The Mystery of Castle Croome

Molly Stewart, an American college student attending Oxford, is an orphan who is barely scraping by when she suddenly receives word that she has inherited an ancient castle in Scotland from her great-uncle, who has recently died. Molly’s friends, a pair of twins called Pat and Penny Roderick (short for Patricia and Penelope), go with her to have a look at the place, but right from the beginning, it seems like nobody wants her there.

Although the lawyer, Mr. Harding, is aware that Molly has been attending Oxford, he also knows that she is planning to return to the United States when she finishes her degree. He also knows that her great-uncle, Sir Malcolm, disapproved when her father married an American and moved to the United States himself, so he was surprised when Sir Malcolm’s will left his estate to his nephew or his nephew’s heirs. Mr. Harding had expected that Sir Malcolm would leave the estate to Jamie Campbell instead because Jamie has been the caretaker for years. The estate doesn’t come with much of an income, and the farms attached to it don’t have tenants, so they’re not bringing in rent money. It would take a lot of work to restore the estate. Since Mr. Harding would rather deal with Jamie Campbell anyway, he thinks that Molly would find it a better deal to just sell the castle to Jamie and use the money to finish her degree and go back to the United States. Molly asks why Jamie Campbell would want to buy the castle if it’s not worth much and needs so much work to restore. Mr. Harding says he might buy it out of sentiment, but Molly wants to have a look at the castle before agreeing to sell it. After seeing it, she might decide that it isn’t the kind of place where she could live, but she won’t know for sure until she sees it herself. Mr. Harding agrees and says that he will tell Jamie Campbell that she’s coming.

When Molly arrives with Pat and Penny, they see that the castle is isolated and rather eerie. Inside, it is run down, and living conditions are primitive. Jamie Campbell, an elderly man, isn’t happy that they’re there. There is no other staff, and while Jamie was happy to serve the old laird and nurse him through his final years, he has no intention of serving this young American grand-niece. Although there is an electrical generator at the castle, Jamie says that it hasn’t worked in years, and he and the old laird used oil lamps and candles. If Molly and her friends think he’s going to go to special efforts for their comfort, they can think again. Molly refuses to be intimidated by his disrespect, and she tells him that, because this castle has been his home for years, he is welcome to continue staying there, although Jamie Campbell thinks that she’s only extending that invitation to get a free caretaker.

Molly is studying engineering at college, and her friends think that she could probably fix the generator, but Molly tells them that she would like to wait to look at it. She hasn’t had much practical experience yet, so she wants to take time to study the situation before she does anything. She also tells her friends not to mention to Jamie Campbell that she has any engineering knowledge. She doesn’t trust Jamie, and she thinks it might be better for him to think that they’re more helpless than they actually are.

Molly sees definite signs that Jamie Campbell hasn’t been honest with them about the real condition of the castle and about even the contents of the castle at the time that her uncle died, and she can tell that he’s deliberately trying to make life harder for them to drive them away from the castle. After Jamie Campbell tells them that there is no running water at the castle, the girls notice that soap next to a sink is still wet, indicating that Jamie has very recently washed his hands there. The girls think that he probably shut off the water right before they got there, and they also think there is probably nothing wrong with the generator, that Jamie probably just turned it off. He tries to keep them from even looking at it, and he’s reluctant to hand over the keys to the castle to Molly. Many pictures are missing from the walls of the castle, and Jamie says Molly’s uncle sold them for money, but another painting disappears during their stay, showing the girls that Jamie is the one looting artwork from the castle. Molly realizes that nobody seems to know exactly what was in the castle at the time her uncle died, making it difficult to prove that Jamie is stealing things. When Molly tries to search her uncle’s desk, she finds that it’s been completely cleared of even routine papers, and Jamie admits in a cagey way that he may have tidied up a little.

Things improve for Molly and her friends when they set out to buy some food and make contact with other people outside the castle. Jamie refuses to even feed them, saying that he barely has enough for himself. He says that he might have been able to provide something for Molly if she was alone, but he can’t be expected to feed her friends, too. Fortunately, the girls have some provisions with them that get them through their first night at the castle. When they set out in the morning to buy more food, they can’t take their care because there’s a large nail in one of the tires. They can’t prove that Jamie sabotaged the car, but they all suspect he did. They decide to set out on foot to find somewhere with a telephone or somewhere they can buy some food. They meet up with a scout troop camping nearby, and they save the girls from stumbling into a bog. They share a meal with the girls, and the girls tell them what’s been happening at the castle.

The scout leaders don’t like the sound of Jamie and the things happening at the castle, and they tell the girls that they will send a mobile shop to the castle to sell them food. There’s a van that travels among the farms in the area, selling groceries, sort of like a food truck, and it carries a surprising variety of goods. The scouts also tell the girls how they forage for wild foods, and they offer their services for changing the car’s tire and other things they might need.

That night, Molly has a frightening encounter with a ghostly white figure, although she believes that it’s just Jamie, trying to frighten her away from the castle. The next day, Molly and her friends confront Jamie about the missing painting, and he tells Molly that her great-uncle sold that painting years ago. He tries to convince her that the only reason why she thought she saw it is that she has “second sight.” He says that it was a favorite painting of her great-uncle’s and that she only saw it because she’s a member of his family and has psychically sensed the memory of the picture. Molly knows that can’t be true because her friends also saw the picture. Molly also asks Jamie about a strange roaring noise that she heard at night that sounded like machinery of some kind, and Jamie tells her that it’s the “Roar of the Stewarts.” He says it’s a bad omen, and that Stewarts hear it before something bad happens. Although none of the girls admits to having seen a “ghost” the night before, Jamie also tells them about the “Specter of the Castle”, and he insists that all of these bad omens are signs that Molly and her friends should leave the castle because it’s dangerous for them.

Molly and her friends know that Jamie badly wants to frighten them away from the castle, and part of that might be that he’s been looting objects from it since Molly’s great-uncle died, but what is the real cause of the machine noises in the night? Then, suddenly, Jamie welcomes a pair of unexpected guests into the castle as paying guests. Mr. and Mrs. Smith claim that they’re traveling tourists who think it would be exciting to stay in a real castle. Molly tries to discourage them from staying by charging them more than anyone might expect from staying in a run-down castle with primitive living conditions, but the Smiths insist that they would enjoy an authentic experience. Molly and her friends are immediately suspicious, especially when they realize that the Smiths don’t seem to have a car, and there’s no obvious way they could have even reached this out-of-the-way castle. Who are they really? Are they confederates of Jamie’s? What has Jamie really been doing at the castle, and what is he so afraid that Molly and her friends will discover if they stay?

The book is available to borrow and read for free online through Internet Archive (multiple copies).

I found this book recently at a used book sale, but I recognized the title because I tried to find this book when I was a kid. I wanted it because it was on a list of suggested books in the back of another mystery book I read and liked as a kid. Actually, I think I enjoyed it more as an adult than I would have has as a kid. As a kid, I would have liked the notion of a girl inheriting a spooky old castle that might be haunted, but in this story, it’s pretty obvious right away that Jamie is behind all the mysterious things happening.

This story is not like other mysteries where you have to wonder who among the suspects could be responsible for the mysterious happenings because Jamie is the only suspect from the beginning. The real mystery, for both the characters and the readers is why he’s doing it. It’s a “whydunnit” more than a “whodunnit.” Although it would have been fun and atmospheric if Molly and her friends believed that the castle was haunted and were scared, I have to admit that I loved how unimpressed the girls were when Jamie awkwardly makes up his spooky stories and excuses about “second sight”, the “Roar of the Stewarts”, and the “Specter of the Castle.” They know that he’s just making it all up. They just don’t kick him out of the castle immediately because he’s an old man who’s been there for years, and they also want to know that he’s up to.

It turns out that part of what he’s up to is obvious and part actually resembles the mystery book that had this listed as a recommended book. Readers can figure out the more obvious part themselves, but there’s a revelation later that Jamie is also involved in another crime that he can’t explain away as any misunderstanding. There’s a suspenseful part of the story where the girls are trapped in the castle with Jamie and his confederates and need to figure out how to escape or summon help. I thought that the ending part wrapped up a little quickly, but overall, I liked the story. I think I enjoyed the book more now than I would have if I’d found it when I was a kid.

Dig for a Treasure

This is the second book in The Invisible Island series. It begins with the arrival of the Lennox family and their two children, Hugh and Barbie. The Lennox family has been staying with various relatives since the father got out of the army, but now, they’ve found a house to rent in the small town of Anchorage, Connecticut. The children are looking forward to having a yard to play in, and the mother wants to have a garden.

Unfortunately, when they arrive they are shocked to see that the house they were going to rent has been destroyed by fire. Their landlord, Mr. Prentice, is also on the scene, and he regretfully tells them that the fire just happened, although they don’t know the cause, and that there are no other houses in the area to rent. At first, they think that they will have to go back to staying with relatives, but Mrs. Lennox says firmly that they won’t. The family has had enough of staying with relatives, and they desperately need a place of their own. It’s summer, so her idea is that they can camp out on the property of the burned house for a few months while they look around for another place to rent. The children are excited about the idea of a camp-out. Mr. Prentice says that he wouldn’t have any problem with the family camping on the land, and he returns their rent deposit to them, saying that they can stay at his house that night and get some camping equipment the next day.

