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American Girl Mysteries

Clues in the Shadows: A Molly Mystery

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Molly still does her her patriotic duty to help America win World War Two, but in the spring of 1945 she's weary and troubled. Dad is home safe . . . but he seems different now. Her favorite Red Cross leader abruptly quits. Her archrival, Ronnie Vanko, is driving her crazy. And now someone is sneaking into the backyard shed and messing with the scrap she's collecting for the latest wartime drive. Who is the Ronnie, her own brother Ricky--or a prowler she spied in the night?

This book includes a richly illustrated "Peak Into The Past" essay.

179 pages, Hardcover

First published February 1, 2009

11 people are currently reading
437 people want to read

About the author

Kathleen Ernst

57 books379 followers
I grew up in Maryland, in a house full of books! Both of my parents were avid readers, thank goodness. Before we traveled to a new area, my librarian-mom used to bring home historical novels set in that place. It was a great way to get excited about history.

I began writing stories when I was maybe 10 or 11. At 15 I wrote my first novel; I sold my first novel to a publisher 20 years later! Writing was my hobby, so during those two decades I just kept practicing, reading, writing some more. What a thrill to finally hold my first book in my hand! Still, I write because I enjoy the process (at least most of the time).

For years I wrote while working at other day jobs. I spent 12 years working at a huge historic site, which was a perfect spot for someone interested in historical fiction. I also developed and scripted instructional videos for public television. Finally, though, it got to be too much to juggle. I now write full-time, and consider myself enormously fortunate to do something I love.

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113 (23%)
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Displaying 1 - 30 of 35 reviews
Profile Image for Bailey Marissa.
1,165 reviews61 followers
April 15, 2017
A very good story about Molly after the series that touches on the hardships that soldiers (and their families) had coming home from WW2.

Side note 1: (As a student studying psychology) Even though this wasn't the main point, I really liked the undertone of how the person with PTSD (or any mental illness, really) and their support system need to be on the same page when it comes to their action plans for going forward with life.

Side note 2: (As a reader) If you're an author/writer and your MS has miscomunication as a plot device, please change it ASAP. It's not good, and frankly, kind of annoying.

Recommended 10+ for mentions of war and PTSD, and violence
Profile Image for Kathleen.
628 reviews6 followers
October 22, 2011
The American Girls books never cease to amaze me. This mystery - which takes place after the initial Molly books and is for older readers - digs into post-traumatic stress syndrome (known as "battle fatigue" in Molly's WWII era), the emotional and financial struggles faced by families of MIAs, and the usual friendship dramas. It was *excellent* and prompted some incredible conversations with Tessa.
Profile Image for Sarah.
555 reviews3 followers
March 20, 2022
Ernst does an excellent job dealing with many difficult topics in this AG companion mystery.

Molly is, for me, once again incredibly relatable. As a ten-year-old, she has to navigate the complicated feelings of war fatigue, of being asked to continue to give when you feel like you have already given so much and are ready to feel hopeful again. (Hits home when you look at the situations going on in the world currently.)

There are also moments when you see how Molly has grown over the series and is more capable of showing compassion and kindness to others.

Plus, Ernst remembered Bennett, the dog that Valerie Tripp gave her in Book 4 and then just forgot about in the rest of the series. So, kudos for that.
1,902 reviews
March 13, 2009
I liked this Molly Mystery. It deals with post-traumatic stress disorder and the constant drives kids were asked to participate in. It takes place after Molly's dad is home, so that was cool. All in all, a good Molly book.
Profile Image for Shayla Salazar.
164 reviews1 follower
October 23, 2025
I am so glad we got a focus on the effects of the war and that commentary of how it didn’t end when people came home
Profile Image for Panda Incognito.
4,662 reviews95 followers
August 4, 2020
When this book came out in 2009, I thought that it was very disappointing, and since this was the final Molly book ever released (until the reboot choose-your-own-adventure novel), I always thought that this was a shame. However, even though the mystery is extremely lackluster, I enjoyed this as a novel while rereading it in my current stage of life.

If I was looking for an exciting mystery, I would still give this a low rating, but focusing on the family and small town elements gives me a different perspective. This book reflects a variety of different issues from the time, such as V-E Day, women losing their jobs as troops came home, soldiers recovering in local hospitals, people struggling with PTSD, the ongoing focus on scrap drives, the fatigue that people felt from their home front efforts, the financial and emotional effects of a father being MIA, and the shift to the focus on the Pacific Theater, etc.

