A few weeks ago I read my first Nancy Drew mystery in years and I was hooked. I have enjoyed mysteries my whole life because it means fitting pieces together in a puzzle to solve a case, and being right brained, I like to attempt to solve the mystery before the detective does. I remember that I must have read my first Agatha Christie book in middle school and have been reading Sara Paretsky and Faye Kellerman and now Louise Penny for year. My start as a mystery reader is the same one as it has been for generations of women before me: Nancy Drew. When I read my first Nancy Drew mystery, I cannot pinpoint, but I know they were a staple of my middle grade years. The cases she solved with the Hardy Boys: the best. Today I needed a mindless activity so even Hercule Poirot and Inspector Gamache would require me to use too many gray cells. I turned instead to the detective who got it all started for me: Detective Drew of River Heights.
The Nancy Drew diaries take place in modern times so that a new generation of girls can enjoy the detective in a meaningful way to them. This time Nancy, Bess, and George are visiting one of Bess’ close friends on Nantucket Island for a few days. Ned is still in the picture but this is a girls’ trip. Those are more and more common in the 21st century. George brings every gadget imaginable to stay plugged in. Bess and Nancy just want to enjoy a few days at the beach. That is the restful vacation that Nancy had in mind until (dum dum dum) a mystery happens to occur within the first few minutes that they are on Nantucket. So much for rest and relaxation, Nancy Drew has a case to solve.
Bess’ close friend Jenna is a summer intern at the Nantucket whaling museum. She is immersed in history and curated her first exhibit immediately upon graduating from college and is aiming to get a full time job. Her exhibit is set to open and solves the mystery of the sinking of the Eleanor Sharpe whaling vessel one hundred fifty years earlier. There are some full time island residents that do not like the idea of a summer resident like Jenna telling the island’s story. The exhibit is vandalized and key artifacts go missing. Without the figurehead of the Eleanor Sharpe, there is no exhibit. This is Nantucket, the playground of the rich; there are no detectives who happen to just be present. But of course there is a detective, so Nancy forgoes a relaxing vacation to do what she does best: solve a case.
“Carolyn Keene” sets the time and place so readers feel immersed in Nantucket summer culture. There is the tension between year round residents and summer vacationers who only want to be on Nantucket to go to the beach and sail. I can’t say that I blame them because I would do the same. There are local businesses that offer antiques and regional cuisine including warm donuts meant to be eaten on the dock. Nancy does get to experience all this but her main goal is to find the missing figurehead and see who has been vandalizing the museum in time for the exhibit’s opening. Regardless of one’s views on whaling and animal rights, one hopes that Nancy solves this case in order to preserve Nantucket’s history for future generations.
Nancy Drew solves her mystery because that is what Nancy Drew does. I enjoy the friendship between Nancy, Bess, and George as it teaches middle grade girls that friendship does not need to be a competition and that everyone brings different qualities to a relationship. This is the second case I have read recently and unlike other detectives who generally stay in one region, because Nancy Drew is timeless, she gets to travel everywhere. This shows what an able detective she is because she does not need to be in her home region in order to solve a case. While the adult in me would like to see more of Ned, the girl mom in me appreciates the female centric relationships that dominate most of the books. I have long moved on to “age appropriate” detective cases, but it is refreshing that Nancy Drew is part of my reading life again.
4 stars