While Hugh and Barbie are exploring the area and looking for their cat, who ran off, they meet the children from the first book in the series. Hugh is about the age of David Guthrie, and Barbie is about the same age as Winkie Guthrie, the youngest of the children who play on the island they call “The Invisible Island.” Since the previous book in the series, they have finished their stone hut, and it has a grass and sod roof and four built-in beds for the four Guthrie children. Mr. Guthrie is an architect, and he helped the children build the house.

Hugh and Barbie admire the hut, and they say that they wish they had a stone house like that because it couldn’t catch fire. They explain to the other children what happened to the house that their family was going to rent, and they ask the children if they would consider renting the stone hut to their family until they can find another place to live. Mr. Lennox isn’t really happy about the idea of camping in tents because he lived out of tents when he was in the army.

At first, the Guthrie children and the Leigh children aren’t sure that they want to rent out their stone hut. They spend a lot of time there, and they’ve been trying to save up money to add improvements. The hut really belongs to the Guthries, who built it, but they want to add an extra room for the Leighs. However, after thinking it over, they realize that they can earn more money as rent from the Lennox family than they can by just doing chores, and while the Lennox family stays in the hut, they can camp out on other parts of their little island, like the woods that they call “Sherwood Forest.”

Since the little hut is just a one-room hut with no bathroom or other amenities, the children aren’t sure at first whether the Lennox adults would want to stay there or not. However, staying in a stone hut does sound better than in a tent, where they would also have no bathroom or amenities. Mr. Lennox is also intrigued by the pond, where he can go fishing. The children and the Lennox family talk things over with Mr. Prentice and the Guthrie children’s parents, and they all agree to renting the stone hut to the Lennox family.

The Lennox family still isn’t sure whether or not they’ll find another house for sale or rent in the area. They want to stay in the area because Mr. Lennox has a job nearby and Mrs. Lennox knows that some of her ancestors used to live in the area, although she doesn’t know much about them. However, Anchorage is a small town, and most of the houses already have people living in them. There is only one empty house in the area, but the owner has always refused to rent it or sell it. Mr. Prentice explains that the owner believes that there is a treasure in the house or nearby, a necklace that once belonged to a queen, and she’s been looking for it for years. Mr. Prentice doesn’t think that there really is a necklace or, if there once was, it’s probably long gone, but the owner insists that it exists and is still there, somewhere.

The children are fascinated, and they ask Mr. Prentice to tell them the story of the queen’s necklace. He says that during the time of Queen Elizabeth (Tudor), the ancestors of the Winthrop family who owned the house did something for Queen Elizabeth that caused her to reward them with a golden necklace that was passed down through the family for generations. When the Winthrops came to the colonies in America around 1650, they brought that necklace with them. However, when they came to this area and settled there, they had problems with the local Indians (Native Americans).

Mr. Prentice says that he can’t blame the American Indians for resenting strangers coming and taking over their lands and hunting grounds or for them trying to stand up for their rights, but the situation escalated with increasing violence. David Guthrie protests that American Indians scalped people and that, if he’d been there at the time, he’d “show them.” Mr. Prentice explains that was exactly the problem – everybody who was there at the time thought he’d “show them”, and that’s why the violence escalated. As for the scalping, Mr. Prentice says that white people committed their share of atrocities, too, and when David is older and learns more about it, he might not feel so proud of his side in this battle. (I thought that was an amazingly honest and self-aware interlude about European colonization and its effects on Native Americans for a book written in the late 1940s, when cowboy and western shows were becoming popular, and American Indians were mainly portrayed as violent enemies to be defeated. I was a little concerned at first when “Indians” entered the story, but I was relieved that the author took this attitude.)

Continuing with the local legend, Mr. Prentice explains that the colonists received warning one day that the local tribe was going to attack. In preparation for the attack, some families hid valuable items that they didn’t want stolen or destroyed in the coming battle. Some people buried valuables, and others hid their valuables in wells or caves. Presumably, the Winthrops hid their necklace, called the Queen’s Chain, during this time, but nobody really knows what happened to it. The colonists fled the area, and the American Indians burned the entire village to the ground. Every man-made structure was destroyed during this attack. Although people later returned to the area and rebuilt the town, it’s unknown what valuables they retrieved or when or if they ever retrieved them from their hiding places. Because all the buildings and some of the trees were burned, many landmarks were destroyed, so some people might not have found their hidden valuables again, even if they managed to return to look for them.

Mr. Prentice is related to the Winthrop family, and so is his cousin, Lizzie, who currently owns the rebuilt house known as the Winthrop house. Lizzie is firmly convinced that the Queen’s Chain is still there, somewhere. She thinks it was never hidden during the attack that destroyed the first house and was passed down through the family but hidden by a later generation, which is why she won’t sell or rent the house. Mr. Prentice, on the other hand, thinks that the necklace is lost forever. He thinks that either the necklace was hidden with other valuables that were never retrieved after the attack or that the family found the necklace and sold it to get money to rebuild the farm that was destroyed. Mrs. Prentice, on the other hand, sides with Lizzie, saying that nobody in the Winthrop family would have sold the necklace because it was part of a family trust.

The children are fascinated by the story, and they immediately begin thinking about searching for the necklace themselves. They talk to Miss Lizzie about the story Mr. Prentice told them and use some of the descriptions that she gives them of the old Winthrop property and the plants that once grew in their herb garden to see if they can pinpoint the exact location of the original house and the hiding place that the Winthrops might have used for their valuables. Even though everything manmade was destroyed in the attack, some plants have a way of coming back, and the remains of the old herb garden might still be there, even almost 300 years later.

The treasure hunt takes on greater importance when the Guthrie children learn that their family might not be able to buy the island from Mr. Prentice. Mr. Prentice is also the Guthrie family’s landlord, and the family has been saving up to buy their house from him. They had also hoped to be able to buy the island where the children have been spending so much time, but Mr. Prentice is reluctant to sell it. Lumber is valuable, and he’s thinking of cutting down the pine trees on the island to sell the wood. The children are horrified at the thought that their beloved “Sherwood Forest” might be cut down! Perhaps, if they can find the missing treasure, they can persuade Mr. Prentice to sell the land to them and Miss Lizzie to rent her house to the Lennox family.

The book is available to borrow and read online through Internet Archive (in audio form!).

There isn’t as much imaginary play as “castaways” in this book as their was in the first book in the series, but the theme still shows up in some ways. The kids still go camping on the island. They use tents when the Lennox family is living in their hut. The children’s search for treasure also offers plenty of outdoor adventure, and I really enjoyed the element of mystery in the story.

The children approach the treasure hunt from the assumption that the necklace is still hidden wherever the Winthrops hid their valuables. They do find that spot and recover some relics of the 17th century, but the necklace is not among them. Readers probably won’t guess exactly where the necklace has really been hidden, but there are a few clues to notice along the way. Mrs. Lennox says at the beginning that her ancestors were from this town, even though she doesn’t know much about them. I had guessed that they might have a connection to the Winthrops, especially when Miss Lizzie explains that the name of the girl who hid the family’s valuables before the attack was Elizabeth, and there are other Elizabeths in the family. Besides Miss Lizzie, Mrs. Lennox is called “Betty” when her husband addresses her by her first name, and Betty is another nickname for Elizabeth. When Barbie recognizes something that Miss Lizzie has as being like something her family owns, Miss Lizzie realizes that the Lennox family is related to her. By comparing what each of them has and what Miss Lizzie knows about their family, they figure out what really happened to the necklace. It not only solves the mystery of the necklace, but once Miss Lizzie realizes that the members of the Lennox family are relatives, she’s happy to have them living in the old Winthrop house.

The problem of what will happen to the children’s island and the trees on it is solved when the children win a bet with Mr. Prentice. In the first book, the children called their island “The Invisible Island” because it isn’t obvious at first that it really is an island, surrounded by water on all sides. So far, the children have kept the knowledge to themselves and their parents. When the children accidentally refer to the island in Mr. Prentice’s presence and realize that Mr. Prentice isn’t aware that it’s really an island, they start to explain. Mr. Prentice can’t believe that there’s actually an island on his land, and he says that he will give up ownership if they can prove that it’s really an island. The children easily demonstrate that it’s truly an island, showing him all of the waterways and bodies of water around it, and Mr. Prentice says that they’ve won. The Guthries end up with control of the island and the trees on it.

Danny Dunn and the Homework Machine

Danny Dunn

At the beginning of the book, Danny develops a device that allows him to do his homework and his friend Joe’s homework at the same time by using a system of pulleys and a board that holds two pens at once. (This seems like an unnecessarily complicated device, since he and his friend could accomplish the same thing just by sitting next to each other and talking over their answers as they both write them down at the same time, although Danny says that he plans to build a second pen board so Joe can work on their English homework at the same time as Danny does their math homework.) Danny thinks that it would save even more time if he could find a way to build a robot that will just do the homework for them, but Joe warns him to be careful because things often go wrong with his inventions.

