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Chiang Yee, Dabbitse, 1955
Daddy's
Birthday Cake
This was a Golden Book, perhaps illustrated by Corinne
Malvern.
In the book, a little girl makes a birthday cake
out of clay for her Dad. We hope you or someone else out
there
might know the titles of these books. Thanks so much!
There's a chance this may be Daddy's Birthday Cake (Rand McNally,'53), by Miss Frances (Frances Horwich) of Ding Dong School fame. The Ding Dong School books resemble Golden Books.
F71 fairy/robin: could be Wild Robin,
written and illustrated by Susan Jeffers, published
Penguin
and Dutton 1976, pbk edition 1986 "Wild Robin, a lazy and unruly boy,
longs
for home after he is captured by the fairies, but he must wait to be
rescued
by his brave and loving sister." The story is based on one from Little
Prudy's Fairy Book, and is a reworking of Tam Lin, where a young man is
stolen by the fairies and rescued by his pregnant lover, Janet.
Jeffers, Susan, Wild Robin,
illustrated by author, NY Dutton 1976. The names are reversed,
but
this has a similar story. Robin is a wild and lazy young boy who is
stolen
by the fairies and rescued by his loving sister. I haven't read it so
can't
say about the carving, but it sounds worth checking out.
Margaret Greaves, The dagger and the bird
: a story of suspense, 1975.
It could be this, but I haven't read it to know for sure. There
is
no Birdie, though. "When Luke and Bridget discover a changeling
in
their family, they set out for the mysterious fairy world to find their
real brother."
The girl's name is different, but maybe this
will ring a bell: The dagger and the bird : a story of
suspense
/ Margaret Greaves Laszlo Kubinyi, 1975 New York :
Harper
& Row. "When Luke and Bridget discover a changeling in their
family,
they set out for the mysterious fairy world to find their real brother."
Margaret Greaves (author), Laszlo
Kubinyi
(illustrator),
The Dagger and the Bird: A Story of Suspense, 1971. The
book
is NOT Wild Robin, as was previously suggested. That is
a
fairly short picture book, there are only two siblings instead of
three,
the abducted boy is not replaced by a changeling, and the girl does not
have a carved wooden robin. This is definitely
The Dagger and
the Bird: A Story of Suspense. It's a children's book
with
fifteen chapters, but it's only 133 pages long. The girl's name
is
Bridget, but her nickname is Biddy---easy to confuse with Birdie,
because
"biddy" is another name for a hen. Bridget's elder brother, Luke,
makes the carved bird for Bridget's birthday, but accidentally cuts his
finger and stains its breast with his blood. Bridget's younger
brother,
Simon, is emotionally unstable and vicious, and refuses to go near
their
blacksmith father's forge because he is a changeling and cannot abide
cold
iron. When Bridget and Luke discover Simon's secret, they all
travel
to the world of the fairies to recover the real Simon, who was abducted
in infancy.
Damon
and Pythias
My husband remembers a book from his childhood
about two deer named Damon and Pythias.
It told about them growing up and being hunted and how they avoided the
hunters. I would love to find a copy for him. Sorry I don't have
have more into but if you have any suggestions please let me
know.
Thanks.
This must be your book. Terhune is best
known for his dog stories, but he wrote some other animal stories too.
Terhune, Albert. The Story of Damon
and Pythias.
<SOLD>
A lady asked about a book with two deer named
Damon and Pythias. The book she is searching for is DOUBLE
CHALLENGE
written by Jim Kjelgaard in the 1940s.
Dance,
Dance, Amy-Chan!
A picture book I read around 1975, but may
have been older. A little Asian girl (possibly Japanese, but I am
not certain) is the main character, and one of the things she does is
practice
several different traditional dances with other little girls (maybe
preparing
to perform at a festival of some kind?). One of the dances is a
"butterfly"
dance.
Is the book poetry or prose? If it's
poetry
and there's also a section where the girl talks about being a nurse,
I'm
searching for the title too! My copy never had a cover---we
always
called it "the Ling book" but I don't think that has any relation to
the
actual title.
Hawkinson, Lucy, Dance, Dance, Amy-Chan! 1964. I am
the one who posted this stumper, but I have found the answer
myself.
Amy and her little sister Susie visit their Japanese grandparents in an
American city, where they prepare to dance in a street festival.
Amy misses the beginning of the dancing when Susie is lost and she must
find her, but makes it back in time to perform her favorite dance, the
"butterfly dance".
Dance for
Susie
Can't remember the title or author but I'm trying to find a book
about a girl who always wanted to be a ballerina - she learns
labanotation
(a way to write down choreography) along the way and when she's hurt
and
can't dance any more, she realizes through her disappointment that she
really enjoys choreography. HELP!
One Fainting Robin? in Dancers,
Dancers,
Dancers. Are you sure it was a whole book, not a short
story?
I remember one story in the book Dancers, Dancers, Dancers,
called "One Fainting Robin", and I'm almost
sure it was about a young girl who has to stop
dancing after an injury/accident, and decides to teach/do
choreography.
It may not be what you're looking for, but the story is similar.
Lee Wyndham, "Susie" series: A Dance for
Susie etc. 1950's or 60's.
I
am certain the book you are describing is one of the Susie books by Lee
Wyndham. Susie is an American girl studying ballet and befriends a
French
ballet family and in the process they teach her Labanotation.
These
books hardback are almost impossible to find and quite pricey but
Scholastic
reprinted these in the 60's and these are more readily available.
---
Story about young ballet student - 2 books in series, I think -
one about dancing in the nutcracker and one about ballet notation
systems.
B197 This is the Susie series
by Lee Wyndham---it's on the solved mysteries page, which I
remembered
because there
aren't that many books on labonotation!
Dancers,
Dancers, Dancers
Well, here's a stumper for you! I am looking for a book I
read between 1965 -1975. I think it was called either "Dance,
Dance,
Dance" or "Dancers, Dancers, Dancers." It was a collection of
stories
about dancers (duh), and I believe that the first story was about
Salome
dancing at a banquet. As I recall the hardcover book had a blue
cloth
cover. I would dearly love to find this!
#D44: Try Phyllis Reid Fenner as
editor. All her anthologies had the title word repeated three
times.
Re D 44 - thanks, and that's a logical suggestion, but
unfortunately,
I cannot find anything by Phyllis Reid Fenner having anything to do
with
dance! So I'm still looking....
I found the book! Well, actually, someone else found it for
me, for which I am very grateful. It's Dancers, Dancers,
Dancers
by Lee Wyndham.
This doesn't answer the main request, but the
book about the prince in disguise might be Frances H. Burnet's The
Lost Prince.
I remember reading a young adult biography (whose
title and author I don't remember) about the young Anna Pavlova, who
left
her poor family in order to study ballet in pre-revolutionary St
Petersburg.
I wonder if this might be the same book.
M Kay, A Circling Star. Also
wrote a book about girl in Russian revolution called "Masha"
Gladys Malvern, Dancing Star,
1960. I read a young-adult biography of Anna Pavlova which sounds
a lot like this, too. It was called Dancing Star - hard cover,
pale
blue (I think), a few line illustrations.
Don Freeman, Dandelion.
Lion gets his hair fixed to go to a party, but the hostess doesn't
recognize
him all dressed up.
This is definitely DANDELION by
Don
Freeman~from a librarian
Don Freeman, Dandelion.
I remember this one! It's by the author of Corduroy, Don
Freeman. The lion has his mane done up in curlers. It was one of my
little
brother's favorites.
