List of Nancy Drew books
The character of Nancy Drew – ghostwritten and credited to the pseudonymous Carolyn Keene – has appeared in a number of series over the years.
613 Nancy Drew books have been published as of March 2021 over thirteen different series, as follows:
Series overview[]
- Nancy Drew Mystery Stories (1930–2003; 175 titles + 8 revisions with different stories)
- Seven special titles released between 1973 and 1985.
- Nancy Drew and The Hardy Boys: Be A Detective Mystery Stories (1984–1985; 6 titles)
- Nancy Drew: Girl Detective (2004–2012; 47 titles + 3 "SuperMysteries")
- Nancy Drew and the Hardy Boys Super Mystery (2007) (2007–2012; 6 titles)
- Nancy Drew Diaries (2013-present; 21 titles + 1 special + 1 upcoming)
For young adults[]
- The Nancy Drew Files (1986–1997; 124 titles)
- Nancy Drew and The Hardy Boys Super Mystery (1989–1998; 36 titles)
- River Heights (1989–1992; 16 titles + 1 "Super Sizzler")
- Nancy Drew on Campus (1995–1998; 25 titles)
For children[]
- Nancy Drew Notebooks (1994–2005; 69 titles)
- Nancy Drew and the Clue Crew (2006–2015; 40 titles)
- Nancy Drew Clue Book (2015-present; 15 titles + 1 upcoming)
Graphic novels[]
- (2005–2010; 21 titles + 3 "New Case Files")
- Rereleased under the Nancy Drew Diaries banner, with 10 collections of two titles a book
Nancy Drew Mystery Stories (1930–2003)[]
Grosset & Dunlap[]
No. | Title | Pub. | Outline | Manuscript | Editor | Rev. | Revised By |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | The Secret of the Old Clock | 1930 | Edward Stratemeyer | Mildred Wirt | Edward Stratemeyer | 1959 | Harriet Stratemeyer Adams |
2 | The Hidden Staircase | 1930 | 1959 | ||||
3 | The Bungalow Mystery | 1930 | 1960 | Patricia Doll | |||
4 | The Mystery at Lilac Inn | 1930 | Harriet Stratemeyer Adams | Harriet Elp | 1961 | ||
5 | The Secret Of Shadow Ranch | 1931 | Harriet Stratemeyer Adams | 1965 | Grace Grote | ||
6 | The Secret of Red Gate Farm | 1931 | Edna Stratemeyer Squier | 1961 | Lynn Ealer | ||
7 | The Clue in the Diary | 1932 | 1962 | Harriet Stratemeyer Adams | |||
8 | Nancy's Mysterious Letter | 1932 | Walter Karig | 1968 | |||
9 | The Sign of the Twisted Candles | 1933 | Harriet Stratemeyer Adams | 1968 | Patricia Doll | ||
10 | The Password to Larkspur Lane | 1933 | 1966 | ||||
11 | The Clue of the Broken Locket | 1934 | Edna Stratemeyer Squier | Mildred Wirt | 1965 | Harriet Stratemeyer Adams & Grace Grote | |
12 | The Message in the Hollow Oak | 1935 | 1972 | Grace Grote | |||
13 | The Mystery of the Ivory Charm | 1936 | 1974 | Priscilla Baker-Carr | |||
14 | The Whispering Statue | 1937 | 1970 | Harriet Stratemeyer Adams | |||
15 | The Haunted Bridge | 1937 | Edna Stratemeyer Squier | 1972 | Priscilla Baker-Carr | ||
16 | The Clue of the Tapping Heels | 1939 | Edna Stratemeyer Squier | 1969 | Harriet Stratemeyer Adams | ||
17 | The Mystery of the Brass-Bound Trunk | 1940 | Harriet Stratemeyer Adams | 1976 | |||
