Danny Dunn


Danny Dunn is a fictional character, the protagonist of a series of American juvenile science fiction/adventure books written by Raymond Abrashkin and Jay Williams beginning in 1956.

Background

The stories are set in the fictional American town of Midston. The plots feature characters who are interested in science and mathematics.
Abrashkin died in 1960, after publication of the fifth book. Williams, however, insisted on Abrashkin being given co-author credit on the subsequent ten books as well, since he had been instrumental in constructing the series. Ezra Jack Keats illustrated the first four novels in the series.
Although the exact location of Midston is not given, the authors wrote that a famed American of colonial times visited the town, implying Midston is somewhere in the original 13 states. In the book Danny Dunn and the Heat Ray, reference is made to US Route 1 and US Route 2 being located near Midston, and those roads meet only at Houlton, Maine.

Main character

Dunn is a boy, a fifth-grader when the series starts, although the school year ends at the end of the first book. He is looking forward to a career in science. According to book reviewer Andrew Frederick, Dunn is precocious and headstrong—a redhead whose adventures mainly include getting into and out of trouble.

Other characters

  1. Danny Dunn and the Anti-Gravity Paint
  2. Danny Dunn on a Desert Island
  3. Danny Dunn and the Homework Machine
  4. Danny Dunn and the Weather Machine
  5. Danny Dunn on the Ocean Floor
  6. Danny Dunn and the Fossil Cave
  7. Danny Dunn and the Heat Ray
  8. Danny Dunn, Time Traveler
  9. Danny Dunn and the Automatic House
  10. Danny Dunn and the Voice from Space
  11. Danny Dunn and the Smallifying Machine
  12. Danny Dunn and the Swamp Monster
  13. Danny Dunn, Invisible Boy
  14. Danny Dunn Scientific Detective
  15. Danny Dunn and the Universal Glue

    Albums

of Galaxy Science Fiction said in 1961 that "Danny's adventures are always based on a solid science foundation, once the authors' usually wild main premise is digested".