Rating: Summary: Absolutely the best!! Review: I was introduced to Jupiter, Pete and Bob nearly 20 years agoby a wonderful 5th grade teacher that read to our class every day.After she read the Secret of Terror Castle I was hooked and read nearly every one of the books in the series (including this one). I highly recommend these books to parents who want to get their children reading. I've read some of the Animorphs and Goosebumps series and they can't hold a candle to the Three Investigators! I'm now reading them over again with my son. Simply the best read ever! END
Rating: Summary: Perfect mysteries for kids (and adults who are at heart)! Review: I was introduced to this series when I was in the 4th grade (1974)and it was one of the influences that started my life long passion of reading. Perfectly balanced with great story telling and intelligence that is not insulting to a young person. Jupiter, Ben and Pete get themselves involved in great mysteries with the great Alfred Hitchcok to guide them once in awhile. You cant go wrong with a secret hidden clubhouse underneath a pile in a junkyard and a free personal limo and driver. Great adventures in the series, there is not a lame story to be read! Highly recommended!
Rating: Summary: Perfect mysteries for kids (and adults who are at heart)! Review: I was introduced to this series when I was in the 4th grade (1974)and it was one of the influences that started my life long passion of reading. Perfectly balanced with great story telling and intelligence that is not insulting to a young person. Jupiter, Ben and Pete get themselves involved in great mysteries with the great Alfred Hitchcok to guide them once in awhile. You cant go wrong with a secret hidden clubhouse underneath a pile in a junkyard and a free personal limo and driver. Great adventures in the series, there is not a lame story to be read! Highly recommended!
Rating: Summary: Excellent Mystery Adventure Series Review: I would recomend this series of books to anyone, young or old. The stories are great, and they keep you glued to the pages as you try to figure out who dunnit.
Rating: Summary: Robert Arthur's daughter has a new message! Review: I'm not the author, Robert Arthur, but his daughter, Elizabeth Arthur. Just writing that sentence reminds me of how many fan letters Dad used to get which either began "Dear Mr. Author," or which said, "since you are a published arthur..." My father died in 1969, before he had a chance to read most of those letters, or to know how many readers were going to be affected by The Three Investigators. For years, letters from children went to my Aunt Margaret, who answered every single letter she ever received, and then they came to me, who, I am ashamed to admit, didn't. But I was still very happy to get the letters, and to know that there was a group of loyal and enthusiastic fans of Jupiter Jones, Pete Crenshaw and Bob Andrews out there somewhere in the world. Now, with the advent of the Internet, it's even easier to be in touch, and in the time since I first posted a letter on this page, I've received a lot of wonderful letters from now-grown-up readers of the series, and this time -- though sometimes it's taken me a while -- I've actually managed to answer them. So, if you'd like to write to me, I can be reached at eaa@threeinvestigators.net. That email is, as you may guess, linked to a web site my husband and I have recently put up. On the site, we've tried to answer all the questions I've been asked in letters from readers, so if you'd like an answer to a specific question about the Three Investigators series, or about my father and his work as a writer, please visit our site. If you just want to write to me, please do so! Elizabeth Arthur, May 7, 2000
Rating: Summary: Fun fun fun Review: I've a soft spot in my heart for The Three Investigators. Originally conceived in the 60s as a knock-off Hardy Boys series, the adventures follow three boys who run their own detective agency. One boy is the nerdy smart one, one boy is the brawn, and one boy (Jupiter Jones: former child model) is the leader of the crew. The boys set their headquarters in an old mobile home trailer, hidden beneath a pile of junk at the Jones Salvage Yard. Their mysteries tended to mimic that of Scooby Doo in some ways. In each book someone is threatened by a supposed supernatural force. It is up to our three intrepid explorers to solve the mystery and save the day. For a time, Alfred Hitchcock allowed his name to be associated with the series, even going so far as to include a special note at the beginning of every mystery. In time, however, his name was dropped and "Alfred Hitchcock and The Three Investigators" was shortened to the less wordy, "The Three Investigators". As a young girl, I loved these superficially male books. Who doesn't want a secret headquarters under a junkyard? Or to solve mysteries with names like, "The Secret of Skeleton Island" or "The Mystery of the Talking Skull". These books are so enjoyable that kids of every gender will gravitate towards them. This particular mystery, "The Mystery of the Whispering Mummy" is a good starter Three Investigators book. In it, the tale follows a mysterious mummy, known to whisper Egyptian incantations in the dead of night. When the mummy disappears without a trace, the three boys have to separate fact from fiction in an effort to locate its remains and solve its loose tongue. Lots of fun and surprisingly absent of Arab stereotypes. The boys make friends with an Egyptian lad and his part is played out without any racial barbs or slurs (amazing, due to the book's original 1965 publication). Enjoy this rollicking adventure and expect a good time.
