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Hardys in England!

Easy and useful

OK but not the best.

Hardys in Texas

Essential reading if you want to understand Taiwan.

300 Years of Household Collectibles

Review of Treshold of War

A Hardy Boys Caribbean MysteryThere's plenty of action in this story (every chapter ends in a cliff-hanger) but the mystery itself is ill-defined. Everything finally gets rolling when a fierce tropical storm hits the island and our heroes are pursued by a blow-dart wielding thug into a network of underground passages. Naturally, the Boys overcome all obstacles and solve the mystery in a surprise ending.


The Certainty of Good FictionFranklin, who published work under various pseudonyms, displays a welcome variety and originality here. This is not pornography, although the stories are genuinely erotic. There is science fiction here, humor, nostalgia, and whimsy (e.g., the mischieveous gay leprechaun in "The Luck of the Irish"). The book opens with "Stale Beer and Flowers", a marvelous evocation of the narrator's Kentucky boyhood, in which he learns a lot about life and love. Franklin gets the details right here and elsewhere. He describes with unfailing sharpness: we get a clear picture of whatever he presents us. "Love Under Glass" has a bizarre (though not entirely improbable) concept that works because of Franklin's skill. "Catalytic Converter", one of the book's two longest stories, is simply knockout erotic; you'll twitch and squirm as you read it. "New Clothes" has an O. Henry-type twist, and the title story features revenge as its central theme, and it is a finely orchestrated tale.
Patrick Franklin has apparently disappeared from the scene. I hope he is stashed away in some room somewhere writing more entertaining stories, perhaps under another of those numerous pen names he adopted over the years. If not, he can rest with assurance that he left the world of writing with a most accomplished little book of stories.


A good book for kids.