The Secret in the Old Lace

The Secret in the Old Lace is the fifty-ninth volume in the Nancy Drew mystery series. It was ghostwritten by Nancy Axelrad[3] and first published in 1980 under the pseudonym Carolyn Keene[4] under the Wanderer imprint of Simon and Schuster. It was later republished again in both Wanderer and Minstrel imprints, each time with a new cover. In 2005, Grosset & Dunlap reprinted it in the yellow hardback "glossy flashlight" format. The original edition cover art and six internal illustrations were by Ruth Sanderson. These illustrations were removed in the two subsequent printings.

Nancy Drew: The Secret in the Old Lace
AuthorCarolyn Keene
IllustratorRuth Sanderson
Cover artistRuth Sanderson[1]
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
SeriesNancy Drew stories
GenreDetective, mystery
PublisherWanderer Books
Publication date
October 31, 1980[2]
Pages167
ISBN0-671-41119-5
Preceded byThe Flying Saucer Mystery 
Followed byThe Greek Symbol Mystery 

Plot summary

Nancy enters a magazine competition with an answer to an old Belgian mystery of a missing nobleman. However, her manuscript is intercepted and someone else submits her same solution, so she must find out who it was and prove that the solution was indeed hers. Meanwhile, her friend Bess Marvin's mom has been sent a letter from her friend in Belgium, Madam Chambray. Madam Chambray recently bought an old house with a mystery attached, and she invites Bess, Nancy, and their friend George Fayne to come stay with her and solve the mystery. But on the way to Belgium, Nancy's suitcase is stolen. She and her friends continue to Madame Chambray's house, where the old woman tells them about a beautiful cross made of gold, diamonds, and Lapis Lazuli. It came when she bought the house and she does not know who owned it. While in Belgium working on these three mysteries, the girls are guided by their Belgian friend Hilda Permeke. They visit a lace center and learn how it is made. At a museum, Nancy is intrigued by a painting of a man on a bridge with a dark cloaked figure behind him (this painting appears on both of the covers pictured below). She later identifies the man as the missing Belgian nobleman, and solves the real-life mystery that the magazine contest was for. The valuable cross and suitcase and manuscript theft also tie in.

Book covers

The Secret in the Old Lace features three different American versions of the cover art including the following two:

gollark: Making prizes more available wouldn't really do anything bad other than hurt trading value of existing ones.
gollark: It probably would, though.
gollark: I have no idea how many there are. I don't see how people would be particularly hurt by prizes becoming easier to get.
gollark: Changes which upset lots of people are bad. So are status quos which upset people. We have a bad status quo.
gollark: Well, I suggested it.I may have been joking.

References

  1. The Secret in the Old Lace at Nancy Drew World
  2. United States Copyright Office Public Catalog ~ to search: Secret in the Old Lace
  3. "Autographs". The Cover Art of Childrens' Series Books. Retrieved 2020-08-14.
  4. The Secret in the Old Lace at WorldCat



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