The Bobbsey Twins

The Mystery of the Missing Mummy by Laura Lee Hope (Stratemeyer Syndicate), 1989.
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!

It’s only two days before Halloween, and the Bobbsey Twins are getting their costumes ready. Flossie is going to be a black cat, Bert is dressing as Frankenstein (the monster, not the scientist, for purists), and Nan is a traditional witch in a pointed hat. Only Freddie isn’t sure what he’s going to be yet. He could just put a sheet over his head and go trick-or-treating as a ghost, but that doesn’t seem exciting enough. He wants to be something really scary, but he doesn’t have much time left to decide.
The children’s mother offers Freddie some inspiration when she tells them that she will be writing a story about a new museum exhibit for the local newspaper. The new exhibit is an ancient Egyptian mummy. She asks the kids if they want to go to the museum with her to see the mummy, and they eagerly accept. Freddie thinks that a mummy would make a great costume idea, so he will be a mummy for Halloween.

The museum curator, Mr. Foxworth, gives the Bobbseys a special tour of the exhibit after hours, when there are no other visitors. The Bobbsey Twins are fascinated with the exhibit, and they talk about Egyptian hieroglyphics and the reasons why ancient Egyptians wanted their bodies preserved as mummies for the afterlife. Mr. Foxworth says that the mummy belongs to a wealthy woman named Mrs. Truesdale, who is also there to see the exhibit with her fifteen-year-old nephew, Lex.
The kids notice that Lex seems nervous, and he tells them that there’s a legend about the mummy coming to life. He even says that he’s heard strange noises coming from the mummy case. Mrs. Truesdale thinks that’s nonsense. The mummy has belonged to their family for 60 years. However, when the case is opened, Flossie is certain that she hears the mummy sigh. Then, when Freddie takes a closer look after the others leave the room, he sees the mummy breathing, and it tries to grab him!

Freddie and Flossie try to tell everyone what they saw, but everyone assumes that it was just their imagination. The kids go to the library to do some research about mummies, and they learn that Lex was telling them the truth about the legends surrounding this particular mummy. Nan doesn’t believe that the legends are real, but when the kids walk home from the library, they see the mummy walking in the park!
The kids run home and tell their parents what they saw. Their parents remind them that it’s almost Halloween, and it could have been somebody in costume, on their way home from a Halloween party. It sounds like a reasonable explanation, but the next morning, they hear a news report on the radio that someone broke into the museum and stole the mummy from the exhibit! The kids wonder if the mummy could have really come to life and broke out of the museum itself rather than being stolen.

The Bobbsey Twins decide to report their mummy sighting in the park to the police. At they police station, they see the security guard from the museum. The security guard tells them that the mummy did come to life and that it knocked him unconscious before leaving the museum, but nobody believes him because it sounds too crazy. The kids believe the security guard, but it also occurs to them that their parents might be right, that it could have been someone dressed as the mummy rather than the mummy itself. But, why would someone want to dress up like the mummy to pull a stunt like that, and if that’s what happened, where is the real mummy now?
The book is available to borrow and read for free online through Internet Archive.
My Reaction
I was pretty sure I knew right away who one or two of the culprits was because I figured that a theft and stunt like this would have to involve more than one person. However, I figured that there had to be another confederate involved because my favorite suspects were accounted for the first time the mummy moved. It turned out that I was way off base because there were suspects I hadn’t considered. The motive behind everything was different from the one that even the kids believed. I was pleasantly surprised by the twists in the story. There is a clue later in the book that more than one person dresses up as the mummy at different times when the kids realize that the mummy looked thin one time and fat the next time they saw him.
I liked the pieces of historical information about mummies included in the story, although the part about tanna leaves bringing mummies to life and attracting them is fictional, a concept created for a movie called The Mummy’s Hand from 1940. That’s why it’s important that one of the books Freddie finds at the library is about mummies in movies. At one point, Freddie and Flossie use what they’ve learned to build their own trap for the mummy.
I also noticed that the mummy’s legend comes with curse that rhymes when it’s translated into English, sort of like how the clues on the old Spanish map rhyme in English in The Goonies. In real life, things translated from one language to another don’t maintain their rhyme scheme. That went over my head when I was a kid, but I hadn’t studied other languages at that point, so the idea didn’t occur to me.
At one point in the story, the kids receive a message from the “mummy” that is clearly written on modern paper that someone tried to make look old, and the kids notice right away. They realize that it’s modern computer paper that someone yellowed with a candle, and they see where the holes at the sides were torn off. Modern kids might not understand what they mean about holes being torn off at the sides of the paper, but this was a familiar feature of computer paper at the time the book was written in the 1980s. Modern computer paper doesn’t have holes at the sides, but when I was a kid in the 1980s, there were perforated sections on both sides of the dot matrix printer computer paper with a series of little holes in them. The holes were where the printer would grab the paper and feed it through the machine. They later became unnecessary when printer designs changed, which is why you don’t see paper like that any more. When I was a kid, we would tear off those perforated sections with the little holes after printing. We would also have to break the individual sheets apart at perforated points because the sheets of paper were all joined together to feed continuously through the printer. That’s the type of printer paper that the kids in the story have. I don’t know if everyone did this, but I’d sometimes use those edging strips with the holes for little craft projects, or make them into little chains or bracelets.
I wish there was some way I could be notified when you posted new books because I completely forgot about your website! Glad to see a mummy book posted-since you are doing that motif, how about reviewing the McGurk and Three Investigators books that feature mummy mysteries?
I haven’t read your review yet, but will do so now-I may have another comment to make after I do. And, speaking of comments, if you want to talk about more children’s books from yesteryear-especially the series that you know I am interested in, send me an email at SHagins_17551@yahoo
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Did you subscribe to the site? If you’re a subscriber, you get notifications. I already covered the McGurk and Three Investigators mummy mysteries! Those mummies whisper and mutter.
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I did subscribe, but the problem is that most of it just goes into my “white noise” section of my mind since most of what you review doesn’t fall into stuff I read as a kid. I get so many messages that I had to unsubscribe as it was distracting. I wish I could set it to just email notifications on select series that I am into. Thanks-I’ll look at your other reviews (I may have even seen them before and forgotten)
What do you think about the Wanderer Bobbsey Twin series? That’s my REAL childhood (as a little kid being read to by my mom). The New Bobbseys came out when I was almost a teenager, and lasted until I was in grade 11! So, while there is nostalga that I am enjoying, the older Wanderer, as well as the early McGurk, the Three Investigators, and Trixie Belden are real childhood memories (not that I am complaining-I’m just explaining how my mind works)
How about emailing? Want to talk sometime about these books?
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I could send an email the next time I’m about to publish something I think you’ll find interesting. Stay tuned for January. I think I’ll have some stuff you’ll like then!
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Thanks-that would be great. I am so busy, and I don’t want to forget. I appreciate it
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I know I said I would have more comments after reading your review, but you basically summed it up. You covered all of the points I would make, and did so very nicely!
Just one aside-I used to write stories and sell them to my classmates (and a few teachers)! I printed them on the dot matrix printer that I had attached to my Commodore 64 (I used the Bank Street Writer word processor program). I still have copies of most of those stories printed (a good thing too, as I still have the floppy discs the stories are saved on, but without the Commodore and BSW program, I have no way to read them!)
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You might be able to find an emulator that will allow you to read them and convert them to a newer format. I know some people have done that, but you’d probably have to Google it to figure out how to do it.
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Thanks, but I can not. Apparently, Bank Street Writer is a tricky piece of software that was never emulated. If it was just a Commodore 64 program, there would be no problem, but the BSW software is very unique and proprietary
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