Joe leaves to get more materials for their homework device, and suddenly, Danny is surprised by a tapping at the window, and he sees a girl’s face looking in at him. It’s surprising because Danny is on the second floor of his house. At first, he thinks that this girl who seems to be hovering in the air must be from outer space or something, but it turns out that she’s just an ordinary girl on a ladder.

The girl tells Danny that her name is Irene Miller and that her family just moved in next door. Her father, Dr. Miller, is an astronomer who will be working at Midston University. The reason why Irene is up on a ladder is that she’s built a weather balloon, and now, it’s stuck on the roof of Danny’s house. Unfortunately, she’s just discovered that her ladder isn’t quite long enough to reach the roof. Danny, who loves science, is intrigued by Irene’s weather balloon, and he helps Irene retrieve it by climbing out an attic window and onto the roof.

Danny shows Irene his device for doing homework, but Irene says it doesn’t seem quite honest because it’s basically like copying from someone else. Danny defends his idea, saying it’s not really cheating if the second person actually does know how to do the homework and would give the right answers anyway. He just sees it as a time-saving device. He also says that Professor Bullfinch, an inventor and physicist at the university, says that homework isn’t relevant to the learning kids do in the classroom. Danny’s father is dead, and his mother is Professor Bullfinch’s housekeeper, so Danny and his mother live with him.

Danny is surprised at how much Irene knows about science because he didn’t think girls would be into science. Irene says that there have always been female scientists, like Marie Curie, and she also wants to study physics. Although Danny has learned a lot from Professor Bullfinch, he’s a little intimidated that there are things that Irene knows that he doesn’t.

When Joe returns, he isn’t enthusiastic that Danny has made friends with a girl. When Joe is derisive about women and girls, Danny even defends Irene and how much she knows. Irene confesses to Danny that getting her weather balloon stuck on the roof wasn’t an accident. Her mother had already talked to Danny’s mother, so she knew Danny was interested in science. She purposely got the balloon stuck on the roof to get his attention and give them a reason for meeting. Joe uses that as part of his assertion that women are trouble.

Irene joins Danny and Joe’s class at school, and she starts making some other friends there. There is one boy in class, Eddie, who seems to have a crush on Irene. She’s a little flattered that he thinks she’s pretty, but she begins to feel uncomfortable with his attention because he keeps staring at her. Danny explains to Irene that people call Eddie “Snitcher” because he’s always telling on somebody for things they do, seemingly out of spite.

When Danny invites Irene to come to his house for cookies after school, Professor Bullfinch surprises them by telling them that he’s going on a business trip, and while he’s gone, he’s going to let Danny take care of his new computer. The computer is called Miniac, which is short for “miniature automatic computer.” It’s much smaller than most computers of its time. During the 1950s, computers could take up an entire room. The Miniac is about the side of a large sideboard.

Joe asks Professor Bullfinch how the Minaic works, and he explains that they can ask it questions through a microphone. The computer prints out answers with an electric typewriter. Irene asks if they can ask it a question to see how it works, and she asks the Miniac a question from their homework. Joe is amazed at how quickly the computer answers the question, and Professor Bullfinch explain a little more about how computer work, with a memory unit that stores information. He says that facts are stored on magnetic tape. (This was true at the time this book was written, although 21st century computers are constructed differently, in ways that allow them to be made much smaller than 1950s computers. What he says next about the nature of computer intelligence is still true, although I’m going to have some things to say about AI in my reaction section.)

Irene marvels at how the computer seems almost like something from science fiction (for her time) and how amazing it is to have a device that can give you the answers to everything. Professor Bullfinch explains to her that’s not quite true, and that there’s something more amazing: the human mind.

It is only a kind of supertool. Everything in this machine is inside the human head, in the much smaller space of the human brain. Just think of it — all the hundreds of thousands of switches, core memory planes, miles of wire, tubes — all that’s in that big case and in this console — are all huge and awkward compared to the delicate, tiny cells of the human brain which is capable of doing as much as, or more than, the best of these machines. It’s the human brain which can produce a mechanical brain like this one. … The computer can reason … It can do sums and give information and draw logical conclusions, but it can’t create anything. It could give you all the words that rhyme with moon, for instance, but it couldn’t put them together into a poem. … It’s a wonderful, complex tool, but it has no mind. It doesn’t know it exists.”

Danny’s assignment while the professor is away is to feed data to the computer. The professor has laid out the information and code tables that Danny will need, although the professor says that Danny can add some extra information if he comes across something new and interesting in Scientific American or one of the other science magazines he reads. Irene asks if she can help with this task because she finds it interesting, and the professor gives her permission. Before he leaves, he warns Danny not to get too carry away with his enthusiasm. He knows that Danny likes to experiment, and sometimes, he gets carried away when he has an idea, without stopping to think first. The computer is a tool, not a toy, and the professor wants him to treat it as such.

However, a few days after Professor Bullfinch leaves, Irene has a question about their homework that Danny and Joe can’t answer because they also don’t really understand the subject. Then, Danny gets the idea of asking the computer about it. Inspired by how easily the computer answers the question, Danny suggests to the others that they use the professor’s computer as a “homework machine.” After all, it can answer questions and supply them with information, and Danny thinks he could even program it to write short compositions. Irene is a bit dubious about it, but Danny amends his idea to say that the computer would “help” them with their homework.

The book is available to borrow and read for free online through Internet Archive (multiple copies).

One of the interesting things about reading a vintage book like this that focuses on the technology of its time is seeing how things have changed and how people’s perceptions of technology have changed. The kids in this book are amazed by the professor’s computer, which is cutting edge for their time, although 21st century children grow up accustomed to computers in their homes that they are allowed to use. Modern children do use computers as toys, playing computer games, and they are also tools for doing homework.

However, even though things have greatly changed in the decades since this book was written, some of the issues surrounding the ethical use of technology are still concerns in the modern world. This story brings up the issue of how much a reliance on technology to do homework borders on cheating and keeps students from gaining the skills they’re supposed to use. This has become a major issue in modern education in the 2020s, with the rise of AI technology. In the story, Professor Bullfinch says that a computer cannot write poetry, which might get a smirk from modern readers because AI has achieved compositional writing skills. What I’d like to point out, though, is that there are still limits on that. As of this writing, the ideal way to use AI in writing is as a starting point for writing and research but not as a replacement for human writers or the human mind to edit and control the content of the writing. AI also uses human writing as the basis for its compositions, not writing everything from scratch:

“… an AI writing tool will gather information based on what other people have said in response to a similar prompt. The bot will search the internet for information about what you’ve asked it to write, then compile that information into a response. While this used to come back as clunky and robotic, the algorithms and programming for AI writers have become much more advanced and can write human-like responses. … AI writers are, so far, limited in their abilities to create emotional and engaging content. Humans, by nature, are storytellers. We have been since the beginning. Robots, however, are not. They are limited by what they’re programmed to do, and AI bots are programmed to gather information and make an educated guess about what you want to hear.”

(AI Writing: What Is It And How Does It Work?, July 2023)

Computers, even those in the 21st century, which are both smaller and more efficient than the ones from the 1950s, still rely on input from human sources to do anything. AI work is not original, it only builds on what humans have given it to use. In spite of the word “intelligence” in the name “artificial intelligence”, it still “has no mind“, as Professor Bullfinch put it. It’s literally artificially intelligent. It knows nothing independently of human beings, and one of the current problems with AI is that, although it can write convincingly and sound almost human, it not only does so only because it’s basing its writing on human writing that has been supplied to it but also, it has no idea whether or not anything it says is true or not. As the Microsoft article points out, it’s only using predictive technology to guess at what you want to hear and just tell you what you want to hear. It still takes a human being to reason out how much sense AI writing actually makes or whether or not it’s accurate.

One of the current problems with AI in the 2020s is AI hallucinations. Sometimes, AI seems to make things up that aren’t true at all because the way it processes information sometimes produces errors, and by itself, AI has no way of knowing when this has occurred. It has no understanding of the subject its writing about. It’s only attempting to predict and supply what it thinks the human who supplied the prompt wants it to supply.

“AI hallucination is a phenomenon wherein a large language model (LLM)—often a generative AI chatbot or computer vision tool—perceives patterns or objects that are nonexistent or imperceptible to human observers, creating outputs that are nonsensical or altogether inaccurate.

Generally, if a user makes a request of a generative AI tool, they desire an output that appropriately addresses the prompt (that is, a correct answer to a question). However, sometimes AI algorithms produce outputs that are not based on training data, are incorrectly decoded by the transformer or do not follow any identifiable pattern. In other words, it “hallucinates” the response.”

There are currently problems with students relying too much on AI to do both their thinking and writing for them, and even professionals who rely too much on AI tools to get through their work faster sometimes fail to notice when the AI writing says things that don’t make sense or are just blatantly untrue. The AI doesn’t know what’s true or not, it’s just telling you what it thinks you want to hear, based on information given to it, put together, and rearranged in its logic programming. Because it doesn’t actually understand the information fed into it, it has no idea when it gets the story wrong. Computers are faster at processing data than a human, but actual understanding of information is still entirely a human quality. A computer cannot understand anything on behalf of a human mind because it “has no mind” of its own to do the understanding.

