Judy Bolton Days

Judy Bolton Days
First annual in 1991!

Thursday, February 24, 2011

RICK BRANT GOLDEN DRAGON 4

THE QUEST OF THE GOLDEN DRAGON
or THE SOUTH SEAS CITY OF DEATH MYSTERY


A Rick Brant fan-written adventure from 1959, a sequel to The Phantom Shark.
To get all the chapters, click on 'Golden Dragon' under Labels on side panel.


Chapter Four: THE WAY TO PALUA PAE

All chapters currently available are now on this alternate site:

THE QUEST OF THE GOLDEN DRAGON https://sites.google.com/site/rickbrantfanfiction/dragon




 

 

HARDY BOYS ABANDONED FARM

THE ABANDONED FARM MYSTERY
Hardy Boys fanfiction at its best!

This full-length Hardy Boys mystery by a Canadian fan is a stellar example of top-notch fanfiction. Anyone who loves the vintage Hardy Boys will really enjoy this book, which is one of three that this fan has written and printed in book form for other fans only.


The Abandoned Farm Mystery is written in the tradition and style of the first nine original-text Hardy Boys books, as authored by Leslie McFarlane. The atmosphere and characterizations are the same as in those early beloved texts. The author uses people, sites, backstory, and even villains from the originals, and it's one big ball to revisit all this once again in a very original story.

To be fair, this book would have benefited by professional editing, but that's really a moot point; it's well-written enough and no Hardy Boys fan is going to care that it isn't perfect because it is so much fun to read.

The Bayport area and surrounding environs are experiencing a rash of robberies at upscale estates owned by wealthy and important businessmen. Elroy Jefferson is one of them; his stamp collection is stolen again! Another victim is wealthy Morgan Monarch, now the step-father of the boy Lester from The Secret of the Old Mill. Lester joins Frank and Joe to do some river-sleuthing in this book in ther boat the Sleuth.

The boys work on helping their dad solve the case of the estate robberies locally, as he goes off to Boston and New York to look for clues. I had to laugh because this is so true: Fenton Hardy is always going out-of-town to solve mysteries that take place right there in Bayport! The boys take off to Cabin Island for a few days with their whole gang of chums, and there they witness strange signal lights coming from an abandoned farm on shore , and night-riding boats motoring back and forth between the mainland and the island.

It's great to return to Cabin Island again, and to Amos Grice's general store in Bayville. The boys and chums do a lot of sleuthing on the island, at the abandoned farm on the mainland, and up and down the Willow River near Bayport. They even stop at the Old Mill to search for clues, and it's great fun revisiting all these sites again.


Aunt Gertrude is her wacky old self in this book, uproariously funny at times as she tries to manipulate the boys into doing her bidding and continuously meddles in their business. There are food feasts with the chums , long discussions about past adventures on Blacksnake Island, Tower Mansion, the Old Mill, Cabin Island, and the Shore Road, and all the great camaraderie the early Hardys are famous for.

The other two titles by this author are The Abandoned Railroad Mystery and The Abandoned Fishing Lodge Mystery. These books are well-made hardbacks with hand-drawn endpapers and frontispieces. The other two are just as good as this one and will bring you back to the early days of the Hardy Boys when mystery and adventure and good times with all the chums thrilled millions of readers.

These books were advertised in one of the leading series books fanzines a number of years ago.




Friday, February 18, 2011

FIRST JUDY BOLTON DAY 1991 (3)




NOT ANOTHER FIRST JUDY BOLTON DAY ARTICLE!

You betcha! And this one was in the Potter-Leader-Enterprise, Coudersport PA's newspaper, on October 9, 1991, welcoming Judy fans to town. Even though there were only about a dozen of us who had come, the event was highly covered by the media in the county, and still is to this day, every year on Judy Bolton Day.


Lorraine Rogers and Joyce Wallner in Dry Brook Hollow
after having discovered Judy Bolton's Dry Brook Hollow house.





This article has lost some clarity in the copyying process, but you should be able to read most of it. Click on the image to enlarge!