Don Freeman, Dandelion,
1964. Are you thinking of this classic book, in which the
usually-sloppy
Dandelion the Lion decides to get himself "dandied up" for a friend's
party,
only to be turned away when the hostess does not recognize him all
groomed
and well-dressed? It has a yellow cover and is still in print.
Don Freeman, Dandelion
Don Freeman, author and illustrator, Dandelion,
1964. Dandelion the lion decides to gussy himself up for Jennifer
Giraffe's Tea and Taffy Party. He gets a haircut and manicure and
wears a spiffy new coat, and is turned away from the party when the
hostess
doesn't recognize him! As the stumper requester remembers, the
cover
of the book is yellow.
This sounds like Dandelion by Don
Freeman. The lion gets all dolled up for a party, but then no
one recognizes him. I believe this book is still being published.
Hope this helps.
I just want to thank you and your users for
solving my submitted stumper! When researching the author, Don Freeman,
I saw that he also wrote ANOTHER of my favorite childhood books – Mop
Top. The wonderful memories of sitting in my room as a little girl
and reading for hours come rushing back. I’m thrilled to be able to
share
these books with my daughters! Again, you provide an amazing
service
and I thank you so very much!
Here's what I found: Rankin, Carroll Watson. Illustrated by
Mary
Stevens. DANDELION COTTAGE. Holt, Rinehart and Winston,
New
York, 1966. "When Bettie and Jeanie, Mabel and Marjory dug the
dandelions
from the lawn of the little square cottage near the church they earned
the right to use the cottage as their own for a whole summer. And an
eventful
one it was in the Northern Michigan village on Lake Superior.."
---
Probably 20 years ago or so, I read a book
that I remember that I really loved.. and for years I have tried to
find
it.. so I thought that I would ask you guys if you remember reading it.
Problem is, I can only remember the gist of it, and bits and pieces..
any
of this sound familiar? I *think* 4 girls, young teenagers find
an
abandoned house, and turn it into a club house. I can remember them
cleaning
it up, because it had been abandoned for years. One bit that I remember
is one of the girls trying to sweep the floor, but it was so dusty that
dirt was flying everywhere. She discovered that if she sprinkled just a
bit of water, then the dust didn't fly so much. I seem to
remember
them hanging up red and white checkered curtains, and several pictures
to hide cracks and holes in the walls. And also something about
them
hosting a dinner party in the new clubhouse for their parents.. they
cooked
everything in the house, and invited their parents over. All of this
was
over summer vacation. This is not Foxfire by Joyce Oates,
I've checked that one. Any other ideas?
Kathryn Kenny, Trixie Belden:
Secret
of the Mansion. might be a
Trixie
Belden. The first one of the seires has the Bob-White Club fixing
up an old building
Elizabeth Enright, Gone Away Lake,
1957. This sounds a lot like Elizabeth Enright's Gone
Away
Lake (a Newbery Honor book)....all the details you mention are
there, but while there are four children, they're not all girls. The
story
takes place during the summer when a girl and her younger brother are
visiting
a cousin...they discover a small resort town of (mostly) abandoned
houses
by a lake that has gone away(its marshland now). You might remember the
elderly brother and sister who are now the sole inhabitants of the
"town",
or the children dressing up in old fashioned evening clothes, or the
younger
brother getting stuck in the marsh. Hope this helps! (and just an
fyi...there
was also a sequel, called Return to Gone Away Lake).
Carroll Watson Rankin, Dandelion Cottage,
1966, reprint. I bet it's this one. Four young teens (Bettie,
Jeane,
Mabel and Marjory) have their eye on a cottage owned by a church --
they'd
like to use it as a play house. But there's a catch -- they have
to weed the lawn, which is covered with dandelions. The house is
also dirty and in bad repair -- it does contain a scene the girls
"sprinkle"
the dust with Aunty's watering can before sweeping. They have
many
adventures in the house, but the plot mostly centers on inviting Mr.
Black
(the town banker) and Mrs. Crane (a widow) to dinner. Unbeknownst
to the girls, the two are actually estranged siblings and the whole
town
is pulling for their reunion. This is a terrific and very
touching
book!
This isn't Secret of the Mansion
but it might be a subsequent Trixie Beldon book. In the Gatehouse
Mystery - the third in the series - teens Trixie, her two
older
brothers and friends Honey and Jim discover an abandoned gatehouse and
plan to fix it up for a club house. But first they must solve the
mystery
of a diamond they found in the gatehouse's dirt floor. It's been many
years
since I read this series but I'm certain they didn't get around to
fixing
up the gatehouse in this book, though, but they do eventually.
Rankin, Dandelion Cottage,
circa 1904. This sounds a little like Dandelion Cottage.
Four girls, neighbors, are given permission to use a small cottage
(after
weeding dandelions from the front lawn). They clean it, fix it
up,
briefly rent it to a young woman, almost lose it to a pushy girl (new
neighbor),
and ultimately have a dinner party.
Christine Govan, The Curious Clubhouse,
1967. If there were boys involved as well as girls, this could be
it. There was a mystery involving a sinister looking portrait in
the old house. The children found the old house when their
parents
told them to find someplace to put all of their collections of toys,
junk,
etc. There was a party for the parents at the end.
I was reading one of the solved stumpers about
a book that is published where I work! The book about four girls
and the little cottage they get to have as a playhouse after pulling
all
of the dandelions out of the yard is called Dandelion Cottage.
You
definitely got that right! I just wanted to let you know it is
still
in print and available through the Marquette County History
Museum.
The author lived in Marquette and wrote the story for her daughter and
friends. There actually is a Dandelion Cottage in town which
inspired
the story. It still stands today! If anyone is interested
in
the book or wants any more information about it, check out our website,
marquettecohistory.org
Dandelion
Library
I used to have a boxed set of 12-15 books or so...they were
hardcover
and the distinguishing feature was that each book had two stories in
it.
Each story started at the cover and they ended in the middle, one right
side up, and one upside down. If you turn the book around and start
from
the back cover, then it would be right side up. They included some
pretty
obscure stories. One I remember was about these three horses, Blackie,
Whitey, and Browney who were sad because they had no friends. This man
shows up and teaches them to walk on their hind legs. He gives them
masks
so they look like pretty girls, dresses them up, and takes them to town
to meet the mayor. They are found out, and he is put
in jail. I don't remember it after that. Also there was a story
about a raven or a crow and every page
ended with "...in the garden." I think there might have been some
Babar stories in them too, but I never read those because they were in
cursive and I didn't know how to read it yet. My parents may still have
a few of these around, but most of the set was destroyed by dampness
and
mildew. These might be as old as the 50s maybe older. I really have no
idea. If anybody knows what the name of the set is, please help!!!!
Worm, Piet. (1958). Three Little
Horses: Blackie, Brownie and Whitey. New York: Random
House.
It's from the Dandelion Library collection. Each book
contained
two stories printed back-to-back but upside-down, so that the book
actually
has two covers. The flip side of the Worm book is a story about a
hippo called Veronica
by
Roger Duvoisin.
I used to have three or four of them, although I can only find the one
containing the stories by Worm and Duvoisin. The reader is right in
remembering
a Babar story in one of the books.
H23: Horses in split books -- The split book
series were the Dandelion Flip Books. The THREE LITTLE
HORSES-BLACKIE, BROWNIE, AND WHITEY
book had VERONICA on the flip side and were by Roger Duvoisin
and
Piet Worm.
