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While searching in Iceland for a missing sailor sought by an insurance company, the teen-age detective brothers uncover a plot threatening the life of a United States astronaut and the secrets of NASA's moon project.Tags
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It seems a bit obvious to start a review of a Hardy Boys book by describing it as “totally bananas”, but bananas it was. I concede that it was a fast-paced read; I finished it in about an hour. But wow, is it ever a fantasy novel. As a thirty-something, I am rolling on the FLOOR laughing at the thought of a 17yo and a 16yo being authorized to investigate top-secret spy cases and go by themselves to Iceland to do so! Not to mention their being experts with radio transmission technology and crack private pilots who can land twin-engine planes with aplomb on a glacier, despite only having had single-engine experience.
In terms of other characters, this story features a good deal of Chet and Biff, although Chet is carrying the idiot ball show more on this one, spilling the beans about their trip despite being expressly warned not to do so. (As soon as they said “You can’t tell anybody!” I was like “Well, this will be all over town in the next few paragraphs.”) I liked that the story was set in Iceland and featured some actual Icelandic people. A nice touch too was including the U.S. military base at Keflavík, which indicated that at least *some* homework had been done for this one.
I read this as an ebook from my hometown library, and it was obviously a scan of one of the original blue hardcovers. The illustrations and maps hadn’t been formatted properly for ebooks, with the map of Iceland getting cut off in the middle and being spread over two pages. And there were some OCR errors; my favourite was “Biff flooper” instead of “Biff Hooper”.
Overall, this book was just OK. I finished it and found it amusing, but it’s not a book I feel compelled to own. show less
In terms of other characters, this story features a good deal of Chet and Biff, although Chet is carrying the idiot ball show more on this one, spilling the beans about their trip despite being expressly warned not to do so. (As soon as they said “You can’t tell anybody!” I was like “Well, this will be all over town in the next few paragraphs.”) I liked that the story was set in Iceland and featured some actual Icelandic people. A nice touch too was including the U.S. military base at Keflavík, which indicated that at least *some* homework had been done for this one.
I read this as an ebook from my hometown library, and it was obviously a scan of one of the original blue hardcovers. The illustrations and maps hadn’t been formatted properly for ebooks, with the map of Iceland getting cut off in the middle and being spread over two pages. And there were some OCR errors; my favourite was “Biff flooper” instead of “Biff Hooper”.
Overall, this book was just OK. I finished it and found it amusing, but it’s not a book I feel compelled to own. show less
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The Stratemeyer Syndicate
605 works; 1 member
Author Information

Franklin W. Dixon Franklin W. Dixon is actually a pseudonym for any number of ghostwriters who have had the distinction of writing stories for the Hardy Boys series. The series was originally created by Edward Stratmeyer in 1926, the same mastermind of the Nancy Drew detective series, Tom Swift, the Rover Boys and other characters. While show more Stratmeyer created the outlines for the original series, it was Canadian writer Leslie McFarlane who breathed life to the stories and created the persona Franklin W. Dixon. McFarlane wrote for the series for over twenty years and is credited with success of the early collection of stories. As the series became more popular, it was pared down, the format changed and new ghostwriters added their own flavor to the stories. Part of the draw of the Hardy Boys is that as the authors changed, so to did the times and the story lines. While there is no one true author of the series, each ghostwriter can be given credit for enhancing the life of this series and never unveiling that there really is no Franklin W. Dixon. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
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Belongs to Publisher Series
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Common Knowledge
- Canonical title
- The Arctic Patrol Mystery
- Original title
- The Arctic Patrol Mystery
- Original publication date
- 1969
- People/Characters
- Joe Hardy; Frank Hardy
- Important places
- Iceland
- First words
- "How would you boys like to fly to Iceland?" Mr. Hardy asked his sons.
- Last words
- (Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)"Yow! Yow!" Chet agreed.
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Statistics
- Members
- 985
- Popularity
- 26,543
- Reviews
- 3
- Rating
- (3.29)
- Languages
- Czech, Dutch, English, Norwegian (Bokmål)
- Media
- Paper, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 11
- ASINs
- 20





























































