The Wishing Well by Mildred A. Wirt

(11 User reviews)   2622
By Dylan Hernandez Posted on May 7, 2026
In Category - The Beloved
Wirt, Mildred A. (Mildred Augustine), 1905-2002 Wirt, Mildred A. (Mildred Augustine), 1905-2002
English
I just tore through 'The Wishing Well' by Mildred A. Wirt, and wow—this old-school mystery hits different. Penny Parker, a curious and brave teenager, is visiting her friend Louise’s farm when they stumble upon an old wishing well that supposedly grants wishes. But when those wishes start coming true in weird and sometimes scary ways, Penny realizes small-town secrets run deeper than anyone expected. There's a whole mess involving a missing heir, a suspicious relative, and a family desperate to hide the truth. I loved how every clue kept me guessing, and the well itself felt like this creepy third character in the story. If you're into classic girl detectives with a side of small-town drama, this one's for you. Wirt knows how to keep you turning pages with twists that feel earned, not random. I couldn't stop reading, and I bet you won't either.
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The Story

Penny Parker is always up for a mystery, but when she and her friend Louise visit Louise’s aunt Eleanor’s farm, they find more than just fresh air. There’s a legendary wishing well stuck in the property, and people around town claim it makes wishes come true. But when a strange coughing visitor arrives and offers a ton of money for the well, Penny gets suspicious. Soon, the girls are digging into old family secrets, a missing baby’s necklace, and a lady ghost that walks the farm at night. The plot races forward with all the best ingredients: red herrings, a character named Old Malachi who might know way more than he lets on, and one wild final scene where the mystery of the well unravels. Forget slow burns—this story jumps from clue to clue like it can’t help itself, and that’s a huge part of its charm.

Why You Should Read It

I admit it—I’m a sucker for girl detective stories, and Penny Parker might be the most relatable of them all. She’s smart, straightforward, not so much into fashion as into seeing the world as a puzzle waiting to be solved. This book totally nails the feeling of a big, impulsive adventure where even the minor characters feel real (shout out to Aunt Eleanor, whose patience gets tested more than a little). Wirt hides background details everywhere—the local folklore around those forest sounds, the sound in the well water, the weird history of the farm itself. And the heartfelt wish theme? It works as both a cozy lark and as something deeper, making you ask what people truly want. There’s even a stray dog. I found myself caring about everyone, even the villain. The old-school setting (probably mid-1900s farm life) also feels authentic: trucks, farms, phones spread around. It’s like stepping into another slow, word-filled world, where a girls’ biggest worry is who to trust.

Final Verdict

Final Verdict: If you love Nancy Drew (and Wirt wrote as Carolyn Keene, so yeah, she’s the real deal), you owe it to yourself to meet Penny Parker. The Wishing Well is funny, exciting, and loaded with genuine tension—quiet when it needs to be, frantic when the action kicks in. The writing zips along with that 'today’s the last day to solve the case' feel that made me forget to eat dinner. Perfect for younger readers wanting no spice, just thrills, and for any adult chasing the pure, giddy rush of a golden age series classic.



🟢 Copyright Status

This publication is available for unrestricted use. Access is open to everyone around the world.

David Harris
10 months ago

I wanted to compare this perspective with traditional views, the footnotes provide extra depth for those who want to dig deeper. I'll be citing this in my upcoming project.

4.5
4.5 out of 5 (11 User reviews )

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