This book tries to do too much, and is crammed with so many different historical details and transitions that it cannot fully do any of them justice. However, it is still very educational, and gives an honest look at what life was like for many different Americans in the spring of 1945. The book's best element is the focus on Molly's relationship with her father, and on how different things are now that he is home. This is the only book that explores their relationship after the war, and I am glad to own a copy now for that alone.

This book teaches a lot about PTSD, and even though the author shows how wonderful it was for Molly's family to be reunited, she also engages with the difficult aspects of this transition, and the readjustments that the family had to go through while welcoming him home. This book gives a very authentic portrayal of the different pressures, griefs, and joys that the family experienced, with a focus on Molly's desire to connect with her father on a prewar level instead of feeling shut out because of experiences that he won't talk about.

I appreciate this book at a deeper level now that I have studied WWII in such depth. This is a very realistic, honest story, and even though I found it disappointing when I was younger, I appreciate the emotional texture and historical detail so much now that I am willing to overlook the story's faults. Also, this book introduced me to the concept of how often men would take up knitting when they came home from the war, since it was a soothing activity that gave them something to do with their hands. Every time I read about that in another book, I pictured Molly's dad, and I'm glad that this story made such an impression on me and taught me so much even when I thought that it was only a two-star story.
Profile Image for Laura.
918 reviews
August 16, 2018
I read this book in an entire night and I LOVED it! The mystery was good too, better than what I expected from a childrens' mystery book. Molly is such a lovable character and I love anything set during WWII! A must-read!
Profile Image for Katie.
468 reviews50 followers
December 12, 2023
The great American Girl marathon has finally gotten to the last three mysteries.

There's a lot going on here, from a new neighborhood nemesis to Junior Red Cross work, plus the possibility that someone is sneaking around after dark. Molly, our schemer and dreamer, is determined to find out who and why.

But perhaps the most exciting thing about this book is that DAD'S HOME! This is the only one of Molly’s mysteries that takes place after her core series, which is unusual. We get to see the family still adjusting to having Dad back, and they’re all finding each other a little changed. Perhaps not surprisingly, Dad’s working through some PTSD, which he refers to as “battle fatigue” and Mom has the kids kind of tiptoeing around so they don’t disturb him. I love the moment where honesty finally enters the chat and Dad says he misses the way their house always used to be full of noisy kids, and his children are just like AHHHH but Mom’s made us be so quiet JUST FOR YOU.

We're now in spring 1945, so the war is coming to an end. We get to experience VE Day with Molly, and she starts to hear conversations about women getting fired from factories and other war work so the returning soldiers can have those jobs.

Other elements feel less fresh. The kids get involved in a big paper drive, which feels like a re-tread of the Lend-a-Hand project from Lesson. We also spend time with hospital patients, not unlike The Light in the Cellar.

The mystery elements here are things that do seem spooky or suspicious, but turn out to have a totally benign explanation. Some are cases where adults just don’t feel they need to explain themselves to a bunch of ten-year-olds… so the ten-year-olds decide to investigate. And some are cases where it would be easy to let your imagination run away with you — like having all street lights and porch lights off after a certain time. In that respect, more realistic than a whole lot of AG mysteries, if that's important to you.

This is a middle of the pack AG mystery. It’s fine, but if you’re just going to read one Molly mystery, go for Light in the Cellar.

More Molly babble

Meet Molly | Molly Learns a Lesson | Molly’s Surprise | Happy Birthday, Molly | Molly Saves the Day | Changes for Molly