There have been cases where professional lawyers who have relied on AI writing instead of doing their writing themselves have been sanctioned when AI hallucinations included information that was not only inaccurate but actually fictitious, citing court cases that never actually existed. The lawyers who received disciplinary action about this did not proofread the writing produced by AI, just trusting it to do all of their writing and thinking for them. Yet, the errors jumped out immediately when actual humans read the writing.

The more complex the writing is, the more the limitations of AI become apparent. AI can sound convincing in a short article (especially if you’re not doing any fact checking to see whether it’s talking about something real or not), but it isn’t always consistent or coherent in longer writing. The drama department of one of the local colleges where I lived put on a performance of a play written entirely by AI as a kind of thought experiment, and the results were hilarious. It was a mystery play, and the script was confusingly written. The AI had trouble keeping track of which characters were currently on stage and which were not, so actors who were not actually present in particular scenes had dialogue. At one point, when the detective was questioning everybody, he even talked to the person who was murdered, and the corpse responded. The play didn’t make sense because the AI doing the writing didn’t really understand the story it was telling. It just told a story in the pattern that was requested of it. It was, technically, a complete play, and if you gave it a cursory glance, it would have looked like a fully written play. It’s just that it had absent people and dead people talking. Perhaps at some point in the future, AI can do its own proofreading and learn to catch these types of problems, but for it to do so with the accuracy of an actual human, it would have to have a human level of understanding about the world and the subject matter it writes about. That is, it would have to have real intelligence, not just artificial intelligence.

This video from Wired on YouTube features AI and machine learning professor Graham Morehead from Gonzaga University, answering common questions about the nature of AI. In the video, he explains some of the differences between how AI “thinks” and how a human brain thinks, which help explain why AI can do some things that a human being would find pretty stupid. AI often thinks in terms of two-dimensional images as opposed to the three-dimensional world we live in as humans, and it doesn’t always understand the consequences of actions because, to AI, everything comes down to simple numbers and data as opposed to a physical world where actions have context and consequences.

Overall, I think this story did a good job of evaluating the differences between the human brain and the electronic brain at a point in history where the technology was relatively new and evolving. It also did a surprisingly good job of anticipating some of the developments and problems associated with the use of artificial intelligence, although the form it takes in this story isn’t quite what we’ve seen in the 21st century, and the kids in this story encounter an issue that modern students attempting to use AI to do their homework aren’t likely to encounter.

At the end of this story (spoilers), Danny and his friends come to realize, to their surprise, that they’ve actually been doing more homework than their classmates in order to make their wonderful homework machine function. They had to teach the machine the subjects they’re studying in order to have it do the assignments because the machine doesn’t innately understand the subject matter. The kids have to supply the knowledge base for the machine learning to function, and that ultimately takes more work and study for them than simply understanding the subjects in their own minds and just doing the assignments themselves. Danny’s mother and his teacher allow the kids to continue using the machine once Danny’s mother explains to the teacher how the process works so the kids can experience how a seeming shortcut can actually take more effort.

This is a little different from the 21st century AI tools, where someone else has already done the basic programming work, and students don’t have to actually understand the subjects themselves to use the AI tools. Of course, if the student doesn’t understand the subject matter of the assignment, there’s less chance that they’ll even notice when the AI produces an AI hallucination and says something that isn’t true or doesn’t make sense. There is an incident in the book where the computer messes up and outputs something that makes no sense, and the kids have to figure out why it did that.

The kids also consider the issue of whether or not using the machine to do their homework is cheating or not. Irene has serious reservations about it at first, and their teacher and some classmates think it gives them an unfair advantage when they find out. Danny, on the other hand, defends it, thinking of the computer as just a time-saving tool, like a typewriter, although the computer is doing more for them than a typewriter does. Danny is only focused on the idea of saving time so he can do things other than homework because he’s confident in his own ability to understand the academic subjects and thinks that practicing his skills or proving his knowledge through homework is a waste of his time.

The only reason why the teacher agrees to let them continue using the computer is that Danny’s mother figures out before he does how much extra work he and his friends are doing to teach the computer how to do their homework. This becomes obvious after the teacher gives them a special assignment, beyond what was covered in class, so Danny and his friends have to work extra hard and spend far more time to understand the material themselves and then teach the computer to understand it well enough to do the work. The first assignments weren’t so hard for Danny and his friends to teach the computer how to complete because the kids are at the top of their class, and they do know the material. However, the more difficult the assignments get, and the less familiar they are with the subject matter, the harder it gets to program the computer to handle the assignments. This exposes the flaws in their system and highlights the need for them to understand the material themselves rather than depend on the computer to do their work for them or even necessarily do it more efficiently. The great use of computers is to do tasks more efficiently, but that depends on the task and whether or not the computer has accurate instructions and an efficient knowledge base to draw on to do it. Building the programming and the knowledge base takes the work of a human mind that knows what it’s doing and is willing to put in the effort to do it correctly and to troubleshoot errors.

In this book, we get a glimpse of school in the 1950s. Something that stood out to me was when the teacher mentions that the class sizes have grown considerably in recent years, meaning that she has less time to work with individual students than she used to. This was a real problem in the 1950s, due to the effects of the Baby Boom. This generation of children was much larger than previous generations, so there were shortages of teachers and class space, and teachers and students did complain that students got less individual attention. (This documentary on YouTube shows some of the overcrowding.)

The focus on science and technology in the Danny Dunn stories is also important to the 1950s because that was the beginning of the era of the Cold War technology race, exemplified by the Space Race. The capitalistic United States and its allies competed against the USSR and its allies for world supremacy following WWII, and one of the ways they did that was by trying to develop superior technology and technological skills. This need to compete in the areas of science and technology led to changes in the US public education system, emphasizing the skills that we would call “STEM” skills today (science, technology, engineering, and mathematics). Echoes of those changes still influence the way we think about education in the 21st century.

This technological and scientific focus also influenced children’s entertainment, as adults tried to encourage children to take an interest in science and technology. The Danny Dunn series is one example of this, showing children who are interested in science and new inventions and portraying them as fun and exciting. Another example was the educational tv show Watch Mr. Wizard, which was being broadcast at the time the Danny Dunn books were written and published. Watch Mr. Wizard featured the title character performing experiments in his laboratory and demonstrating scientific concepts to child visitors. It was very popular, and in the 1950s, there were science clubs for children based around this show. This show also helped inspired new generations of shows with a similar premise, such as Bill Nye, the Science Guy, which was popular when I was a kid.

The Silver Nutmeg

It’s late summer, and it’s very hot. The well is dry, so Anna Lavinia has to go to the spring whenever they need water, and the paw-paws are falling off the trees even though they’re not ripe yet. Anna Lavinia is spending most of her time outside, singing songs from her favorite book Songs from Nowhere, because her mother is making the green paw-paws into preserves, and it’s a smelly process. Nothing seems like it’s going right, and even Anna Lavinia’s animal friends are grumpy because of the heat.

Anna Lavinia looks at Dew Pond Hill through the hole that her father recently made in the garden wall. He made it because he’s been thinking that Anna Lavinia has been too cooped up, and he wants to “broaden the horizon for her” and give her a new “point of view” in a very literal sense. Anna Lavinia thinks that she already has many points of views on many issues, but she does like the new vista that her father has opened up for her.

Things seem to improve on this very hot day when Uncle Jeffrey comes to visit. Uncle Jeffrey deals in spices, and he brings herbs and spices with him to replenish the family’s supply. Uncle Jeffrey also likes to collect samples of flowers and leaves, which he keeps pressed in a book with labels of their names (if he knows them) and the places where he found them. This time, Anna Lavinia notices a special purple flower in his book that she has never noticed before. There are no notes about it in the book, but she is sure that it is something special.

Then, she notices three men digging for something by the dew pond on the hill and decides to go see what they’re doing. Uncle Jeffrey warns her against going to the dew pond because he says that dew ponds are always bewitched. However, her mother thinks that’s nonsense and sees nothing wrong with Anna Lavinia going to look at the dew pond. When Anna Lavinia talks to the diggers, they joke with her at first that they’re digging a hole to go to exotic places on the other side of the world, but then, they admit that it’s just a ditch for water. They want to drain the dew pond! Anna Lavinia is upset about that, and they explain that they need the water to grow their parsnips. They say that this won’t be the end of the dew pond because they plan to fill in the ditch, and the pond will eventually fill up again. However, they really need the water now.

Anna Lavinia goes to look at the dew pond and enjoy it while she can, thinking how awful it is that it’s going to be drained just when her father created a new view of it for her. While she thinks about it, she tosses a few acorns in the water. Then, suddenly, one of them jumps back out of the water at her! Strangely, the acorn also seems completely dry. Curious, Anna Lavinia tosses in another acorn. This time, when it flies back at her, it has a note pinned to it that says, “Please don’t throw acorns at me.” When Anna Lavinia looks into the water, she doesn’t see her own face reflected back at her. Instead, she sees a blond boy in a green sweater. She looks around, but she doesn’t see anyone else by the dew pond but herself. When she calls out to the boy to ask where he is, he says that he’s on the other side of the pond – the underside!

