As many know, the Carolyn Keene books of the 30s, 40s, up to 1959 were edited to get rid of the racism. While I approve of that, I do not like the other changes. For example, Nancy, I believe had brown hair, and I know she had a roadster, but in the new editions her hair became strawberry blond and her car was a convertible. There were other changes, like the stories were changed some. I used to have all of her books up to when they began making changes. The only racism I saw was that the maid was black and dump, but that was in the Dana Sisters series. I am sure I missed sonmegthing. But due to he other changes, I continued to read the older editions. Now, I can’t see to read, so I use Audible, but you can’t get the older editions in any Kindle form. If I am wrong, please let me know.
So, this book was put out by the Library of Congress for the Blind, and I don’t believe that it is the older edition. I don’t know what to think about it. Mildred Wirt, the write r of many of the Nancy Drew series, had written this book, but it doesn’t sound like her. Yet, I could be wrong. For one, this book was too detailed. I just could not get into it. Not knowing what had been changed didn’t help. I tried to accept it as it was, but, hey there was the convertible and the strawberry blond hair.
It began okay, with Nancy and a friend, Helen, who I had never heard of before, in a motorized boat on a lake when a storm came up. Didn’t they get warnings back then? Their boat hits an object and begins to sink, but in time someone, an orphan girl named Laura, saves them.
From here the story goes downhill for me. Laura has a couple who are going to care for her now that her parents have died. But this couple, we learn is not her true guardians. They want her inheritance. Nancy finds a bungalow, but I never can figure out what this has to do with the book. It was a poor title for this book is what I mean. And, oh, well, I can’t do a good review of this book because I want the old Nancy Drew and Dana Sistersback, minus the racism. At least I had reread most of them a second time.