Imagen del autor

Harold L. Goodwin (1914–1990)

Autor de The Rocket's Shadow

40 Obras 1,719 Miembros 8 Reseñas

Sobre El Autor

Incluye los nombres: Hal Goodwin, GOODWIN HAL, Harold Leland Goodwin

También incluye: John Blaine (1)

Nota de desambiguación:

(eng) Hal Goodwin wrote books under pseudonym in addition to his own name. Please put the John Blaine books and the Blake Savage title under those names (they have been aliased to also appear here if properly entered under the author name they were printed under).

Créditos de la imagen: Harold L. Goodwin (John Blaine pseud.)

Obras de Harold L. Goodwin

The Rocket's Shadow (1947) 156 copias
The Lost City (1947) 118 copias
Sea Gold (1947) 92 copias
100 Fathoms Under (1947) 85 copias
Smugglers' Reef (1950) 79 copias
The Whispering Box Mystery (1948) 78 copias
The Scarlet Lake Mystery (1958) 71 copias
The Caves of Fear (1951) 70 copias
The Wailing Octopus (1956) 68 copias
The Golden Skull (1954) 68 copias
The Phantom Shark (1949) 68 copias
The Pirates of Shan (1958) 63 copias
The Blue Ghost Mystery (1950) 60 copias
The Egyptian Cat Mystery (1961) 59 copias
Stairway to Danger (1947) 55 copias

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Nombre legal
Goodwin, Harold Leland
Otros nombres
Blaine, John
Savage, Blake
Gordon, Hal
Goodwin, Hal
Goodwin, Harold L.
Fecha de nacimiento
1914-11-20
Fecha de fallecimiento
1990-02-18
Género
male
Nacionalidad
USA
País (para mapa)
USA
Lugar de fallecimiento
Bethesda, Maryland, USA
Aviso de desambiguación
Hal Goodwin wrote books under pseudonym in addition to his own name. Please put the John Blaine books and the Blake Savage title under those names (they have been aliased to also appear here if properly entered under the author name they were printed under).

Miembros

Reseñas

review of
John Blaine's The Lost City
by tENTATIVELY, a cONVENIENCE - June 27, 2012

While written under a pseudonym, these Rick Brant stories were all written by the same author (or coauthors), unlike the similar Hardy Boys & Tom Swift series. As I explained in my review of the Hardy Boys' The Clue in the Embers ( http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/13583071-the-clue-in-the-embers ), I recently got interested in rereading bks that I read as a child thanks to an interview question posed to me by my friend & fellow writer Alan Davies. As I wrote in that review: "I find it moderately fascinating to reread something that I wd've last read 50 yrs ago to reappraise the culture that they represented at the time."

While I definitely read the Hardy Boys & Tom Swift bks, I'm not sure about this "Rick Brant Electronic Adventure". But given that it was published by the same publisher as the former 2 series & that the size & look of them is similar, it seems very familiar nonetheless.

I started reading this one b/c I'd hurt my leg & wanted to read something completely undemanding to while away my recovery time. I didn't bother to take notes for this review b/c it didn't seem worth the effort.

As w/ the Hardy Boys, the main protagonist is a young 'white' male whose father has an exciting profession that's both led to extraordinary knowledge at an early age & to adventures few are ever likely to encounter. Like The Clue in the Embers, this adventure takes the characters to another continent where 'exotic' people live. Also like The Clue in the Embers, mysterious people try to sabotage their mission. In other words, this is formulaic writing meant to encourage 'white' boys to be resourceful in 'conquering' the world - wch is, of course, their oyster.

This isn't really as 'bad' as my use of the word 'conquering' implies. The use of far-flung locales (in relation to the New Jersey origins of the young men) is a way of introducing parts of the world to the readers to get their imaginations 'out of the box' & into a wider world. In this story, the main villain is an impeccably dressed 'white' man from the Netherlands wearing a clean white suit - & 'our heros' fall for him as someone to be trusted b/c of this appearance. On the other hand, the most helpful character is an impoverished young Indian lad who's dirty & ragged & who speaks pigeon-English & who the protagonists make the mistake of not taking seriously. SO, there's a bit of parody of American stereotyping.

Nonetheless, there's a bit of 'yellow peril' here w/ such torrid passages as "Rick looked into the greasy, Oriental faces with their black, animal-like eyes and knew he could expect no mercy." This latter in reference to the descendants of Ghenghis Khan - by all accounts an extremely nasty fellow.

All in all, I enjoyed it & wd recommend it to practically no-one. Why? As w/ the Hardy Boys, this story was written for a particular time & place & wd have to be revised to reserve the same function as it originally did. As literature in & of itself, it's not that great. For one thing, the villains are so transparent to the reader that they're immediately recognizable while the heros blunder on stupidly. That, of course, can be a technique for making the reader feel smarter & making the reader get emotional about the ongoing foolishness of the protagonists but I just found it annoying.

I wonder if there are any equivalent series today? & how naive & Polly Purebred wd the characters be if there were one? I think of Thomas Pynchon's Against the Day ( http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/277017.Against_the_Day ). Wd Grosset & Dunlop (the original publisher of many of these series) be as daring as Pynchon & have their heros be young anarchist train-hoppers fighting greedy corporate villains?
… (más)
 
Denunciada
tENTATIVELY | Apr 3, 2022 |
After reading Harold Goodwin's The Real Book About Space Travel, I tracked down some of his Rick Brandt Science-Adventure books. Written under the pseudonym John Blaine, I can imagine this would have thrilled a post-WWII 1947 boy - yes, they were gender-binary in their targeting back then; girls had Nancy Drew and boys had the Hardy brothers. Ten years before Sputnik, the rocket to the moon in this tends more toward Swift's or Verne's imagination. Still, there are the elements of science that do make this a "Science-Adventure". One serendipitous to only me cross-over, Blaine/Goodwin had the teen character Rick fiddling with a Model-T ignition coil and some batteries to deliver an electric shock and Thomas Willeford's Steampunk Gear, Gadgets, and Gizmos: A Maker's Guide to Creating Modern Artifacts used one in one of his steampunk creations. Not to shock, but for it's geek value, of course!

Fun stuff I never read as a kid. I'll keep the series in mind for a diversion or three this year.
… (más)
1 vota
Denunciada
Razinha | Jan 28, 2019 |
Reread after many years; the story is (as expected) fine for middle-schoolers. It was interesting to see "what life was like" regarding technology in the year of my birth (1952). Despite the obvious advances (cell-phones and computers), many things are still much the same today.
 
Denunciada
librisissimo | Sep 5, 2016 |
Written in 1960, this is similar to the Hardy Boys series. An fun and enjoyable read.

Rick Brandt and his friend Scotty get an invite to fly down and visit friends in Virginia—and look into the haunting of the Blue Ghost that is scaring picnickers away from a favourite gathering spot. This Civil War soldier is putting on his act every time people are there. Is it really a ghost or is it a hoax?

A cave, a pool, mist, figures walking over the fields at midnight...are they real ghosts or real people. Maybe science can help explain it along with good old detective work. It is up to Rick and Scotty to solve this mystery.… (más)
 
Denunciada
ChazziFrazz | Jun 23, 2016 |

Listas

También Puede Gustarte

Autores relacionados

Estadísticas

Obras
40
Miembros
1,719
Popularidad
#14,942
Valoración
½ 3.6
Reseñas
8
ISBNs
61
Idiomas
1

Tablas y Gráficos