18 | The Mystery at the Moss-Covered Mansion | 1941 | Edna Stratemeyer Squier | 1971 | |||
19 | The Quest of the Missing Map | 1942 | Harriet Stratemeyer Adams | 1969 | Priscilla Baker-Carr | ||
20 | The Clue in the Jewel Box | 1943 | 1972 | ||||
21 | The Secret in the Old Attic | 1944 | 1970 | ||||
22 | The Clue in the Crumbling Wall | 1945 | 1973 | ||||
23 | The Mystery of the Tolling Bell | 1946 | 1973 | ||||
24 | The Clue in the Old Album | 1947 | 1977 | ||||
25 | The Ghost of Blackwood Hall | 1948 | 1967 | ||||
26 | The Clue of the Leaning Chimney | 1949 | George Waller, Jr. & Harriet Stratemeyer Adams | 1967 | |||
27 | The Secret of the Wooden Lady | 1950 | Margaret Scherf | 1967 | |||
28 | The Clue of the Black Keys | 1951 | Wilhelmina Rankin & Harriet Stratemeyer Adams | 1968 | |||
29 | The Mystery at the Ski Jump | 1952 | Alma Sasse | 1968 | Ann Shultes | ||
30 | The Clue of the Velvet Mask | 1953 | Andrew Svenson | Mildred Wirt | 1969 | Priscilla Baker-Carr | |
31 | The Ringmaster's Secret | 1953 | Harriet Stratemeyer Adams | Harriet Stratemeyer Adams | 1974 | June Dunn | |
32 | The Scarlet Slipper Mystery | 1954 | Charles Strong | 1974 | Ann Shultes | ||
33 | The Witch Tree Symbol | 1955 | Harriet Stratemeyer Adams | 1975 | |||
34 | The Hidden Window Mystery | 1956 | Patricia Doll & Harriet Stratemeyer Adams | 1975 | Mary Fisher | ||
35 | The Haunted Showboat | 1957 | Harriet Stratemeyer Adams | June Dunn & J. Sanderson | |||
36 | The Secret of the Golden Pavilion | 1959 | |||||
37 | The Clue in the Old Stagecoach | 1960 | Harriet Stratemeyer Adams | ||||
38 | The Mystery of the Fire Dragon | 1961 | |||||
39 | The Clue of the Dancing Puppet | 1962 | |||||
40 | The Moonstone Castle Mystery | 1963 | |||||
41 | The Clue of the Whistling Bagpipes | 1964 | |||||
42 | The Phantom of Pine Hill | 1965 | |||||
43 | The Mystery of the 99 Steps | 1966 | |||||
44 | The Clue in the Crossword Cipher | 1967 | |||||
45 | The Spider Sapphire Mystery | 1968 | |||||
46 | The Invisible Intruder | 1969 | |||||
47 | The Mysterious Mannequin | 1970 | |||||
48 | The Crooked Banister | 1971 | |||||
49 | The Secret of Mirror Bay | 1972 | |||||
50 | The Double Jinx Mystery | 1973 | |||||
51 | Mystery of the Glowing Eye | 1974 | |||||
52 | The Secret of the Forgotten City | 1975 | |||||
53 | The Sky Phantom | 1976 | |||||
54 | The Strange Message in the Parchment | 1977 | |||||
55 | Mystery of Crocodile Island | 1978 | |||||
56 | The Thirteenth Pearl | 1979 |
Simon & Schuster[]
In 1979, the Nancy Drew books began to be published by Wanderer Books Simon & Schuster in paperback format. Though formatted differently from the original 56-volume series which continued under Grosset & Dunlap's control, these new books were published under the Nancy Drew Mystery Stories banner. These books feature increasingly contemporary cover illustrations and some books have multiple versions of the cover art.