The boy says his name is Tobias, and he’s playing with a boat on the pond. Anna Lavinia asks if he can come up to her through the pond, and he says he could but he promised his mother that he wouldn’t. However, she can come through the pond to him, if she likes. He says that, for her to get through, the water must be completely still, no ripples, and that she must jump in as hard as she can. Anna Lavinia asks what will happen if she doesn’t do it right, and Toby tells her that she’d probably just get all wet and get a scolding from her mother. Anna Lavinia debates about it because Toby is upside down compared to her, and she’s not sure how gravity will work on the underside of the pond. Toby says that the right side up depends on your point of view and there is no gravity where he is. He shows her a net in a tree where she can jump and teases her about being afraid. Deciding that it’s a small risk, Anna Lavinia jumps in along with her pet lizard, which she calls a thobby.

It works just like Toby said it would, and Anna Lavinia lands safely in the net. Once in Toby’s land, she experiences a strange sensation that they call “the tingle.” (It’s not a dirty thing, although I did raise an eyebrow at first.) This sensation is a kind of force that Toby says flows through the ground in his land, and it’s what keeps objects from just floating around all the time in the absence of gravity. If you lift an object off the ground, it will float around in the air because there is no gravity, but once it’s in contact with the ground or in contact with another object that’s in contact with the ground, it will stay where it is, held in place by this force, until someone or something else causes it to move. Toby describes it as being like a kind of magnetism.

With Toby’s help, Anna Lavinia experiments with this lack of gravity. Toby explains that people can’t fly in his land, although birds can fly through the air with their wings. People do lose contact with the ground if they skip or jump, but it’s usually not a big deal because they can sort of maneuver themselves in the air until they can get back down to the ground or grab hold of something that’s grounded. It’s impossible to fall.

All of Toby’s world is the underside of our world, and the ground they’re walking on is the inside of the ball that is the Earth. Because it’s the inside of the Earth, it’s dimmer than the outside world. The light that comes through comes through bodies of quiet water, like the dew pond. Toby says that, while people from this inside world can go to the surface area through any still pond, they typically don’t. For one thing, they find it difficult to deal with the gravity of the outside world, and it will turn them bandy-legged if they stay too long. For another, people who left used to be banished by their own people if they returned, so those who have gone to the outside world have often stayed. Toby’s Aunt Cornelia still misses the man she had planned to marry. After the two of them quarreled about his desire to see the world, he vanished, and Aunt Cornelia thinks that he probably went to the outside world, never to return. Things have changed now so that people who left are now allowed to return, so Aunt Cornelia hopes maybe her sweetheart will come back, but Toby doesn’t think there’s much hope of that.

When the children hear a baby crying, Anna Lavinia insists on finding the baby and seeing why nobody seems to be tending to him. It turns out that the donkey pulling a gypsy wagon has pulled the wagon over a cliff, which isn’t as dire as it sounds, since nothing in this land can fall. However, the wagon is now stuck sideways on the side of a cliff, and things from the wagon have been tossed around and are hanging in mid-air, including the baby in his basket. Toby and Anna Lavinia rescue the baby, and his grateful mother offers them a reward for their help. She gives Toby a tambourine, and she tells Anna Lavinia’s fortune. The fortune comes out strangely backward because Anna Lavinia is from the outside world, but from what they gypsy sees, it looks like Anna Lavinia is going to do something to make an old man happy.

Anna Lavinia has a lovely visit with Toby and Aunt Cornelia, but then, she suddenly remembers that the men are going to drain the dew pond today! By the time she and Toby return to the dew pond, it’s dry! With the pond dry on her side, Anna Lavinia can’t get home … unless still waters run deep.

This book is the sequel to an earlier book called Beyond the Pawpaw Trees, which first introduced the character of Anna Lavinia.

The book is sweet and would probably appeal to fans of Cottagecore. The characters sing songs and recite rhymes throughout the story, which might appeal to young children. I was a little divided over whether I liked having the story interrupted by the songs and rhymes, but the songs and rhymes really are a part of the story and add to its charm. It’s a little like Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland, where a girl goes to a magical land, where things don’t work as they do in the ordinary world.

In Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland, there’s a lot of random nonsense, and that’s fun, but I liked that this particular story uses a kind of pseudo-scientific focus on magnetism and gravity. Neither the magnetism nor gravity works the way it does in the real world, and it adds a kind of science-fiction twist to the fantasy world in the story. Even with this almost science-fiction twist, we still have that old-fashioned, cottagecore style fantasy atmosphere that’s charming and whimsical rather than technical. I haven’t read the first book in this series, but I understand that it uses similar concepts. Nothing really stressful happens in the story, and it would make a nice bedtime story.

My one complaint is that there are some stereotypical gypsies and comments about gypsies in the book. They are always referred to as “gypsies” and not Romany or any other name, and for some reason, they make a point at the beginning of the story that gypsies always go barefoot. I’m not sure what the point to that was except to establish that gypsies have eccentric habits. It’s not unusual for children’s books from the mid-20th century to have stereotypical gypsies as characters, although it might rub people from the 21st century the wrong way.

Stories of Rainbow and Lucky: Rainbow’s Journey

Stories of Rainbow and Lucky

This is the second book in the Stories of Rainbow and Lucky series. I’ve covered the first book this series, and I have to do all five books in a row because the series is set up like a mini-series. That is, none of the books in the series can stand alone; they are all installments of one, longer story. It’s an unusual series from the mid-19th century, written on the eve of the American Civil War, by a white author with a young black hero. Rainbow is a teenage black boy who, in the previous installment of the story, is hired by a young carpenter who is just a few years older than he is to help him with a job in another town. The rest of the series follows the two young men, particularly Rainbow, through their adventures, learning life lessons, even dealing with difficult topics like racism. (Lucky is a horse, and Lucky enters the story later.) The story is unusual for this time period because it was uncommon for black people to be the heroes of books and for topics like racism to be discussed directly. It’s also important to point out that our black hero is not a slave, he is not enslaved at any point in the series, and the series has a happy ending for him. People don’t always treat him right, but he does have friends and allies, and he manages to deal with the adversity he faces and builds a future for himself. Keep in mind along the way that there are a lot of pun names in this series and that people’s names are often clues to their characters.

This book is easily available to read online in your browser through NINETEENTH-CENTURY AMERICAN CHILDREN & WHAT THEY READ, I’m going to do a detailed summary below. If you’d rather read it yourself before you read my review, you can go ahead, but some people might want to know what it’s like in more detail.

For most of the last story, the focus was on Handie, his family’s financial problems, the inheritance he receives from his uncle, and how the lawyer who is the executor of the estate arranges for Handie to use the estate to his best advantage. Because Handie is 19 years old, he is still considered a minor. (The legal age is 21 during this time period and would stay the legal age until about halfway through the 20th century.) His uncle’s will specifically stated that Handie cannot take full ownership of the farm that he left to him until he is 22 years old. Uncle that time, the lawyer, Mr. James, will manage the estate on his behalf, using the money provided with the estate to hire someone to fix up the farm to rent it out to a tenant until Handie is old enough to take it. The Level family’s money problems are because Handie’s father is not good at managing his money, and Handie’s uncle knew that if Handie’s father got his hands on his son’s estate, he would probably blow the money and end up having to sell the farm to cover his debts, leaving Handie with nothing.

In the previous book, Mr. James discusses the situation with Handie, and they work out another solution to the Levels’ debt problems. He helps Handie take steps to separate the money he earns from his father’s money, and he hires Handie as the carpenter to work on repairing the farm he inherited on behalf of his own estate. It’s a somewhat odd arrangement because Handie is effectively being hired to work for himself but will be paid by Mr. James on behalf of the estate. Under the circumstances, it’s the best system for solving the family’s money problems and setting Handie up for a better future. 

Because Handie will need a little help while he’s working on the farm, Mr. James also provides money from the estate so he can hire an assistant. Handie offers the job to 14-year-old Rainbow. Rainbow doesn’t have any carpentry experience, but he’s strong for his age and a good worker, and Handie would rather bring someone he knows with him rather than trying to find someone else when he arrives at this new town. At the end of the previous book, Handie offers Rainbow the job as a carpenter’s assistant and tells him that they will be living in the town of Southerton for about 2 or 3 months during the summer while they do the job. The job will involve hard, physical work, but Rainbow can handle it, and this job could give him some good work experience. Rainbow accepts the job offer, with his mother’s permission, and they begin preparing for the journey.

When this story begins, Handie and Rainbow are about to leave the village where they both live. It’s a summer evening with good weather, and they will be traveling by stage coach. When Handie offered Rainbow the job, he didn’t explain that the farm where they will be working actually belongs to him, but word of Handie’s inheritance has spread around town since. Rainbow is astonished at the idea of someone so young having a farm of his own, and he decides that he will ask Handie more about it later, although he knows he should be careful to be polite about asking because he doesn’t want to seem rude by prying. Although these boys are friendly with each other, having grown up in the same small town, they also have a professional relationship now, and Rainbow’s mother impressed on him that he needs to treat Handie respectfully as his employer. They are becoming young men and venturing out into the world for the first time, so they need to learn how to behave professionally with each other, as befits their new, professional relationship. Neither of the young men is experienced with traveling anywhere, and they’re both looking forward to this exciting journey.