H-23 - I don't know the name of the series, but
the second story that is described, with the crow and the reiteration
of
"...in the garden," is probably L. Leslie Brooke's Johnny
Crow's Garden. Perhaps one could work backward and find
out
in what books that story has been anthologized and get an answer that
way.
Hmmm, looks like this might be a hard nut to crack. i am
writing
to share with you that I sent the inquiry to the Bookshare volunteers
and
you would be surprised (or not) to know how many immediately thought i
was referring to Lord of the Flies. This is partly
because
in trying to discuss my reading of the book i mentioned that the
talking
book was narrated by William gladden, whereupon they confused that with
author William Golding! I had tried to be specific about names, and I
even
threw in another detail about condensed milk, but I suspect most of the
guessers hadn't read Lord of the Flies in quite some time if at
all. Or perhaps they just don't trust my memory, at which i take
no offense, not trusting it all that much myself. Mr. golding
wrote
a far more compelling and horrifying book than the mystery one we're
looking
for; this is just a nice little sea adventure where eventually everyone
lives happily ever after and nobody gets his brains scattered over the
beach. Still, it's fascinating to me that my description led to
this
interesting conclusion.
A search in the National Library Service website
for books narrated by William Gladden showed two anthologies of
sea stories: True tales of the South Seas (Selected and
edited
by A. Grove Day and Carl Stroven, 1966) and Post true stories of
daring and adventure (selected by the editors of the Saturday
Evening
Post, 1967). The titles in the second one sounded more like WWII
stories,
while the first contained stories by several famous 'sea tale' authors.
This story may be in one of those anthologies.
Sorry, but F189 is not a short story and not included in an
anthology
to my knowledge, it is an independent novel. Also, the
young
men are wearing oilskins during part of the book if that helps
any.
I don't think there was any reference to World War II or any other, but
that's debatable.
Danger Rock, 1960.
Richard Armstrong, Danger Rock, 1960. The person who
suggested
this title was right. I found a copy and am reading it now.
I had begun to give up hope but should never underestimate the readers
who flock to this site. Many thanks! It's great to have
this
exciting sea adventure to enjoy all over again.
Dangerous
Edge
This is Robert Daley, The Dangerous Edge (S&S,'83). The "master criminal" responsible for the heist, Alberto Spaggiari, also wrote an account, Fric-Frac: the Great riviera Bank Robbery ('79). (The film, The Great Riviera Bank Robbery, also came out in '79). The robbery takes place in Nice; Spaggiari engineered similar heists in Marseilles & Nice.
Dangerous
Island
I6: This was a Weekly Reader Book Club book
called
something like Dangerous Island...can't think of
author.
(late 1950's - 1960.)
Mindlin, Helen Mather-Smith.
Dangerous
Island. New York: Dodd,Mead & Co., 1956. Weekly Reader Book
Club
A bit more information on the suggested title:Helen
Mather-Smith Mindlin Dangerous Island NY, Dodd, Mead, 1956,
Weekly Reader Children's Book Club Edition, 178 pages. Illustrated by
Manning
de V. Lee. "When three young children are carried out to sea on a
raft,
they become modern day Robinson Crusoes on a remote island. They
discover
buried treasure too."
Wow! That question was months ago!
Imagine my surprise to get an answer now. Thanks for the
information.
I'll see if I can find a copy of the book, to confirm that it really is
the story I was trying to remember. I'll let you know if I want
you
to search for me. Thanks again!!!!
---
This book is about kids who are looking for shells (I think) and
end up on a very small island. They find gold bars on this island
and, of course, someone else wants the gold. At the end, a
helicopter
rescues the kids and the gold and the island sinks into the
ocean.
I always thought it was called "The Lion's Paw", named for one of the
shells
they were looking for.
in reading through your list, someone's reply to T90 seems to be the answer to my stumper. I am looking for a story about kids who are looking for shells and find an island with gold bars and they get rescued at the end by a helicopter and the island sinks. Is this Dangerous Island? I don't know the plot of that book....can you help me?
Robb White, The Lion's Paw.
I'm not sure if this is the right book, but The Lion's Paw
is about a boy and girl who stow away on a boat. The girl's name
is Penelope, and the owner of the boat ends up sailing someplace
tropical
and I think they do find treasure. And yes, the lion's paw was a
seashell. I don't remember a sinking island, but it's been years
since I read the book.
White, Robb, Illustrated by Ray, Ralph
and Beck, Charles , The Lion's Paw, 1968.
You
remembered the title correctly yourself, I believe... my fourth grade
teacher
read us "The Lion's Paw" one chapter at a time. An online search
gave this: "Ben, Penny and Nick are running away. Searching for them
are
Ben's uncle, the Coast Guard, everybody. Will they make good their
escape?
And will they find the Lion's Paw?" (must be the cover teaser.) I
remember
distinctly that the tide comes in and they bearly escape... thus the
"sinking
island".
White, Robb, The Lion's Paw, 1946.
This book has absolutely nothing to do with a sinking island. It
concerns two orphan children, Nick and Penny who stow away on another
kid's
(Ben's) boat. They sail across Florida to Sanibel Island where they
look
for a rare shell (the Lion's Paw). There is a happy ending. This is
probably
the most beloved Florida children's book. It is scarce as a
hardback
except through librarys. Paperbacks can be found weekly on eBay for
about
$15. Sorry that this doesn't solve the mystery.
I'm the person who sent in this stumper. The book I was
looking
for is Dangerous Island and I found a copy. The Lion's Paw
is, of course, another book I must have read as a child. I'll try
to find that one as well. Thanks everyone.
---
My stumper: It's called either "Vanishing Island" or "Sinking
Island" I don't have a clue as to who wrote it. It was a
Weekly
Reader book from the 1950's. It's about a couple of kids who get
marooned on an island they didn't know was there. They're reduced
to eating seagull eggs etc. and the island starts sinking and the
tension
rises -- will they be rescued in time... which of course they have to
be
since it was Weekly Reader in the 50s and people weren't allowed to die
back then.
HRL: Mindlin, Helen Mather-Smith. Dangerous Island, 1956.
See Solved Mysteries for more.
You are a marvel!!!! It's solved already and I was surprised at
how many other folks were also looking for it! It was Dangerous
Island by Helen Mather-Smith, 1958. Thanks so very very
much...
now I have a title etc. to go hunting a copy!
|
Condition Grades |
Mindlin, Helen Mather-Smith. Dangerous Island. Illus by Manning de V. Lee. Dodd, 1956. Weekly Reader Book Club edition. G+ $9 |
|
D 140 This biog has quite a bit abt Simon
Girty.
If it helps ring bells, all of the illustrations are brown. Brown,
John
Mason. Daniel Boone; the opening of the west.
illus by Lee J Ames. Random, Landmark series, 1952.
Danny
Dunn series
Hi, I'm looking for a child's book that I
read when I was about 10 years old, which would have been around
1964.
Unfortunately I don't remember the author or title. It was the first
book I ever read that featured a computer.
The boy in the story was also about 10 years old, and he had access to
his father's ENIAC-style, mainframe computer (you know the kind we all
had in our living rooms in the '60's). The boy eventually
programmed
it to do his homework and that of his 'gang'. He had to
troubleshoot
mechanical problems and repair a sabotage attempt by some of his
jealous
classmates. He may have even solved a crime or two and helped his
scientist-father solve a few work problems. When he was finally
discovered,
the school authorities concluded he had probably learned as much
programming
the machine as if he had done the work 'the hard way', and his
punishment
was pretty light. I remember being very inspired by this little
genius,
and would very much like to rediscover this book with my own kids (who
are now very much into discovering their own way around the
computer).