To collectors of Nancy Drew and Hardy Boys books, books in the original series published at Simon & Schuster are called "digests." This is due to the books resembling digest-size paperbacks, differing from Grosset & Dunlap's hardcover books. One of the reasons why Adams switched to Simon & Schuster was that Grosset & Dunlap did not like this move, while Simon & Schuster agreed to it.[citation needed]
Wanderer editions[]
The main plot, formula, and continuity of the books remained similar to the original Grosset & Dunlap books still being published at the time. Harriet Adams was still involved in the Syndicate, even after she stopped writing the books in 1980; Simon & Schuster rejected her original manuscript for The Secret in the Old Lace, with the story being rewritten by Nancy Axelrad. After she died in 1982, the Syndicate continued with five of its partners (Adams' remaining three children, plus authors Nancy Axelrod and Lilo Wuenn), until its sale to Simon & Schuster in 1987.
The Triple Hoax was originally listed as the next book at the end of The Thirteenth Pearl. Grosset & Dunlap continued to list this until they lost a court case against the Syndicate and Simon & Schuster in May 1980. The book was later revised to eliminate The Triple Hoax. However, they later published this book — and the seven following — in 2005, with the permission and collaboration of Simon & Schuster, in celebration of Nancy Drew's 75th anniversary. These republications went out of print in 2013.
During this period, the Syndicate began to hire new, younger writers, including Sharon Wagner, Richard Ballad, and James Duncan Lawrence. Ballad's books — Captive Witness and The Sinister Omen — were all originally written for The Hardy Boys, but were rewritten for unknown reasons. The Emerald-Eyed Cat Mystery also falls in this category.
The final two books (#77 and #78) were "backdoor pilots" for the spin-off The Nancy Drew Files, which began in 1986. Due to this, and the sale of the Stratemeyer Syndicate, the series went on a two-year hiatus to retool the series.
No. | Title | Pub. | Outline | Manuscript | Editor |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
57 | The Triple Hoax | 1979 | Harriet Stratemeyer Adams | Harriet Stratemeyer Adams | Harriet Stratemeyer Adams/Lilo Wuenn |
58 | The Flying Saucer Mystery | 1980 | Lilo Wuenn | ||
59 | The Secret in the Old Lace | 1980 | Nancy Axelrad | ||
60 | The Greek Symbol Mystery | 1980 | Harriet Stratemeyer Adams & Nancy Axelrad | ||
61 | The Swami's Ring | 1981 | |||
62 | The Kachina Doll Mystery | 1981 | Sharon Wagner | Sharon Wagner | Nancy Axelrad |
63 | The Twin Dilemma | 1981 | Nancy Axelrad | Nancy Axelrad | Lilo Wuenn |
64 | Captive Witness | 1981 | Richard Ballad | Richard Ballad | Nancy Axelrad |
65 | 1982 | Nancy Axelrad | Nancy Axelrad | ||
66 | Race Against Time | 1982 | James Duncan Lawrence | James Duncan Lawrence | |
67 | 1982 | Richard Ballad | Richard Ballad | ||
68 | 1982 | Sharon Wagner | Sharon Wagner | ||
69 | 1982 | James Duncan Lawrence | James Duncan Lawrence | ||
70 | The Broken Anchor | 1983 | Sharon Wagner | Sharon Wagner | |
71 | 1983 | James Duncan Lawrence | James Duncan Lawrence | ||
72 | 1983 | ||||
73 | 1984 | ||||
74 | 1984 | James Duncan Lawrence | James Duncan Lawrence | ||
75 | 1984 | ||||
76 | 1985 | Sharon Wagner | Sharon Wagner | ||
77 | 1985 | James Duncan Lawrence | James Duncan Lawrence | ||
78 | The Phantom of Venice | 1985 |
Minstrel editions[]
After volume 78, the series took a 2+1⁄2-year hiatus due to the sale of the Stratemeyer Syndicate to Simon & Schuster, and to begin The Nancy Drew Files spin-off. At this point, book packager Mega-Books took over the series, and hired different ghostwriters for the job (many of whom are still unknown). The series also gained Anne Greenberg as the series' new editor; Greenberg would oversee the series for the next 16 years, and become one of the most influential Nancy Drew editors that helped the books continue until the 21st century.
