Deanna Durbin had a secret life, at least as evidenced by her two adventures told in children's novels: Deanna Durbin and the Adventure of Blue Valley, and Deanna Durbin and the Feather of Flame. These began a popular, if sometimes rather odd, series of girls' books by Whitman Publishing Company of Racine, Wisconsin. We learned about the adventures of other stars as well in exploits never told in fan magazines.
These two books were published in 1941 and spearheaded the collection that would be known as the Whitman Authorized Editions, though whether any star actually authorized these stories is quite doubtful. They do stand as creative examples of not only the studios' ownership of its stars, but its wide-reaching commercial exploitation of the stars as its products.
One of the more interesting of the series was Ginger Rogers and the Riddle of the Scarlet Cloak, which was actually written by her mother, Lela E. Rogers, so Ginger must have at least known about the novel even if she didn't authorize it. The story has Ginger dealing with a rough relationship with her mother, meeting her father for the first time, and in her job as a night switchboard operator for a hotel, ferrets out enemy spies in the aftermath of Pearl Harbor. A full day's work.
Most, but not all, of the books in the series were written by Katheryn Heisenfelt.
We see by the titles that many stars had a lot going on in their lives. There is:
Bonita Granville and the Mystery of Star Island
Jane Withers and the Hidden Room
Ann Rutherford and the Key to Nightmare Hall
Betty Grable and the House with Iron Shutters
Jane Withers and the Phantom Violin (Jane Withers was very busy.)
Betty Hutton and the Romance of Palmetto Island
Ann Sheridan and the Sign of the Sphinx (Look at her casting that wry eye at the whole idea.)
Jane Withers and the Swamp Wizard (Jane's back again in a weird swamp story.)
Judy Garland and the Hoodoo Costume
Shirley Temple and the Spirit of Dragonwood
Shirley Temple and the Screaming Specter (because why should Jane Withers have all the excitement?
Gene Tierney and the Invisible Wedding Gift (I find this title the most intriguing.)
Dorothy Lamour and the Haunted Lighthouse
And just so you don't think the ladies have all the fun, we have:
John Payne and the Menace at Hawk's Nest
Gregory Peck and the Red Box Enigma
Van Johnson, the Luckiest Guy in the World.
If any of you have read any of these books, I'd like to hear your book report.
*************
In this previous post from 2010, I discussed some children's novels that were centered around World War II and published in that era. I'll be writing a book on this subject, something that's been on the back burner for, obviously, a very long time. My to-do list is so long it sometimes strangles me, and I have to shoot it. But I'd like hear your input as well on books like the Cherry Ames series, the Dave Dawson series, the Ann Bartlett series, etc., all the pre-teen novels about the war. I'll post more on this down the road.
***
Jacqueline T. Lynch is the author of Ann Blyth: Actress. Singer. Star. and Memories in Our Time - Hollywood Mirrors and Mimics the Twentieth Century.
6 comments:
I did have a Lennon Sisters adventure book in my youth. I've never seen any of these; not even at garage sales (great old book hunting ground).
I was going to mention how long the series lasted - which went right up to the early 1960s and featured the Lennons (and Janet in a few adventures of her own), Annette Funicello, and Patty Duke - but I decided to keep it in the 1940s. You can probably find a lot of these books on eBay these days. They were cute.
These look like wonderful books! I'm going to start searching for these at second-hand book shops and library sales. I would have collected all of them if I was a kid during this era.
They do look fun, don't they? Nothing you'd see today. "Meryl Streep and the Secret of the Lost Diary in the Abandoned Coal Mine."
Oh my! I didn't know these existed! Weird and fascinating at the same time. Thanks for this great article! Now I'm curious to read one of these!
Thank you, Virginie. They certainly were a different sort of genre.
Post a Comment