Any help you can provide would be greatly appreciated. Thank you.
Stumper C5 sounds like it might be Danny
Dunn and the Homework Machine by Jay Williams and Raymond
Abrashkin.
I am pretty sure this is Danny Dunn and
the Homework Machine by Jay Williams and Ray Abrashkin.
Congratulations ! You and your readers solved
my stumper (formerly C-5), Danny Dunn and the Homework Machine.
Once armed with a title and author I was able to conduct some other
online
searches and found several sources for the book. When I saw a
picture
of the cover, I recognized it instantly, though it's been over 35 years
since I'd last seen it. I was even more pleased to learn that there was
a series of Danny Dunn books, so now I will be acquiring even
more.
Your service is so great because I have previously made this same
request
to other long-time book dealers and children's book specialists, but
none
had a clue.
---
This book had a sci-fi flair to it, it wasn't exactly a children's
book but more of a young adult's adventure kind of story. It
seemed
to predict the advent of virtual reality. The story involved a
young
boy who befriended a scientist who had developed a flying device with
"eyes
and ears". It was in the shape of a dragonfly. A person
could
control this dragonfly by wearing goggles and putting on a pair
of gauntlets. Everything the dragonfly saw could be seen
through
the goggles and its claws could be controlled by the gauntlet. It
was really cool because it was like you actually "were" the
dragonfly.
At the end of the story the dragonfly is destroyed in a fire of some
sort,
because I remember the boy's hand feeling really hot. I don't
remember
the author or title, but if any of you recognize this please let me
know!
G3-Danny Dunn, Invisible Boy
I think I can confirm the red poster's guess
on the second story as Danny Dunn, Invisible Boy by Jaw
Williams and Raymond Abrashkin, illustrated by Anne Mieke,
published
1974, 134 pages. "When Professor Bullfinch invented ISIT (the
Invisibility
Simulator with Intromittent Transmission) it seemed just as fascinating
toy. For his young friend Danny Dunn and his friends Joe and Irene the
'flying' of the dragonfly-like probe opened up a whole exciting new
world
of experience." The cover illustration shows Danny with a
motorcycle-type
helmet with a visor (much like a VR helmet) and gauntlet gloves with
wires
leading to a box. The mechanical dragonfly hovers in the air above him.
On page 125 "The clear plastic of the dragonfly's body burst into
flame.
It had not occurred to Dan that he would feel the pain of the burning.
Involuntarily he snatched his hands away from the controls. But they
were
still in the gauntlets, and he could still feel the fierce, terrible
heat."
---
This was a funny, lighthearted book I read
sometime in the 70's that would be extremely dated now and I'm sure
it's
long out of print. A boy and a girl - I distinctly remember her
name
was Irene- have something to do with computers. These were the
giant
computers of the 60's or whenever that filled entire rooms. I
remember
that Irene tried to use the computer to write a homework assignment at
school, but the computer produced page after page of gibberish (I guess
programming code). I have a mind picture of Irene standing at the
front of the class trying to read it aloud. Does that ring a bell
for anyone?
Sounds like Danny Dunn and the Homework Machine by
Jay
Williams and Raymond Abrashkin. to me. Check out
the other postings and copies for sale on the Solved
Mysteries page.
Yaayy, that must be it! Sorry I didn't see it on the solved
mysteries page - I'll go back and plow through all those for more.
---
There was a series of books I read in the
late 70's that had a boy who was something of a scientist. He had
many adventures through the use of science and his
inventions.
As I recall he lived at home on the second floor and possibly only
lived
with his mother. I believe there were also a couple of friends (a
boy and a girl?) who often helped him.
Jay Williams, Danny Dunn series,
1960s. The description sounds like the Danny Dunn series
Jay Williams?, Possibly the Danny
Dunn series.
Jay Williams and Raymond Abrashkin, Danny
Dunn series, 1958. This is a series of books about a boy
who lives with his mother and an inventor (Professor Bullfinch). In one
story he invented a homework machine (a computer). In another, he
travels back in time. His bedroom is on the second floor of the
house
he lives in.
Jay Williams, Danny Dunn and ....
try looking at the Danny Dunn series by Jay WIlliams.
Jay Williams, Danny Dunn
books. S417: Series of books about boy scientist who lives at
home.
I think these are probably the Danny Dunn books--Danny
Dunn and the Antigravity Paint, etc.
Jay Williams, Danny Dunn and...
early sixties. This sounds like the Danny Dunn series. Danny and
his mom live with "the professor, I think. Danny is always inventing
things,
like a Homework Machine. His best friends are Joe (a writer) and Irene
(a scientist). Great books!
Jay Williams & Raymond Abrashkin, Danny
Dunn and... (series),
1960's
- '70's. This is a possibility: Danny Dunn lives with his
mother
and a science professor, Euclid Bullfinch (his mother is the
professor's
housekeeper his father is long dead). Danny and his
friends,
Irene Miller and Joe Pearson, get into a lot of adventures involving
the
professor's experiments and projects. Irene wants to become a
physicist
Joe is often reluctant to follow Danny's enthusiasms, and composes
poetry
while he waits for disaster to strike. Some titles are Danny Dunn
and the Homework Machine (about an early computer), Danny Dunn and the
Automatic House, Danny Dunn and the Anti-gravity Paint.
This sounds like the Danny Dunn
books. His mother rented a room to Prof. Bullfinch, a scientist.
Danny's
friends were Joe and Irene. One title was Danny Dunn and the
Homework
Machine. There were several books.
---
1970. This is not The Mad Scientist's Club.
I read this book in the mid '70s and would guess that it was written
about
1970. Two teenage boys are involved in a number of amateur
science/engineering
adventures. For example, they mount an ultrasonic generator on the back
of a jeep to use in suppressing brush fires. In another, they conceal a
miniature military surplus homing proximity fuse inside a golf ball to
steer it toward the hole. Each chapter was another of their escapades.
The stories had a "serious" tone. The father of one of the boys was an
engineer, I think in the aerospace field. I also remember that the
events
were set in California. It seems that most of their endeavors failed to
go as intended. The copt that I read had a blue cover.
Could this book be earlier than 1970?
Because
it sounds a little like one of the Rick Brant Science Adventure series
books. (Either The Flaming Mountain or the Flying
Stingaree--I can never remember which is which of those
two).
If it is Rick Brant, the author was John Blaine. Rick and
his friend Scotty work for Rick's father, who runs a scientific
foundation
off of Spindrift Island in New Jersey. They help him out and
usually
end up solving some mystery in each of the books through science. The
series
started in the 50s (or maybe even late 40s) and the last volume was
written
in the late 60s.
This is not from the Rick Brant/Spindrift
Island series. (Thank you for the suggestion!) I remember reading the
first
three or four of these books and what I am looking for is not one of
these.
While I don't think that I made it as far into the series as the titles
that you have mentioned, I do clearly recall the characters Rick and
Scotty.
I should have also mentioned that the book I remember is not the Carl
&
Jerry adventures in electronics series that appeared in Popular
Electronics
magazine, or the Brains Benton mysteries. What I remember had a
"backyard"
or a "down the street" feel about the individual stories. Each account
was a chapter and there was, as far as I know, just one book about
these
two boys. These stories weren't the grand adventures of Rick Brant. I
am
reasonably confident that they were written about 1970. That was the
period
for the hardware that the boys used.
