The Mystery of Banshee Towers explained

The Mystery of Banshee Towers
Author:Enid Blyton
Illustrator:Jenny Chapple
Country:United Kingdom
Language:English
Series:The Five Find-Outers
Genre:Children's novel
Publisher:Methuen
Pub Date:1961
Preceded By:The Mystery of the Strange Messages

The Mystery of Banshee Towers by Enid Blyton is the last children's mystery novel in a series of fifteen known collectively as The Five Find-Outers and Dog. The series ran for eighteen years, from 1943 to 1961.[1]

Plot summary

During a school holiday, the children are told by their parents to spend their time visiting sites in the surrounding countryside, rather than searching for mysteries in the village. The children visit an old stately home, Banshee Towers, which is exhibiting famous sea paintings, which Ern and Bets love. The Towers are reputedly haunted and wailing noises are driving visitors away. On a subsequent visit, Ern spots that a small boat he admired on the painting is missing. On pointing this out to the owner, the children unwittingly place themselves in danger. After investigating, they discover the owner of the Towers has been conspiring with an art forger and a second member of staff to replace the collection with copies and sell the originals. The novel ends with Fatty saying they will have many more mysteries to solve.

This book is a standalone in that the Five Find Outers enter a cave and a secret passage for the first time in their history, more resembling the Famous Five. The mystery is not divided up by assigning investigative tasks to each of the five children as was normally the case, and Fatty more or less solves this one on his own.

Characters

The Five Find-Outers and the Dog

The Police Force

The "Jolly Bad Lot" persons

External links

Notes and References

  1. Reprinted by London, Egmont in 2003