JUDY BOLTON COUNTRY LEGENDS


Judy Bolton fans at the house on Denton Hill from The Voice in the Suitcase.
Left to right: Isabella Ganz, Eleanor (Margaret Sutton's daughter), Mike DeBaptiste, and Garrett Lothe, publisher of Susabella Passengers and Friends, a popular series books fanzine.

Judy Bolton Country, Kidnapping Mystery:
The Mystery of the Boy from Denton Hill

 
A DEATHBED STORY CLEARS UP MYSTERY AFTER 40 YEARS!

Potter County and its surrounding area, the location of the Judy Bolton mystery stories, located in north-central Pennsylvania, is an area rich in old mysteries and legends. Some were used as themes in the Judy Bolton books, like The Clue in the Ruined Castle, which is based on a real castle built in Potter County by a world-famous Swedish violin player named Ole Bull (that's O-ley). Much of the legend was used in the book as fodder for the story.

But there are hundreds of amazing legends and mysteries from this area that were not used in the Judys, and one of them is this story from an article in a Buffalo NY newspaper from 1919.


MAN SAID TO HAVE CONFESSED TO KIDNAPPING A BOY NEAR COUDERSPORT IN 1878.

Coudersport Pa., January 12, 1919: A mystery of forty years standing that has puzzled succeeding Potter County generations may be cleared up through the story told by Reuben Daniels, a carpenter. Daniels declares that John Nesbit made a deathbed confession to him that he kidnapped Henry Schall, the three-year old son of Mr. and Mrs. John Schall of Denton Hill, near Coudersport, on October 7, 1878 and turned him over to a rich New York man for $500.

John Schall of Bradford, Pa., father of the kidnapped boy, came here yesterday to hear from Daniels' own lips the story of the kidnapping as related to Daniels by Nesbit. Nesbit, it seems, was taken ill several years ago and, thinking he was about to die, told the story to Daniels. However, Nesbit later recovered and sought out Daniels and secured a renewal of the promise that Daniels would not tell what had become of the Schall boy until after Nesbit's death. It was only last week that Daniels learned by chance that Nesbit had died four years ago and thereupon he lost no time in communicating with a friend of the Schall family and through this friend informed Mr. Schall of what he had learned.

Henry Schall's kidnapping was impressed upon the minds of the people of the country by the fact that for days after the event hundreds of men searched the dense woods in Potter County. It was believed that he might have been carried off by a wild animal. The search proved fruitless and was finally called off, but not until a suspicion had been awakened that John Nesbit knew more than he was willing to tell. Threats were made against Nesbit, but he never admitted knowledge of the boy's disppearance and no crime would ever be traced to his door.

According to Nesbit's alleged confession, however, he was approached early in October, 1878, by a wealthy New York man who offered him $500 if he would sieze the Schall boy and deliver him to the man making the offer at Elkland, Pa., some sixty miles away. Nesbit owed William Perkins $500 at the time, and had no means to pay the sum. He yielded to temptation and consented to the bargain.

The New Yorker had been one of a party of wild pigeon shooters who had come into the vicinity of the Schall home the preceding June. He was struck by the resemblance of the Schall boy to a child of his own who had died. He tried to persuade Mr. Schall to let him have the boy to bring up as his own son. Mr. Schall refused, and the man left. After the kidnapping, Mr. Schall thought of the New York man in connection with the case. He did not know the man's name; there were no railroads within forty miles, and Schall was poor and did not follow up the clue.

Nesbit told Daniels at the time of his confession that he had since seen Henry Schall; that the latter had grown into manhood believing himself to be the son of the wealthy New Yorker, and had inherited a fortune from his supposed father at the latter's death. Nesbit gave Daniels this man's name and Daniels wrote it down in a book, which has now been mislaid, although Daniels believes that he will be able to find it.

The Schalls left their Potter County home on Denton Hill a few years ago for Bradford, Pa., and Mrs. Schall has since died. She believed to the very end that her son was still alive, and that some time she might hear from him. She died with her expectation unsatisfied.



