Nick Carter Stories No. 159, September 25, 1915: Driven from cover; or, Nick…
Let's dive into the world of Nick Carter, a detective so famous in his day he makes some of our modern heroes look like amateurs. This story, originally a dime novel from 1915, throws us right into the action.
The Story
Nick Carter gets a call about a wave of incredibly clever forgeries hitting Wall Street. These fake bonds are so good, they're threatening to shake public trust. Nick's investigation leads him to a ruthless criminal mastermind known only by his alias. This guy isn't hiding in a lair; he's operating from the crowded, chaotic streets, using a network of homeless newsboys and bootblacks to pass the counterfeit notes. He's literally using children as his cover and his messengers. Nick and his trusted assistant, Chick, have to navigate the bustling tenements and shadowy alleyways of Lower Manhattan, piecing together clues while trying to protect the kids being exploited. It's a tense game of cat and mouse where every move could endanger an innocent life.
Why You Should Read It
Forget the idea that old stories are slow. This thing moves. The plot is straightforward—catch the bad guy—but it's packed with smart deductions and narrow escapes that are genuinely fun. What really got me, though, was the heart. Nick Carter isn't a cold, calculating machine. His drive to protect those kids adds a real moral weight to the chase. Reading it is like a time machine trip to a pre-skyscraper New York, full of horse-drawn carriages and street-corner slang. You get the thrill of the mystery plus a fascinating slice of social history.
Final Verdict
This is a perfect pick for anyone who loves the roots of the detective genre. It's for readers who enjoy a clean, action-driven mystery without 500 pages of backstory. History buffs will love the authentic early-1900s atmosphere, and fans of characters like Sherlock Holmes will see where a lot of that clever, deductive energy started. It's a short, satisfying adventure that proves a good story, with a clever plot and a heroic heart, never really gets old.
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Steven Walker
1 year agoThe layout is very easy on the eyes.
Aiden Johnson
1 year agoPerfect.
Dorothy Nguyen
1 year agoAfter finishing this book, the content flows smoothly from one chapter to the next. I would gladly recommend this title.