Book review/recommendation: Nancy Drew Mystery, The Secret at Red Gate Farm

I’ve been reading through the original Nancy Drew books, which, as many of us now know, were written by around 28 ghost writers. These first books I am reading, though, were written by Mildren Benson using outlines given to her by either Edward Stratemeyer or his daughter Harriet Stratemeyer Adams.

The Secret of Red Gate Farm is number six in the original series and was first released in 1931 with some rewrites of it done in 1961 by Adams.

In this book we find Nancy caught up in a mystery that starts on a train while she and her friends George (female George) and Bess are coming home from a shopping trip.

Let’s start with the summary: Nancy and her friends, Bess and George, meet Joanne Byrd on a train ride home. Joanne lives at Red Gate Farm with her grandmother, but if they do not raise enough money to pay the mortgage, they will soon lose the farm! Nancy, Bess, and George decide to stay at Red Gate for a week as paying customers. Soon, they learn about the strange group of people who rent a cave on the property. They describe themselves as a nature cult called the Black Snake Colony.”


 Nancy Drew books are written simplistically in many ways but the storylines are not light by any means. There are subjects of abuse, criminal underworlds, abandonment, parental loss and many other hard-hitting issues.

This one was no exception. A young woman goes to the city to look for work because her grandmother is going to sell the family farm because they are losing money. While there she meets Nancy and almost gets caught up in a gambling ring of some sort when she interviews for the job and the interviewer is super, super creepy. I’ve watched too many movies and written up too many stories for newspapers so I imagined all the  horrible things that would happen to this girl and Nancy while reading these scenes. It made me a bit lightheaded, but since it is a Nancy Drew book I knew things would turn out okay in the end.

Nancy decides she and her friends will go with the young girl back to her farm and pay to stay at the farm while also encouraging others to do the same. Nancy’s idea is like an early Airbnb. People can rent rooms at the farm and this will help the farm owners pay off their dept.

While there Nancy and her friends notice people in the woods, wearing all white, and dancing in the moonlight. This doesn’t seem like your everyday farming community activity so they ask Joanne’s grandmother what that is all about. The woman says she’s renting her land to a group of people to help avoid selling the farm but she doesn’t really know what they are doing up there. Can we say “RED FLAG”?

In addition to that craziness, there is also a man trying to buy the rest of the farm but the grandmother is trying to push him off until she sees if other options work to raise some money.

Despite the simple and fairly innocent way the Nancy Drew books are written, this one was a little creepy for me because of the cult angle.

Even with the simple writing, the dark subject matter leaked through and left me a little unsettled part of the time. People wearing white robes, dancing weirdly in the moonlight? Shudder!

Then Nancy and her friends decide to infiltrate the group at one point and I swear I was about to faint from the tension.

Nancy Drew books might be written simply but their plots still hold together well in my opinion.

Either Stratemeyer or Mildred had quite an imagination.

Have you read this one in the series yet or before?


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6 thoughts on “Book review/recommendation: Nancy Drew Mystery, The Secret at Red Gate Farm

  1. Pingback: Book review/recommendation: The Secret of the Wooden Lady, A Nancy Drew Mystery – Boondock Ramblings

  2. Pingback: Sunday Bookends: The many injuries of Little Miss, fun and light mysteries, and watching classic movies – Boondock Ramblings

  3. Lisa,

    Thanks so much for stopping by!! I read the original Nancy Drew books when I was a lot younger and loved them!!! I hope you are having a great week!!

    Hugs,

    Deb

    Debbie-Dabble Blog

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  4. I loved the Nancy Drew Mysteries when I was a kid. I never thought about rereading them. Now that you point out some of the storylines, I wonder why the books were in my K-6 library instead of in the library for older kids. I don’t remember this one but out school library didn’t have all of them. I suspect when some came up lost or missing over the years, they just didn’t replace them.

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  5. Lisa…do you know how long it’s been since I read Nancy Drew? It was probably the early 60s! I don’t know if I’ve read this one, but gosh, I really didn’t realize how dark those books were. Maybe, I’ll have to add some Nancy Drew to my reading. Thanks for the review! BTW…that first line was a joke (true, but just joking)!

    https://marshainthemiddle.com/

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  6. While I definitely do not remember the storyline of this particular book I do remember having this one with the exact same cover photo/artwork!

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