Things seem to be going well at the start of the journey, but then, the stage coach driver, while chatting with Handie mentions that he doesn’t like the look of one of the passengers. At first, Rainbow worries that the driver is talking about him because he’s accustomed to people making comments about him, ridiculing him, or telling him that he isn’t welcome among them for being black. Even though they are from a small village, and many people there like Rainbow for his good nature and helpfulness, he’s already seen his share of discrimination. However, the driver is talking about someone else. He explains that there’s a man on the stage coach called Burkill, who is wearing a bright waistcoat. He’s met Burkill before, and he knows that the man is trouble. 

Right now, Handie and Rainbow are riding on the top of the stage with the driver, but when Burkill joined them, he made a fuss to the driver about whether or not Rainbow would be riding inside the coach, objecting to the idea of riding with a black person. The driver, Trigget, who knows Rainbow and doesn’t like Burkill anyway, told him that Rainbow has paid his fare and will ride wherever he wants to: “I don’t pay any attention to the different shades of complexion of my passengers … Rainbow is suitable company for any honest man. You can judge best whether he is suitable company for you or not, and act accordingly.” It’s a bit of a slam. He’s implying that, if Burkill can’t get along with Rainbow, he’s probably not an honest man, and the driver already has reason to think he’s not, so he’d better not make a big deal about it. The other passengers also know Burkill’s reputation, so they get the joke and laugh at Burkill. Embarrassed, Burkill just gets on the stage coach without saying anything else. All of this happens before Handie and Rainbow get on themselves, and they don’t hear any of it, so their choice to sit up with the driver was just by preference, not because they were required to sit there. Trigget just tells them about it later, as they ride along.

(Note: I’m using the term “black”, and so did Burkill when he was speaking, but the driver corrects him, using the word “colored” because “colored” is considered the more polite word at the time this story was written. I’ve explained before that “colored” and “Negro” used to be considered more polite terms prior to the Civil Rights Movement in the mid-20th century. At that point, “black” became the accepted generic word, where it had once been considered somewhat rude, and “African American” became the polite, formal term. I’ve been using “black” in the modern generic sense for the purpose of these reviews because I think the modern audience will find it easier to follow, but this series was meant to be educational for 19th century children, like the author’s other books, so there are points in the story where the characters actually discuss which racial terms are more polite. The general rule they establish is that the best thing to call someone is whatever they would like to be called, and I think it’s a pretty good, general rule. I’m just explaining because it’s a plot point, and the racial words that people use are clues to their characters. Characters who use the wrong racial words are either ignorant or antagonistic, and Burkill falls into the second category. We haven’t know him long, but we’ve already established that Burkill is disreputable and a trouble-maker, and he also uses the wrong racial words and has a racist attitude. Basically, he’s bad news all the way around, and this incident is establishing his character for readers and setting the scene for further misbehavior from him.)

The author of this series likes to include detailed information about daily life in his stories for educational purposes, which is a boon to modern people who like learning about the details of life in the past. Some of what he says might have once been common knowledge to 19th century people, but it’s really helpful for people studying history. In this case, we leave off the racial talk to talk about the trials and tribulations of travel in the mid-19th century. 

While they ride with Trigget, Trigget asks Handie about his journey to Southerton and the inheritance he’s heard about. Handie explains to him about the farm he’s inherited and his arrangements with the lawyer, so Rainbow gets the rest of that story without needing to ask. Trigget explains that the stagecoach needs to be in Southerton by 4 o’clock because there’s a train that leaves Southerton at that time. Some of his passengers will want to be on that train. However, he’s also carrying mail on the stagecoach, and it’s even more important for the mail to make it there on time than the human passengers. 

Handie asks if people shouldn’t be considered more important than letters, and Trigget explains, “the passengers go at their own risk. We get them through if we can, but if we can’t it is their misfortune. We don’t absolutely engage to get them through at such a time. But as to the mail, it is different. We contract with the government to deliver it, without fail, at four o’clock at the station, and if we don’t do it we have a heavy fine to pay.” In other words, there are laws and consequences to guarantee that the mail gets to its destination on time, but nobody’s imposing consequences for delivering people safely to their destination, so the people just have to look out for themselves. That sounds worrying, but Trigget further explains that he can’t wait for people who just have to finish the story they’re telling at a stagecoach stop. The coach has to leave each stop at a specific time to make it to its destination on time for the sake of the mail, so the passengers need to make sure that they’re ready to go, or they’ll be left behind. It’s not much different from missing a bus, a train, or a plane today.

When Trigget says that they will reach Southerton at four o’clock, he means four o’clock in the morning. They set out in the evening, and this stagecoach travels all night. As they pass through the countryside and towns along the way, they notice that lights in houses start going out around 10 o’clock, the usual time for people in the countryside to go to bed, although the author notes that lights in the towns stay on for longer because people stay up later there.

Along the way, they stop at the post offices in various small towns and villages to sort the mail. The post offices are sometimes in buildings by themselves, but in some places, they’re located inside another business, like a store or a tavern. At each stop, they have to leave behind the mail for that particular area. At one point, they change horses on the coach, and Rainbow says that he might want a job like that someday, caring for horses. Each stop only takes a few minutes, but Trigget tries to keep things moving quickly so they can be at the next stop on time. He plans for an extra hour on his journey in case anything goes wrong, and they are about to need that extra time.

After the coach is moving again, Trigget suddenly realizes that the boy who harnessed the horses has accidentally left the reins on the right sides of the horses’ mouths unbuckled on the lead horses. It’s serious mistake because, when Trigget pulls on the reins, he’s pulling the lead horses off to the left instead of evenly on both sides, causing the entire team and coach to turn. When he tries to stop the horses from moving, he loses control of them, and they’re coming to a place where a dangerous turn could wreck the coach!

In desperation, Rainbow decides to try a dangerous stunt. He climbs out over the backs of the moving horses to reach the lead horses to fix the problem with the reins. At first, the horses are nervous with Rainbow climbing on them, but Rainbow is good with horses and manages to calm them. Unfortunately, he doesn’t manage to get the reins completely fixed before disaster strikes. They hit the turn that Trigget feared, and the coach overturns!

Fortunately, Rainbow manages to escape injury. He swings down from the horse he’s riding and manages to calm the horses down. The horses are uninjured, but the coach is on its side, and the passengers are in a panic! Trigget and Handie are also unhurt, and they begin helping the other passengers out of the overturned coach and assessing them for injuries. One of the young women who was in the coach is unconscious. The other passengers fear that she may be hurt very badly and will need a doctor, but Trigget thinks that she has only fainted from the shock. The axle-tree of the coach is broken, so they can’t merely right the coach and continue traveling. Trigget asks Rainbow to take one of the horses and ride back to the last stop and get some help and a wagon to pick up the mail and baggage from the coach. Trigget’s first concern, as he said before, is to keep the mail moving. Once someone comes to take the mail bags on, he turns his attention back to his passengers.

The unconscious girl revives, and she is not badly injured. When Rainbow returns with another wagon, they load all the luggage on it, and the entire party returns to the last tavern they passed, where they stay for the rest of the night. The owner’s wife, Mrs. Norton, gives the young women a room upstairs, but she doesn’t have enough unoccupied rooms for everyone. She suggests that Rainbow stay in the barn with the man who manages the horses, and Handie says that he’ll stay there with Rainbow, too. Mrs. Norton is grateful that they’re willing to take this lesser accommodation, and she gives them both sheets and blankets to use. The man who manages the horses, Hitover, offers his bed to Handie, and he says that Rainbow can use his assistant’s bed because the assistant, Jex, is the one who is currently taking the mail to its next stop. However, the boys decide that they would prefer to sleep on the hay with their sheets and blankets. Handie shows Rainbow how to shape the hay into a more comfortable bed, rolling up some to make pillows. (I thought that part was interesting because I’ve read about people sleeping on hay in other books, but I think this is the first story I’ve read that explains how to make an improvised bed in hay.) Then, they say their prayers and go to sleep.

Rainbow has a more difficult time going to sleep than Handie does, thinking about everything that’s happened and how strange it feels to be away from home. Both of the boys are becoming young men and venturing out into the world without their families for the first time, but in some ways, Rainbow’s position feels more precarious than Handie’s because he never knows how the people he meets might react to him, just because of his race. The book says:

Besides, the going away from home of a colored boy like Rainbow is a much more momentous event for him than such a change is for a white boy. A white boy, if he is of an amiable disposition and behaves well, even if he goes among entire strangers, soon makes plenty of friends. The world is prepared every where to welcome him, and to receive him kindly. But a boy like Rainbow feels that his fate is to be every where disliked and shunned. In every strange town that he enters he expects that the boys, instead of welcoming him as a new companion and playmate, will be ready to deride him, and to point at him, and to call him opprobrious names; so that, when he goes out into the world, there is no bright side of the picture to relieve the regret which he feels at leaving his home. He expects, wherever he goes, and however bright and beautiful may be the outward aspects of the novel scenes through which he may pass, that every thing human will look dark and scowling upon him, and that all who have loved him, or will love him, or care any thing about him, are left behind.

