or How Childhood Entertainment Became a Hobby
Welcome to my small part of the World Wide Web, celebrating 35-plus years of collecting children's mystery series books, including such international literary characters as the Hardy Boys, Nancy Drew and the Bobbsey Twins.
My name is Tim O'Herin, and I am a resident of Oklahoma City, OK, a graduate of the University of Missouri School of Journalism and a serious book collector of a not-too-serious genre of books, children's mystery series books.
Almost every American child has read a Nancy Drew or Hardy Boys book. Previous generations might fondly recall reading Tom Swift, the Rovers Boys, or the Bobbsey Twins. But the key word here is "fondly," for the clue to the popularity of these books is tied to the fact, most likely, that no child was forced to read these books. They were true popular reading material, perhaps with a little more stature than a comic book, but less stature than a true "classic" book.
Every person can recall that thrill of obtaining the latest comic book from the drug store, or the next volume of the Hardy Boys, and reading it after lights were out. Typically, if you shared a room with a brother or sister, you read by flashlight under the covers.
My fascination with these type of books was bred through my dear mother, Zoe' L. O'Herin. She loved a good mystery and passed that passion onto her youngest child.
That love of mystery books started with a lesser-known but still popular series, The Happy Hollisters. Oddly, it was the only series books at my local library in New Madrid, Mo., a small town on a great bend of the Mississippi River.
The Happy Hollisters series was written under the name of Jerry West, from 1953-1970. All of my friends at Immaculate Conception Grade School read them, and like me, probably most of them several times each. While these books were never popular with educators and librarians, they did promote the good habit of reading, and I suspect prompted many young people to expand their literature horizon.
Along with being a fan of mystery books, I also developed a serious interest in collecting books, comics and other items of memorabilia. Despite having read The Happy Hollister library books, I wanted to own them, too. Fortunately, the books were offered for sale through a book club of Doubleday & Company, Inc., of Garden City, New York.
The following is a paragraph from a Doubleday & Company promotional letter:
To introduce your child to this series, we want to send him a copy of the first book in the series -- "The Happy Hollisters and the Haunted House Mystery" -- for only 10 cents (to help cover shipping) and without any further obligation on your part. Your child will be thrilled to receive this handsome, hardbound book with its many illustrations and full-color jacket. And he'll be more thrilled when he starts to read it -- it's filled with action on every page and lots of fun all the way through.
At first I did not have an application or any idea how to enroll, so I wrote to the author, Jerry West, and he sent me an application. In his letter, dated Sept. 20, 1965, he wrote:
It is always good to hear from fans who enjoy to read the Happy Hollisters...Keep up your good reading!
With the encouragement and financial support of my mother, I began receiving each volume of the 33-book series. And in the four years I collected the book club volumes, I corresponded with Mr. West, receiving 12 letters from him and a photo.
Soon I expanded my reading interests to include the Hardy Boys, Nancy Drew and the Bobbsey Twins. It was then that I began a correspondence with one of the most important persons in the history of juvenile fiction, Harriet S. Adams. She had written or edited many of the most popular children's mystery series books of my generation. But I did not suspect that there was a mysterious connection between her and Mr. West. A connection I would not know of until almost ten years later.
to be continued....