Mystery Of The Burnt Cottage - Kindle edition by Enid Blyton. Download it once and read it on your Kindle device, PC, phones or tablets. Use features like bookmarks, note taking and highlighting while reading Mystery Of The Burnt Cottage. Board index ‹ Enid Blyton. The Mystery Of The Burnt Cottage The Mystery Of Tally-Ho Cottage The Mystery Of The Missing Man' A kind heart always brings its own reward,' said Mrs. The Christmas Tree Aeroplane - Society Member. But not one I had imagined as a young reader!). The Mystery of the Burnt Cottage (Mysteries) [Enid Blyton] on Amazon.com. *FREE* shipping on qualifying offers. A fantastic children's crime story from the world's best-loved children's author, Enid Blyton. Who could have set fire to Mr Hick's Cottage? There are plenty of suspects: the cook.
Author | Enid Blyton |
---|---|
Illustrator | Joseph Abbey |
Series | The Five Find-Outers |
Published | 1943 |
Publisher | Methuen |
Media type |
The Mystery of the Burnt Cottage is the first in the series of children's novels the Five Find-Outers by Enid Blyton. It was first published in 1943 and continues to be frequently reissued.[1]
The novel centres on the mystery of who could have set fire to Mr Hick’s cottage. Los angeles city map with zip codes. The five children, Larry and Daisy Daykin, Pip and Bets Hilton, and newcomer Frederick Algernon Trotteville (later nicknamed Fatty from his initials), meet at the scene of the fire and end up solving the mystery together.
Their suspects include an old tramp, a dismissed servant, a hostile colleague, and the cook. They find certain clues: Broken-down nettles in a ditch, a footprint in a grassy field, and planes (which Mr. Hick mentions 'flew over' the other day).
The children realise that as Mr Hick claims to have been in the London train when the cottage was burnt, but by his own report he saw the planes which flew over the village at the same time, he is contradicting himself. Fatty finds out that the cottage and the burnt papers Mr Hick describes as 'most important' were insured. The children deduce that Mr Hick burnt his own cottage for the insurance money. The book also introduces Inspector Jenks, who turns out to help the children and becomes a good friend of theirs.