The Dark Deception

At this point, I’m less than a month away from my cancer surgery and I’m deep in the throes of getting pre-operative clearance from my primary care doctor and cardiologist. As a result, it feels like I’m spending a lot of time in waiting rooms, either waiting for doctor’s appointments, or for tests. To me, the best way to spend that kind of time is with a good book. To distract myself from dwelling too long and hard on the forthcoming surgery, I picked a fun book based on one of my favorite childhood cartoons. It helps that this particular book was the sequel to one I read recently and truly enjoyed. The book I read was The Dark Deception, which is the second book in the Daphne and Velma young adult series. The author was Morgan Baden, who I’m pretty certain also authored book 1, The Vanishing Girl. The first book’s author was listed as Josephine Ruby, which seems like it must have been a pen-name picked to honor Scooby-Doo co-creator Joe Ruby.

At the end of The Vanishing Girl, Daphne’s friend Marcy suggests that Shaggy Rogers is hiding a deep, dark secret. The Dark Deception opens with Daphne and Velma trailing Shaggy, trying to figure out what that secret actually is. Just as they begin to get their first clues, a batch of crystals suddenly wash up on Crystal Cove’s beach. The town has a history of disappearances being tied to a mysterious crystal. That same crystal happens to be in the possession of Shaggy’s father, who is descended from the original settlers. The town also has a long history of paranormal occurrences, or at least occurrences the populace attribute to paranormal causes. One of the old paranormal stories involved a mysterious figure known as the Lady Vampire of the Bay and people have begun to see her lurking around town. Daphne and Velma begin to think the crystals must somehow be tied to whatever secret Shaggy is keeping. What’s more, Daphne now has a summer job as an intern for Crystal Cove’s newspaper and her boss has her out looking for clues to whatever is going on with the mysterious crystals.

As Daphne and Velma investigate the case, they discover several red herrings. They also have to navigate some real teen challenges such as attractive peers who might make potential romantic partners, challenging friendships, relationships with parents, and building an honest yet positive self-image. Over the years I’ve known numerous people who have wondered why Velma didn’t just get contacts when she was so blind without her glasses. The book does a nice job of allowing Velma to experiment with contacts only to discover they aren’t for her. I was glad to see the journey since it echoed elements of my own experiments with contact lenses several years ago. As I’ve indicated, Shaggy is a much more integral part of this novel and we can see the core group of “meddling kids” starting to bond as a unit. Fred still largely exists as a side character, but he takes a more important role here in the second book. Scooby still acts more like a real dog than a talking cartoon dog, but it works in this novel-length exploration of the characters. The Dark Deception is published by Scholastic Books and is available wherever fine books and ebooks are sold.

As I mentioned in my look back at The 13 Ghosts of Scooby-Doo, I thought one of the missed opportunities of the various Scooby-Doo series was to show how dangerous real criminals could be compared to the ghosts and monsters they pretended to be. The Dark Deception gave us a taste of that and did show how a desperate human might actually be scarier than any ghost or vampire. My Scarlet Order Vampire novels also look at how humans motivated by greed and power can sometimes be scarier than so-called monsters. You can learn more about those novels by visiting http://davidleesummers.com/books.html#scarlet_order.

The Vanishing Girl

After last week’s dive into Edgar Cantero’s Meddling Kids and revisiting the comic Scooby Apocalypse, I decided to investigate what other Scooby-Doo media existed. Of course, I’ve known about the movies and TV series which are available in a variety of formats, and I’ve known many books exist for younger children, but I was curious if more had been done. I was pleased to discover a young adult novel series published by Scholastic under the series header Daphne and Velma. The first novel in the series is The Vanishing Girl, by Josephine Ruby.

The novel introduces us to high school students Daphne Blake and Velma Dinkley, who had been close friends as children when they spent many afternoons with Fred Jones, Shaggy Rogers, and Scooby-Doo playing at being detectives. However, as time passed, the friends went their separate way. Daphne fell into the “cool crowd” while Velma became a loner who is working for Crystal Cove’s theme park, celebrating the town’s haunted past. One morning, Velma comes into work and is doing her rounds only to discover her distant cousin and Daphne’s current best friend, Marcy Heller, locked in the old west Sheriff office’s jail cell. Marcy claims a ghost locked her in. Whether that’s true or not, the park’s owner blames Velma’s mom, who was the night manager, for not making sure everything was locked up at night. With her mom’s job on the line, Velma wants to find out what really happened. As she begins her investigations, Marcy starts evading Daphne and ultimately disappears completely! Now Daphne wants to find out what happened to her friend, which causes her path to cross with Velma’s. If the two want to find out what really happened, they’ll have to reconcile their differences and heal their friendship in order to work together.

The Vanishing Girl turned out to be a pretty dandy young adult mystery. We get enough clues that we’re able to solve the mystery alongside Daphne and Velma. Yes, I did figure it out before they did, but as a reader, I got to see all their clues as they found them, plus part of the plot is them dealing with preconceptions both about who they felt must be the culprit and who they had already eliminated. On top of that, part of the story is learning how the rift developed in their relationship and how they heal that rift. As someone who had been a teen and as someone who recently watched his kids go through their teen years, the emotions felt genuine.

Telling the story in prose allowed the author to explore the world of Scooby-Doo more deeply than even the movies have to date. Of course, Scooby’s world has been explored by many creative teams over the decades and there has been little consistency about the gang’s backstory, their parents, and even their hometown. Still, the author found a nice balance between their world as portrayed in A Pup called Scooby-Doo, What’s New Scooby-Doo?, and Scooby-Doo: Mystery Incorporated. As I read, I thought I might not make the same choices for what to use and and what not to use as the author did, but I did feel the author made valid choices.

Over the course of the novel, we also meet series regulars Fred Jones, Shaggy Rogers, and Scooby-Doo along with supporting characters like the Hex Girls. In fact, Shaggy and Scooby prove to be major supporting characters. The author made an interesting choice to not allow Scooby to use human words. He only barks and whines as a real dog would. I rather liked this since it helped me suspend my disbelief for this more in-depth mystery novel. What’s more, there have been multiple points in the series and movies where it’s implied that only the Mystery Inc. gang actually understand Scooby. Those of us who’ve lived with dogs and cats do begin to understand their language after awhile.

Fortunately, there are two more novels in the Daphne and Velma series and I plan to dive in as soon as I can. I really enjoyed spending time in this version of Crystal Cove and felt like I got to know these old friends a little better. Reading these made me wish that Warner Brothers would actually develop a Scooby novel series for adult fans like me and my kids who all grew up with these characters. In fact, great movies like Scooby-Doo on Zombie Island and comics like Scooby Apocalypse showed us that stories with the gang as adults do work.

In the meantime, I’m busy creating stories about my own characters exploring spooky mysteries. One good choice is my novel The Astronomer’s Crypt. You can learn more and see a video trailer at: http://davidleesummers.com/Astronomers-Crypt.html