Rating: Summary: Fun fun fun Review: I've a soft spot in my heart for The Three Investigators. Originally conceived in the 60s as a knock-off Hardy Boys series, the adventures follow three boys who run their own detective agency. One boy is the nerdy smart one, one boy is the brawn, and one boy (Jupiter Jones: former child model) is the leader of the crew. The boys set their headquarters in an old mobile home trailer, hidden beneath a pile of junk at the Jones Salvage Yard. Their mysteries tended to mimic that of Scooby Doo in some ways. In each book someone is threatened by a supposed supernatural force. It is up to our three intrepid explorers to solve the mystery and save the day. For a time, Alfred Hitchcock allowed his name to be associated with the series, even going so far as to include a special note at the beginning of every mystery. In time, however, his name was dropped and "Alfred Hitchcock and The Three Investigators" was shortened to the less wordy, "The Three Investigators". As a young girl, I loved these superficially male books. Who doesn't want a secret headquarters under a junkyard? Or to solve mysteries with names like, "The Secret of Skeleton Island" or "The Mystery of the Talking Skull". These books are so enjoyable that kids of every gender will gravitate towards them. This particular mystery, "The Mystery of the Whispering Mummy" is a good starter Three Investigators book. In it, the tale follows a mysterious mummy, known to whisper Egyptian incantations in the dead of night. When the mummy disappears without a trace, the three boys have to separate fact from fiction in an effort to locate its remains and solve its loose tongue. Lots of fun and surprisingly absent of Arab stereotypes. The boys make friends with an Egyptian lad and his part is played out without any racial barbs or slurs (amazing, due to the book's original 1965 publication). Enjoy this rollicking adventure and expect a good time.
Rating: Summary: Usual high quality in an outstanding series for kids Review: My introduction to this series was my older brother's slightly worn Scholastic copy of Mystery of the Green Ghost. We both read it several times, and once we found out there were more, look out! We read them from the library, we cajoled Mom into taking us to the mall to buy them, we bought them at a local used bookstore. We were both hooked! I can recommend every book in this series. My brother and I both read all the Hardy Boys (and liked them a lot), but these blow them out of the water! I think you can get 1-10 new (they've been reprinted), the rest you'll have to get used. I've still got a complete set, but I'm rebuying them for a nephew. He's as excited about them as I was over 20 years ago. Excellent characters, spooky happenings, and just enough chills to keep a kid's pulse racing. If you have kids, I can't recommend these highly enough.
Rating: Summary: THE BEST CHILDREN'S MYSTERY BOOK EVER! Review: once i read this book, i have been on a 25 year search for more! never heard of the series back when i was in 3rd grade, and i was actually looking to read a nancy drew, but the librarian handed me the whispering mummy - and to this day, i'm still reading & rereading the series! robert arthur is one of the best story tellers, suspense, adventure, & fun for the young & young at heart! brings back fond memories of reading on a hot summer day, eating a bowl of peppermint ice cream w. rice krispies...
Rating: Summary: Another baffling, highly enjoyable mystery Review: The Three Investigators do it again, solving their strangest mystery thus far. This case involves a 3000-year-old mummy that mysteriously whispers in some archaic tongue to one professor alone. The boys overcome a number of hurdles set in their way, some involving great personal danger to themselves, to solve this perplexing mystery and, at the same time, return an unusual Abyssinian cat to his loving owner. As the series continues, we learn more and more about the boys themselves and their secret headquarters, see them employing more gadgets in their work, and see the logical gymnastics Jupiter Jones continually performs to find resolutions to case after case. There is more deductive reasoning exhibited in this case than in the trio's previous two adventures, and that only serves to further draw the reader into the world of Rocky Beach, California. As I continue to re-read these classic stories from my youth, my appreciation for the writing of Robert Arthur grows more and more. I was indeed pleased to see that my suspicions in this case proved correct in the end; even had I been wrong, I would not have been embarrassed because Arthur's tight plot works on two levels--that of young readers, who can certainly follow the case with understanding and eager anticipation for each upcoming chapter, as well as that of adults. This is a great mystery story in all regards.
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