Read The Boxcar Children Mysteries: Books One through Twelve Online
Authors: Gertrude Chandler Warner
Watch wagged his tail a little. He sat down.
“She’s just a baby dog, Watch,” said Jessie. “You be good, now.”
“Do you want to hold the puppy, Aunt Jane?” asked Henry.
He put the little dog in her arms. Watch didn’t like this. He sat and looked at the stranger.
Aunt Jane loved it. Anyone could see that. The puppy loved her, too. It lay down against her arm and shut its eyes.
“Lady is tired,” said Henry. “She goes to sleep whenever she can.”
Aunt Jane sat very still. She held the baby dog quietly. She was very pleased when it went to sleep.
Watch lay down again, beside Jessie, as if to say, “Well, I don’t care. After all, I’m Jessie’s dog.”
Grandfather looked at his family and his friends. He loved every one of his grandchildren. He was very happy now that he had a sister again.
Grandfather said to Mr. Carter, “This is a very happy day for me. You can see what fine grandchildren I have.”
“You certainly do, Mr. Alden.”
“Now we will all be happy next year,” he went on. “The children will go back to school. Sam and Annie can move into this house. Maggie can stay happily with Jane. And best of all, I have a sister again.”
But Aunt Jane shook her head and said, with tears in her eyes, “No, James. Best of all, I have a brother.”
The Alden children just looked at one another. They were too happy to say a word.
G
ERTRUDE
C
HANDLER
W
ARNER
discovered when she was teaching that many readers who like an exciting story could find no books that were both easy and fun to read. She decided to try to meet this need, and her first book,
The Boxcar Children,
quickly proved she had succeeded.
Miss Warner drew on her own experiences to write the mystery. As a child she spent hours watching trains go by on the tracks opposite her family home. She often dreamed about what it would be like to set up housekeeping in a caboose or freight car—the situation the Alden children find themselves in.
When Miss Warner received requests for more adventures involving Henry, Jessie, Violet, and Benny Alden, she began additional stories. In each, she chose a special setting and introduced unusual or eccentric characters who liked the unpredictable.
While the mystery element is central to each of Miss Warner’s books, she never thought of them as strictly juvenile mysteries. She liked to stress the Aldens’ independence and resourcefulness and their solid New England devotion to using up and making do. The Aldens go about most of their adventures with as little adult supervision as possible—something else that delights young readers.
Miss Warner lived in Putnam, Connecticut, until her death in 1979. During her lifetime, she received hundreds of letters from girls and boys telling her how much they liked her book. And so she continued the Aldens’ adventures, writing a total of nineteen books in the Boxcar Children series.
The Boxcar Children Mysteries
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