Brave Emily

Molly Takes Flight | Molly and the Movie Star | Molly’s A+ Partner

A Spy on the Home Front | The Light in the Cellar
Profile Image for Brenna.
238 reviews
August 28, 2024
After finishing the Molly Story Collection, my son wanted to read this one as our next read aloud as he recognized Molly on the cover. He picked this up along with the Molly's Short Story Collection and I really though he'd rather read the other one since it had pictures. Nope, he picked this one first and was totally fine with no pictures (though still asked once in a while if I saw a picture that he might have missed). I've never read one of the American Girl mystery books as these came out LONG after I aged out of AG. But I honestly can say I really liked this book. It was a nice, cozy little mystery book.
Profile Image for Erin Anne.
119 reviews2 followers
August 13, 2020
My 9 year old and I read this book aloud together. We've read all the Molly books and enjoyed continuing the series. The book peaked further into life in the midwest during World War 2, and addressed topics of conversation including women in the workforce, veteran's mental health (battle fatigue/PTSD), and the importance of fully understanding another's situation before judging or labeling them/their actions.
Profile Image for Brittany.
35 reviews
August 21, 2022
This book was so good! I love that it talked about battle fatigue or PTSD in a way to help young readers understand mental health & mental illness, especially for returning solders & veterans. I also love the twist about Mrs Petrosky & the lesson learned from her story. And of course pride in your country, being compassionate, and showing even kids can make a difference. Very good book!
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Little Seal.
216 reviews8 followers
September 6, 2025
This is easily my favorite Molly book. While all AG books talk about history and give insight to how life was during the era, there was just something deeply special about this one talking about the hardships of folks who experienced mental health issues coming out of the war.
Profile Image for Kristin .
16 reviews1 follower
January 29, 2024
Good story and well-written

This is a great story with historical references. Middle grade age will enjoy and learn reading it. Adults will too.
Profile Image for Meghan.
620 reviews30 followers
February 12, 2024
Molly does a lot of meddling in the affairs of adults suffering from PTSD, and the timeline of the story feels rushed.
Profile Image for Meghan Keen.
34 reviews
June 13, 2024
I really enjoyed the plot. The ending was unexpected and I would read it again
Profile Image for Emily Karapcik.
33 reviews
August 24, 2024
I used to really enjoy reading the American Girl series it was well written , I was always impressed by the illustrations they did a good job drawing it .
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for S. J..
328 reviews54 followers
August 27, 2013
First I have to say, Molly was my first American Girl doll and has remained my favorite. I loved her as a character, her time period, and her stories. She is the one that rang more...real to me then many of the other girls. I read one review that says she wavers between peppy and self-centeredness and I kind of agree...most kids do. What I loved about Molly is that her world was turned upside down and she genuinely wanted to give what aid she could to end the war but she was still a kid. Her childhood was changed but not completely damaged. She still acted like a child at times, she still went through basic growing up, but she also, like children touched by such circumstances, wanted to be involved, wanted to help, wanted to do her part. I loved this, even then, because she was the one I could identify with. She wasn't perfect...I didn't want her to be.

So, yes, I had to pick this up when I learned they were doing mysteries of the various American Girls. The fact that this is set for an older age of reader and is a mystery (which I love) made it even better. I also loved the fact that we actually got to see her dad, always a presence in the books though he was over in Europe for the series. He returned at the very end of the last Molly book and I always hated that we never got to know him the way we did others in the series. We get to know him now and he is handled very well. The man they love is there, but he is different; changed as they have been changed by the war. Molly struggles with this as she also struggles with a weariness of the war (something she shares with many others at the time). Experiencing VE day with her, learning about the scars both seen and unseen that many soldiers would carry beyond the war, and seeing the conclusion of some women working outside the home through her eyes was well written and made me love the character even more.

This is well handled book and actually a not bad mystery. She's no Agatha Christie detective, there is no murder or anything major in that respect, but it is a very believable mystery for a young girl to become interested in and she solves it fairly well. It is a technically superb mystery, set up and executed exactly the way the rules say you should. There are red herrings, tangents, but the clues are there and it is very well executed.

I highly recommend this book and plan to buy it and place it beside my Molly books from my childhood. My one complaint is that I wish this had been written when I first received Molly. We would have had a lot of fun solving more mysteries together.
Profile Image for Sesana.
6,268 reviews329 followers
March 13, 2021
I started this book feeling a little disappointed, because of the plot description. A kid collects scrap for the war effort, discovers that it's being messed with, and goes through some amateur detective heroics to discover the culprit? I read this before. In an American Girl book. (Voices at Whisper Bend) Fortunately, the way the basic plot is handled is very different, and I actually ended up liking it a bit more.