The one point of reassurance for Rainbow is Handie. Handie is kind to him, and he’s also Rainbow’s link to what’s safe and familiar to him. When he falls asleep, Rainbow dreams that he’s riding a wild horse. 

At one point during the night, Rainbow wakes up and sees Burkill sneaking around. Burkill hides a carpet bag under some hay, not seeing that Rainbow is awake and watching. Rainbow tells himself that he’ll have to mention it to Handie, and he goes back to sleep.

The next day, Handie goes to see about breakfast, and Rainbow gives Hitover some help with the horses. While Rainbow is helping with the horses, Burkill comes to the barn again, and he starts hassling Hitover about getting him a horse and wagon so he can get to Southerton faster. Hitover says that Burkill has been giving him a lot of trouble about that since the coach party arrived after the accident, but he keeps telling Burkill that he can’t help him. They only have one wagon, and Trigget will probably need it for handling his passengers and their baggage. When Trigget returns after getting the broken stage coach to a blacksmith, he says the same thing. Burkill tries to persuade him to forget about the other passengers because he’s willing to pay more, but Trigget says that he has a duty to all the passengers. Out of curiosity, Rainbow looks under the hay and sees that the carpet bag is still hidden there.

When Rainbow next speaks to Handie, Handie tells him that everyone’s bags and trunks will have to be searched because some things have been stolen. Handie’s pretty sure that he knows who will be most reluctant to have his bags searched, but he doesn’t say so aloud. (I think we all know at this point who the thief probably is.) While the search is being conducted, Rainbow quietly tells Trigget about Burkill’s hidden carpet bag. Trigget tells him not to say anything to anyone else yet. 

Instead, while Burkill is pressing him again about getting the wagon and leaving, Trigget says that he needs to get John Easterly and Handie to come to the barn with him first to talk about some hay he wants to buy. Burkill, worried about the possible discovery of the bag, goes with them without being invited. Trigget asks Rainbow to move some of the hay with a pitchfork, and Burkill tries to distract them from looking in the spot where the bag is hidden. When Rainbow uncovers the bag, Burkill admits that the bag is his and claims that he put it there to keep it from being lost. He tries to keep everyone from examining the bag, but Trigget says that, if he doesn’t show them what he has in the bag, they’ll all assume that he has the stolen goods, and they’ll fetch an officer to search the bag. For a moment, Burkill pretends that he’s lost the key to the bag, but Trigget finds it and opens the bag. Burkill does have John Easterly’s stolen watch in his bag, and he tries to claim that he just happened to find it and didn’t know who it belonged to, but nobody believes him. They fetch an officer, and Burkill is arrested. They can’t find the money that was taken from the young women on the coach, but everyone assumes that Burkill took that, too. Since the girls lost their money, Handie offers to lend the girls some money so they can continue their journey, and they accept.

Trigget says that he’s having the coach repaired, and any of the men (except for the arrested Burkill) who wants to wait for it can go with him that night. He is arranging for the girls to continue on immediately in the wagon, but if the men don’t want to wait for the coach, he will refund part of their coach fare, and they can make their own travel arrangements. Trigget says that they can continue to Southerton on foot, if they wish, and he’ll bring their baggage later, so Handie decides that’s what he and Rainbow will do. They’re about 20 miles away from Southerton at this point, and Handie says they can walk the distance and get there by five o’clock, maybe around seven o’clock in the evening, if they stop for a couple of hours on the way. That means that they will still get there faster than if they waited for the coach to be fixed. They remove a few things from their bags that they will need until Trigget can bring them their luggage in Southerton. Then, they set off on their way.

While they walk, they pass the place where the coach was wrecked. They look around to see if maybe the girls’ wallet with their money fell out somewhere. They don’t find it, and they consider going by the blacksmith’s shop to see if it’s still in the coach. The problem is that, when they come to a crossroads, they realize that Southerton is one way, and the blacksmith’s shop is another. They have to decide if they’re willing to go out of their way to visit the blacksmith and see if the girls’ wallet is in the coach. Handie doesn’t want to delay their journey too much because he doesn’t have much money. He gave what he could spare to the girls, and a delay in the journey would cause them to have to spend more money for food or accommodation. However, he feels like they ought to try looking for the purse anyway because he wants to feel like he did all he could for the unfortunate girls.

At the blacksmith’s shop, the blacksmith gives them permission to search the coach for the wallet. It doesn’t take them long to find it. When they do, Rainbow says that they ought to check if the money is there and maybe take what they need to pay themselves back what Handie lent to the girls, but Handie doesn’t think it’s right to look in the wallet without the girls’ permission. He thinks that it would be only right to deliver it to the girls intact. In fact, after he thinks about it, he decides that he should show it to the blacksmith, since the coach was in his custody, and that he will also seal it up for security. (The narrator says at this point that he’s not sure himself whether Handie is being truly right in this level of scrupulousness or just being overly particular. Rainbow thought this was going too far, but he didn’t want to say so. The narrator invites child readers who are unsure about the right thing to do in such a circumstance to discuss it with their parents or a trustworthy adult, which sounds like the advice that teachers typically gave us in school when I was a kid and anything came up on which they didn’t want to render an opinion or didn’t think it was their place to discuss.)

Handie shows the wallet to the blacksmith, and they discuss the proper way to handle it. The blacksmith says, in a way, he wishes that Handie hadn’t found the wallet because it does create an ethical quandary about which of them is the best person to handle it, since it doesn’t really belong to any of them, and he doesn’t want there to be any question about whether he might have taken any money from it himself, since it was in his possession. Handie suggests that they wrap the wallet up in paper and seal it, and he’ll write on the outside that they found it but didn’t open it and that they all sealed it up together. Then, the blacksmith can give it to Trigget when Trigget comes for the coach, and Trigget can deliver it to the girls. The blacksmith is satisfied with this arrangement.

After they’ve resolved that matter, Handie and Rainbow talk about how Trigget was wrong that Burkill stole the money, and Handie says, “And it shows us that we ought to be pretty careful how we judge and condemn people, even when we know that their characters are bad.” (I also took the lesson from it that a person like Burkill has made the kind of reputation for himself where nobody believes him on those rare occasions when he is telling the truth, so it’s also his fault when people don’t believe him. I mean, it’s hard to convincingly argue that you haven’t stolen something when people have already caught you with a different thing you just stole, lied about, and tried to conceal in the same 24 hour period, but that’s not where the story puts its emphasis.)

They continue on with their journey, and when they come to the next tavern, Handie decides to see if they will give them dinner in exchange for work instead of money, so he can save the money they still have. The tavern owner, Mr. Dorling, is a little “slack”, as one of his neighbors puts it. He’s not very on top of things, but his daughter, Margery, minds the business, and she can think of some things for Handie to fix around the place. Margery is very pleased with their help and considers that they have paid for their dinner many times over. Handie thinks that they probably still owe some money for dinner, so he asks Margery’s father what he thinks is fair. At first, it seems like Margery’s father still insists on them paying for most of the cost of their meals, which doesn’t seem fair, but then, they realize that they’ve misunderstood what he said. Mr. Dorling means that he will give them not only the promised meals but almost enough to buy two more meals for themselves. In other words, he’s the one who owes them more money, not the other way around. In fact, they’ve done such good work that Margery proposes that Handie and Rainbow stay the rest of the afternoon. There is more work to do, they can have their evening meals at the tavern, and Margery will also arrange for a wagon to take them to Southerton so they will arrive there at about the time they had planned. Handie accepts the offer, and they continue their work.

The boy who will be taking them to Southerton in a wagon, Tolie, says that he can drive them when he’s done bringing the cows in from the pasture, and they can go sooner, if Rainbow will help him finish the task. Rainbow and Tolie go out to the pasture together, and while they’re out there, they decide that they both want some lilies from the pond. Rainbow often helped younger children from his village get pond lilies and a couple of them have asked him to send some lilies from his journey, so he’s happy to help Tolie. When they collect the lilies, Tolie says he doesn’t see how Rainbow can send lilies back to his town without them wilting on the way. Rainbow does his best to get lilies with their roots intact, and he asks Handie if he can think of a way to send them home undamaged. Handie thinks about it, and he remembers that there’s an empty paint keg in the shed that the Dorlings probably don’t want anymore. He says they can ask the Dorlings if they can have it, and then, Trigget can pick up the lilies and carry them home when he passes this way again. Margery says it’s fine for them to have the paint keg, and she’ll make sure that Trigget picks up the lilies. Trigget is happy to do Rainbow the favor of delivering the lilies because Rainbow was so helpful during and after the coach accident.

