Showing posts with label Girl Flyers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Girl Flyers. Show all posts

Monday, March 18, 2024

The Girl Flyers on Adventure Island (The Girl Flyers Series, Book 2 of 2)

This second book in The Girl Flyers series was a gift from a wonderful friend who found out I had bought the first book, so he graciously gave me this book so I would have a complete set.  The first book was a fairly decent read, so I had expectations that this one would be just as good.  The inside front flap of the dust jacket provides the exact same blurb that was used with the first book, so going into the story, I had no idea what to expect from it, as the blurb only gave a general overview of the series as a whole (and, surprisingly, gives away the identity of the culprits from the first book).  

The Girl Flyers on Adventure Island picks up very shortly after the ending of the first book. This is a rare occurrence in series books, as they usually do not connect with one another so closely.  Terry and Prim Mapes are flying down to South America on a mission to purchase the land on which their father, Dick Mapes, had established his flying field.  The option to purchase the land is just about ready to expire, and the girls must make it to the wilds of Peru to get the money to Peter Langley before their father's competition, Joe Arnold, convinces Langley to sell it to him.  Now, I did find it rather odd that the author makes several references to the events of the last book, yet fails to answer the question of how Joe Arnold and his lackey, Bud Hyslop, escaped their fate from the end of the last story (those that may recall, Joe's plane was crashing towards the water in a fog bank, where they were believed to have lost their lives!).  I guess that is one mystery that will remain unsolved...

From the stops along the way, the author has the girls travel down the East Coast, and they eventually make a stop in Miami before heading on to Havana - readers even get a too-brief mention of the "keys and reefs of the Florida coast spread out flat on the blue water" (p. 29).  Then, upon arriving in Havana, they sign "the grim old Morro Castle, the Spanish fort" (p. 29), which is actually a real place - Castillo del Morro, a defense fort located at the etrnce of the Port of Havana.  It is here where the girls are forced to wait for the arrival of their father's students, Allan and Syd - a fact that displeases Terry very much (as she believes her father thinks the two girls cannot handle the job without the boys there to watch over them!).  It turns out, though, the boys just want to join the fun as a bit of vacation and have no intention on interfering with the girls' task - but when they find out Joe Arnold is tailing them, the four decide it is a good thing they are all together to face the enemy.

It's not until Chapter III - Tropic Storm that the story takes on the more dangerous elements.  Terry and Prim in their Skybird, and the boys in their Fleetwings, try to escape a horrific storm in the Caribbean but end up flying right into it.  Their planes are put through the worst of tests, and by the time they come out of the other side of the storm, the girls are forced to land at the first island they come upon.  Before they even have a chance to think about repairs to the plane, they come face to face with Joe Arnold and Bud Hyslop, who are engaged in some rather illegal activities on the island - using the natives of the island as their slave labor!  Needless to say, they have no intention of letting the girls leave and reveal their location to the authorities, so Terry and Prim are taken captive while Bud takes off with the Skybird!  But, as is usually the case with situations like this in series books, the natives befriend the girls due to Joe Arnold's horrific treatment of them, and they eventually help the girls escape the clutches of the villains!

"Adventure Island" is an apt description of the island, for there is plenty of adventure that the girls experience while there.  The author has them traipsing through the jungle, hiding in native huts, exploring hidden caves, and doing everything they can to outwit their enemies.  The manner in which they signal for help is rather creative, but it's all too convenient that the boys happen to fly over the island and see it at just the right time.  Once again, coincidence is the go-to trope for series book authors.  

While there was never any third book published in this series, the end of the story does indicate that the girls would "face grave dangers and many times would escape with their lives only be a hair's breadth" in the Land of the Incas, leading one to think the next book might have been titled The Girl Flyers in the Land of the Incas had one been published.  And since Terry and Prim outwitted Joe and Bud by getting to Langley and paying him for their father's land before the option expired, it can be speculated that the two dastardly men would have appeared once again in the third book to compete against the girls in searching for the lost Incan treasure!

Something else I noticed in these books is that like nearly all Goldsmith books I've read, the first chapter begins on page 11 - however, unlike the other books, this one actually has 10 pages prior to it (most of them simply being blank pages).  That came as a surprise, since most of them only have 8 pages or less before that first page of the first chapter - so it was a refreshing surprise to see the page number actually match the number of pages.

The cover art, again provided by "F. Rigney" and, like the first book, features a very unexciting scene of the girls with a man who readers can assume is either their father or perhaps one of the men who serviced the plane at any one of the stops along the way down to Peru.  There is no sense of danger, no sense of mystery, and honestly, no sense of adventure to the cover at all.  Perhaps if the cover art for these two books had featured scenes with a little more drama, the books may have drawn more readers to them and sold well enough to warrant at least one more book.  But, alas, the Girl Flyers only had the two adventures - in Canada and in the Caribbean - before hanging up their flying togs.

RATING:  8 silver necklaces with bright pendants out of 10 for adventure, danger, and a nice send-off story for the Girl Flyers!

