the "Westcott Shop"), and we got to see a rather large loom!


But, yes, the biggest draw was the Cardiff Giant - after all, that was the main reason Nancy, Bess and George visited the Farmer's Market, and that was definitely what we wanted to see!  And just like Bess, we quickly discovered that "[t]he only thing about this being a giant is his size.  He's just carved out of wood and pretty crudely at that.  He has an Indian face, though" (p. 56).  Located right when you walk into the entrance of the market, the Cardiff Giant is on display for all who enter.  A sign in front of the exhibit provides a brief description of the "discovery" of the giant, although the book provides a few details behind the hoax itself (p. 56).



Now, we must take a moment to backtrack.  In Mirror Bay, before heading to the Farmer's Market to see the giant, Nancy makes a quick trip to the post office to see if any letters had arrived for her addressed to General Delivery (p. 50).  The book describes the post office as just up the street from the docks where they were talking with Yo.  Sure enough, the post office, which is located on the main street that runs through town, was just "up the street" from the docks, and Pam and I made a quick stop (and Pam even mailed out a package to herself, so that when she got home, she would have a Cooperstown postmark!).


Back to the story (and jumping forward a bit) ... when Yo leads the girls in search of a cave where some criminal activity may be going on, poor George is bitten by something when she reaches out to touch the cave's wall.  "It's a poisonous centipede!" Yo exclaims.  "Very poisonous!"  (p. 82).  Of course, Yo immediately jumps into action - first, he sucks the poison from the bite; second, he has Nancy tear off a wild-grape vine and strip off the leaves, which he uses as a tourniquet around George's arm; and third, he uses a sharp rock to cut a small crisscross over the wound, so that a trickle of blood would flow out of it (pp. 83-84).  While we were out exploring the woods, Pam managed to come across a centipede of her own!  (Thankfully, this one turned out to be one of the non-poisonous kind!)



In the book, Nancy asks Yo where he learned to treat that kind of puncture before, and he replies, "From an old Indian over in Cherry Valley" (p. 84).  It turns out Cherry Valley is a very real town just 15 miles northeast of Cooperstown.  Pam and I decided to take a detour and go visit Cherry Valley (which does still boast an Indian presence).  Interestingly enough, despite the small size of the community, we found a small bookstore that was once the town's telegraph building, built back in 1840!  The small building was even used as a training station for Morse code operators back in the day.  Which just goes to show, you never know what you'll find when you start exploring all the places in a Nancy Drew book!


Continuing the journey, our search took us to the Toy Museum mentioned by Aunt Eloise to the girls.  "One you'll love is the Toy Museum.  It's on the west side of the lake and a good distance from town," she tells them (p. 94).  Adams writes that the girls "took Route 80 toward Springfield Center.  At last they came to the old farmhouse and barn which were now used as a toy museum" (p. 94).  With these somewhat vague descriptions, we began our hunt for the Toy Museum.  Online research provided almost no clues whatsoever (other than one image of a postcard from the Toy Museum) - no address, no history, nothing!  Well, Pam and I put our heads together, put out some feelers, and with the surprisingly more than helpful information from some locals, we learned that the Toy Museum closed down years ago, and the property was now privately owned and once again used as a residence.  We did find the location and buildings, and we were able to see the buildings that once housed the museum visited by Nancy and her friends (and likely Adams, as well!).  


Jumping even further ahead now, we come to the secret of that valentine that Nancy, Bess and George found in the Toy Museum.  They were discussing the meaning of the number 5 and the backwards "C" on the card, and Nancy suggests, "It could stand for Five Mile Point across the lake" (p. 119).  She explains "that the jut of land was about five miles distance from Cooperstown" (p. 119).  She goes on to give some history about the point, and how the owner of the property went away, so locals used it for a picnic and swimming area (p. 120); they hoped the man would make it a public park when he returned, but he ran them off instead (p. 120).  Well, apparently, the locals eventually got their wish, just not where they had hoped.  Five Mile Point is marked by a sign on the west side of Otsego Lake, but two miles before that, there is a small picnic/swimming area at Three Mile Point, which offers views of the "Sleeping Lion" to the left and the Kingfisher Tower to the right!

 
 
Their discussion of Five Mile Point led the young detectives to ponder what was located northeast of that point - and a review of a map of the area showed that "a straight line from Five Mile Point directly northeast ... ended ... on the opposite side of the bay from Aunt Eloise's cottage" (p. 120).  "That's directly to the east of Glimmerglass Park," Burt points out (p. 120).  Needless to say, Pam and I headed off to Glimmerglass Park to take a gander at what was there.  As indicated in the book, there is indeed a public beach and plenty of picnic tables for tourists (and possibly locals, as well) to enjoy the bay.  