Book #147 (The Case of the Captured Queen) was originally written as a book in The Nancy Drew Files series. That series (as well as its Hardy Boys equivalent) had been cancelled in late 1997, and planned titles in that series were sometimes re-written for the continuing original series.[citation needed]
The writing style of these books took a different direction than the books of the Syndicate; modern technology is mentioned (making the books seem somewhat dated very quickly), continuity errors are common, and the books become shorter (reducing the books from a 20-chapter/180 page format, to a 16-chapter/150 page format). Characters Burt Eddleton and Dave Evans are eliminated completely, and Nancy mostly has a habit of rotating between George, Bess, and Ned. This creates a more realistic setup, rather than having all six drop everything to join Nancy. In the late 1990s, continuity errors and text errors became more common.
No. | Title | Pub. | Outline | Manuscript | Editor |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
79 | 1987 | Anne Greenberg | |||
80 | 1987 | ||||
81 | The Mardi Gras Mystery | 1988 | |||
82 | 1988 | ||||
83 | 1988 | ||||
84 | The Joker's Revenge | 1988 | Eileen Hehl | ||
85 | 1988 | ||||
86 | 1988 | ||||
87 | The Case of the Rising Stars | 1989 | |||
88 | 1989 | ||||
89 | 1989 | Carol Gorman | |||
90 | 1989 | ||||
91 | 1989 | ||||
92 | 1989 | ||||
93 | 1990 | ||||
94 | 1990 | Carol Gorman | |||
95 | 1990 | ||||
96 | 1990 | ||||
97 | 1990 | Alison Hart | |||
98 | 1990 | Carol Gorman | |||
99 | 1991 | Ellen Steiber | |||
100 | 1991 | ||||
101 | 1991 | ||||
102 | 1991 | ||||
103 | 1991 | Alison Hart | |||
104 | 1991 | Ellen Steiber | |||
105 | 1992 | ||||
106 | 1992 | ||||
107 | 1992 | ||||
108 | 1992 | ||||
109 | The Mystery of the Masked Rider | 1992 | Alison Hart | ||
110 | 1992 | ||||
111 | 1993 | ||||
112 | 1993 | ||||
113 | 1993 | ||||
114 | 1993 | ||||
115 | 1993 | ||||
116 | 1993 | Alison Hart | |||
117 | 1994 | ||||
118 | 1994 | ||||
119 | 1994 | ||||
120 | 1994 | ||||
121 | 1994 | ||||
122 | 1994 | ||||
123 | 1995 | ||||
124 | The Secret of the Scarlet Hand | 1995 | |||
125 | 1995 | ||||
126 | 1995 | ||||
127 | 1995 | ||||
128 | The Treasure in the Royal Tower | 1995 | |||
129 | 1996 | Pamela Willis | |||
130 | 1996 | ||||
131 | 1996 | ||||
132 | 1996 | ||||
133 | 1996 | ||||
134 | 1996 | ||||
135 | 1997 | ||||
136 | The Wedding Day Mystery | 1997 | |||
137 | 1997 | ||||
138 | 1997 | ||||
139 | 1997 | ||||
140 | 1997 | ||||
141 | 1998 | ||||
142 | 1998 | Elizabeth Nugent | |||
143 | 1998 | Elizabeth Nugent | |||
144 | The E-mail Mystery | 1998 | |||
145 | 1998 | Alison Hart | |||
146 | 1998 | ||||
147 | 1999 | ||||
148 | 1999 | ||||
149 | 1999 | Alison Hart | |||
150 | 1999 | ||||
151 | 1999 | ||||
152 | 2000 | ||||
153 | Whispers In the Fog | 2000 | |||
154 | The Legend of the Emerald Lady | 2000 | |||
155 | 2000 | George Edward Stanley | |||
156 | 2000 | ||||
157 | 2000 | ||||
158 | The Curse of the Black Cat | 2001 | |||
159 | 2001 |
Aladdin editions[]
With the new millennium, the series changed publishers to the Aladdin subdivision of Simon & Schuster. With declining sales, and the departure of longtime editor Anne Greenberg, Simon & Schuster ended the original series in November 2003.