This dramatic story has a particular connection to the Judy Bolton books via the Schall's house on Denton Hill. One of Margaret Sutton's relatives owned a house on Denton Hill, a small mountaintop community near 'Dry Brook Hollow' (Odin, PA), and it was used as Selma Brady's grandmother's house in The Voice in the Suitcase. Judy fans visit the house, which is now used as a hunting lodge, almost every year when they meet in Potter County for Judy Bolton Day.

This story would be a great basis for a Judy Bolton mystery and perhaps Margaret would have eventually used it had the the series been allowed to continue. One can easily picture Judy sifting back through the years for clues to find out what happened to the missing child, perhaps concluding that he was now a grown man she knew in New York from her days spent there with Irene and Dale Meredith.

There are endless possibilities, and there could have been dozens more Judy Bolton books based on Potter County legends and mysteries alone. This is only one of them, The Mystery of the Boy from Denton Hill.



Sunday, February 13, 2011

RICK BRANT GOLDEN DRAGON 3

THE QUEST OF THE GOLDEN DRAGON
or THE SOUTH SEAS CITY OF DEATH MYSTERY


A Rick Brant fan-written adventure from 1959., a sequel to The Phantom Shark.
To get all the chapters currently available on this blog, click on 'Golden Dragon' under Labels on side panel.


Chapter Three: THE CITY OF DEATH

All chapters currently available are now on this alternate site:

THE QUEST OF THE GOLDEN DRAGON https://sites.google.com/site/rickbrantfanfiction/dragon

 




Saturday, February 12, 2011

THE THIRD HARDY BOY!

The THIRD Hardy Boy!
MICKEY ROONEY AS ANDY HARDY


A lot of people who grew up during the 1930s and 1940s confuse The Hardy Boys from the books with Andy Hardy from the Andy Hardy movies, as played by Mickey Rooney. These movies were family comedies and still can be seen often on TV on Turner Classic Movies. They were filmed throughout the thirties and forties and Mickey literally grew up while making them. However, they have nothing to do with the Hardy Boys books, even though Mickey Rooney is often considered to be a Hardy Boy. Well, actually, he was! He was Andy Hardy.


On this magazine cover from 1942 he is shown with Esther Williams, Hollywood's glamorous swimming star, and Ann Rutherford. The movie was Esther's film debut and actually came out titled Andy Hardy's Double Life.



People often confuse the Andy Hardy movies with the Hardy Boys books, and Mickey Rooney with being one of the Hardy Boys. Now you know why!

The movies are terrific period pieces, showing how life was in the thirties and forties for young people, and Andy is generally girl crazy in the later ones when he is a teenager. In a couple of them, his girl-crazy interest is Bonita Granville, who played Nancy Drew in the four 1930s Nancy Drew movies. So Mickey Rooney, the third Hardy boy who wasn't really a Hardy Boy, even did some on-screen romancing with the gal who was Hollywood's Nancy Drew!


FIRST JUDY BOLTON DAY 1991 *PHOTOS 2*

more JUDY BOLTON DAY PHOTOS 1991



Judy Bolton fans on the North Hollow Road, photographing the meadow that leads to the Dry Brook Hollow house, the old Smeed Farm.

The wall of deer inside the Dry Brook Hollow house.

Mike DeBaptiste in Potter County Courthouse, used as a site in The Pledge of the Twin Knights.

Mike with Ann Creamer and daughter Meg outside the Potter County Courthouse.

The swimming pool in Sizerville State park, used as a site in The Voice in the Suitcase.

Lorraine Rogers with Mike DeBaptiste and Joyce Wallner in Dry Brook Hollow (Odin PA).

Ruins of the Austin Dam, used as the Roulsville Dam in The Vanishing Shadow,

John Rotello and Mike DeBaptiste completing a book sale outside the Laurelwood Motel.

Lorraine Rogers and Mike DeBaptiste speak at assembly in Austin PA (Roulsville) Firehouse.

