Mention Epithetical Books The Secret of the Lost Tunnel (The Hardy Boys #29)
Title | : | The Secret of the Lost Tunnel (The Hardy Boys #29) |
Author | : | Franklin W. Dixon |
Book Format | : | Hardcover |
Book Edition | : | Anniversary Edition |
Pages | : | Pages: 192 pages |
Published | : | January 1st 1950 by Grosset & Dunlap |
Categories | : | Mystery. Fiction. Young Adult. Childrens |
Franklin W. Dixon
Hardcover | Pages: 192 pages Rating: 3.77 | 1332 Users | 35 Reviews
Commentary As Books The Secret of the Lost Tunnel (The Hardy Boys #29)
Difficult assignments are nothing new to the Hardy boys and this one that takes them to the Deep South is particularly challenging. Their mission: to vindicate a long-dead Confederate general, disgraced during the Civil War because he was accused of stealing hidden gold belonging to a bank. Skillfully avoiding booby traps and flying bullets, the boys persevere in their perilous quest. The arduous search is full of surprises that will thrill all fans of the Hardy boys.Particularize Books During The Secret of the Lost Tunnel (The Hardy Boys #29)
Original Title: | The Secret of the Lost Tunnel |
ISBN: | 0448089297 (ISBN13: 9780448089294) |
Edition Language: | English |
Series: | The Hardy Boys #29, Hardy-guttene #29 |
Rating Epithetical Books The Secret of the Lost Tunnel (The Hardy Boys #29)
Ratings: 3.77 From 1332 Users | 35 ReviewsCritique Epithetical Books The Secret of the Lost Tunnel (The Hardy Boys #29)
My Book ReviewBook title and author: Secret of the Lost Tunnel by Franklin W DixonTitle of review: Review of Secret of the Lost TunnelNumber of stars (1 to 5): 5IntroductionIn the secret of the lost tunnel the hardys are at there at the hardy home and they get some strange phone calls and then a strange visit.Description and summary of contentWhen the man comes to the hardy home and ask them to take a trip with them to his home. He asked the Hardys that because he heard that they were goodYowza. I picked this up hoping for something light-hearted and nostalgic, and was knocked sideways from several characterizations that apparently were A-OK in 1950. First, all the Black Americans were either servants or preachers and had no problem bowing and scraping and smiling beatifically while whipping up sumptuous feasts for 2 overindulged white teenager boys who could inexplicably manage to buy a new car or hire a blimp (?!) as soon as the need arose. Second, there was the overweight
Our trip through the Hardy Boys' books continue.
Read in 2005.
This one didn't do it for me quite as much. The confederate stuff... eh. And the "lost tunnel" sounds much cooler in concept than how it's actually used here.
A great exciting mystery!
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