The books published in 2003 show a sharp decline in quality compared to earlier books, as the new editors focused on preparing the new Nancy Drew, Girl Detective series. Continuity errors are rampant throughout these books: in No Strings Attached and Danger on the Great Lakes (both written by George Edward Stanley), Nancy and her friends are 17, and are on summer vacation; Ned works at a company; and George has chestnut hair (when she is usually a brunette). In Werewolf in a Winter Wonderland, Ned is suddenly blond, and it is (ironically) hinted at that Nancy might be in college. Numerous typographic errors and mistakes are also found throughout these books.
No. | Title | Pub. | Outline | Manuscript | Editor |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
160 | 2001 | Anne Greenberg | |||
161 | 2001 | ||||
162 | 2001 | ||||
163 | 2001 | ||||
164 | 2002 | ||||
165 | 2002 | ||||
166 | 2002 | ||||
167 | Mystery By Moonlight | 2002 | |||
168 | The Bike Tour Mystery | 2002 | |||
169 | The Mistletoe Mystery | 2002 | |||
170 | No Strings Attached | 2003 | George Edward Stanley | ||
171 | 2003 | ||||
172 | The Riding Club Crime | 2003 | |||
173 | Danger on the Great Lakes | 2003 | George Edward Stanley | ||
174 | 2003 | ||||
175 | Werewolf in a Winter Wonderland | 2003 |
Specials[]
- The Nancy Drew Cookbook: Clues to Good Cooking (1973)
- Nancy Drew Picture Book: Mystery of the Lost Dogs (1977)
- Nancy Drew Picture Book: The Secret of the Twin Puppets (1977)
- The Nancy Drew Sleuth Book: Clues to Good Sleuthing (1979)
- Nancy Drew and the Hardy Boys: Super Sleuths (1981)
- Nancy Drew Ghost Stories (1983)
- Nancy Drew and the Hardy Boys: Super Sleuths #2 (1984)
- Nancy Drew and the Hardy Boys: Campfire Stories (1984)
- Nancy Drew Ghost Stories #2 (1985)
The first four works were published by Grosset & Dunlap. The Nancy Drew Cookbook contained recipes and short stories. Both titles under the Nancy Drew Picture Book banner were illustrated picture books aimed at younger readers. The Nancy Drew Sleuth Book contained short stories that involved Nancy teaching a group of younger girls how she solves her mysteries, and gives lessons to the reader on the techniques used.
The first Nancy Drew and the Hardy Boys: Super Sleuths book was published in 1981, after switching over to Simon & Schuster. The book contained seven short stories in which Nancy Drew crosses over to solve mysteries with The Hardy Boys; both the Carolyn Keene pseudonym and The Hardy Boys' Franklin W. Dixon pseudonym are used. The story was so popular, that it spawned a sequel, a spin-off series, and a Campfire Stories companion.
In 1983, Nancy Drew Ghost Stories was published, also containing seven short stories. It, too, spawned a sequel in 1985. Unlike other specials, though, the first volume was reprinted by the later Minstrel and Aladdin imprints.
Nancy Drew and the Hardy Boys: Be a Detective Mystery Stories (1984–1985)[]
These titles feature a level of reader-interaction in a manner similar to the Choose Your Own Adventure books. The series was published by Wanderer.