Lorraine and Mike with Peg Rotello in Austin Firehouse.

Host John Rigas of Adelphia Communications talks to Judy fans Meg Creamer, Lorraine Rogers, Diana McInerney, and Rosemarie DiCristo at Saturday evening banquet at the Crittenden Hotel in Coudersport PA.


Tuesday, February 8, 2011

FIRST JUDY BOLTON DAY 1991 * PHOTOS*

JUDY BOLTON DAY PHOTOS 1991

  • Here are some photos from the first Judy Bolton Day weekend held in Coudersport PA in 1991. You can click on the photos to enlarge.

                                           

Bucolic scene in front of the Dry Brook Hollow house
                                         

The Farringdon -Pett mansion along the banks of the Allegheny River
                                         

Meadows next to the Dry Brook Hollow house, the old Smeed Farm.
                                         

Joe Slavin, Rosemarie DiCristo, Lorraine Rogers, Meg and Ann Creamer, Joyce Wallner, Mike DeBaptiste, and Diana McInerney on the front porch of the Farringdon-Pett mansion (the Judge Lewis house).
                                         

Joyce Wallner and Mike DeBaptiste in front of the Laurelwood Motel.
                                 



Jack Sharpe, Joyce Wallner, Mike DeBaptiste, Lorraine Rogers, and Rosemarie DiCristo gather in front of the Laurelwood Motel on Saturday morning to begin their first annual tour of Judy Bolton sites.

                               


Judy Bolton fans Joe Slavin, Mike DeBaptiste, Ann and Meg Creamer, Lorraine Rogers, and Diana McInerney in Potter County PA for the first annual Judy Bolton Day weekend in October 1991.
                                

more photos to come..........

FIRST JUDY BOLTON DAY 1991 (Part 2)

THE FIRST ANNUAL JUDY BOLTON DAY WEEKEND 1991


Regardless of what some others may be claiming, this was the first actual Judy Bolton Day weekend get-together in October 1991. Some of us had been there the year before searching out sites and laying the groundwork for future visits, but it was a different time of year and it wasn't an 'official' event. At this point, we were still representing the Phantom Friends, which is why the name is used in the article which appeared in several fanzines in 1992, including The Judy Bolton Society newsletter. Click on the images for reading!





This year's event, 2014, will be the 24th annual Judy Bolton Day weekend, not the 15th, as some are claiming.

Monday, February 7, 2011

HARDY BOYS RETURN TO CABIN ISLAND

THE SECRETS OF CABIN ISLAND


This is a fan-written novelet sequel to the original-text The Mystery of Cabin Island, everybody's favorite Hardy Boys winter adventure. More ice-boating on the bay, more mysterious happenings on Cabin Island, an unexpected thrilling ride to New York City on the Flying Express, and New Years Eve spent at a gathering of a sinister cult of danger in an old Manhattan warehouse!



All right here on this blog:
http://hardyboys-stratomiker.blogspot.com/2010/12/hardy-boys-cabin-island.html



Check it out while WINTER is still here to chill and thrill you!




BRITISH HARDY BOYS

WHILE THE CLOCK TICKED
UK Harold Hill & Sons edition, 1950s










This cartoon ad appears on the back of some other Harold Hill Hardy DJs advertising this title.

Friday, February 4, 2011

JUDY BOLTON-LIKE ADULT MYSTERY SERIES

THE FOXGLOVE CORNERS MYSTERY SERIES
by Dorothy Bodoin



This adult cozy mystery series of sixteen books by Michigan writer Dorothy Bodoin is very much like the Judy Bolton Mystery series by Margaret Sutton; any Judy Bolton fan or juvenile girls mystery fan is sure to love it. The series features Jennet Greenway as its heroine. She is a school teacher in a suburban Detroit high school and lives in a country area an hour north of the city dotted with lovely lakes and forests. Within it lies Foxglove Corners, an out-of-the-way neighborhood of Victorian homes and thick mysterious woods that yields far more than its fair share of mystery and suspense. It's a magical place, like Judy Bolton's Potter County PA, and like Potter County, it has a real-place alter-ego, Metamora, Michigan.

