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Shaun Cassidy/Parker Stevenson Notebooks
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The London Deception (Digest #158) All Eyes On First Prize (Clues Brothers #14) The Great Airport Mystery (Applewood Reprint #9) |
This month: Hardy Boyšs Casefile #1 - Dead on Target
Reviewed By: Ben Schmitt
The Plot: The Casefiles start out with a bang(excuse the pun) with the Hardy Boyšs
Casefile #1 Dead on Target. The Boys are thrown into this one without any
warning, they are not even on a case.
    In the first chapter, actually, the
first paragraph, you obviously know that itšs a serious situation with Joe
trying to rescue his girlfriend(Iola) while Frank is preventing Joe from
going into the flames to rescue her.
    Earlier they are inside the mall
passing out pamphlets for an upcoming political campaign to be held there at
the mall. Joe is flirting with an attractive blond when Iola walks over to
him. She asks Joe to go get some pamphlets out of the Hardyšs car. Joe
proceeds to tease her until she snatches the car keys away. She angrily
walks off while Frank talks to Joe. He asks Joe why he is flirting with her,
then they walk after Iola. Their car was inside the parking garage. Joe
calls after Iola only to have her walk faster. She opens the car door and
the car blows up right in front of Frank and Joe. The car burst into flames
as Joe starts to run towards the car. Frank runs after him and holds Joe
back until Frank has to karate chop Joe to keep him from hurting not only
himself but Joe. At the end of the explosion and after Bayportšs cops check
out the scene they come to the conclusion that there is no sign of Iola.
    Joe
promises to track down Iolašs killers and of course Frank agrees to help.
This throws them into one of the best casefiles ever, arguably. They meet
the Network and the Gray man and tangle with the Assassins, a deadly, evil
corporation. There is a plane hijacking with the boys and the Gray man
taking part in capturing the disguised Assassins. There is constant action
throughout the book. They finally have a show down with Iolašs killer, Sam
Butler a.k.a. Al-Rousasa an Assassin. Butler was the detective handling
Iolašs case.
    The showdown is in Bayportšs mall during the political campaign
which the boys and there friends had passed out pamphlets earlier, on the
day of Iolašs death. Fenton Hardy is in control of security over Philip
Walker the president-elect and Al-Rousasa is planning on killing Walker.
    Frank and Joe catch up with Al-Rousasa on the third floor of the mall as
Al-Rousasa aims an Uzi at Walker. The only problem is that the Hardys are
across the mall from him. As Joe spots a lighting cable hanging from the
ceiling, an idea quickly forms in his head. He steps back a few feet and
runs toward the cable. Joe grabs the cable and swings across the huge gap of
the third floor to the other side!
    Al-Rousasa looks up in surprise but is
not quick enough to avoid Joešs feet being planted into his chest. Joe lands
safely but Al-Rousasa jumps up quickly to fight back! His uzi was knocked
away but he pulls a large knife out of his clothing. He slices at Joe but
Joe is able to move out of the way, the second time hešs not so lucky. The
knife slices the side of his palm, drawing blood. Joe grits his teeth in
pain but continues to fight back.
    They fight until Joe is able to flip him
away. Al-Rousasa starts to fall over the edge but is able to grasp the edge
of the floor! Joe looks at him with hate in his heart and he knows all it
would take is one stomp of his shoe on Al-Rousasašs hands and he would fall
to his deserved death. But no, Joe knew if he did that, he would be no
better than Iolašs killer. Joe stretched out his hand to help him up.
Al-Rousasa reached and grabbed Joešs hand, and with an evil grin, pulls Joe
over the rail! Joe starts to fall over the side but Frank is there to grab
Joe before he falls to his death.
    Al-Rousasa is not so fortunate though, the
hand that Joe had stretched out was his bloody hand. Al-Rousasa slipped by
the blood that he had drawn and fell three stories to his death. The boys
get a reward and buy a van and some sophisticated detecting equipment.
Comments: I think that this Casefile was one of the best Casefiles written with plenty of action and hair-raising escapes by the Hardys and their friends. I especially like the encounters with the mysterious Gray Man and the Network. I also found that #100 True Thriller in the Casefiles dealt with the Assassins and the Gray man. It was kind of a similar plot. Also #80 Dead of Night in the Hardy Boyšs Casefiles series contained the ŗreappearing˛ of Iola haunting Joe. I would give this book an A+ for continuous excitement and excellent writing especially for the first Hardy Boys Casefile.
| 01: Nick The Greek | A: The Secret of the Old Mill |
| 02: Sam Bates | B: The Twisted Claw |
| 03: Sam Lee | C: What Happened at Midnight |
| 04: Runt | D: The Missing Chums |
| 05: Polly Shaw | E: The Melted Coins |
| 06: Ollie Jacobs | F: The Shore Road Mystery |
| 07: Charles Norton | G: The House on the Cliff |
| 08: Ferdinand Arezo     | H: The Mystery of the Flying Express     |
| 09: Weather-Eye | I: The Great Airport Mystery |
| 10: Long Jim | J: The Mark on the Door |
| 11: Red Hawkins | K: A Figure in Hiding |
| 12: Judge Keene | L: Footprints Under the Window |
| 13: Rocco | M: Hunting for Hidden Gold |
| 14. Paul Zane | N: The Tower Treasure |
| 15: Sr. Bario | O: The Disappearing Floor |
From: Kevin Murphy (kevinmurphy1@earthlink.net)
I was pleased to see the art work added to the article (Kevin's article in issue 18). It looks good. I never dreamed, when reading the HB mysteries in the late 1940's-early 1950's, that one day they and I would share space in a haven for their memory. I feel that I have, at last, "arrived." As someone else observed in the readers' message board, they may not have been the greatest literature, but they opened up the world of reading and literature for many of us.
From: pmandryk@tcs.on.ca (Phil Mandryk)
Is it possible to be put on the list to receive the Bayport Times? I've loved the Hardy Boys Mysteries for years, starting at 10 years old until now. It's exciting to read about a community, albeit fictitious, like Bayport. Thieves, crooks and robbers. And all in one little town! The boys have their work cut out for them. It's nice to take a break from this fast paced world and pickup a book where boys outsmart the Police and your Mom's only goal in life is to make sandwiches.
From: WConnallyw@aol.com (Wes Connally)
I originally read the Hardy Boys in late 40's and early 50's. Sort of drifted away to Tom Swifts, JRs, and Rick Brants. Still had a half dozen of brown and some light gray boards with orange Gretta end papers form child hood. Recently have reread these after I would guess about 50 years. Actually better than I remembered.
Now I am contemplating finishing out the collection or perhaps buying an existing collection. I have noticed that entire collections are sometimes posted on the Internet. Sometimes they have what are called old blue picture covers. Are these the original stories, or are they rewritten?
Obviously I am a green horn in this area. Any suggestions. I don't mind picture covers, but guessing I should stick with the stories as I read them as a child.
 
 
 
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Quiz Answers: 1-C, 2-G, 3-L, 4-O, 5-A, 6-I, 7-M, 8-E, 9-H, 10-B, 11-D, 12-F, 12-N, 14-K, 15-J