Two more volumes, Jungle of Evil and Ticket to Intrigue, were planned and advertised, but were unpublished after the sale of the Stratemeyer Syndicate to Simon & Schuster.[1]
No. | Title | Pub. |
---|---|---|
1 | The Secret of the Knight’s Sword | 1984 |
2 | Danger on Ice | |
3 | The Feathered Serpent | |
4 | Secret Cargo | |
5 | The Alaskan Mystery | 1985 |
6 | The Missing Money Mystery |
Nancy Drew Notebooks (1994–2005)[]
The Nancy Drew Notebooks were aimed at younger readers and featured a Nancy who was still in grade school. The series was published from 1994 to 2005.
Nancy Drew Files (1986–1997)[]
In 1986, Simon & Schuster, Inc. began publishing a spin-off series, Nancy Drew Files, running concurrently with the main Nancy Drew Mystery Stories line. The Nancy Drew Files were aimed at an older, teenage audience, and is similar in style, target audience, and sensibilities with The Hardy Boys Casefiles.
Starting in January 2014, Simon & Schuster began releasing this series as eBooks.
Nancy Drew Files Volume I and Nancy Drew Files Volume II were published September 24, 2019 under the Simon Pulse imprint. These are reprints of the first six titles in the series, books 1, 2, and 3 in volume I and books 4, 5 and 6 in volume II. Cover art by Fernanda Suarez.
Nancy Drew and Hardy Boys Super Mystery (1988–1998)[]
The Hardy Boys and Nancy Drew teamed up in this 36 volume series of paperbacks. This series follows the formula of the main characters and their friends typically involved in separate mysteries that end up being connected. The sleuths join forces to solve the overall mystery. This series is based in the Nancy Drew Files and Hardy Boys Casefiles continuity, so murder, romance, and flirtation between the series regulars are common. Nancy Drew and Frank Hardy share an attraction in this series, though after a brief kiss in "The Last Resort" this attraction is not acted on. Subsequent books focus on the respect and friendship that developed between the two and their continued feelings for Ned Nickerson and Callie Shaw. Several spin-off series were cancelled by Simon and Schuster at the end of 1997, including the series Super Mystery (also called Nancy Drew and the Hardy Boys Super Mystery).
River Heights[]
This series does not feature Nancy Drew beyond a cameo appearance in a couple of books, but is set in her fictional hometown and still written under the Carolyn Keene pseudonym. The series focused on romance and lasted for only 16 titles.[2]
Nancy Drew on Campus[]
The Nancy Drew on Campus series, like The Nancy Drew Files, is targeted at an older teen audience. Nancy and her friends Bess Marvin and George Fayne go to college; the series focused on college life and romance, rather than all solving mysteries.[3][full citation needed]
Nancy Drew, Girl Detective (2004–2012)[]
Nancy Drew, Girl Detective replaced the long-running Nancy Drew mysteries series. This new series is written in first person narration, from Nancy's point of view, and features updated and overhauled versions of the main Nancy Drew characters. In addition, new secondary characters are introduced to populate River Heights and appear over multiple books, adding a framework to Nancy's world.
The drastic changes in the main characters' personalities, and a perception in quality decline, earned the series negative reviews from long-time fans. A switch to trilogies gave even more negative reviews, before low sales forced the series to be cancelled in 2011. In 2013, Nancy Drew, Girl Detective was replaced with the Nancy Drew Diaries series.
Papercutz graphic novels (2005–2010)[]
Beginning in 2005, Papercutz began issuing a new series of Nancy Drew graphic novels as an offshoot of the Girl Detective series. The series is edited by Jim Salicrup, written by Stefan Petrucha, and illustrated by Sho Murase. The manga-style illustrations and technical allusions (Nancy's hybrid car, George's tablet PC) give Nancy and her friends a 21st-century spin.
In 2010, the series was rebooted as Nancy Drew: Girl Detective - The New Case Files. These new novels center around a River Heights that has become obsessed with vampire books. However, the series was cancelled not long after. In 2014, the series began being re-released as an offshoot of the Nancy Drew Diaries series, with two volumes per issue.