There is plenty of mishaps and danger as Ned and Nancy are overturned in the water by the culprits in the story, and then their sailboat is stolen!  When Yo drops by and offers to help them out, Nancy asks where one would be likely to hide a boat on this lake.  Yo instantly replies, "Where Shadow Brook empties into the lake" (p. 131).  While this was only a quick mention in the story, it was definitely worth investigating - and it paid off!  It turns out there is a Shadow Brook, just outside of Cooperstown (or just before you get to Cooperstown, all depending on which direction you are traveling!).  It is a small campground and RV park which just so happened to have been established back in 1969, only three years before this book was published.  The campground was not open during our visit, but we could see in the distance a small body of water, which we are guessing may somehow make its way over to Otsego Lake.  


The next site on our excursion is a location in the book that seems to have no real purpose to the story (other than to put Nancy and her friends in downtown Cooperstown at the moment when a bus arrives so she can question the bus driver).  In other words, a plot device.  However, the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum is located right on Main Street, just as stated in the book.  While Nancy and her friends went in to view the various baseball memorabilia on display, Pam and I decided to forego the tour of the museum, as neither one of us are really fans of baseball (and there was just SO much more to explore in Cooperstown!).


As the mystery races to its conclusion, Nancy and her friends make the trek up to Natty Bumpo's cave (p. 146).  Pam and I found the location of the path that leads up to Natty Bumpo's cave fairly easy (after all, there is a sign along the lakeside road that marks the spot (and even a small parking lot).  For those who may not know, Natty Bumpo was a fictional character in some of James Fenimore Cooper's books - a scout in the pentalogy of novels known as the Leatherstocking Tales.  The cave is said to be a favorite childhood place of Cooper.  As indicated hereinabove, the hiking in the area is quite steep and difficult, and some reviews online have indicated it is even treacherous in places.  While it would have been exciting to actually visit the cave.  Adams, in writing Mirror Bay, makes it seem there was no difficulty in reaching the cave.  From the moment they jump out of the car, pursuing the young woman who resembles Nancy, to the point where they find Natty Bumpo's cave (p. 146), there is no description of any uphill climb, no description of difficulties faced along the trial, or anything else that would make the hike appear as anything less than easy.  Of course, Adams would have visited the area fifty-plus years ago, so perhaps the trail was more defined than it is now, and maybe they had actual guides that led people up the trail to the cave back then.  In any event, Pam and I elected not to endanger ourselves, as we were not sure we could make the steep climb, and with the unmarked trail, we were concerned with the possibility of getting lost in the woods (and who knew if our phones would have a signal once we got deeper into the woods!).



The book comes to a climactic conclusion at the old Hyde Homestead (p. 167), where the criminals have rushed off to after leaving Nancy and some of her friends trapped in a cavern.  When asked here the homestead is, Nancy explains, "It's a beautiful mansion which stands on a high hill" just past Glimmerglass Park (p. 168).  Interestingly, George explains to Nancy that she informed the local police that she overheard the criminals say they were heading to the Hyde Homestead, and "the officer got in touch with the State Police, who decided to investigate the empty buildings at the Hyde Homestead" (p. 167).  Pam and I easily found the Hyde Homestead (a/k/a Hyde Hall), and it does indeed stand empty.  It appears there is work being done to the property, but according to their website, it opens back up at the end of May!  And something to note is that from Hyde Hall, you get an absolutely stunning view of "Mirror Bay," and you can see across the bay to the place where Aunt Eloise's cabin would have been!
 
 

I have to wonder if this book is the one Nancy Drew book with the most real-world locations used for its setting.  It seems that once we arrived in Cooperstown, we kept discovering more and more places in the book that existed in the real world!  I mean, even simple things like Hannah Gruen's concern over the fact that there could be bears in the woods of Cooperstown (pp 3-4) is a factual concern, as evidenced by this sign we ran across during our journeys!


Oh, and I certainly would be remiss if I didn't also mention the Otesaga Resort Hotel of Cooperstown.  Nancy makes a casual reference to the hotel being named after the Indians' original name for the lake (p. 2), but the hotel itself is so grand and beautiful, and it contains so much information about the rich history of the lake and of Cooperstown, it is definitely a place to visit!  Perhaps this may have been the hotel where Adams stayed on her visit to Cooperstown.   A young lady at the front desk was most helpful, especially when we told her about our mission to find all of the locations from the book (she was not even aware that the book featured Cooperstown!).


As our trip came to a close, Pam and I both realized that spending an entire a week in Cooperstown allowed us to discover so much from the book, but we both wished we had another week or two to keep exploring.  We are disappointed that we are not going to be able to share the adventure with our fellow Sleuths during the convention in July, but we can certainly guarantee that everyone who goes is going to have a fantastic time, and you will definitely be able to follow in Nancy's footsteps (literally!!!!) while there.  With so much to check out, so many places to see, and so much exploring to do, you'll barely have time to catch your breath!

RATING:  10 jars of homemade peach preserves out of 10 for being such a marvelous city to inspire an entire Nancy Drew book to be centered around the magnificent locations in and around Cooperstown!

(***Yes, I realize this is not an actual book I'm reviewing, but I can still give the city and our trip there a rating, and quite frankly, it probably more rightfully deserves a 15 out of 10 rating for just how great it really is!)