The Bobbsey Twins

#1 The Secret of Jungle Park by Laura Lee Hope (Stratemeyer Syndicate), 1987.

Before I begin, I’d like to acknowledge Sean Hagins, for supplying me with photos of this book! Usually, I take pictures of books myself, but I just couldn’t find a physical copy of this one. Sean is a big fan of the Bobbsey Twins, particularly the New Bobbsey Twins mysteries, and you can see some of his video reviews as well as videos about his photography work on his YouTube channel, SJHFoto. Thanks, Sean!

Twelve-year-old twins Nan and Bert Bobbsey are part of a rock band with some of their friends. They call themselves The Aliens, and they’re participating in a Battle of the Bands at the amusement park Jungle Park. Nan plays the keyboard, Bert plays the drums, and their friends, Jimmy and Brian, play guitars. Flossie, their younger sister, wishes that she could join the band, too, but she’s still too young. Flossie and her twin brother, Freddie, are there to help their older siblings get ready and watch them perform. (And, the case of the boys, use some fake blood to play a trick on the girls.)

While they watch the first bands perform, they see some smoke. At first, they think that it’s just a stage effect, but it becomes thicker, and they realize that something is really wrong! Most of the audience flees, but Bert stays behind to save his band’s equipment. Nan tells him it was a dangerous thing to do, but Bert says that he doesn’t think it was a real fire. Fire fighters come, and so does their police officer friend, Lieutenant Pike. Lieutenant Pike also tells Bert that he took a foolish risk, but he agrees with Bert’s impression that the smoke was actually caused by a smoke bomb. Even though a smoke bomb isn’t real fire, setting one off in a crowded auditorium can still be very dangerous because someone could have been hurt in the panic when everybody rushed out.

Lieutenant Pike confides in the children that the police have been called to the park three other times recently for other apparent accidents and problems. He says that if things like this keep happening, they might have to shut down Jungle Park due to safety concerns. The four Bobbsey Twins don’t think that’s fair. They love Jungle Park, and they want to catch the person who set the smoke bomb!

Lieutenant Pike lets the kids look around after the police and fire fighters are finished with the auditorium. There are two clues that they find: a black eye patch and a swizzle stick. Bert doesn’t think that the swizzle stick is much of a clue, but Freddie thinks it might mean something. The eye patch points to two possible suspects that the kids know about: a member of a rival band in the contest and a man the girls saw who was lurking around the dressing room area. Bert thinks that the rival band was trying to disrupt the contest so they would win, but the others aren’t so sure. It turns out that the guy with the eyepatch was hired by one of the owners of the park to make some repairs, but could he have been hired to do more than that? Could one of the owners have a reason to make sure the park closes? What about the woman who takes care of the animals at the park? She doesn’t seem happy about the conditions they’re kept in.

As the kids investigate their suspects, they get chased by elephants, hunt for a suspect in a fun house, tackle someone in a gorilla suit, and win the band contest!

The book is available to borrow and read for free online through Internet Archive.

My Reaction

Like Sean, this particular Bobbsey Twins series was the one that I read as a kid. I didn’t even know the difference between the New Bobbsey Twins series and the earlier series until I was older. The Bobbsey Twins series, like other Stratemeyer Syndicate series, is typically set contemporary to when the stories were written, so the New Bobbsey Twins series is set in the late 1980s and early 1990s, when they were originally written and published.

That time period was when I was a kid myself, so things that the kids did in the New Bobbsey Twins series were very like things kids my age were doing when I was a kid. A lot of kids wished that they could be part of a band. At one point, Flossie talks about something she saw in a teen fashion magazine. Flossie isn’t a teenage herself, but as I recall, teen magazines were largely popular with pre-teens (or “tweens”), who wanted to look like teenagers. Later, she pretends to be collecting signatures for Save the Whales, which was a popular and well-known cause at that time.

The mystery in this book was pretty good. I was sure from the beginning that the kid from the rival rock band wasn’t the park saboteur, but I wasn’t completely sure which of the adults was responsible for much of the book.

3 thoughts on “The Secret of Jungle Park

  1. Thank you very much for the acknowledgement! I hope you don’t mind me mentioning this, but about 10 years ago, I set up a website to review the Bobbsey Twins, and the McGurk series (I should have said this during some of the McGurk reviews) I was disappointed with the lack of people interested in this, and stopped after the first half dozen or some New Bobbsey Twins books, but my review of this one can be found here:

    http://newbobbseytwinsbookreview.blogspot.com/2013/06/the-bobbseys-are-not-amused-at-strange.html?m=1

    A few more things come to mind at this juncture though:

    Danny Rugg (that rival rock band) is a suspect a lot, and he does do some mischievous things, but I don’t think he is ever the main baddie in any of these books.

    Now, about the series: I was Bert & Nan’s age when book #1 came out, (meaning that I was in my late teens when the last one was released), but I still didn’t miss a book thru the entire run, even though I had to convince a mom & pop little religious bookstore to order them specifically for me as no one around here carried them at the end remember, this is before the internet, so a teen in a small Canadian town didn’t have many options to get their favourite books.

    I know I was leaving the target audience, but there is something I’ve always said about these books: they seem to have been written for tweens during the first half of the series, and then for younger children during the last half! The mysteries in the first 17 books were real crimes usually, and the older twins had a heavy role in solving them *(some plots include government top secret items being stolen, industrial espionage, money from a town fundraiser being stolen, etc)*, then the last 13 books changed the format entirely! Not only does the physical layout change (the yellow borders change to multi-coloured ones, the artist is fired (I was told by him that he was told by the publishers that they wanted “to go in a new direction” (Yea, I should have mentioned that I like these books so much that I interviewed him about 15 years ago, and I also bought the rights to the photography used of the models that were taken for the artists to base their artwork off of-I can share some of these if you want)), but the kinds of mysteries change *(instead of those real crimes, the events now include cookies being taken, an ice skater being harassed, hijinks at a science fair, and other kiddie crimes), and also the focus switching to the younger twins. This can be seen in the covers alone which began to exclusively feature Freddie & Flossie alone!

    I have A LOT of other things I’d like to say, but my comment is long enough as it is. But yes, this series as well as a few others (McGurk, the Three Investigators, Trixie Belden, the Twin Connection, and Not Quite Human to name a few) captured my imagination, and I really like them! Thanks so much for sharing many of my interests in very obscure series (I would love to share the Twin Connection and Not Quite Human with you, so you can read those as well sometime)

    Sean

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    1. Oh, I’ll have to check out your site! It takes time for sites to build traffic, and the more posts you have, the more attention you’re likely to get. If you want to revive your site, go for it! You could also try different hosting. I actually have another book blog, too, but I don’t do as much with it because this blog takes plenty of time and because I think WordPress blogs tend to get more attention because of the WordPress.com Reader. It’s a good way to acquire some followers.

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      1. I don’t plan on it. My time is limited for one thing, and I wrote reviews of Trixie Belden elsewhere and met basically the same disappointing results

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