The Mad Scientists' Club

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The Mad Scientists' Club is a series of four books written for children by Bertrand R. Brinley (1917 – 1994) and illustrated by Charles Geer. They are:

  • The Mad Scientists' Club (1965, 2001) [1] consisting of:
    • "The Strange Sea Monster of Strawberry Lake" (1960), first published in Boys' Life (September 1961)
    • "The Big Egg" (1964)
    • "The Secret of the Old Cannon" (1963), first published in Boy's Life (1966)
    • "The Unidentified Flying Man of Mammoth Falls" (1962), first published in Boy's Life (November 1962)
    • "The Great Gas Bag Race" (1964), first published in Boy's Life (1966)
    • "The Voice in the Chimney" (1964)
    • "Night Rescue" (1961), first published in Boy's Life (February 1964)
  • The New Adventures of the Mad Scientists' Club (1968, 2002) [1] consisting of:
    • "Big Chief Rainmaker" (1965)
    • "The Telltale Transmitter" (1966)
    • "The Cool Cavern" (1966)
    • "The Flying Sorcerer" (1968)
    • "The Great Confrontation" (1968)
  • The Big Kerplop; A Mad Scientists' Club Adventure (1974, 2003) [1]
  • The Big Chunk of Ice (2005) [1]

The title of The Big Kerplop was supposed to be The Big Kerplop!, but the original publisher, MacRae Smith Company, dropped the exclamation mark. Even though it was written 14 years after the "The Strange Sea Monster of Strawberry Lake", chronologically it is the first story in the series, telling how the Mad Scientists' Club came into being.

During the course of the books, the boys often use technology (such as ham radios) and science to pull off harebrained schemes. For example, in "The Strange Sea Monster of Strawberry Lake," they build a fake sea monster out of chicken wire mounted to a rowboat, and row it out on Strawberry Lake. When it gets too dangerous to take the boat out on the lake themselves because hunters are preparing to shoot it with an elephant gun, they hook up a remote control system.

Living in the fictional small town of Mammoth Falls, the members of the Mad Scientists' Club are seven propeller head boys:

  • Jeff Crocker, President
  • Henry Mulligan, Vice President and Chief of Research
  • Dinky Poore
  • Freddy Muldoon
  • Homer Snodgrass
  • Mortimer Dalrymple
  • Charlie Finckledinck, the narrator of the stories

Dinky Poore is the smallest (and most sarcastic) of the Mad Scientists; this is sometimes relevant to the stories, as in "The Great Gas Bag Race", in which the boys prepare to compete in a hot-air balloon race without deciding which two Mad Scientists will have the honor of crewing the balloon; since Dinky weighs less than anyone else in the club, he is the only one who is certain of being chosen.


The Mad Scientists began as a series of short stories in Boys' Life magazine, the official youth magazine of the Boy Scouts of America. They were later collected into two volumes, The Mad Scientists' Club and The New Adventures of the Mad Scientists' Club, originally published by the MacRae Smith Company of Philadelphia. Only about 1000 copies of the first novel, The Big Kerplop!, were published before MacRae Smith went bankrupt, so it is not well known.

Sheridan Brinley, the son of the author, authorized Purple House Press to reprint these books starting in 2001. The new edition of The Big Kerplop! was released in 2003 (with the exclamation point included), which includes all new interior illustrations by Geer. It is the only MSC title without interior drawings since Macrae Smith never commissioned them. [1] On November 17, 2005 they released the final one, the previously unpublished second novel titled The Big Chunk of Ice, which has been newly illustrated by Geer.

A two-part episode in 1971 of the TV series Wonderful World of Disney was loosely based on "The Strange Sea Monster of Strawberry Lake". It was titled "The Strange Monster of Strawberry Cove" and starred Burgess Meredith. It would be repeated a few times, but doesn't seem to be available on DVD or Video.

[edit] Trivia

  • West Newbury, Massachusetts, provided the inspiration for the geography and some of the characters in the Mad Scientists' Club adventures.
  • Narrator Charlie Finckledinck didn't have a last name until The Big Kerplop!

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c d e The Mad Scientists' Club series. PurpleHousePress.com. Retrieved on 2007-05-26.

[edit] External links

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