Re-read: This is the only one of Molly's mysteries to be set after the Central Series, and it's set towards the end of World War II. In fact, one of the chapters happens just as V-E Day is announced, and the celebrations are appropriately joyful and emotional. And because it's set at the end of the war, Ernst builds the story on returning vets with PTSD and people, including Molly, getting burned out on the war effort. And the culprit in this book leads to a totally unexpected result. I think this was my favorite Molly mystery.
Profile Image for QNPoohBear.
3,580 reviews1,562 followers
July 30, 2016
This story takes place in the spring of 1945. World War II is coming to an end and Molly is feeling burned out by all of her war-related activities. Dad is home from the war, but he's different and doesn't laugh and tease the way he used to. Molly worries about her dad and about doing her part to win the war in the Pacific. When General Eisenhower offers a medal to the child who can collect the most scrap paper, Molly is goaded into participating by her rival and her desire to please her dad. Things don't go according to plan when Molly's paper pile is disturbed. Molly is determined to solve the mystery and along the way she learns about wounded veterans with "battle fatigue" (now known as Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder) and discovers that the war has taken it's toll on everyone -some more than others - and people aren't always what they seem.

I really enjoyed the honest and realistic examples of what happens when war is over and soldiers come home. This book was more mature than the other Molly stories. Molly has grown up a lot since Meet Molly and I liked seeing her grow and change and become a better person.
Profile Image for Ashley.
81 reviews1 follower
June 12, 2012
A Molly Mystery Age 8+

Molly still does her patriotic duty to help America win World War II, but she's weary and troubled. Dad is home safe... but he seems different now. Her favorite Red Cross leader abruptly quits. Her archrival, Ronnie Vanko, is driving her crazy. And now someone is sneaking into the backyard shed and messing with the scrap paper she's collecting for the latest wartime drive. Who is the intruder: Ronnie, her own brother Ricky - or a prowler she spied in the night?

Gotta love these American Girl Mysteries! Kathleen Ernst has done it again! She writes amazing mysteries for American Girl. I can't get enough of the American girl books.

As for this one I loved it and couldn't put it down. I read half of it last night before I went to bed and finished it this morning during breakfast.

American Girl celebrates a girl's inner star - that little whisper inside that encourages her to stand tall, reach high, and dream big.
Profile Image for Marian.
875 reviews25 followers
July 5, 2009
I actually really liked this mystery. Molly tends to walk a fine line, in general between a little too peppy and a little too self centered, which isn't as noticible when you're the same age as she is. When you get older, however? Things change.

That said, I could really get behind Molly feeling so burnt out by the war and having to constantly sacrifice things for what seemed like a war that would never end. To always keep upbeat, to always have to pretend things were better than they were. Factor her father returning but not acting like himself and you've already hooked me.

The mystery itself isn't really all that interesting nor do I really care about it. But the rest of the things going on in Molly's life are more than enough to pick up the slack.
Profile Image for Sharon.
332 reviews15 followers
January 16, 2022
Clues in the Shadows, a mystery novel, focuses on the effects and the aftermath of the war at home.
Molly's father has returned from World War II: however, he has become a somber person, not the light, teasing person he once was.
Molly and her friends continue to volunteer for the war effort: they collect books to donate to hospitalized soldiers, they participate in paper recycling, they sell war bonds and they make friendship bags for soldiers.
Then Molly finds that someone has tampered with her collected paper. Molly observes strange behavior in the unpleasant Fletcher and his negative nephew Ronnie Vanko. Molly's favorite Red Cross leader, Miss Delaney resigns. As Molly states, "Wars don't really end when the shooting stops."
Profile Image for Lydia Therese.
350 reviews7 followers
September 5, 2015
It was an easy read and I sped through it - I finished it in about half a day? I remember loving this book when I was younger. Now I find it a bit predictable (I didn't remember ANYTHING about it, I read it such a long time ago). I did love seeing an older, more mature Molly, though. She's a sweetie - I can see why she used to be my favorite American Girl character. :)
Profile Image for Maureen.
147 reviews
February 25, 2016
This story tackles a number of important topics—ptsd and other mental health issues, poverty, and the uncertainty that faces working women when the soldiers come home (that is sympathetic to both the women who lose their jobs and the soldiers)—in a way that is accessible to the target audience (ages 8+) without being patronizing. Well done.
Profile Image for Amanda Kay.
466 reviews3 followers
January 20, 2019
By far one of my favorite Molly mysteries. I love that we see Molly after VE Day, and the struggle many soldiers have with "battle fatigue" or PTSD. This was a refreshing AG mystery, especially because nothing was simple or easy to understand - it tackled a complex issue in a refreshing way.
88 reviews5 followers
Read
May 8, 2010
excellent American Girl mystery!
Displaying 1 - 30 of 35 reviews

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