The second Nancy Drew mystery, and one that was again extensively revised from its 1930 version for republication in 1959. And I do mean extensively. If you read a comparison of the two books you’ll see how not just the characters’ names but most of the plot has been changed. Mildred Benson, writing under the pseudonym Carolyn Keene, considered this to be a personal favourite books but I don’t think I can make any comment on that since the book she wrote wasn’t the one I was reading.
As things kick off it seems as though there are two mysteries in play: a couple of old ladies (Helen Corning’s great-grandmother and great-aunt) are living in a mansion that seems to be haunted while Nancy’s lawyer father is involved in a real estate deal that is coming undone in ways that are too complicated to explain (and that I’m not sure make any sense). Is there a connection? Of course there’s a connection. But it will take a while before things can be sorted out.
Nancy herself is feisty, fearless, and formidable. You don’t mess with this girl. If she sees a suspicious man (a man with an “athletic build” and cauliflower ear) checking out where she’s parked her car in an isolated field she takes off chasing him! Her friend Helen may be nervous about ghosts, or about ancient passageways crumbling down upon them, but Nancy just charges and barges ahead. And all this unarmed! In the 1930 version she’s packing a revolver, but here she only has a flashlight. When the police tell her she’ll never break the witnesses they have in custody she wins them over in mere seconds. There’s really no stopping her. And when it comes to noticing things she’s more machine than detective. I had to wonder, reading this passage, if she was perhaps being ironic. But I don’t think so.
“What did he look like?” Nancy asked.
The officer described the man as being in his early fifties, short, and rather heavy-set. He had shifty pale-blue eyes.
“Well,” Nancy replied, “I can think of several men who would fit that description. Did he have any outstanding characteristics?”
“Harry didn’t notice anything, except that the fellow’s hands didn’t look like as if he did any kind of physical work. The taximan said they were kind of soft and pudgy.”
“Well, that eliminates all the man I know who are short, heavy-set and have pale-blue eyes. None of them has hands like that.”
“It’ll be a good identifying feature,” the police officer remarked.
Maybe people noticed soft hands more 80 years ago. It’s certainly the case that today you wouldn’t feel a radio “to see if it were even slightly warm to prove it had been in use.” (“The music wasn’t being played on this,” she determines, “finding the radio cool.”) And how many teenagers today would be able to use a buttonhook even for its intended use, much less to open a secret wooden panel in the ceiling? I had to look up what a buttonhook was.
I shouldn’t be too hard on the Nancy Drew novels. After all, they’re YA fiction, directed primarily at girls, and written very much on an assembly line. Just as the end of almost chapter gives us a cliffhanger, so the end of each book hooks you into the next in the series, the title of which is already helpfully provided.
That said, aside from the historical interest I have to register that I don’t care for them very much. The plot in this one anyway I found hard to follow, with far too many secondary characters and the legal stuff, as in The Secret of the Old Clock, just a lot of fudge. More than that though, the writing struck me as lazy. To take just one example, on page 101 Nancy is referred to as “the young sleuth.” She’s called this again on page 103. On page 109 she’s “the young detective” and on 112 she’s the young sleuth again. And she’s the young sleuth again on pages 117 and 119. This list isn’t meant to be exhaustive, even for these twenty pages, as I know I’m missing some. But you get the point.
So these books are interesting as cultural touchstones. And I also found something compelling in the family dynamics at play. The housekeeper Hannah Gruen is usually presented as a kind of surrogate mother figure, but most of the time Nancy herself seems to be her father’s partner. It has a bit of the air of Haworth Parsonage about it. But even that doesn’t make me eager to read a lot more.




