Tandy, and four glossy black-and-white interior illustrations, also by Tandy. The 1930s edition was published with the white-spine dust jacket, with artwork by Russell H. The final scene, the reading of the will that disinherits the Tophams, focuses on the delight of rewarding the deserving Crowley kin, instead of Nancy's desire to down-class the snobbish Topham family. Nancy catches up with the thieves when they stop to dine, instead of drinking illegal-era alcohol. Nancy's encounter with the undeserving Topham sisters now centers around a torn evening dress instead of a broken vase, as in the original story. In the original version, the sisters wanted to improve their hatchery and dressmaking skills here, Allison Hoover wants to take singing lessons. While looking for the Hoover sisters, Nancy happens upon their farm during a downpour and shelters with them to dry off because her convertible top malfunctioned. Eighteen-year-old Nancy Drew is prompted to help the Crowley kin by her affection for Crowley's distant niece, little Judy, who is being raised by the elderly Turner sisters. When Crowley dies, promises of being included in his will appear moot as the will, held by the Tophams, wills everything to them. Relatives of Josiah Crowley are concerned that the selfish nouveau riche social-climbing heirs presumptive, the snobbish Tophams, have taken him into their home and do not let him visit other family members, including the Turner and Hoover sisters. Greater detail is given to develop Nancy and her home. Action is increased significantly and is faster-paced. Readers have noted two figures illustrated in the same vein as the cousins appear in a 1959 illustration at a girls' camp). Helen now appears older, perhaps in preparation for her eventual "write-out" after Volume 4 of the revised series (no explanation is made in the original series) to introduce Bess and her cousin George. In the Harriet Adams rewrite, Nancy is depicted as a less impulsive, less headstrong girl of Stratemeyer and Mildred’s vision, to a milder, more sedate and refined girl- "more sugar and less spice", with an extensive wardrobe and a more charitable outlook. Although charitable and altruistic to the poor heirs, she enjoys seeing others in River Heights society lose their status earned by new money rather than character. Nancy comes across as very strong-willed, but also competitive with the Tophams. A climactic scene, inserted before the denouement and epilogue, has Nancy delighted to take the money from the Tophams and see it distributed to destitute family and friends. Nancy is depicted as intentionally hiding stolen evidence (the clock) from the police and gunfire is involved in the police-robber chase. ( Prohibition in the United States was in force in 1930.) She is able to obtain the titular clock while the burglars drink wine and beer heavily (and illegally) at a wayside inn. She is imprisoned in the vacant house while the caretaker is locked in a shed nearby. There, she is overpowered by the burglars who stole the Crowley Clock and the rest of the Topham furniture. Nancy then joins Helen at summer camp to investigate the Topham summer home nearby. When Helen gives Nancy charity tickets to sell, she sells them to the Tophams to gain entry to their home and quiz them about the clock. Interviewing various Crowley relatives and friends, Nancy learns from an injured old lady that Crowley hinted that the clue to his will would be found in the family clock. Aided along the way by friend Helen Corning, she becomes interested in the case because she dislikes Crowley's snobbish nouveau-riche social-climbing heirs presumptive, the Tophams.Ī nasty encounter at a department store allows Nancy to discredit the Topham sisters when they break an expensive imported vase. Sixteen-year-old Nancy Drew wishes to help the Turners, who are struggling relatives of the recently deceased Josiah Crowley, by finding a missing will that can give them claim to Crowely's estate. In 2001, the novel ranked 53rd on Publishers Weekly's list of the all-time best-selling hardcover children's books in English, having sold about 2.7 million copies. In early editions, she is depicted as a mere servant later in the series, she becomes more of a family member. The Drews reside in River Heights and employ a housekeeper, Hannah Gruen. Her father, Carson Drew, is a well-known criminal defense lawyer. Nancy Drew is a sixteen-year-old high school graduate (her age was changed to eighteen in the 1959 rewrite). It was first published on April 28, 1930, and rewritten in 1959 by Harriet Stratemeyer Adams. The Secret of the Old Clock is the first volume in the Nancy Drew Mystery Stories series written under the pseudonym Carolyn Keene.
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