Fifteen-year-old Judy Bolton pursues a mysterious shadow and uncovers a dangerous fraud that threatens the life and property of everyone in town.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A likeable, real-girl heroine with spirit and bravado,
By
This review is from: The Vanishing Shadow (Hardcover)
Judy Bolton was my heroine in the 1960s. Unlike Nancy Drew, she comes from a believable background, and grows up with each story. The Vanishing Shadow combines personal values of honesty, trust and integrity with a gripping story line which has action and mystery, but no gory scenes or gratuitous violence.Although this story was written over 30 years ago, it has aged well. Suitable for pre-teens.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Sweet, old-fashioned and surprisingly fast paced,
By
This review is from: The Vanishing Shadow (Judy Bolton Mysteries) (Paperback)
Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?)
The Judy Bolton series was famous in its heyday, and now, surprisingly, it's back in print, with the feisty, clever teenage heroine taking on truly bad guys -- and beating them -- while enjoying the parties, dances and social events of her own peer group.
Judy is spending a summer vacation with her grandparents in their small Pennsylvania town when she stumbles on a frightening mystery involving the new dam that's just been built in town. Before you can blink, she's been kidnapped by the baddies and held alone, overnight, in a strange and awful place. Oddly, Judy is released when she promises not to tell anyone what she knows (a strange thing for anyone to ask and even stranger for her to promise). But she also knows that something terrible may happen, and being Judy, she takes action to prevent it. What she does leads to the bursting of the dam itself and the astonishing transformation of her older brother Horace into a local hero, when he rides through town helter-skelter, shouting a warning to the townspeople and saving almost all of them from the onrushing waters. While this story does start slow, it picks up pace quite soon, and the vanished world of the 1930's (or possibly earlier) is well depicted in language that moves the reader quickly through Judy's various plights. While not quite as exciting as Nancy Drew or Connie Blair, Judy has her own charm -- and it's easy to see a series like this drawing a lot of fans, many of them older and perhaps nostalgic for the time when they read her as children. Judy may not be my favorite heroine, but I sure am glad I read her first adventure.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Nostalgic,
By
This review is from: The Vanishing Shadow (Judy Bolton Mysteries) (Paperback)
Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?)
Fans of The Boxcar Children, The Hardy Boys, and Nancy Drew will enjoy Margaret Sutton's Judy Bolton mysteries. In The Vanishing Shadow, fifteen-year-old Judy is spending a lazy summer with her grandparents, itching for some excitement. When she overhears a private conversation with a sinister overtone, she immediately becomes a witness to a crime. The trick is to figure out what that crime is!
The same day, Judy receives a letter with tickets to a spelling bee and party from an anonymous sender. What is even more mysterious is the paper with the strange cross drawn on it that accompanies the tickets. Who invited her to the spelling bee? Now she has two mysteries to solve! Written in a time period when a person's promise was a binding contract (even amongst criminals) and old timers still feared those newfangled automobiles, Judy's adventure reminds readers of life at a slower pace. Everyone knew everyone in town and children could walk about safely on their own. There are a few period terms that may confuse younger readers, so be prepared with explanations if this is your child's first introduction to historical literature. Adult readers will also enjoy this nostalgic mystery, so don't hesitate to dive right in and read it for yourself before handing it off to the kids. Judy Bolton is a welcome retreat from today's technology-driven society.
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