Friday, March 15, 2024

Gypsies of the Air (The Girl Flyers Series, Book 1 of 2)

This book is the first of a two-book series that I have heard about for many years, but which I had never had any real interest in picking up.  I know there was discussion about the real identity of the author (as the name Bess Moyer is considered a pseudonym, like so many others used for children's books back in the day); but I'm unaware of anyone actually uncovering Moyer's true identity, although there has certainly been speculation.  Nevertheless, when I happened across this book at Atlanta Vintage Books last year, I decided to pick it up.  Since the series only consists of two books (which is surprising, since most series of that time at least managed to open up with three books - even the short-lived Madge Sterling series had three books!), I figured they should be easy reads.  After all, they were published by Goldsmith and consisted of only 110 pages of story (similar to the Madge Sterling books, also published by Goldsmith).

Gypsies of the Air is the first of the Girl Flyers series.  As described on the inside front flap of the dust jacket, the series is about Terry and Prim, "two high spirited and adventurous girls, who have been taught to fly by their father."  Their father, Dick Mapes, was proud of his daughters and encouraged their flying, but their mother, Alice Mapes, was not quite so thrilled about their adventures in the sky.  Fortunately for her, though, Terry was the truly adventurous one, dedicating her life to learning all she could about airplanes and flying, while her sister, Prim, who did learn to fly a plane, was more than happy to stay on the ground.  Sort of like George and Bess (and you KNOW who they are!), the girls are described in the book as opposites - Terry is "tall for her age, slightly built, high-strung, and nervous, while Prim was inclined to be plump and rosy" (p. 17).  It is said that Prim "was easy-going, practical and diplomatic.  She could get along with any one, while Terry with her quick tongue was always getting into trouble and making enemies" (p. 17).  Yet, despite all of these differences, the two sisters are the best of chums.

The story centers around the disappearance of Allan and Sydney, two young men who Dick Mapes is teaching to fly.  They head off in a plane to fly across the Atlantic, but they disappear before their planned stop in Newfoundland.  Terry convince her father to let her and Prim go off in search of them, and the story takes off (no pun intended!) from that point.  The girls locate a downed plane, but it turns out to be one that was taken by their father's right-hand man, Bud, who had said he was heading down to Florida.  Why was his plane up North?  And why was Bud nowhere to be found?  The girls soon find the answers to that, and those answers lead them into a whole heap of trouble!  Joe Arnold, who is a neighbor and Dick Mapes' biggest competition, is willing to do anything necessary to put the girls' father out of business and take over the land Mapes' currently leases.  That includes kidnapping Allan and Sydney, and now Terry and Prim!  But the girls find aid in a newfound friend, a young girl named Alice, who is instrumental in helping them escape and rescue the two young men.

Despite how short the story is compared with most children's mysteries of the time (this book being published in 1932), it is actually rather engaging.  The descriptions are not necessarily as flowery as other series books, and the action moves along at a much quicker pace - but it makes for a quick, easy read that is, ultimately, enjoyable.  Terry is definitely the more quirky of the two sisters, and her character gets fleshed out considerable more than poor Prim.  Prim's purpose seems to be for no other reason than to keep her sister in check.  We do get some backstory on their father, Dick, who is confined to a wheelchair due to an injury sustained in a plane crash (which they suspect was a result of sabotage by Arnold), but we see very little of the girls' mother.  Allan and Sydney are the "gentlemen in distress" for the book, because it is the girls who have to save them, not the other way around as is usually the case.  It's a nice gender flip to see the girls presented as the stronger characters, not needing the men to bail them out. 

What is surprising is how the story ends - with the girls rescuing the boys, leaving Arnold and his cohort in crime believed to have crashed into the sea in a swirl of fog, lost to the waters below.  Not many children's series books end with the crooks believed to be dead!  But, of course, it doesn't come right and say they crashed and died, so it does leave it open for them to return...
 
Part of the story takes place in Harbor Grace, which is an actual town in Newfoundland.  Information found online indicates the town has roots going back all the way to the 16th century, making it one of the oldest towns in North America!  The town currently has a population of less than 3,000 people, so who knows what the population would have been 90-plus years ago.  In the story, the girls also travel down to a place called "Fish Cove" - and it turns out that is a real place as well, located in Newfoundland.  Thus, either the author was familiar with that area, or he/she did some research to integrate actual places into the story (to ground it somewhat in reality - again, no pun intended).

The cover for the book is not a very thrilling scene, showing Terry and Prim simply cooking over a fire next to their plane. This scene takes place just after they locate Bud's plan (p. 48) and does not portray any of the dangerous situations in which the girls find themselves over the course of the story.  Odd they did not pick a more "mysterious" scene than this.  The art is provided by "F. Rigney," who provided art for other books published by Goldsmith, including, but likely not limited to, the Madge Sterling series and a sports book titled His Olympic Feat.  Rigney also provided the cover art for the second book in this series as well (which, by the way, is mentioned on the last page of the story, nicely integrated into a sentence for readers to know the title of what was being offered next!).

While not exactly the best example of series book writing from the era, the story is enjoyable, and I'd recommend it for anyone wanting a fast read.

RATING:  8 jaunty flying suits out of 10 for giving girl aviators a chance to shine in their own little mystery - and ensuring they were the strong heroes of their own story!