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Book Reviews of The Mystery in Arizona (Trixie Belden, Bk 6)

The Mystery in Arizona (Trixie Belden, Bk 6)
The Mystery in Arizona - Trixie Belden, Bk 6
Author: Julie Campbell
ISBN-13: 9780307215338
ISBN-10: 0307215334
Publication Date: 1985
Pages: 236
Reading Level: Ages 9-12
Rating:
  • Currently 4.2/5 Stars.
 13

4.2 stars, based on 13 ratings
Publisher: Golden Press
Book Type: Paperback
Reviews: Amazon | Write a Review

2 Book Reviews submitted by our Members...sorted by voted most helpful

annalovesbooks avatar reviewed The Mystery in Arizona (Trixie Belden, Bk 6) on
ISBN 0307215334 - It's probably a bit of nostalgia that makes me give the book five stars: Trixie is a childhood favorite, and this title is the last written by series creator Julie Campbell. From here on, the books are written by various house authors under the name Kathryn Kenny.

Trixie and her friends have been invited to spend their Christmas holiday at a dude ranch in Arizona, owned by Di's uncle Monty. When they arrive, they're very nearly sent right back home because Uncle Monty is seriously under-staffed. Trixie, however, volunteers the entire group to fill in for the Orlandos, who mysteriously left their jobs without real explanation. Only Maria, an Orlando by marriage, and her son Petey, remain behind - and the things Petey says to Trixie has her convinced there's some sort of mystery to solve. Unhappy guests, a cowboy on the ranch and Rosita, a young girl working in housekeeping, all come with their own riddles and Trixie, of course, will solve them all. But can she do that and her job and still get in all the studying she's promised her mother?

The original copyright of 1958 is evident in the writing style, not to mention a few clues; the "No Smoking" sign on the plane and the comment "Got three teen-age kids whose friends practically lived at our house... until they got TV sets of their own" are giveaways. Campbell's style reminds me a great deal of The Boxcar Children series, set in a more innocent time. The greatest negative to the book is the feeling that you're being lectured on things like Arizona itself (16 pages of info on the state!), Indian customs and more. Still, I don't recall that bothering me when I was younger and I don't know that mystery fans will mind much now. A fun, bad-language-free mystery with the Bob-Whites. (Copyright, AnnaLovesBooks, 2008)
reviewed The Mystery in Arizona (Trixie Belden, Bk 6) on + 167 more book reviews
"Trixie, feeling very wide awake, wandered over to peer out of the window which opened onto the west patio. It was as bright as day out there, except for a shadowy corner. And then she heard, rather than saw, that somebody was hovering outside in the shadows. A soft sighing sound rose and became a sob. Somebody was out there...."