Not sure- but maybe one of the Danny Dunn
stories??
Danny Dunn series, 1950s
- 1970s. 'The basic setup sounds like the Danny Dunn stories.
Danny
Dunn is a young teenager whose mother is a housekeeper for Professor
Bullfinch,
an absent-minded genius inventor/professor. Danny and his pal Joe
Pearson get involved in all kinds of adventures with Danny's
inventions,
none of which ever work out the way Danny expects them to.
Several
of the books also featured a female friend Irene Miller who also wants
to be a scientist. Each of the books has one 'main' invention
that
drives the plot, but most of them also have several other side plots
involving
other inventions.
|
Condition Grades |
Williams,
Jay and Raymond Abrashkin. Danny Dunn and the Anti-Gravity Paint. Illustrated
by Ezra Jack Keats. Whittlesey House, 1956. Children's
Weekly
Reader Book Club edition, 1957. Pages acidic, otherwise
VG/VG.
$20
Williams, Jay and Raymond Abrashkin. Danny Dunn and the Homework Machine. Illustrated by Ezra Jack Keats. Whittlesey House, 1958. Children's Weekly Reader Book Club edition, 1959. Pages acidic, otherwise VG/VG. $20 Williams, Jay; Abrashkin, Raymond. Danny Dunn and the Fossil Cave. illus by Brinton Turkle McGraw 1961 Young Pioneer edition 1967 boards rubbed, soiled; pages good [YQ8313] G $7 Williams, Jay & Abrashkin, Raymond. Danny Dunn and the Swamp Monster. illus by Sagsoorian, Paul McGraw 1971 Weekly Reader edition boards good; a few page corners crunched [EQ19573] G $10 Williams, Jay and Raymond Abrashkin. Danny Dunn, Scientific Detective. Illustrated by Paul Sagsoorian. McGraw-Hill, 1975. Ex-library with the usual marks, mended dust jacket. G/G $8 |
|
Possibly Dapple Gray, the
story
of a rocking horse by John Symonds, London: G.C. Harrap,
1962.
"Even though his new
owner is a nice little girl, a rocking-horse
decides to run away to find his old master and clear up some unfinished
business."
---
At night a boy's rocking horse (or perhaps statue of a horse?)
becomes
real. The horse is white with a black mane and tail. It's
possible
that, like Pegasus, the horse flies. I think this was a short book,
with
lots of illustrations. The illustrations were bright and
colorful,
and rather cartoonish and flat, not realistic.
Dapple Gray, the story of a rocking horse by John
Symonds,
London: G.C. Harrap, 1962. See more on the Solved
Mysteries page.
Hi, I was just reading part of the description
of Dapple Gray. Part of it said a boy's statue of
a
horse comes to life and flies like Pegasus. I owned several of
these
books when I was a child. They were about the size of Little
Golden
Books and the illustrations were indeed colorful and cartoonish.
The boy's name may have been Timmy and the horse's name may have
started
with an L. The boy would chant, "O winged horse of (something
something),
Oh, take me on a magic flight!" The horse, which was a statue on
the boy's chest of drawers or bedside table, would then turn into a
real
winged horse and the the boy would ride it on all sorts of all
adventures.
It was definitely a white horse with a black mane and tail, not a
dapple-gray
rocking horse.
Dar
Tellum:
Stranger from a Distant Planet
Looking for a book from my childhood. I don't recall the title or
author. I do think it was published by Scholastic Book Club. I would've
had this book in the mid-70s, so it was published then or earlier. The
little that I can remember of the story: there is a boy whose father is
a rocket or space scientist of
some kind. This young boy is in (telepathic?) contact with a boy
on another planet. The father's project is endangered somehow and no
one
can come up with a solution... but his son, with the assistance of the
other-planetary boy, figures out that they need to put algae on the
spacecraft
to generate oxygen? Somehow, I seem to recall that the words "Tom" or
"calling"
may have been part of the title. I know it sounds weird, but that's how
I remember it.
B122: Dar Tellum: Stranger from a
Distant
Planet, by James R. Berry, 1973. Global warming and
melting
polar caps are the problems, and Ralph and his E.T. friend figure out
the
solution is to scatter a special algae that will turn the gases into
cool
oxygen with the help of a rocket. The main tools used are telepathy and
telekinesis - and careful deception, since Ralph generally knows better
than to expect anyone to believe him.
Susan Cooper, The Dark is Rising
Susan Cooper, The Dark Is Rising, 1973.
On his eleventh bithday, Will finds out that he is one of the 'Old
Ones',
destined to protect the world against the evil Dark. His first quest is
to find the six signs that must be joined to aid in the battle. He
keeps
the ones he has found looped on his belt. There is a prequel and three
sequels to the book.
Susan Cooper, The Dark is Rising.
This is definitely The Dark is Rising by Susan Cooper.
It's part of a series of books- Over Sea, Under Stone, The
Dark is Rising, Greenwitch, The Grey King, and Silver on
the Tree.
Susan Cooper, The Dark is Rising,
1973. This is Susan Cooper's Newbury Honor book The Dark
is
Rising. Part of the Dark is Rising sequence, which also
included
Over
Sea, Under Stone, Greenwich, The Grey King and Silver on
the Tree.
Susan Cooper, The Dark is Rising,
1973. You all have no idea how great this is to finally get to
reread
this book (and the rest of the series). Thank you all so much!!!
---
It has 5 parts, split between two different sets of sibling main
characters, with an old "great uncle" as a thread connecting
them.
This "uncle" is a wizard (if not Merlin himself), and the children (I
am
fairly certain) are from different time periods. The uncle sets
them
on mini quests. In one instance, the kids have to travel into a
sea
side cavern to get a piece of cloth or the holy grail or
something.
The first and third books focus on one set of kids, while the second
and
fourth focus on the other set. Your help will be greatly appreciated.
Susan Cooper, Dark is Rising series.
Sounds like the Dark is Rising Series...one set of
children
do refer to the wizard character as their "Uncle Merry," but Will
Stanton
(in The Dark is Rising) calls him Merriman.
Susan Cooper, Dark is Rising series.
This is the Dark is rising series which includes Over Sea, Under
Stone in which Jane, Simon, and Barney search for the grail
under
the guidance of their great-uncle Merriman; The Dark is
Rising
in which Will Stanton realizes his role as an "Old One" and gathers
together
the symbols of power; Greenwitch in which Jane
shows
compassion to the Greenwitch and completes another part of the quest; The
Grey King in which Bran Davies, son of King Arthur is
introduced;
and Silver on the Tree in which all the children work
together
to vanquish evil. A classic series.
Cooper, Susan, The Dark is Rising series
Susan Cooper, The Dark is Rising series.
Definitely!
Susan Cooper, Dark Is Rising series. Books
in the series are: Over Sea, Under Stone, The Dark Is
Rising,
Greenwitch, The Grey King, Silver on the Tree
Susan Cooper, The Dark is Rising series.
a
great series of 5 books, still in print.
T289 is possibly Susan Cooper's The Dark
is Rising sequence: Over Sea, Under Stone,
The
Dark is Rising, Greenwitch, The Grey King, The Silver on the Tree. 1
& 3 are particularly about Simon, Jane and Barney Drew. Will
Stanton features in 2, 3, 4 & 5. Great Uncle Merry or
Merriman
is the old man in all of them and there is travel to other times and
places.
Currently available in UK Puffin as a collected book of all 5.
