The Bobbsey Twins

#5 The Case of the Close Encounter by Laura Lee Hope (Stratemeyer Syndicate), 1988.
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!

When Nan gets sick, her twin brother Bert, agrees to take over her babysitting job, looking after a 5-year-old boy named Artie. Artie has a reputation for being a troublemaker, but since he’s had experience looking after the younger set of twins in the Bobbsey family, Bert figures that he can handle Artie. Of course, Artie turns out to be a handful. Artie tries to paint his cat’s whiskers and juggle eggs, and he generally makes a mess. Then, he suddenly declares that they’re playing hide-and-seek and runs outside. When Bert goes out to look for him, he sees a bright light from the sky, and when he looks up, he sees what looks like a flying saucer!

Artie doesn’t see the flying saucer and thinks that Bert is making it up. Everyone is in bed when Bert gets home, so he phones the police and reports the UFO. He tells the rest of his family about it the next morning. He speaks to the police and a reporter from the newspaper where his mother works, but they all say the same thing: without more witnesses to the event or more information, there’s not much they can do. Since nobody seems to believe him, Bert decides that they only thing to do is to investigate the phenomenon himself.

Bert and his siblings go to the area where Bert saw the UFO to look for clues about what it could have been. Artie tags along, although he’s more of a distraction than a help to them. In a clearing, they find large patches of grass that have been flattened and burnt. They look almost like footprints made by some kind of fiery dinosaur. The kids aren’t sure what to think of them. Then, while walking along the road, they’re almost hit by an angry man on a motor scooter. When they get back to Artie’s house, Artie’s father identifies the man as Felix Usher, who is renting a cottage nearby. There are stories that the house he’s renting used to be used by smugglers and gangsters and that they might have left some kind of treasure behind, but Artie’s father doesn’t really believe that.

On the way home, the Bobbsey twins stop off at a diner called the Flying Saucer Diner. While they’re talking with the owner, they learn that he bought the place from Mr. Stockton, the same man who used to own the house that Felix Usher is renting. When Mr. Stockton owned it, he called it the Cup ‘n’ Saucer Diner, which is the name on an old coffee cup that Artie found in the field with the burn marks. The kids wonder if there could be some kind of connection between the diner and the UFO Bert saw. Then, they find a tape cassette on Bert’s bike seat with a threatening voice on it, telling him that he saw nothing and he should say nothing, or else!

It seems like someone wants Bert to forget what he saw and stop trying to figure out what it was, but that’s just more confirmation that Bert really saw something and that what he saw was significant. What did Bert really see in the sky? Was it really a flying saucer, and were the burn marks really caused by aliens? Or is something else happening in their town?
The book is available to borrow and read for free online through Internet Archive.
My Reaction
I liked the premise of this mystery immediately! Unlike many mysteries, it isn’t immediately obvious that a crime has been committed. It falls more under the category of what I call Strange Happenings, where the characters know that something weird is going on, but they’re not entirely sure what it is or why it’s happening.
If I read this one as a kid, I didn’t remember the story, but I had a theory from the beginning about what Bert could have seen because I’ve seen the episode from the old Hardy Boys/Nancy Drew tv series The Creatures that Came on Sunday (older than this book) and an episode of Psych (newer than this book) with a similar premise, that someone had seen an alien spaceship or UFO. I guessed right on the type of flying object Bert saw, but I wasn’t sure what made the burn marks on the ground or how the situation could be related to the old house that might have treasure in it. There is also a woman who comes to see Bert and interview him about what he saw for a book she’s writing, but Bert has the feeling that she isn’t really an author, and she dodges questions that he asks her about her other research into UFOs and the encounters other people have had. There is some doubt from the beginning whether or not Bert’s UFO was an alien spaceship, but the book provides enough doubt and suspects to keep the story interesting as readers speculate about who is playing what roles in the mystery.
This book is from the late 1980s, and there are a couple of dated references to technology and pop culture, although it’s not too bad. It’s enough nostalgia that people who were kids in the 1980s would identify with it, but not too distracting for modern kids to enjoy the story. The kids use a very basic modem to connect to their local newspaper’s archives to do some research. It’s not how the modern World Wide Web works, but Internet use wasn’t popular yet at this time. This is still the early days of civilians having remote access to archives and databases through their computers. There wasn’t much to see, and there weren’t as many people who had the ability to see it yet. There is one instance of someone who seems to be talking to themselves in the story, and then, the kids realize that this person is actually using a radio. The modern equivalent is realizing that someone is actually talking on their cell phone, but cell phones were a relatively new invention around this time. They were expensive, brick-like, and heavy, and very few people had them. A radio or walkie-talkie would have been a more practical choice for this time period. There is also a point where the neighborhood bully and his friend tease Bert about seeing a UFO, and they make some references to popular sci-fi movies, like ET and Planet of the Apes.
I may leave a comment after reading your article (I will DEFINITELY read what you have to say), but beforehand, I want to say this is my absolute favourite of the series. If you are going with the UFO theme, please don’t forget the Three Investigators Mystery of the Blazing Cliffs. If you are going with supposedly paranormal things (which really aren’t), a couple Wanderer Bobbsey Twins books come to mind. Specifically, the Scarecrow Mystery, and the Ghost in the Computer
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Guess which book is up next for review! 😀
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I’m guessing it is Blazing Cliffs. I remember it pretty well despite not having read it for several years. Listen, do you want to borrow my Wanderer Bobbsey Twin books? Or any of the other titles I mentioned? I REALLY think you’d like them, and I am really looking forward to hearing your thoughts on these books. Also, there are a few of the later Trixie Belden books which fall into this same category of faux paranormal experiences (no supernatural elements though, which is how I like it) Do you have any of those? I forget
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I assume you don’t want spoilers in the comments, (since you didn’t reveal the denouement of the mystery in your review), so I won’t bring that up. One thing you didn’t mention that I think you should have especially since you posted the artwork from it was Flossie’s scary overnight experience with a “glowing alien” at her window! This book came out in 1988, so I was 12, and let me tell you, that was a SCARY scene for me to read as a tween (I still don’t watch rated R or really scary movies, so this was a real thrill).
I won’t give away what happens, or how, but seeing that was scary! They were also attacked by a possible ray gun at one point. That was neat too.
Say, I thought I’d share a couple photographs taken of the models used for the artist (you won’t find these anywhere but somewhere I posted them since these are the only prints made of them, and not copies). Here is an alternate take on the cover:
Back in the day before digital, the photography process of making templates for artists is really interesting!
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I debated about how many spoilers to offer for this one. I often do include spoilers for books, especially ones that are harder to find, but I felt like saying too much would really spoil this one. I thought that the confusion about what Bert really saw and who was doing what was the best part of the story. Readers will probably guess that it’s not really aliens because it’s the Bobbsey Twins, but that still leaves a lot of possibilities open. I really like those mysteries where there isn’t an obvious crime at first, just something totally bizarre happens, and the characters have to figure out what the point of it is. Maybe it’s partly because of all those Scooby-Doo shows I saw as a kid.
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The photography used for the book illustrations is really interesting, too!
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