The Mystery of the Neverending Stories—Nancy Drew

A mention of Nancy Drew brings a smile of recognition from many women who grew up in America during the twentieth century and well into the twenty-first. The adventures of Nancy and her two companions, Bess and George, have been reprinted and made available to generations of preteen girls. Why do they linger on in so many women’s memories generation after generation?

Nancy Drew was not a character who was formed spontaneously in the mind of some gifted writer. She was a character developed deliberately by a man whose major talent was interpreting sales trends rather than in artful writing. Edward Stratemeyer started his career writing for magazines, which were a popular format and popular with children during the early 1900s. Stratmeyer took advantage of their popularity by turning many magazine stories into short books that could be sold very cheaply.

To produce as many books as he could for his readers, Stratemeyer devised a system. He would write an outline of a book and send it to one of a group of writers. The individual writer would fill out the story, elaborating Stratemeyer’s ideas. When the manuscript was returned, Stratemeyer would give it a final edit and find a publisher for the book. The author would sign away all rights so that his name would never appear on the cover and all of the royalties would go to the Stratemeyer syndicate. The system worked well and Stratemeyer became a wealthy man. Unfortunately, he died young, leaving his wife and two daughters to carry on without him.

Stratemeyer’s older daughter, Harriet Adams, took over managing the Nancy Drew series as well as other books. She prepared outlines for the stories and hired writers to produce the final product. Over the years, she formed a strong working relationship with the writer Mildred Wirt Benson, who wrote many of the Drew books. Although the two women worked together amicably on many of their projects, a deep rivalry developed over which of them had the major responsibility and should get the major credit for writing the series. They both had long lives and well into their 80s were still determined to get credit. They never agreed on a proper sharing arrangement.

The story of Harriet Adams and Mildred Wirt Benson is told in Melanie Rehak’s book–Nancy Drew Girl Sleuth and the Women Who Created Her (Harcourt Brace 2005). Rehak details the fascinating stories of many of the changes which had to be made over the years.

The first Nancy Drew story appeared in 1930 when Nancy was shown as a 16-year-old girl who drove around the countryside in her roadster and managed the household for her widowed father, Carson Drew. It wasn’t long before the legal driving was raised and Nancy became 18 years old. Other events in the real world affected the way Nancy appears in the books too. Although the books continued to appear during the Second World War, the authors tried hard to downplay the war and make life on the home front seem normal.

By the time Nancy books were appearing in the late 1950s, there were many changes that had to be made, so a major rewriting was in order. The authors removed references to racial differences, although they never fully integrated minority groups into the books. The books were also shortened and the language simplified over the years. One of the biggest changes was that Nancy began to be allowed to show some interest in Ned Nickerson, her faithful boyfriend, but it soon became clear that readers did not want Nancy to seriously contemplate marriage.

Over the years, series books for boys have lost most of their audience, but Nancy still carries on. There have been attempts to tell her story in other formats. She has appeared in 6 films, 3 television series, and 33 video games, but none of these have reached the level of popularity that her books have.

Perhaps Nancy Drew books will survive to reach their 100th year in 2030. Will there still be readers interested in the mysteries? And what will Nancy look like then?

Ada Lovelace Revisited

Few people seem to be aware that we celebrated Ada Lovelace Day on Tuesday October 10, 2023. This week was filled with news, most of it bad news, about war, invasions, and Congressional squabbling. Somehow Ada got lost, and yet many thoughtful people acknowledged that the major scientific development of 2023 has been the establishment of AI or Artificial Intelligence. And Ada Lovelace’s life and work did much to make AI possible. She deserves some attention, even during this busy month.

Ada Lovelace

 Who was Ada Lovelace and why is she celebrated? You can still get a few arguments about whether she deserves the distinction, but she certainly had an unusual life. She was born in England in 1815 and was the legitimate daughter of the famous poet, Lord Byron, quite a feat in itself because Byron fathered all of his other children with women who were not his wife. Still, being born legitimate is not an achievement for the baby, who has no choice in the matter. Ada Lovelace (born Augusta Ada Byron) had to be an unusual woman to earn a reputation of her own and gain lasting fame. And she was.

Despite having an irregular upbringing with a mother so focused on hatred for her husband, Byron, that she had little time for her daughter, Ada Lovelace had a good education. Her mother encouraged tutors to teach Ada mathematics as a way to ward off the tendency toward madness that she believed affected Lord Byron and his family. Ada took to numbers and became a competent mathematician as well as mastering several languages. 

Ada Lovelace moved in high social circles. She became Baroness King when she married William King. The couple had three children, but Ada still had time to continue her friendships with both men and women, including the mathematician Charles Babbage.

Charles Babbage was the inventor of the Analytical Engine, a first attempt at a computer, which enabled him and Ada to develop an algorithm that allowed the analytical engine to compute Bernoulli numbers. It was this which led to Ada being considered the first computer programmer.

Ada became an avid gambler and tried to find mathematical models to help herself and her friends find a formula to increase their winnings. That, unfortunately, did not work and Ada went deeply into debt. Despite her weaknesses and failures, Ada still deserves some attention as one of the early leaders in science, so let’s offer three cheers for Ada and celebrate her special day as we learn mor about how AI will affect our lives this year and in years to come.

An International Star—Anna May Wong

During the early 1900s many Chinese Americans lived in California, but their existence was scarcely noticed or mentioned in the mainstream press. Because they were of a recognizably different race, many white Californians paid little attention to their Chinese American neighbors. When the movie industry started during these early years of the 20th century, the Chinese Americans became more visible, but they still seemed “foreign”. Few white people thought of them as “real Californians”.

Anna May Wong was born in 1905 in Los Angeles. Her father was a Chinese laundryman whose family had lived in America for three generations. Anna May went to an unsegregated school, but she did not like it. Boys pulled her pigtails and teased her for being “different”. She soon moved to a Christian religious school that enrolled only Chinese American students. While she was still in school, she became fascinated by movies and started hanging around studios where early films were made.

Anna May Wang

Despite being somewhat isolated in the dominant world of movies, Wong soon built a strong reputation for herself. She was a tall, slim woman who stood out among the shorter, less striking Asian actresses. She had a keen fashion sense and was photographed and admired as one of the leading stars of the Hollywood scene, especially after she appeared with Douglas Fairbanks in “The Thief of Bagdad” in 1924. When Grauman’s Chinese Theater opened in 1927, Anna May was featured as the leading lady among female Asian stars.  

As the 1920s continued, rules about miscegenation became more stringent in many states and it became difficult for Asian actors to get roles in Hollywood. Following the route of many other actors, Anna May went to Europe in 1927. There she proved again to be a versatile actor. She starred in a successful play in London and then moved to Germany where she learned the language and appeared in a film with Marlene Dietrich.

Despite her success, Wong continued to lose leading roles to non-Asian actors. Her biggest disappointment was to lose the starring role in “The Good Earth” to a white actress who was made up to look Asian.

During World War II, Wong worked for the Chinese cause and after the war she finally visited China for the first time and met several of her relatives. After she returned to the U.S., she hoped to produce movies herself, but she died unexpectedly of a heart attack in 1961 at the age of 56.

Wong’s life has been celebrated by featuring her picture on a new American coin. More importantly, we now have a recent biography of her life, by Yunte Huang. Daughter of the Dragon: Anna May Wong’s Rendezvous with American History (Liverwright 2023). The more you learn about Anna May Wong, the more fascinating she becomes.