Susan Cooper, Dark is Rising,
1973. This is the Dark is Rising sequence by Susan
Cooper. Titles are: Over Sea, Under Stone (1965), The
Dark is Rising (1973), Greenwitch (1974), The
Grey King (1975) and Silver on the Tree (1977). Dark
is Rising was a Newbury Honor book, The Grey King
won the Newbury Medal. The two families are the Drews (3 children) who
first appear in Over Sea, Under Stone, and the Stantons (a large
family,
Will Stanton, the protagonist and last of the Old Ones is the 7th son),
who appear first in The Dark is Rising. The Merlin
character
is Merriman, another of the Old Ones, known as Great-Uncle Merry or
Gummery
to the Drews...Merriman appears in all of the books. A fantastic
series,
luckily all still in print.
Could this be part of THE DARK IS RISING
series by Susan Cooper? Titles includes OVER SEA, UNDER
STONE;
THE DARK IS RISING; GREENWITCH; THE GREY
KING,
SILVER ON THE TREE~from a librarian
Easy stumper. This is absolutely Susan
Cooper's The Dark is Rising series. The underwater
cave
with the grail is from Over Sea, Under Stone.
---
I'm looking for a book/series that I read
in the eary 80's. The subject of the books is a boy that has to
collect
these medallions and place them onto a belt. It seems that the
story
takes place in Europe, Wales area. I remember there was alot of
references
to crows/ravens when something bad was going to happen. People
have
pointed me to Deltora Quest but that wasn't out when I read this
series.
Thank you for the help.
Susan Cooper, The Dark Is Rising,1973.
This is the first book in a series of 5. The Dark Is Rising
chronicles the adventures of Will Stanton as he struggles to find the 6
signs (or medallions) that will hold back the Dark and allow the Light
to triumph in the final battle. This is his path as the last of
the
Old Ones, which he discovers he is on his 11th birthday. Once he
has found the first sign (which is brass) he starts threading them on
his
belt in order to keep them together and safe. The ravens are
agents
of the Dark and, as you remember, frequently portent something ominous
or downright evil occurring.
Cooper, Susan, The Dark is Rising.
On
his eleventh birthday, Will Stanton discovers that he is the last of
the
Old Ones, destined to seek the six magical signs that will one day
enable
his kind to triumph over the evil forces of the Dark. This is part of a
5 part series.
Susan Cooper, The Dark is Rising.
And
its sequels.
Susan Cooper, The Dark is Rising. Will
Stanton is the last of the Old Ones. His quest is to seek the six
signs,
circles quartered by a cross. He does keep them on his belt until
he has all six.
Susan Cooper, The Dark Is Rising,1970.This
is the book you are looking for (soon to be made into a movie).
The
first, or second (depending upon how you look at it), of a series by Susan
Cooper and one of my favorite books of all times. "When the Dark
comes
rising, six shall turn it back,/Three from the circle, three from the
track/
Wood, bronze, iron/ water, fire, stone/ Five will return, and one go
alone."
With these mysterious words, Will Stanton discovers on his 11th
birthday
that he is no mere boy. He is the Sign-Seeker, last of the immortal Old
Ones, destined to battle the powers of evil that trouble the land. His
task is monumental: he must find and guard the six great Signs of the
Light,
which, when joined, will create a force strong enough to match and
perhaps
overcome that of the Dark. Embarking on this endeavor is dangerous as
well
as deeply rewarding Will must work within a continuum of time and space
much broader than he ever imagined."
etc.
Cooper, Susan, The Dark is Rising. Thank
you! That is exactly the one I was looking for!
there's The Dark of the Cave,
by
Ernie
Rydberg, illustrated by Carl Kidwell, published McKay 1965 "Ronnie
and Garth each have a secret. Since 9-year-old Ronnie cannot see his
new
friend, Garth, his choice of friend shows the natural unprejudiced
values
of a youngster." At some point they are both trapped in a cave, and
Ronnie
is blind, so this may be it.
Dark
Sunshine
It's about a girl who has just recovered from polio or another
debilitating
disease, and is using crutches to walk. The two main themes are her
determination
to ride again (I think her horse is a mare named Goldie or
Gold-something)
and her pursuit of a college scholarship. She studies diligently and
ends
up class valedictorian, I think. I read this in the late 60's or early
70's. Thanks.
This is Dorothy Lyons' Dark
Sunshine
-- pretty easy to find used.
Possibles: Vian Smith Tall and
Proud
Archway, 1970 "A little girl recovering from polio finds that love for
her horse and his faith in her, will help her learn to walk again." Dorothy
Lyon Dark Sunshine Voyager, 1951 "When a young girl
named
Blythe with polio moves to an Arizona ranch with her family, she
eventually
decides to ride horses. One one ride she finds Dark Sunshine, a
magnificent
buckskin mare trapped by a landslide and sets about to save her."
More on the suggested title - Dark
Sunshine,
by Dorothy Lyons, illustrated by Wesley Dennis, published
Harcourt
1951. "This newest book by the author of Copper Khan and Golden
Sovereign
portrays a girl's valiant struggle against the crippling effects of
infantile
paralysis. Blythe's efforts to train her horse, Dark Sunshine, for an
endurance
ride have more far-reaching results than she anticipated. Ages 12 up."
(Horn Book Sep/55 p.285 pub.ad)
Ray Bradbury, "Dark They Were, and Golden
Eyed",
1949. Ray Bradbury's short story "Dark They Were, and Golden
Eyed"
has this basic premise. I don't recall it well enough to say if it
matches
the exact plot points given. It's also been published as "The
Naming
of Names." It's been reprinted in several anthologies and in
several
Bradbury collections, including S IS FOR SPACE and A
MEDICINE FOR MELANCHOLY.
Various Authors, Three Green Men and Other
Stories, 1966. The title story fits your plot pretty
well.
Here's a detailed summary I found, no mention of grass turning green or
three eyed cows, though :( "Once, many years ago, three men
in space suits went to Mars. The Martian exploration team enjoyed the
red
planet... but there was something odd about it. Everywhere they looked,
there were green cukes growing. Each cucumber was about the size of an
eggplant and covered with pretty patterned leaves. Two of the
astronauts
were afriad of the cukes. But the third man wasn't afraid of the
cucumbers.
He noticed that they didn't seem to be bad, or growing poorly. Most of
them were about the size of an eggplant... only green and cucumber
shaped.
So one day... when the other two slept... he snuck out and got a
cucumber.
He ate it with his breakfast... and didn't notice his skin was turning
green. With each bite, his skin became greener and greener... until it
was green as the cucumber. He also found it changed him around on the
inside...
it changed him so he could live on Mars. He slowly convinced the other
two men to eat the strange cucumbers as well, so they could conserve
their
food supplies and oxygen...Then their spaceship broke, and they were
stranded
on Mars. Many, many years later... more astronauts came to Mars.. and
were
surprised to see a colony of Martians, who looked strangely human...
only
with green skin."
Ray Bradbury, Dark They Were, and Golden Eyed, 1949. Dark
They Were, and Golden Eyed is definitely it. As soon as I saw
the title I knew it was the story I remembered. I found a copy
online
and was pretty close on some of the details - The grass turned purple
and
the cow grew a third horn. Now I just need to pick up one of the
Bradbury collections with this story. That was fast! Thanks for
your
help.
I was the person who suggested Bradbury's
"Dark They Were, and Golden-Eyed." I've since had a chance to
reread the story and I'm pretty much certain this is the story being
asked
about. (The cow grew a third horn rather than a third eye,
though.)
