Evil, Inc. (novel)

Evil, Inc. is the 2nd book in the Hardy Boys Casefiles series.

Evil, Inc.
AuthorFranklin W. Dixon
Cover artistMorgan Kane
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
SeriesThe Hardy Boys Casefiles
GenreYoung adult novel
PublisherArchway Paperbacks
Publication date
April 1987
Media typePrint (Paperback)
Pages153 pp
ISBN0-671-62559-4
OCLC15529351
LC ClassCPB Box no. 1779 vol. 1
Preceded byDead on Target 
Followed byCult of Crime 

Plot summary

The Hardy Boys come to New York for a vacation. When the brothers spot The Gray Man in Manhattan, they learn about an investigation he is working on regarding a terrorist organization in France. While the Gray Man does not want the brothers involved because they are too young and the case is too dangerous, the Hardys secretly work to get themselves in the center of the investigation and soon they find themselves undercover in France as a couple of gun dealers who are into the punk rock scene, complete with dyed hair and grungy clothes. They get caught up in a company called Renyard and Company, which secretly sells guns and other illegal things to people. They are almost killed in a machine when a lady known as Denise helps them escape. The book has an interesting storyline in which almost everybody is betraying each other - Renyard and Company, Denise and many other people. The Hardy Boys are also captured by the French special police known as the Sûreté. They eventually escape by beating everybody up.

Soon when the book is about to end, they are chased by the Chairman of Renyard & Company and his other partners. The people try to kill them but Denise saves them at the right moment. The case is then solved by the Hardy Boys and they return to the United States.

Other editions

Evil, Inc. was published in other languages, they are:

gollark: Depending on the particular apocalypse, there might be a much bigger population around than there was then, at least for a while.
gollark: Can you not just get bottlecaps separately?
gollark: That probably works best in advanced, functional economies like the ones you won't have after an apocalypse.
gollark: There are probably ways to keep them in line as long as you don't do anything horribly egregious.
gollark: They might complain and rebel.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.