Secret
Spy Society 1: The Case of the Missing Cheetah. By Veronica Mang. Viking. $13.99.
Secret
Spy Society 2: The Case of the Curious Scouts. By Veronica Mang. Viking. $13.99.
Secret
Spy Society 3: The Case of the Musical Mishap. By Veronica Mang. Viking. $14.99.
No Sherlock Holmes stuff here. No major derring-do (or even
derring-don’t). No high-level dangers or implications of genuine evil. And that
is just as things should be in an alternate-world set of spy tales for the very
youngest detective aficionados (or soon-to-be aficionados) – ages 5-9. Victoria
Mang has a very clever concept here. First, she assembles a team of three girls
who are themselves firmly in or near the target age range of the books: Dot,
Peggy and Rita. Then she assigns them easily distinguishable personality
characteristics without really doing any character development – too much of
that would be ineffective for this age range. And then – here’s the cleverness
– she apprentices the three budding detectives to a secret group of top-notch female
spies from many time periods and many locations, who never met each other in
the real world but in this world are
all comrades working together for the greater good of everyone.
Best not to examine the adult portion of the Secret Spy Society books too closely, since just what the spy pros
are doing and why is never explained – and does not matter, since the whole
focus of the books is on the apprentices and what they are doing. Mang’s abundant, nicely designed if rather
formulaic-for-kids’-books illustrations neatly advance the stories while making
these easy-to-read chapter books even easier to read. And she draws on the real
lives of some of the adult spies to just the extent necessary to get the books’
plots going and give Dot, Peggy and Rita something into which they can sink
their investigatory teeth. That is almost literally the case in the first book,
The Case of the Missing Cheetah, which
is all about the kidnaping (or cheetah-napping) of Chiquita, the actual name of
an actual cheetah belonging to Josephine Baker (1906-1975), one of the adult
spies and a woman of remarkable (and, to some, scandalous) accomplishments. One
stormy night (Mang suggests but does not go so far as to write “it was a dark and
stormy night”), Dot, Peggy and Rita notice a woman walking along the street who
turns out to be their teacher, Miss Khan – based on Noor Inayat Khan
(1914-1944), a World War II wireless operator captured and killed by the Nazis.
By following Miss Khan and offering to return the fountain pen she has
conveniently (for the plot) dropped, the girls encounter the Secret Spy Society
and help the adults find Chiquita, who has been nefariously caged by a
nefarious next-door neighbor for nefarious reasons that are never explained
because, really, they are not the point. What is the point is that the girls’ assistance earns them the
designation of Petite Private Eyes and the opportunity to solve additional
simple mysteries.
Mang continues the pattern and gives the evildoers slightly more
understandable motives in the second and brand-new third books of the series. The Case of the Curious Scouts picks up,
in a way, on the first book, since in the initial volume, the girls gain entry
to the bad guy’s house by pretending to be scouts selling cookies. The second
book picks up with a strange robbery at the store of two local fashion
designers – an event that leads Dot, Peggy and Rita to go undercover to
infiltrate a scout troop that is doing some very strange things to earn merit
badges. The girls’ primary guide this time is Virginia Hall (1906-1982), who,
in the real world, lost a leg in a hunting accident but still worked as a World
War II spy and for the CIA – and used her artificial leg, which she called
Cuthbert (and to which she gives the same name in Mang’s book), as an aid in
her undercover work. There is an odd little inaccuracy regarding Hall in The Case of the Curious Scouts, as Hall
tells the girls that she used to slip secret notes “into my metal ankle” – when
in fact her leg was entirely made of wood, and she put notes in her leg’s wooden
heel. But details of this sort are not at all the point of The Case of the Curious Scouts, which turns out to involve a troop
leader who redefines merit badges in such a way as to get scouts to do her
housework and make her the Scout Leader of the Year (for which ceremony she
needs a new dress that she steals, connecting the scouting material to the
theft that opens the book). The whole plot is wholly improbable and on the
silly side, but it cements the friendship of Dot, Peggy and Rita with each
other and with their adult mentors, which is what matters.
The third book, The Case of the
Musical Mishap, tosses in a tiny touch of reality by taking place in the
school attended by all three of the Petite Private Eyes – showing young readers
that even in this make-believe world, kid detectives do not get to spend all their time helping famous adult
spies solve little mysteries. If the second book focuses on going undercover,
the third centers more on codes (although Morse code was also a factor in the
first novel). The idea here is that the girls all play instruments in the
school band, whose big concert is coming up – but then various band instruments
start mysteriously disappearing, and if they are not found and restored to band
members, the concert will be ruined. Mr. Vollrath, the band teacher, is a
sourpuss who does not like Peggy, or at least Peggy’s tendency to show off when
playing the trombone. And Rita has a school-based problem to handle: the band
concert is the same day as a math-club competition in which Rita is also
supposed to participate. Of course, as the story progresses, it turns out that
the math and band issues are intertwined – and that elementary-school students
can be just as nefarious as adults (which is to say, not very nefarious). The
adult-spy-in-focus here is Elizebeth Friedman (1892-1980), a cryptanalyst who
assists the Secret Spy Society even though she is not officially a member of
it. Her tie-in with the Petite
Private Eyes is that she is the former principal of their school – spies are
just about everywhere in Mang’s characters’ world. The Case of the Musical Mishap also reinforces one of the
underlying themes of these books – that the girls have to work together, with
their friendship uniting their differing (but always complementary) abilities.
Mang makes this point by having Peggy go off on her own in one exploratory
direction, leaving Dot and Rita to look at and into things differently. Of course,
the mystery is solved only after all three girls get back together.
There is nothing difficult to read or difficult to understand in the Secret Spy Society books, and their educational value is confined to their final pages, which give brief biographical information on the real-world adult spies and provide some detail on concepts such as codes and disguises. Readers who enjoy these fantasy young-detective stories may perhaps be inspired by the biographical material to read about the reality of some of the spies’ lives. If those readers do not find these women’s true stories deeply intriguing, that would be a real mystery.
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