Also I should have made clear that Bradbury has used "The Naming of
Names" for two different stories -- that was the original title for
this story when it first appeared in a magazine, but he later reused
that
title for a different story when he changed the title of this one for
book
reprints. All rather confusing, actually...
Alan Dean Foster, Cachelot,
1980.I don't remember a blue triangle and you don't mention how old you
were when you read it, but this is about humans (a mother and daughter
figure prominently) who crash on a planet colonized by relocated whales
and dolphins. I think it's out of print.
Cachelot doesn't ring a bell and I don't recall a mother
and daughter. I remember the dolphins were telepathic
however.
I would have been about 12 when I read it. Thanks for the
suggestion
though.
David Brin, Startide Rising,
1984. Ok, how about this one? It is about an adult human
crew
who fly a spaceship along with modified dolphins and chimpanzees.
The theory is that humans must "uplift" client species. They
crash
land on a watery planet, chased there by a host of intergalactic
enemies.
One of the humans is a young boy. The dolphins communicate with
one
another and with the humans using modified haiku.
Have done some more hunting around and think this may be a book
called The Dark Triangle by H Walters. Does anybody else
think
this may be correct?
The Dark Triangle. I have managed to track down a copy
of this book and I think it's the right one! I can't wait to read
it and find out that it is! :o) Thanks to everyone for their help
No idea on the book, but could the poster mean
"incubus," rather than "Icarus"? That word would fit the
character's
description more accurately.
Pierce, Meredith Ann, The Darkangel: The
Darkangel Trilogy vol 1. c.1998. classic YA fantasy
novel.
Protaganist is Aerial, the gnome is the duarough and the darkangel is
called
Icarus.
Pierce, Meredith Ann, Darkangel,
1982. Could this be Meredith Ann Pierce's The Darkangel,
first book of her Darkangel trilogy? Aeriel is the name of the
main
character, and the dark-angels (vampire-like, indeed) are also called
icarus.
The other books in the trilogy are A Gathering of Gargoyles and
The
Pearl of the Soul of the World.
Meredith Ann Pierce, The Darkangel,
1982. I daresay lots of people will answer this one! It's
very
atmospheric and memorable - I read it from the school library fifteen
years
ago and I still have vivid recollections. It was reprinted (in
the
US) a few years ago, so it should be easy to find. Oh, and it's
the
first of a trilogy. Opinions seem to vary rather on the third
one,
but I gather the second is well worth reading too.
Pierce, Meredith Anne., Darkangel.Boston,
Little Brown 1982. I was going a little crazy, because I knew I'd
read this and couldn't remember the name! The servant girl
Aeriel's
friend and mistress is stolen by the Darkangel, a vampire-like being
with
black wings. When she follows, she finds that her mistress has already
had her soul sucked out by the Darkangel, and is a wraith like his
other
wives. Aeriel is to be his last wife and make his power complete. She
stays
to care for his wraith wives (and her friend) but finds herself falling
in love with her captor and wanting to redeem him - which leads to a
strange
quest through dangerous desert lands and a revelation of his true
nature.
First part of a trilogy, the others being A Gathering of
Gargoyles
and
The
Pearl of the Soul of the World.
DarAngel. That's it! That's the one! Thanks
so much - I've already ordered it and can't wait to read it
again!
(what an awesome site this is)
Date with a
Career
In this book, a young girl wants to be a clothing designer, and
at one point designs a skirt with appliques that look like fall leaves.
Another girl gets wind of this and copies it, wearing it before the
first
girl is finished.
A possible - Designed by Suzanne,
by Kathleen Robinson, published Lothrop 1965. "A warm,
sympathetic
novel in which Suzanne faces the decision of whether to embark on an
early
marriage or a career in designing clothes. Ages 12-16." (Horn Book
Apr/65
p.133 pub.ad)
This sounds very familiar to me. I vaugely
remember a book like this from my childhood, and for some reason I
remember
it as being by Zilpha Keatley Snyder. Does this ring any
bells?
L36 leaf skirt: here's another - Design
for Ann, by Darlene Geis, published Crowell 1949 "How
Ann
made her love of beautiful things lead her to be a famous designer.
Girls
12-16." (HB May/49 p.177 pub.ad)
L36 leaf skirt: another designer-career book
is Flair for Fashion, by Betty Ferm, published
Messner
1967. "Set against the background of the fascinating multimillion
dollar
fashion industry, this is the story of a girl who learns you can't cut
corners to achieve success." (HB Oct/67 pub ad)
L36 leaf skirt: another possible is Whirl
of Fashion, by Marjory Hall, published Westminster
1961.
"A career story about a girl who has few clothes and fewer friends -
until
she becomes interested in dress design, and by talent and hard work
wins
a fashion scholarship to Paris. Girls, 12 to 15." (HB Oct/61 p.487 pub
ad)
1950's or early '60's. I'm sorry my books
are in storage, so I don't have the title or author, but I remember one
about a teenage girl named Saphronia (!) who wanted to be a designer.
(Eventually
someone uses her middle name, Lee, which *may* be in the title.) She
goes
to live with her grandmother while her mother is on tour or something,
and tries to make friends and fit in in a small rural town in New
England.
The episode about the autumn-leaf skirt is part of her rivalry with the
other girl, including competing for the attentions of a boy named
Jonathan
she also makes hooded capes for a Christmas-carol group. There are
several
other subplots, including a boy, Sidney, with a jalopy and a
little
girl, Louisa, who plays the piano. I hope this will jog someone's
memory
to give you more data. If this sounds right, I can try to dig it out.
Styles by Suzy. I'm pretty
sure I remember the leaf skirt being part of the collection of Tyrolean
stuff Suzy designed.
I hate to reopen a Solved Stumper but I have
come upon a book that fits the "leaf skirt" book perfectly but it is
not
Styles
by Suzie! (Actually this solution was never confirmed. Someone
did list some detail correctly but didn't have the title.)
Saphronia
Lee Adams goes to live with her grandmother Mrs. Saphronia Endicott in
Fairmeadows, Mass. while her actress mother is on tour in Australia.
Lee,
as she is called, is interested in fashion design but she has little
sewing
experience. Her boyfriend's (Jock's) mother, Mrs. Bradford offers to
help
Lee with her original design, the Autumn Leaf skirt, to be worn at the
big Square dance. Mrs. Bradford brings the skirt to her sewing circle
to
complete the applique, inadvertently setting the stage for the
duplicates!
When Lee arrives at the dance, Beverly (the archrival) and her five
member
dance committee all have on the same leaf skirt!! The book: Date
with a Career by Jan Nickerson (Funk and Wagnalls
Co.-1958)
I can't remember the title either but it isn't
any that anyone has named so far. It was a children's book club
selection
in the late 60's or early 70's. The girl had a rival who stole her
designs
and showed up in school wearing them. I definitely remember that the
girl
used real leaves as templates for her appliques. This book is probably
still in my mother's attic, but she has gotten very funny about anybody
going up there...
Jan Nickerson, Date with a Career.
This is a long shot but there is a part of the book where the main
character
(Lee) makes an autumn skirt with leaves on it. The names don't
match
what you remember, though. Look in the solved section for more
detail
about this book- maybe that will help you rule it in or out.
thanks so much for a terrific service! My search was
answered within 24 hours of being posted! I was able to
locate
the book, purchase it, and it arrived today! I am
thrilled!
Thanks again!
