Wednesday, August 19, 2009

Thursday Thirteen ~ Twenty

Thirteen Facts About Nancy Drew
I found all of these facts online...
Make sure you enter my Nacny Drew book giveaway here.

1.
The very first Nancy Drews were The Secret of the Old Clock, The Hidden Staircase, and The Bungalow Mystery, published on April 28, 1930.

2.
The original proposal for nancy Drew suggested that her name be Stella Strong, Nell Cody, Helen Hale, or Diana Dare.

3.
When Nancy Drew was introduced she wore cloche hats and gloves whenever she was out in public, as was proper in the 1930s. Later, in the ‘50s, she changed to sport dresses and rompers, and even—gasp—pants.

4.
Nancy’s father gave her her trusty blue roadster as a birthday gift. After a brief stint as a maroon roadster, it went back to snappy Nancy Drew blue, eventually morphing into a blue convertible to keep up with the latest styles. In the new series launched in 2004, Nancy Drew: Girl Detective, Nancy drives a blue hybrid car.

5.
Nancy’s mother died when she was ten, leaving her the ever-capable mistress of her household (with a little help from reliable Hannah Gruen). Later books changed this and made her three years old at the time of her mother’s death.

6.
Carolyn Keene was a pen name, a cover for the series’ ghostwriters that worked so well the Authors Guild asked her to join their organization and she was listed in Who’s Who in America. Ms. Keene also regularly responded to fan mail.

7.
Nancy began her adventures as a precocious sixteen-year-old who had apparently already graduated from high school. When the books were revised in the 1960s, she became an eighteen-year-old; the driving age had gone up and the sleuth without her trusty car would be no sleuth at all.

8.
River Heights started out as a town located somewhere in the Midwest. As the books were revised the town migrated to the East Coast, close enough to New York for Nancy to travel into Chinatown to solve The Mystery of the Fire Dragon (1961).

9.
Nancy’s tomboy friend George declared in The Secret of Shadow Ranch that her name was not short for Georgia—she was just plain George, named after her grandfather. But as times changed, so did her story: In 1960’s The Clue in the Old Stagecoach she confessed that it really was short for Georgia after all.

10.
Nancy and boyfriend Ned Nickerson never once kissed, but in The Secret the Old Attic she does "faint into his strong arms."

11.
Until the late 1950s Nancy often carried a gun on her adventures, and in The Secret of Shadow Ranch she had to shoot a wild lynx to save Bess and George.

12.
Over the years, among other mishaps, Nancy has been bound and gagged repeatedly, knocked unconscious with a gun and left to die in a basement ( The Bungalow Mystery), locked in a closet ( The Secret of the Old Clock), poisoned with deadly gas ( The Secret in the Old Attic), threatened by a cult ( The Secret of Red Gate Farm), been the recipient of menacing notes ( The Clue in the Old Album), and gotten chased by a vicious dog ( The Mystery of the Moss-Covered Mansion).

13.
Nancy has an astonishing range of skills in the books: She’s an expert swimmer, horsewoman, linguist, actress, circus performer, driver, amateur historian, and crack shot—not to mention a fashion plate.

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17 comments:

Heather said...

Great topic. I was always more of a Trixie Belden girl, but it's always interesting to hear how this series has been changed over the generations. Have you read the book Girl Sleuth by Melanie Rehak?

My Thirteen: http://wordtrix.blogspot.com/

Betty said...

Wow, these are interesting facts!! I used to love Nancy Drew when I was a girl. Devoured most of the books! Ah, those were the days... =)

Thanks for sharing these!

Willa said...

great list, I heard so much about nancy Drew books but never relaly had a chance to read it.Thanks for sharing.

life's journey said...

I do not know why but not loving to read books. Love to collect though. Happy TT!. mine is ready too.

Alice Audrey said...

They've certainly been around a while. My mother had a small collection of them, but I could never get into them.

Americanising Desi said...

#2 is so totally a revelation!

Dear God, I love YOU!

Hazel said...

I love Nancy Drew very much. She's one of my best friends when I was a sixth grader :)

Carnation said...

i love nancy drew. i grew up with her books!

Susan Helene Gottfried said...

I never liked the Nancy Drew books much. I even liked the Hardy Boys show (yeah, the cheesy one with Shaun Cassidy and Parker Stevenson) better.

It's fun to see how Nancy has changed over the years. She's timeless.

Forgetfulone said...

Great topic! I loved Nancy Drew books when I was growing up. The "old school" mysteries from the 60's and early 70's.

Journeywoman said...

Great facts.

One thing though, I read the '80s incarnation and I could swear that she and Ned Kissed.

Ah well.

Tracey said...

Very interesting facts!! Like one of your previous commenters, I was a huge Trixie Belden fan, but read Nancy Drew as well. I have started collecting some of the Nancy Drew books for my two daughters to read when they get a bit older. I'm off to check out your giveaway so I can hopefully add to my collection! :)

Happily Retired Gal said...

As a young girl I gobbled up the Nancy Drew books even though they didn't qualify for inclusion in our public school library. Nancy was my role model and I admired her willingness to take action in the face of fear. Kewl list ;--)
Hugs and blessings,

Mia Celeste said...

I never really read Nancy Drew, but I had friends who loved the books. You make me want to check Nancy out again.

Vi (pronounced Vy) said...

LOVING #10. hehe.

i still have some originalish nancy hardback books! off to check out your giveaway!

happy tt!
she
www.shebecameabutterfly.net

Pop Art Diva Enterprises said...

I never read the Nancy Drew books, though I did watch the tv series - along with The Hardy Boys. Remember those?

I was hungry when I did my TT so it turned out to be: Thirteen Favorite Things I Ordered at the Corner Lunch Counter, lol.

soleil said...

i loved the nancy drew series growing up. i also watched the tv show eons ago. i never could get into the hardy boys, though.
thanks for the post. i learned some new things about a beloved series.