The Girl Scout Pioneers; Or, Winning the First B. C. by Lilian Garis
Think Nancy Drew borrowed her hiking boots from this bunch! “The Girl Scout Pioneers” by Lillian Garis isn't your typical detective story filled with dark alleys and suspicious figures. It’s wholesome, clever, and surprisingly suspenseful.
The Story
A brand-new Girl Scout troop is buzzing about earning their first award—the Bronze Cross. Their enthusiasm is real, but reality checks in when the foul play hits: a valuable railroad bond goes missing from Mr. Kimball’s store. Everyone assumes the culprit is Grace, the local baker's daughter, who suddenly grows unpopular with everyone. However, readers quickly sense tension because readers get fairly early peeks from different girls’ opinions.
The key figure among them is a heartfelt girl named Janet Heves, whose natural suspicion and sense of fairness make conflict even richer and deeper. Janet and her troop use their pioneering scouting skills (tying, patrolling, firemaking) to secretly root around who actually walked off with that piece of paper that is seriously important to the community and the bond’s owner’s future stability—simple small-town havoc that, point blank, stays personal.
Why You Should Read It
What hits you hard about this book is the simple idea: trust, and the pains of misjudging someone. Suspicions radiate quickly because one new girl, Eleanor, acts suspicious yet steers everybody's emotions toward helping clear the despised but desperate Grace. Yes, some parts feel very “prairie fiction,” but the pulse being honest? Essential reading for spark talks on honesty vs. easy accusations. Garis probably had fond reflections on how cool it is for girl protagonists to literally rescue adults from a knotty social crisis—because oof, could they pull hard necessary receipts together. Also get pumped for different scenes wherein they literally barricade a small avalanche—surprising moves—again knotting things literally but charming like duct tape saves the day.
Final Verdict
If book flavors like “The boxcar children meet in a town with badges” sounds like exactly your cozy in need, pick up this 1917 standout. Teens—especially history-minded grade 7-to–early highscool readers who also appreciate amateur detection—and adults trapped into nostalgic YA cycles must treasure it like camping tin pans. No high horses. Garis writes like she knows something sweet but spine—life is often a plot better untied with girlhood help.
The copyright for this book has expired, making it public property. It serves as a testament to our shared literary heritage.
Kimberly Williams
1 month agoThis was exactly the kind of deep dive I was searching for, the historical context mentioned in the early chapters is quite enlightening. I'll be citing this in my upcoming project.