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Posted this link in a different thread. Then I started looking through the
books... (Volume 9) The Great Airport Mystery (Volume 37) The Ghost at Skeleton Rock http://hardyboys.bobfinnan.com/hbart.htm (Hardy Boys book covers) Anyone have one of these on their aviation bookshelf? I could do the easy hunt at eBay, but garage sale scavenging is much more fun :-) Montblack |
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Montblack wrote:
Posted this link in a different thread. Then I started looking through the books... (Volume 9) The Great Airport Mystery (Volume 37) The Ghost at Skeleton Rock I don't have any today but I remember reading these as kids. The boys were pilots and in one book I remember they even added seaplane ratings. |
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My son is 9 and has read 8 of these books (including "The Great Airport
Mystery"). He thought it was pretty funny that that guy tried to land in the street. My son has about 600 hours of air time with me. -Robert |
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![]() Robert M. Gary wrote: My son is 9 and has read 8 of these books (including "The Great Airport Mystery"). He thought it was pretty funny that that guy tried to land in the street. My son has about 600 hours of air time with me. 600 hrs. and you haven't yet shown him how to land in the street? What are you waiting for :-) John Galban=====N4BQ (PA28-180) |
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In rec.aviation.owning Richard Riley wrote:
On 11 Mar 2005 07:22:04 -0800, wrote: snip Of course, I wanted the last episode of "Murder, She Wrote" to reveal that it was Jessica that killed those people every week. Me too, but I wanted Colombo to nail her with "just a couple more questions" about why someone died every time she showed up someplace. -- Jim Pennino Remove -spam-sux to reply. |
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I read those Hardy Boys books as a child and started reading a few of
them again when my son left them lying around these past few years. I found the vocabulary to be more interesting than in many current similar books. I also found the stories did not hold my interest as an adult, even though I thought they were terrific as a child. The new Hardy Boys books are much different than the older ones. (I gather Frank Dixon never existed - the books were ghost written.) wrote: wrote: Robert M. Gary wrote: My son is 9 and has read 8 of these books (including "The Great Airport Mystery"). He thought it was pretty funny that that guy tried to |
#9
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There's another series of book that may not be familiar to U.S.
readers. They're the Bartholomew Bandy books, written by Donald Jack, and are aimed at adults. An absolute hoot! The real-life Billy Bishop, Canadian WWI ace, seems to be the inspiration for the character, but unlike Bishop he is a klutz for whom everything turns out to his credit. Similar to the luck of Inspector Clouseau of the Pink Panther movies. The first four or five Bandy books are especially funny. Used-book stores usually have a few around. Might find them on the 'net, too. Don't read them if you have a weak bladder... Dan |
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On Fri, 11 Mar 2005 at 18:05:22 in message
, ShawnD2112 wrote: How about Biggles? I'd never heard of the character until coming here to the UK but he's the childhood hero cum swashbuckling pilot that is synonymous with flying over here. Every pilot is known as "Biggles" to non-pilots. Written between the wars, the series of childhood fiction follow the adventures, back in the days when people still had adventures in the uncharted parts of the Empire, of Pilot Officer Biggles in his various flying machines around the globe. He was a WW1 fighter pilot hero who left the service after war and went on to do much more interesting things like discovering Inca treasure while in South America with a flying boat! I've read a couple as an adult and they're fantastic yarns of the old-world sort. Perfect for a kid to get lost in for hours at a time! I'd have devoured them when I were a lad. I read many of those books in my youth. I gave them all to my son and he has added to them - I think he has around 72 plus of them now. No sex or swear words. Biggles (Major James Bigglesworth) does smoke, but he does not drink. No sex but lots of villains and only one book has a hint of romance 'Biggles Fails to Return' as I recall. I didn't read them in the sequence they were written - 'Biggles in Africa' was my first. Some of the post Second World Two ones were not so good. They are far from perfect but I loved them. I read them again and again. -- David CL Francis |
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Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
pilot books for sale | GwenO MS | Aviation Marketplace | 2 | July 25th 06 12:10 AM |
Garage sale scavenging - Hardy Boys books | Montblack | Home Built | 11 | March 14th 05 04:36 AM |
Historic aviation and aeronautics books for sale | Martin Bayer | Aviation Marketplace | 0 | April 24th 04 09:30 PM |
Historic aviation and aeronautics books for sale | Martin Bayer | General Aviation | 0 | April 24th 04 09:30 PM |
hundreds aviation books for sale on CDs! | centara | Aviation Marketplace | 0 | March 1st 04 10:40 PM |