Fourteen-year-old twins Ryan and Chris Taylor are on a ski trip in Colorado with their parents, their eight-year old sister Lucy, and their friend, Billy Maguire. Although Billy is a friend of both of the twins, he’s really closer to Chris because the two of them are interested in sports. Ryan is more of an intellectual than either of them, and they tease him about not being as good at sports as they are. When the three of them get together, Ryan often feels left out, although he argues with them that he can do decently well at physical activities; he just cares more about other things.

The ski resort where they will be staying is called Moosehead Lodge. It used to be a very exclusive resort, but it’s fallen on hard times in recent years. The reason why they’re going there is that the current owner is an old friend of Mr. Taylor’s from college, and he’s asked Mr. Taylor to write a travel article about the lodge for a magazine to attract new customers.

It turns out that Dede and Wendy, two girls who attend the same school as the boys, will also be staying there over winter break. The twins have crushes on the girls, but they’re also at the age where they still think girls are weird or likely to spoil their fun, so they have mixed feelings about the girls joining them on the ski trip. The boys consider trying to avoid the girls for the entire trip and make them wonder what happened to them, but Ryan thinks that sounds like something a little kid would do. Billy says that, if the twins are going to hang around with girls, he wants a girl for himself, too.

When they arrive at the lodge, the girls greet them right away, so the hiding scheme definitely won’t work. The girls are enthusiastic that there will be a lot of fun things for them all to do. The lodge includes several stores for the guests to shop in, which the girls and Mr. and Mrs. Taylor find intriguing. However, the boys think that the lodge looks haunted. With all the old-fashioned furniture and paintings, it reminds them of something from a movie.

At their first ski lesson, Chris brags that he doesn’t really even need lessons because he’s such an athlete. However, skiing doesn’t come as naturally to him as soccer does. In spite of his bragging, he is clumsy at his first attempts. He apologizes to the instructor, saying that he’s just eager to get going because he knows that they’ll only be staying there a short time. The instructor says that he understands but that the instructions he’s giving them are important for keeping them safe while they have fun.

When the boys return to the lodge, Mrs. Taylor is very upset because a pearl necklace that’s a family heirloom is missing! When Mr. Taylor and the boys go to the manager to report the loss of the necklace, they find out that other pieces of jewelry have been stolen from other guests. The manager has hesitated to contact the police about it because he’s been hoping that the jewelry was merely misplaced and would turn up. The lodge is suffering financially, and if they have a bad season, they might have to close down. Mr. Taylor likes the lodge and wants to help his old friend, but the thefts have to be cleared up for the lodge to continue functioning. The twins decide that they’re going to be the ones to find their mother’s necklace, bring the thief to justice, and save the ski lodge!

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

I liked this book better than the last book I read in the series. It’s more of a mystery than the last one, although there’s still plenty of excitement and adventure. Unlike the other book I read, where the boys know right away who the villains are, in this story, the boys have no idea who the thief is for much of the book. They have to investigate different suspects, and their first suspects turn out to be completely wrong. The boys undertake a deliberate investigation into their suspects, moving from person to person. There are enough potential suspects with apparent odd behavior to keep readers guessing along with the amateur detectives. A skiing accident and a blizzard and avalanche add excitement and adventure to the story.

When the girls argue with the boys about one of their subjects, the boys say that girls would be more likely to fall in love with a jewel thief than to either be a jewel thief or catch one themselves. The kids turn their investigation into a contest, boys against girls, to see which of them can solve the mystery first. The competition between boys and girls gets carried over to the adults, and it even influenced some of my theories about the identity of the jewel thief. Part of what I suspected turned out to be true, but saying what it was would be a spoiler. 

The boys do solve the mystery before the girls, although the solution does disprove some of what the boys said earlier. Considering some of what they said, I would have liked to see more acknowledgement about that, but the book ends a little abruptly after the final solution is revealed. Overall, I liked the story, but I could see some room for improvement in the ending. Although I understand that part of the premise of this series is that the twins can sense each other’s thoughts, that doesn’t really enter into the story, either, which was also a disappointment.

2 thoughts on “Cold Chills

  1. Hi, Jesstress. I’m glad you read another Twin Connection book. While I agree, this one is better than the last, it truly is in the weaker half of the series. (I want you to read them all, but if you don’t read books #1, #2, or #9, you won’t know the best of what the series has to offer.

    One thing that always bothered me about the Twins was their attitude towards girls. I’m sure it may be realistic, but I never went thru a “girls have cooties” phase. As long as I can remember (and I mean from like 4 or 5 years old), I liked girls-they were around my own age though, so as a kid in the 70s, I wasn’t looking at Lynda Carter (Wonder Woman), but more like Anne from The Famous Five (the 70s TV show version-I know they made a 90s series based on those books, and are making a series for 2024 as well).

    As far as the girls in the series go, I liked Wendy much better than Dede who seems too pushy and domineering to me. I’m not sure how much they mentioned of this in the 2 books you read, but Billy McGuire has quite the story arc in the series as well.

    I was also thinking about how you said you liked to know more of the actual Twin Connection between Chris and Ryan. Kind of coincidentally (because that isn’t the main plot of any of the stories), that aspect is stronger in the three books I mentioned!

    When I was a kid, we used to go to a ski resort like the one the twins are at. (This would have been the very early 80s, so before these books came out) Getting skiing lessons is a thankless job for some of the instructors (I remember not only kids complaining that they didn’t need them), but it really is necessary for first time skiers-it’s not like ice skating where you fall on your butt and get embarrassed-even the bunny trails can be hazardous!

    I’m glad this mystery kept you guessing-it did for me too! So, what’s next?

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  2. That’s interesting. I’ve never been skiing myself. I’m a little clumsy and not at all athletic. These were the only 2 books in the series that I’ve found so far, but it’s ok. I’m going to transition over to sci-fi by way of twins before doing a series of folk tales and fairy tales. I may revisit this series again later. I like to keep things moving for the sake of variety. I am interested in the characters in this series, though, and I’d like to see the books where the twins seem to sense each other’s thoughts.

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