Vee’s logical, honest character is wonderfully balanced by
Darleen’s creative, theatrical talents to make them a charming pair. The two
teenage girls are the closest of friends and can easily be imagined as sisters.
Vee has a great deal of trouble lying, even lies of omission, so it’s amusing
to watch how she phrases sentences in order to maintain her moral standards. The
author often shares the mental struggles waged inside her head. Darleen must
watch her own words lest she let Vee’s true identity slip to strangers. The
whole country is enamored by a series of movies that speculate on the
adventures of Vee’s life since she disappeared from her wealthy, public life
due to unscrupulous characters.
The world of early film-making is explored as the girls
experience the complicated issues surrounding the industry. The setting is in early-1900’s
America when all of the movies were silent but still extremely popular. The
book’s closing pages of this historical fiction confirm some of the characters were
actual people or were based on real people. Much of the technology shared in
the narrative is historically accurate too. The later parts of the book address
the societal impact of movies as Vee begins to realize they can affect viewers’
knowledge and feelings toward the world. Films can give people distorted or
misleading perceptions of the world so don’t filmmakers have a responsibility
to be accurate in what they create? Vee struggles with this problem and her
frustrations and emotions aren’t readily accepted by those involved in movie
production.
The author includes two main mysteries in the plot that
involve a secret that her father is sure will make the family money and items
found inside another train passenger’s briefcase become a major conflict. The
father’s secret is intriguing because he won’t share any information with the
girls so readers are left to wonder what it might be. It supposedly has the
potential to change how movies are made. The stranger’s briefcase becomes the
bigger story when the girls discover three small cylinders with etchings in
them. Rumors of train thieves insert ideas into readers’ minds to create
nefarious scenarios. Vee and Darleen aren’t sure what to do with what they find
and the problem follows them all the way to Hollywood. The truth behind the
cylinders drives the plot although most of the characters find a rich woman’s
plans for them a bit odd.
What didn’t work as well:
There are glimpses into what’s happened in the first book but I
still feel like I want to know more. Some unscrupulous “relatives” tried to
take custody of Vee and her inheritance after her grandmother passed away. This
issue remerges so some additional information will help readers fully
appreciate what’s going on. A quick solution is to read the first book Daring Darleen, Queen of the Screen.
The final verdict:
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