The Judy Bolton books are sometimes mentioned in the Foxglove Corners books. In the first book, Darkness at Foxglove Corners, Jennet moves into her new house at Foxglove Corners and buys herself a housewarming gift - a first edition copy of The Haunted Attic, Judy Bolton #2, at a nearby antique store. In the sixth book in the series, my special favorite, The Snow Dogs of Lost Lake, it is Christmas time, and Jennet buys herself a copy of The Secret of the Musical Tree, Judy Bolton #19, a Christmas mystery, at her favorite antique store.



The books are also similar to the Judy Boltons insofar as the mysteries are very cozy, usually concern friends and acquaintances, and they are constructed with eerie and magical plots, very much like the Judy Bolton books. Jennet also meets the man of her dreams in the series, Deputy Sheriff Crane Ferguson, and a relationship develops with him throughout the books. These books also feature dogs as important characters, usually collies, and Jennet has her own personal pet collie named Halley.


The titles are:


DARKNESS AT FOXGLOVE CORNERS
CRY FOR THE FOX
WINTER'S TALE
A SHORTCUT THROUGH THE SHADOWS
THE WITCHES OF FOXGLOVE CORNERS
THE SNOW DOGS OF LOST LAKE
THE COLLIE CONNECTION

A TIME OF STORMS
THE DOG FROM THE SKY
SPIRIT OF THE SEASON
ANOTHER PART OF THE FOREST
WHERE HAVE ALL THE DOGS GONE?
THE SECRET ROOM OF EIDT HOUSE
FOLLOW A SHADOW
THE SNOW QUEEN'S COLLIE
THE DOOR IN THE FOG





 In this terrific mystery, Jennet's house in town is destroyed by a tornado and she moves into her dream home in Foxglove Corners out in the country an hour north of the suburbs. It offers her bucolic peace and a new romance with a handsome lawman. But there is a secret in the old yellow Victorian house down the lane that threatens her new life when murderous revelations in an old tornado-tossed journal put an evil plan of revenge and terror into motion.


This is my personal favorite and a very special book. It is Christmas time and Jennet is warming up to a happy holiday season, finally meeting her boyfriend Crane's family from down south. But a chance encounter in a snowstorm at nearby Lost Lake with three ghostly white collies pulls her into a mystery about the legend of 'the snow dogs of Lost Lake', ghost dogs whose sightings are said to be harbingers of bad things to come. When murders in the snowy woods begin to accompany the sightings of the ghost dogs, and Jennet stumbles upon a mysterious painting of the very same dogs in an antique shop, she knows she has to get to the bottom of the eerie mystery no matter what dangers she may have to face.


Some of these books were originally published by Hilliard and/or Five Star and are now listed on online sites for very high prices, often $100 or more. Even the current editions by Wings ePress are listed at very high prices on some sites. You don't have to pay the high prices.


All of the Foxglove Corners books are now available directly from the new publisher Wings ePress for a reasonable price ($11.95 or $12.95) plus shipping. They are beautiful trade size paperbacks and promptly arrive in the mail within a few days. They are also available as ebooks in various formats at half the book price.


The website is http://www.wings-press.com/


Ms. Bodoin also has written other mysteries which are not part of the Foxglove Corners series. These are similar cozy mysteries usually set in and around the same Michigan area, often with ties of some sort to the Foxglove Corners stories. One of her specialties is winter cozies and the Foxglove Corners series has a few great ones. Among the standalones, Snowhedge and A Shadow on the Snow will really get you gettin' all comfy and cozy. Others are The Cameo Clue, Love Deadly Love, Ghost Across the Water, and Secret for a Satyr. Most of these titles are available in mass market paperbacks by World (Harlequin mystery) on eBay and Amazon for low reasonable prices.


You can read more about Dorothy Bodoin and her books, including complete first chapters, at her website:


www.dorothybodoin.com


Don't miss out on these books! They are terrific!