Quicksilver Sue by Laura Elizabeth Howe Richards
I have to tell you about this charming little gem I found on a rainy afternoon—Quicksilver Sue by Laura Elizabeth Howe Richards. It’s like stumbling across an old photograph and suddenly feeling the whole story come to life.
The Story
In a sleepy Massachusetts village, Sue Harden turns up at the doorstep of the Dolan family like a whirlwind. She’s not just fast—she lives everything at top speed: running, climbing, talking. Nobody knows much about her, except that her father has disappeared off somewhere “out West,” and a fortune-teller named Madame Lunganee is trailing behind, full of dire predictions about a silver heirloom that Sue carries. At first it’s just fun and games—daring tree-climbing with the neighbor kids, cheeky pranks on grumpy town folks. Then, little by little, you start noticing odd details: creepy hidden rooms in the “Old Rinkle House,” a cash reward for information about a mysterious girl, and how even the adults seem nervous when you mention Sue’s name. Without meaning to, the gang of friends—Sue, Paul, and Polly—gets tangled in a real, grown-up mystery about stolen property, an overbearing villain, and maybe some kind of justice that feels a hundred years old.
Why You Should Read It
First, there’s something pure about this book. It doesn’t hit you over the head with modern themes; instead, it gently opens a world where courage and friendship are the only real tools you need. I fell in love with the way Richards writes—scenes feel as if you’re sitting on a fence, swinging your legs, smelling the grass and dust. Sue herself is a wonderful bother, reckless, loyal, a little annoying on purpose. She makes you both want to roll your eyes and grin. But what got me weirdly emotional is how the story handles loneliness. Under all the zooming and zipping, Sue is really looking for someone to be home—some person or place that says “Stay.” And every kid who’s felt a bit like a racing wind no one can catch will get that. Good, early American kid-lit, and honest feelings layered into a fun mystery—that’s a hard combo to beat.
Final Verdict
This is perfect for readers aged 9 to 12 (or grown-ups who love a sweet escape), especially if you enjoy old-fashioned adventures like The Secret Garden meets a rustic village caper. The vocabulary is straightforward—probably tuned for a fourth or fifth grade reading level—but the emotions are genuine enough that it should absolutely tuck into a sick-day shelf or unroll on a summer porch. Anyone nostalgic for times when adventures had curfews and bike-bells? Yep, this one’s for you.
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