Nancy Drew and the Clue Crew (2006–2015)[]
Starting in 2006, Aladdin Paperbacks published a new series to replace the Nancy Drew Notebooks series for younger readers; it exists in the same universe as the Nancy Drew: Girl Detective series. This series ended in 2015 to be replaced by the Nancy Drew Clue Book series.
Nancy Drew and the Clue Crew features Nancy Drew, George Fayne, and Bess Marvin as eight-year-olds in the third grade at River Heights Elementary School, and solving kid sized mysteries, from finding a stolen ice cream formula entry to the culprit who cut the cake before the bride. This series also sets George's mother working her own catering company, and reveals George's real name to be Georgia.
Nancy Drew and the Hardy Boys Super Mystery (2007–2012)[]
Nancy Drew and the Hardy Boys Super Mystery is a crossover spin-off with The Hardy Boys: Undercover Brothers series. The stories are told in first person, alternating chapters, between Frank's, Joe's, and Nancy's perspective. The first title in the series acts as an introduction between the characters in their new universes. This series published one title per year until the end of the Girl Detective and Undercover Brothers series in 2012.
Nancy Drew Diaries (2013–current)[]
This article needs additional citations for verification. (October 2019) |
This series, that began in 2013, is a reboot of the Nancy Drew: Girl Detective series. The series continues to follow Nancy and her friends' cases, with first-person narration by Nancy. The series was created to move away from the trilogy format of Girl Detective (besides for the first two books, all titles are now individual mysteries), make books longer than its predecessor, and have a cover artist. The new series also attempted to fix some of the more criticized aspects of Girl Detective, with arguable success.
This is the first series to be available in three different formats; paperback, hardcover (with dust jacket), and eBooks. When the series was first launched, three new titles were expected to come out per year (with the exception of 2013 and 2015, which produced four new titles), but was later reduced to two titles per year in 2016. The first four titles had an initial printing of 25,000 copies in paperback and 2,500 copies in hardcover; books five through seven had an initial print run of 25,000 in paperback and 5,000 in hardcover; and books eight through eleven had an initial print run of 10,000 in paperback and 5,000 in hardcover. Though Simon and Schuster does not release sales information for these properties, on-line sites like Amazon and Barnes and Noble indicate their sales are lack-luster to poor.
Books 1-4 were released in a box set in November 2013, and a boxed set of the first ten books was released in August 2016. In addition, the first three titles were packaged in a single book in June 2016. Also available are unabridged audio books for CD or downloads, read by Jorjeana Marie.
Artist Erin McGuire has served as the cover artist since the start of the series.
Titles[]
No. | Title | Released | Manuscript | Editor |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Curse of the Arctic Star | February 5, 2013 | Margaret Wright | |
2 | Strangers on a Train | Kekla Magoon | ||
3 | Mystery of the Midnight Rider | May 7, 2013 | ||
4 | Once Upon a Thriller | September 24, 2013 | ||
5 | Sabotage at Willow Woods | January 5, 2014 | ||
6 | Secret at Mystic Lake | May 6, 2014 | ||
7 | The Phantom of Nantucket | September 23, 2014 | Amy Cloud | |
8 | The Magician's Secret | January 20, 2015 | ||
9 | The Clue at Black Creek Farm | May 12, 2015 | ||
10 | A Script for Danger | September 22, 2015 | Ami Boghani[4] | |
11 | The Red Slippers | December 15, 2015 | ||
12 | The Sign in the Smoke | May 10, 2016 | ||
13 | The Ghost of Grey Fox Inn | October 11, 2016 | ||
14 | Riverboat Roulette | January 3, 2017 | ||
15 | The Professor and the Puzzle | August 8, 2017 | ||
16 | The Haunting on Heliotrope Lane | January 2, 2018 | ||
A Nancy Drew Christmas | September 18, 2018 | Reuben Sack | Fiona Simpson | |
17 | Famous Mistakes | January 15, 2019 | ||
18 | The Stolen Show | September 24, 2019[5][6] | Anna Parsons | |
19 | Hidden Pictures | January 14, 2020[7][8] | ||
20 | The Vanishing Statue | June 16, 2020[9] | ||
21 | Danger at the Iron Dragon | January 12, 2021 | ||
22 | A Capitol Crime | May 25, 2021 | ||
23 | The Blue Lady of Coffin Hall | January 4, 2022 | ||
24 | Captain Stone's Revenge | July 12, 2022 |
Notes[]
- Famous Mistakes was initially scheduled to be released in August 2018, though it was later replaced with A Nancy Drew Christmas.[10] It was pushed back to January 2019, and still retained its status as the 17th title in the series.
