Danny Dunn and the Automatic House

Danny Dunn and the Automatic House is the ninth novel in the Danny Dunn series of juvenile science fiction/adventure books written by Raymond Abrashkin and Jay Williams.[1] The book was first published in 1965.[2]

Danny Dunn and the Automatic House
First edition
AuthorRaymond Abrashkin
Jay Williams
IllustratorOwen Kampen
LanguageEnglish
SeriesDanny Dunn
GenreScience fiction
Published1965
Pages139
OCLC5318795
Preceded byDanny Dunn, Time Traveler 
Followed byDanny Dunn and the Voice from Space 

Plot introduction

Professor Bullfinch develops the "House of the Future" in which all controls are automatic, and plans to debut it at an upcoming Science Fair. This includes temperature controls and other standard functions, but also items such as washing machines, food preparation and normal housework. Danny, Irene and Joe, as well as Irene's toddler cousin, go to explore the house and become trapped inside, as the locks were automated to have security settings to seal the house until the Professor's introduction. Danny and his friends learn that in addition to the automated locks, everything is only a fake sample and the windows cannot be broken. They are trapped inside with no food or telephone, and the Fair does not open for three days!

Editions

McGraw-Hill

  • Paperback, 1965, illustrated by Owen Kampen
  • Hardback, 1965, illustrated by Owen Kampen

MacDonald and Jane's

  • Hardback, 1966, illustrated by Dick Hart

Archway Books

  • Paperback, 1979, #13 in their series

Pocket Books

  • Paperback, 1983 reissue, illustrated by Owen Kampen
gollark: No, antiEric beliefs are antiEric heresy, simple.
gollark: ... what?
gollark: You're adhering to antiEricist doctrine.
gollark: You believe that Eric does not exist. This is heresy against Ericism.
gollark: Your antiEricism is controversial.

References

  1. "New Children's Books At The Library". Ludington Daily News. September 28, 1977. p. 2. Retrieved November 15, 2010.
  2. Goodman, Ellen (November 7, 1965). "Old Friends in New Adventures". The New York Times. p. BRA46. Retrieved November 15, 2010.


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