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When Frank and Joe Hardy investigate a hijacking, they become involved with industrial spies and a pursuit into the Canadian wilderness.Tags
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The 1945 edition of this book surely presents one of the wackier plots of the entire Hardy Boy series. The boys are on the trail of a gang that supposedly steals radio parts and builds "black market" short wave radios. The nefarious crooks hide and ship their radios in taxidermy specimens -- stuffed wolves, stuffed bears, stuffed skunks and so on. The idea seems to be that keeping and transporting radio- stuffed stuffed animal specimens will get far less attention from the police authorities than mere cardboard boxes of electronic gear.
As it turns out, the Hardy Boys' have gotten interested in short wave radios, and their chum Chet has taken up taxidermy as a hobby -- both being amazing coincidences given that the crooks need stuffed show more stuff in which to stuff their illegal radio stuff. And speaking of coincidences, the remote Canadian hideout of the head crook ("Spike") lies very close to a place where a group of scientists were stranded; returning via a small airplane from the African Gobi Desert (in a single flight from China, by way of northern Canada?), their plane had gone down there. The scientists have nothing whatsoever to do with the story. But at the denouement, the situation allows for Frank and Joe to ride a small plane to the scene to help arrest Spike, with a handy side trip to rescue the stranded scientists. What heroes these boys are.
According to online sources, the author of this particular book in the series had been under pressure to add more scientific stuff, and apparently the best he could come up with were black market radios (whatever they were). He also reportedly had great trouble finishing the book, and finally turned in a finished draft long after it was due. His difficulty may explain the awkwardness of the tale, its choppy pace, and its poorly connected and incongruous elements. In one of the author's handy innovations, a happy ending is achieved when the H Boys acquire a pair of walkie talkies. For readers under the age of 35, walkie talkies were devices that allowed one to talk to another person while actually walking around -- hence the clever name. They are like a primitive form of cell phone, but one that can't take selfies, contain games, provide directions, show nude photos, or allow young users to keep pace with the trivial details of one another's lives.
Presumably kids of 1945 would have been utterly fascinated by the devices that allowed voice communication over long distances, along with the possibility of being able to ride in an airplane. Their great grandchildren of today will likely be both bored and mystified. As a side issue, it's noteworthy that the Hardy Boys' chum "Chet" is never mentioned without a reminder that he is "fat" (the word and its synonyms are used easily 25 times in a 140 page book, and interspersed with episodes showing that Chet is lazy and loves to eat). Again, the idea is dated, now that such a large percentage of kids are overweight, and making fun of them is no longer a source of good natured sport. That's progress of a sort. show less
As it turns out, the Hardy Boys' have gotten interested in short wave radios, and their chum Chet has taken up taxidermy as a hobby -- both being amazing coincidences given that the crooks need stuffed show more stuff in which to stuff their illegal radio stuff. And speaking of coincidences, the remote Canadian hideout of the head crook ("Spike") lies very close to a place where a group of scientists were stranded; returning via a small airplane from the African Gobi Desert (in a single flight from China, by way of northern Canada?), their plane had gone down there. The scientists have nothing whatsoever to do with the story. But at the denouement, the situation allows for Frank and Joe to ride a small plane to the scene to help arrest Spike, with a handy side trip to rescue the stranded scientists. What heroes these boys are.
According to online sources, the author of this particular book in the series had been under pressure to add more scientific stuff, and apparently the best he could come up with were black market radios (whatever they were). He also reportedly had great trouble finishing the book, and finally turned in a finished draft long after it was due. His difficulty may explain the awkwardness of the tale, its choppy pace, and its poorly connected and incongruous elements. In one of the author's handy innovations, a happy ending is achieved when the H Boys acquire a pair of walkie talkies. For readers under the age of 35, walkie talkies were devices that allowed one to talk to another person while actually walking around -- hence the clever name. They are like a primitive form of cell phone, but one that can't take selfies, contain games, provide directions, show nude photos, or allow young users to keep pace with the trivial details of one another's lives.
Presumably kids of 1945 would have been utterly fascinated by the devices that allowed voice communication over long distances, along with the possibility of being able to ride in an airplane. Their great grandchildren of today will likely be both bored and mystified. As a side issue, it's noteworthy that the Hardy Boys' chum "Chet" is never mentioned without a reminder that he is "fat" (the word and its synonyms are used easily 25 times in a 140 page book, and interspersed with episodes showing that Chet is lazy and loves to eat). Again, the idea is dated, now that such a large percentage of kids are overweight, and making fun of them is no longer a source of good natured sport. That's progress of a sort. show less
Near-complete revision of the original text. A few plot threads were kept. The updated story was cleaner, but not as fun or nostalgic as reading the OT.
I was really into this story until the author put espionage. I was heart broken that a retreaded plot was in the story line. The author attempted to put nice "big brother" twist in the story line but, sigh. I wanted something out of left field.
I liked this book along with the others in the series. I liked the technology involved with the mystery, also the codes that were sent by radio
One of the many books in the Hardy Boys series I read, and soon forgot, as a 9-10 year old.
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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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Common Knowledge
- Canonical title
- The Short-Wave Mystery
- Original publication date
- 1945; 1966 (revised) (revised)
- People/Characters
- Frank Hardy; Joe Hardy
- First words
- "Try him again, Frank! He ought to answer any minute."
- Last words
- (Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)"Then maybe I can keep track of my two famous boys!"
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Statistics
- Members
- 1,101
- Popularity
- 23,007
- Reviews
- 8
- Rating
- (3.16)
- Languages
- English, Norwegian (Bokmål), Norwegian
- Media
- Paper, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 12
- ASINs
- 29





















