- A Nancy Drew Christmas in an unnumbered, special-edition book, and was originally available only in eBook or hardcover format. The paperback edition is scheduled to be released in September 2020, two years after the hardcover release. It features a guest appearance of the Hardy Boys.
Nancy Drew Clue Book Series (2015–current)[]
This section does not cite any sources. (February 2019) |
This is a reboot of the Nancy Drew and the Clue Crew series published by Aladdin Paperbacks. This is an interactive series, as readers may write down their clues and predictions. A page before the final chapter has questions the reader can answer regarding suspects, clues, and solutions. The first two titles were published July 7, 2015, in paperback, hardcover, and eBook editions written by Carolyn Keene with covers and internal illustrations by Peter Francis. The first three titles have had an initial print run of 35,000 in paperback and 5,000 in hardcover.
No. | Title | Released |
---|---|---|
1 | Pool Party Puzzler | July 7, 2015 |
2 | Last Lemonade Standing | |
3 | A Star Witness | November 3, 2015 |
4 | Big Top Flop | March 1, 2016 |
5 | Movie Madness | July 12, 2016 |
6 | Pets on Parade | October 18, 2016 |
7 | Candy Kingdom Chaos | March 17, 2017 |
8 | World Record Mystery | October 17, 2017 |
9 | Springtime Crime | March 20, 2018 |
10 | Boo Crew | September 4, 2018 |
11 | The Tortoise and the Scare | March 19, 2019 |
12 | Turkey Trot Plot | September 3, 2019 |
13 | Puppy Love Prank | March 17, 2020 |
14 | The Big Island Burglary | July 28, 2020 |
15 | The Great Goat Gaffe | March 9, 2021 |
16 | Duck Derby Debacle | July 13, 2021 |
17 | Recipe Ruckus | March 8, 2022 |
18 | Bird Bonanza | 2022 |
Other books/resources[]
- (1993)
- (2001)
- (2005)
- (2007)
- (2007)
- (2007)
- (2011)
- (2012)
- The Curse (2020)
References[]
- ^ Finnan, R. W. "The Hardy Boys Unofficial Home Page". Retrieved March 3, 2019.
- ^ Fisher, Jennifer. "Nancy Drew Sleuth". Retrieved 15 March 2009.
- ^ White
- ^ "Books: The Nancy Drew Diaries #10: A Script for Danger (2015)". Ami Boghani.
- ^ "LC Catalog: The stolen show". LOC Catalog. Library of Congress. Retrieved January 1, 2019.
- ^ Keene, Carolyn (2019-09-24). The Stolen Show (Nancy Drew Diaries): Carolyn Keene: Amazon.com: Books. ISBN 978-1534405776.
- ^ "Hidden pictures".
- ^ "Hidden Pictures (Nancy Drew Diaries Book 19)". Amazon. Retrieved June 29, 2019.
- ^ "LC Catalog - No Connections Available".
- ^ Ann (November 16, 2017). "Nancy Drew Diaries #17 Famous Mistakes – Details". Retrieved June 29, 2019.
External links[]
- Burton Smith, Kevin. "The Hardy Boys". Retrieved 16 March 2009.
- Book series introduced in 1930
- Nancy Drew books