
The Girl Scouts' Motor Trip
Two girls. Two brand-new automobiles. One dare to drive across a continent. When Alice Endicott's aunt promises each contestant a car of her own, the stakes of the cross-country race to San Francisco become impossibly high. What begins as a cheerful competition between friends transforms into a thrilling test of nerve, mechanical ingenuity, and loyal friendship. Along the dusty roads of 1920s America, Marjorie Wilkinson and her fellow Girl Scouts discover that the journey matters far more than the finish line. Edith Lavell writes with the ebullient confidence of an era that believed automobiles and girlhood were both in their glorious infancy. The humor lands squarely, the adventures are genuinely exciting, and there's something profoundly winsome about watching young women prove they can handle anything a broken axle or rival racer throws at them. The Girl Scout ethos isn't lectured but lived, woven through practical problem-solving and genuine camaraderie. This is a time capsule that still runs. For readers who crave wholesome adventure, vintage road-trip energy, or a window into how Americans once imagined freedom, this little-known gem delivers.










