I started reading this one because I noticed a name of one of the characters in Season 2 of the Hardy Boys on Hulu was in this story. Well, there is a whole lot more than just one character name. Having not watched the entire series yet, I can't answer as to how well the two ...
From Quiz Laurel & Hardy - A Tribute to the Boys Answer: Sons of the Desert Stan and Ollie want to go their convention but Mrs. Hardy won't let Ollie go. Stan has more luck with his wife, but Ollie needed a plan. He pretends to be ill, and Stan arranges for a doctor to come ...
The Hardy Boys - The Hidden Theft is a video game based on the popular book series by Franklin W. Dixon. Developed by X Company, it offers players an opportunity to step into the shoes of the famous teenage detectives, Frank and Joe Hardy.
Primary Name The Hardy Boys: Treasure on the Tracks Alternate Names Platform Nintendo DS Genre Adventure Theme Crime Franchise Nancy Drew Series The Hardy Boys Mode Single-Player Minimum Players 1 Maximum Players 1 Release Date 2009-09-01 Developer DreamCatcher Interactive SEGA ...
As Andrew Norman has pointed out: "Emma felt the same way as Hardy's fictitious character Sue Bridehead, who confessed that the idea of falling in love held a greater attraction for her than the experience of love itself; that Emma, like Sue, derived a perverse pleasure from seeing her ...
and had a lofty contempt for men in general and boys in particular." The rewritten "Missing Chums" -- No. 4 in the rereleased series -- lacks not only that description of her character, but also most examples of it. Aunt Gertrude is reduced to making occasional remarks, almost invariably...
"It is strange, Jude, that these preternaturally old boys almost always come from new countries. But what were you christened?" "I never was." "Why was that?" "Because, if I died in damnation, 'twould save the expense of a Christian funeral." "Oh—your name is not Jude...
Hardy also uses this stanza to introduce the character of Tranter Sweatley. He describes him as "a man of no account," highlighting his poverty and low social status. Despite this, Hardy shows sympathy for Sweatley and his plight, describing how he "stood in the crowd, as aloof as one ...
He used, too, to hold the money-plate at Let Your Light so Shine, and stand godfather to poor little come-by-chance children; and he kept a missionary box upon his table to nab folks unawares when they called; yes, and he would box the charity-boys' ears, if they laughed in ...
when he crossed a tributary of the Stour, and reached Leddenton—a little town of three or four thousand inhabitants—where he went on to the boys' school, and knocked at the door of the master's residence. A boy pupil-teacher opened it, and to Phillotson's inquiry if Mr. Gillingh...