Tolie is a little later in leaving with Handie and Rainbow than they originally agreed, and Handie talks to him about the importance of punctuality, telling him a little story about some boys trying for a job and how the one who planned ahead against accidents making him late was the one who got the job. They discuss the story a little, and then, Handie asks Tolie some questions about Southerton and what he knows about the Three Pines farm. Tolie says that Southerton is a small town but pretty nice. He is familiar with the Three Pines farm because boys in the area like to go fishing in a stream nearby. The Three Pines farm used to be very nice, but it has become run down. It was originally established by a man name Captain Stanfield, an early settler in the area. There really are three pine trees on the farm. Tolie says that Captain Stanfield deliberately left the three pine trees there when he cleared the land for planting, and there’s supposed to be a story about why he did that, but Tolie doesn’t know what the full story is.

Handie’s plan, on arriving in Southerton, is to get a room for himself and Rainbow at the local tavern. He only plans to stay at the tavern for a day or two, while he and Rainbow check out the farm, see what condition the buildings are in, and arrange a place for them to sleep there while they’re repairing the farm. Handie doesn’t expect to find furniture at the farm, so they stop at a farm on the way and buy some straw that they can use to make beds at the farm, if they can’t find anything else.

This volume of the story ends at this point, mentioning that Handie and Rainbow had other adventures in Southerton before they finally settle at the farm house and make beds for themselves from the straw they bought. The story promises that it will explain what happened in the next volume. It also explains that, when Trigget comes to bring them their luggage, he also brings them the girls’ wallet they found and turns it over to Handie to return to the girls, telling him to write to them about it. When he does, the girls tell him to take the money from the purse to pay himself back what he loaned them (so he might as well have done that in the first place). They say that he can mail the wallet to them, but instead, he arranges to send them the remaining money and purchases the wallet from them, with their permission. He finds a piece of poetry in the wallet along with the money and tries to ask the girls which of them actually owned the wallet, but they refuse to say. Handie keeps the poem as a keepsake.

Meanwhile, Burkill goes to trial for his theft of the watch, and Rainbow is called as a witness in court. We do not get to see the trial in the story, but we are told that Burkill is found guilty and sent to prison, and the rest of the story has to wait for the next installment in the series.

I liked this installment of the series better than the last one because it had more action to it! The last installment established the reasons for this journey and how Handie came to hire Rainbow as his assistant, but much of it focused on the money problems in the Level family and Handie’s negotiations with the lawyer handling their affairs. In this part of the series, we see Handie and Rainbow setting off on their journey by stage coach! We get to see them riding on top of a stage coach, a daring stunt by Rainbow to try to prevent an accident, and the aftermath of the accident when he isn’t successful. Everyone gives Rainbow credit for risking his neck to try to save the situation, and nobody regards it as his fault when the accident happened anyway. He didn’t do anything to cause it, and he was brave to try to save everyone. Fortunately, there were no fatalities or serious injuries from the accident, so it’s exciting without anyone having to feel scared or too sad about the outcome. 

Then, we also have a theft among the stage coach travelers. It’s not much of a mystery who committed it because we have one very definite shady character in the group, and Rainbow sees that person doing something suspicious, which gives it all away. For a while, I was afraid that someone would blame Rainbow for the theft or that our suspicious character might try to claim that the bag he was hiding actually belonged to Rainbow. I half expected it because parts of this series focus on racial issues, so I could see why some characters might be tempted to try to use Rainbow as a scapegoat. Fortunately, that doesn’t happen. It might not have worked even if someone tried because everyone knows who owned which bags because they were loaded on the stage coach in front of everyone, and both Handie and the driver know Rainbow, but I was glad to avoid the stress of a false accusation. Instead, the other characters believe what Rainbow saw, and the real thief is caught with the stolen goods, and we are told that Rainbow is later called as a witness against him in court. There is a definite point where racism enters the story, specifically from the suspicious character, but I want to talk more about racial issues below.

Even the parts of the story that are more educational were pretty interesting. As I said, the author liked to describe parts of daily life and how things work for the education of his young readers, and this is very helpful to people in the 21st century as information about how people lived and worked in the 19th century. In this installment, we really get a look at Handie’s work skills for the first time when he does some work at a tavern to pay for their food. We see him mending a broken door, a window, and a leak in a roof, and before that, we also see him fixing the tavern owner’s tools because they haven’t been well-maintained and Handie’s tools are with the rest of his luggage, waiting to be taken to the next town. The details of Handie’s work are minor details in the narrative, but they’re interesting for people with a fascinating for DIY skills.

When you’re reading the parts about racism and the people who stand up for Rainbow or correct the way that other people talk about black people, I’d like to remind you again that this book was written in the late 1850s. This book is pre-Civil War, not just in its setting, but when it was actually created. It was written about 100 years before the Civil Rights Movement. The author of this book, Jacob Abbott, did not live to see the Civil Rights Movement and never heard the term “woke” in its 21st usage or about Black Lives Matter, with all the emotional baggage those carry.

However, like many 19th-century children’s authors, he was very concerned with children’s education. He specifically wrote children’s books for educational purposes, not just pure entertainment. In his books, he explains to children how the world works around from, from the details about travel and mail delivery to the notes about when people habitually go to bed in the countryside vs. the towns to the ways people look at black people, speak about them, and treat them. These things are all parts of the world his child audiences were growing up in, and he wrote about them both to explain what children were seeing around themselves and also to teach the children some lessons about how he and others wanted them to behave and respond to situations they might encounter. Along with the lessons about the importance of hard work, money management, and prudent living (the main focus of the first installment in this series), there are lessons about the polite ways to address black people, how to treat them, and how to respond to someone who isn’t speaking or behaving well. The language that the author uses as polite racial terms isn’t what we would expect in the 21st century, as I explained above, because he didn’t see some of the cultural shifts that inspired the change in the terms that people use. For his time, “colored” and “Negro” were among the more polite words, and the generic “black” we use today was discouraged. However, I think his attitude that it’s best to call people what they want to be called or what they call themselves is generally in keeping with modern principles.

One of the reasons why I want to emphasize that this story, and its author, are from the 1850s, pre-Civil War, is to make sure that readers keep historical events and attitudes in perspective and in their proper order. People like Jacob Abbott existed before the Civil War. He wasn’t the only one who believed in principles of treating other people, including people of different races, with politeness and consideration. There were always people like that. They may not have always said it or shown it in precisely the same way, but there were people with similar attitudes and similar principles in Abbott’s time and even before that. They were there every step of the way, and it matters that they were because none of what happened next would have happened without them, and we wouldn’t be where we are today without their influence behind us. 

When I said that his principles are generally in keeping with modern principles, I’m not saying that Abbott was a man ahead of his time. The point that I’m really trying to make was that he was very much a man of his time. The Civil War was looming, tensions about slavery and treatment of black people had been building for some time, the country was sharply fractured, it was discussed openly, hostilities had already taken place, and people could see the war coming. This was the atmosphere in which Abbott was writing for children, and that’s why I find it intriguing that he was writing about racial issues. He is writing not to prepare the children for the coming war but for the little, everyday battles of their lives, for the times when they will live and work alongside people of different races and must learn to get along together. It matters because the man who fusses about where the black boy will sit on the stage coach aren’t that much different from the 1950s/1960s issues about who would sit where on a bus. When the stage coach driver says that Rainbow has paid his fare and can sit where he wants, he’s not that much different from people who defied segregation in restaurants by saying that one paying customer’s money is just as green as another’s, and that’s the color that matters. Different day, but same issues. 

The people who stood up against segregation and racism were partly fueled by other people who came before them, people like Abbott and books and magazines with themes like the ones in this story. The children who read this story were children during the Civil War. Their children lived during the second half of the 19th century, through increasing westward expansion and industrialization. Their grandchildren lived through the Jim Crow eras and segregated schools, seeing the popularity of Birth of a Nation in 1915 and the resurgence of the Ku Klux Klan in the 1910s and 1920s. Their great-grandchildren and great-great grandchildren would have been alive around the time of the Civil Rights Movement and the end of segregation, but what may have helped determine how they felt about all of these issues and how they felt about them in their daily lives was how their families felt about these things for all the generations leading up to those points when situations came to a head and whether they passed on those principles, generation after generation. Those children who read stories like this, absorbed the lessons, and believed in the principles probably also passed on those attitudes, even if they didn’t give their kids the same books to read. 

The Rainbow and Lucky Series isn’t well-known today, but I think it’s just one of those little pieces of the bigger puzzle. It’s the little things that add up to bigger ones later on. Even if later generations of the family didn’t read the same books, they might have been told by parents and grandparents not to call people impolite names or things they don’t like to be called. They might have been taught that people who are behaving themselves and paying good money for services should receive good service in return, no matter what they look like. There were white people who were against slavery long before the Civil War, there were white people who were supportive of the Civil Rights Movement in the mid-20th century, and there are still people in the 21st century who are determined to do what they can to help people suffering from forms of discrimination. Stories come and go, but the lessons we learn along the way and see our families and friends acting out in small, daily ways can stay not just for one lifetime, but the ones that follow. Major changes don’t happen overnight, and it can take generations for them to build, but it’s all the steps and all the people along the way who get us there and keep us moving forward. What I’d like people to remember is that this children’s series is one of those steps. You may not remember every step on the staircase as you go up, but each one gets you a little further up than you were before.