Stars: 4 out of 5
Pros: Good story
Cons: Lacking supporting characters, Nancy a bit too sweet at the beginning
The Bottom Line:
Solving career begins here
Still entertaining
The Start of Nancy’s Career
Since I reread the first Hardy Boys book a couple weeks ago,
I decided it was time to revisit The Secret of the Old Clock, Nancy Drew’s first adventure. Again, I had no real recollection of the
book, but I know I had read it. I was
pleasantly surprised at how well it held up.
Nancy Drew is driving home from delivering some papers for
her father, attorney Carson Drew, when she witnesses a little girl almost get
hit by a car. When she stops to make
sure the girl is okay, she meets the girl’s two great-aunts, who tell her about
an inheritance they thought they were going to get to help raise their
grandniece. However, their benefactor
left all of his money to the Tophams, a family that Nancy unfortunately knows well since she went
to school with the two daughters.
However, Nancy
wonders if their might have been a more recent will. As she meets other supposed heirs, her desire
to find the truth intensifies. Can she
track down the will? Does a later one
even exist?
Like the first Hardy Boys book, this one certainly had dated
elements, mostly Nancy ’s
choice of clothes. Yes, even this guy
knew enough to know that a teenage girl today wouldn’t wear a dress every
day. There’s also the fact that the
characters act like the $100K inheritance would set them up for life when
divided out among the heirs. Finally,
there are a few dated terms. Still, I
think most kids today would get into the adventure and enjoy it.
The biggest surprise to me was the lack of supporting
characters. This book is pretty much Nancy all the time. Bess and George are nowhere to be seen. I remembered that boyfriend Ned Nickerson
didn’t show up for a few books, but I thought Nancy ’s two best friends were around from the
beginning. There’s no boyfriend
mentioned at all, and one friend does appear for a few chapters, but that’s
all. Instead, this book is all Nancy with a little bit
from Carson and their housekeeper Hannah Gruen.
Not that this is a bad thing. I did get annoyed with Nancy constantly thinking or talking to
herself, but since she had no one else, it made sense. And she is a very strong character who
definitely drives the plot forward. In
fact, she solves the case herself with her dad only stepping in on the legal
matters. In that regard, she fairs
better than Frank and Joe do in their first case. She can come across as a bit too sweet,
especially in the first few chapters, but by the end I really liked her.
The story does stall out once or twice, most noticeably for
me in a chapter set at a department store.
Still, every scene does advance the plot by showing us character or
presenting a setback. There is quite an
exciting sub-plot involving thieves that does tie in to the main story.
I will admit I found the writing simpler than I remembered,
but then again I was a kid the last time I read the book. I breezed through it in a couple of hours,
and I’m sure that kids will only stumble over a few dated terms as they race to
find the solution.
The fact that Nancy Drew’s adventures (in several
incarnations) are still in print is a testament to the staying power of the
character. If you have a middle grade
reader, don’t hesitate to introduce them to The Secret of the Old Clock.
This review is part of this week's Marvelous Middle Grade Monday.
This review is part of this week's Marvelous Middle Grade Monday.
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