Richard Derus’s Reviews > The Secret Of The Stratemeyer Syndicate: Nancy Drew, the Hardy Boys and the Million Dollar Fiction Factory > Status Update
Richard Derus
is on page 54 of 187
"The reader, like the {roller coaster} rider, submits himself (sic) willingly to the prepared experiences of a closed-circuit system that promises to return him (sic) to the safety of his point of origin after having exposed him (sic) to a series of breathtaking dips and curves."--Dennis Potter, quoted by Billman
— May 27, 2019 09:56AM
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Richard’s Previous Updates
Richard Derus
is on page 155 of 187
(cont'd from previous post) Schooled in the elementary virtues of fiction and having fully discovered all the secrets of the series mysteries for themselves, they are ready, in both senses of the word, to explore what is beyond.
— May 28, 2019 11:55AM
Richard Derus
is on page 155 of 187
First, Happy Hollisters readers move on to the Hardy Boys and/or Nancy Drew...readers do not simply abandon those books they once regarded so highly...They also carry over the confidence gained from stories about successful young discoverers and a literary template--a sense of how stories are constructed and proceed--that will be helpful later. (cont'd in next post)
— May 28, 2019 11:53AM
Richard Derus
is on page 155 of 187
Stratemeyer's Success sums up the author's analysis of the business of the Syndicate, after deconstructing individual series and their creation. The Syndicate's willingness to modernize and modify its properties, expand beyond the core book business, and maintain its formulaic satisfaction of juvenile readers' expectations and desires gave it nearly a century of commercial success.
— May 28, 2019 11:49AM
Richard Derus
is on page 139 of 187
The Happy Hollisters breaks down the Stratemeyer Formula to its simplest essentials. The series offers younger readers, ready for more than picture books, a roadmap to a treasure hunt. It's simple, it's larded with family outings not connected to the hunt, the clues and the people are all big and broad. There are 33 of them, so it worked. IDK if they're still read, since they were dated when I was a kid.
— May 28, 2019 10:41AM
Richard Derus
is on page 120 of 187
Nancy Drew: Gothic Detection explores the odd parallel universe of an 18yr old (as of 1959) girl with a boyfriend she doesn't canoodle w & a tubby, funlovin' bestie, no ma, pa her slave & protector, super-high-stakes scrapes in low-stakes mysteries. VV Gothic, old houses lost fortunes eville guardians etc. Perfect for 8-12s bc no hint of sexuality lots of flouting society's expectation, gaining personal fame.
— May 27, 2019 07:06PM
Richard Derus
is on page 96 of 187
The Hardy Boys appealed to me until I was about 12; just read that, in the late 1980s, that was where S&S figured their appeal ended. This chapter's synopsis is The Mystery of the Chinese Junk, 1st vol published after I was born & a least-fave read. The series applies lesson of Fielding, nothing real no slang no aging necessary; by 1970s the boys were 2 years older than in 1927. Enviable, that.
— May 27, 2019 04:53PM
Richard Derus
is on page 93 of 187
"In short, the Hardys remain locked in that period between childhood and adult life that psychologist Erik Erikson has characterized as a moratorium—the quiet and deep sleep of fairy tale characters that precedes awakening into maturity."
— May 27, 2019 04:31PM
Richard Derus
is on page 91 of 187
"Psychoanalyst Lili Peller has commented that stories about uncovering secrets are naturals for children, for whom life is full of secrets adults are duarding. More specifically, {another author of psychological studies on the Hardy Boys} has suggested a Freudian fascination in the Hardy Boys series with yawning-mouthed caves."
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I thought it was just me bein' an ol' perv for seein' that!
— May 27, 2019 04:02PM
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I thought it was just me bein' an ol' perv for seein' that!
Richard Derus
is on page 77 of 187
Ruth Fielding introduced me to a character I never heard of before, precursor to Nancy Drew, mystery solving orphan and successful career woman. Do what now? In 1915? And she grows up, gets married, has a kid?! Nancy Drew's 17 and has been for 80 years! The lesson was learned in this series' failure (30 books a failure?!?) and now all time is now all places are here the world doesn't change. It works even yet.
— May 27, 2019 01:46PM
Richard Derus
is on page 66 of 187
Bobbie Ann Mason has said of the Stratemeyer Syndicate output that the books read so inoffensively precisely because of their sparse style: "The series are so carefully styleless that you can't point to bad puns, strained metaphors, overloaded descriptions. There is an absence of language: there is vocabulary, but not language." quoted by Billman, p59
— May 27, 2019 01:12PM