Jan Nickerson, Date with a Career.
More info available on Solved Pages.
This book is “Date With a Career,”
by Jan Nickerson, published in 1958. Saphronia Lee Adams dreams
of being a clothes designer. She spends her senior year in high school
living in a small town with her grandmother while her actress mother is
working in Australia.
Jan Nickerson, Date with a Career. Thank you so much
for the help. I was able to order the book from an out-of-print
website
and have just received the book. I'm looking forward to reading
it
again!
Janny Wurts (author), Daughter of
Empire, (1991). A series by Janny Wurts. The first
is Daughter of Empire (1991), next is Mistress
of Empire
(1993), and finally Servant of Empire (1997). The
ant-like
creatures are the Cho-Ga, I believe. (This series is linked to
another
by Raymond Feist, beginning with Magician: Apprentice.
There
are about a dozen of those.)
Raymond E. Feist and Janny Wurts,
Daughter
of the Empire, 1987. Definitely Daughter of the
Empire,
jointly written by Feist and Wurts. Book 1 of a Trilogy
featuring
Mara of the Acoma. I'd class it as fantasy, not science fiction. Feist
had previously written Magician, which featured a character Pug being
taken
prisoner by invaders who came from another world. This other world was
the setting for the Empire trilogy and expanded the reader's view of
the
invaders world, politics and mindset, as well as a being a good read
and
a strong female character. It's one of the ones that started me reading
fantasy.
N27: Sounds like Daughter of the
Mountains
by Louise Rankin and illustrated by Kurt Wiese. Written in
1948.
In the last days of the British Empire, a Tibetan girl named Momo
(under
age ten, I think) gets a pet she's always dreamed of - a rare red-gold
Lhasa terrier named Pempa. The dog is stolen by a caravan because a
rich
(kindly) British woman in Calcutta has requested one. Momo rushes
straight
after the caravan and all the way to Calcutta in search of her dog.
Lots
of cultural detail, such as how to greet another person in Tibet (stick
out your tongue) and Momo's amazement when meeting foreign people who
carry
packs rather than having pack-mules to do it for them.
Could N27 be Daughter of the Mountains
by Louie Rankin? I don't remember an astrologer in it
&
I don't think that the dog had the same name as the child, but the plot
says that Momo (who lives on a trade pass in the Himalayas) wants a
Lhaso
Alpso (sp?) desperately. When she finally gets one, it is stolen,
and she travels down from the mountains into India and actually finds
her
dog.
N27 Nepal or Tibet: Sounds like Daughter
of the Mountains, by Louise Rankin, illustrated by Kurt
Wiese, published New York, Viking 1948, 191 pages. Nine year old Momo
leaves
her Tibetan village and crosses the Great Trade Route in her tireless
search
for her beloved red-gold dog, which had been stolen.
This has to be Daughter of the Mountains
by Louise Rankin. I got my copy at a book fair in the
school
library around 1973 and still have it. Momo's Lhasa terrier is
stolen
by traders passing through her Tibetan mountain village, and she
travels
alone all the way to India to find him. Wonderful adventure.
David
and the Phoenix
I'm searching for a book I read in my grammar school library in
Shelton, CT probably between 1960 and 1965. I recall it was a
hardback.
It was a story about a boy who had a close friendship with a Phoenix,
which,
as I recall, had a nest somewhere in the boy's backyard woods. I
recall them having some adventures, and toward the end of the book the
Phoenix does what Phoenixs do, that is, dies and is reborn, but I think
not remembering the boy from its past life. Not much to go on, I
guess.
Sounds like David and the Phoenix to me. Check the Most Requested pages for the reprint now available.
V3 vardon, beth: the poster might want to
contact
Purple House Press, and ask what the steps are to check whether
copyright
has expired, etc. This isn't exactly a lost-book inquiry, but I guess
there's
no other place to
put it.
Helen Adler, Davy Deer's New Red Scarf. Chicago: Rand McNally, 1966.
George MacDonald, The Day Boy and the
Night
Girl, 1882, approximately.
The
story sounds like one of George MacDonald's fairy tales, variously
known
as "The Day Boy and the Night Girl" or as "The Romance of Photogen and
Nycteris." The collection sought might be one of MacDonald's
collected
fairy tales (or, of course, might be an anthology that reprinted that
MacDonald
story among others). The story is online
here along with many other MacDonald fairy tales.
George Macdonald, The Day Boy and the
Night
Girl. From an online
review: "I absolutely love this story! George MacDonald has a
lovely
sort of grandfatherly style, and this is perfect to be divided up as a
series of bedtime stories. A boy who has never seen night and a girl
who
has never seen day help each other cope with their fears." Was
the
story you had part of a larger collection?
George McDonald, The Day Boy and the Night
Girl. This is The Day Boy
and
the Night Girl, one of George McDonald's fairy tales. You can probably
find it in one of his collections. It may also have been printed
separately.
And since he's out of copyright, you could probably find the text
online
easily enough.
G360: Oooooh, this is a beauty! There's more
than one collection of George MacDonald's short(ish) fairy
tales,
but that particular tale goes under two names - The Day Boy and
the
Night Girl (The Romance of Photogen and Nycteris) and Son
of the Day, Daughter of the Night. You can read it online
here - it's from the 19th century. The first lines are:
"There
was once a witch who desired to know everything. But the wiser a witch
is, the harder she knocks her head against the wall when she comes to
it.
Her name was Watho, and she had a wolf in her mind. She cared for
nothing
in itself -- only for knowing it. She was not naturally cruel, but the
wolf had made her cruel." (Since C.S. Lewis said that practically every
work of his has a "quote" from MacDonald, I wouldn't be surprised if
that's
where the remark about Eustace Scrubb comes from ("though he didn't
care
much about any subject for its own sake, he cared a great deal about
marks
(i.e., school grades)...") The Green Tiger Press has a
description
of SOTD&DOTN as follows: "Softcover with Dust Jacket. Wonderfully
illustrated
with full color tipped-in illustrations by Lyn Teeple. 41 pages. One of
George MacDonald's last fairy tales and one highly praised by C. S.
Lewis."
Enjoy!
MacDonald, George, The day boy and the
night girl, 1904. A curse
from
a witch decrees that a boy will never wake at night nor sleep during
the
day while a girl is doomed never to sleep at night nor wake
during
the day, until a twist of fate brings them together.
George MacDonald, The History of Photogen
and Nycteris [“The Day Boy and the Night Girl”],
1879. This could be from any of a number of collections. The
story
described is The History of Photogen and Nycteris, by George MacDonald,
but I have encountered it in several different volumes. It's available
online
here.
Charles Finger, Tales from Silver Lands
There is a short story in this book that involves a witch who imprisons
two children, but lets out the girl by night and the boy by day.
The children eventually escape from her after overcoming their fears
(the
girl was afraid of the day and the boy afraid of night). I think
they escape using a magical flying stone.
#W47: Winkie the monkey: this may
be pretty far off, but there's a story in Volume 4 of the 1956 edition
of Childcraft, Animal Friends and Adventures, called
Wappie's Surprise Cake, and it is about a monkey.
From The Horn Book Sep-Oct/42, p.296, ad for
Viking Junior Books Little Lost Monkey by JoBesse
McElveen
Waldeck "... All sakiwinki monkeys have a bump of curiosity,
but
Winki had the biggest of all. It involved him with the Bushmaster
Snake,
and with the terrible wild pigs, but as it also made him such friends
as
the Labba, the Deer, and the Iguana, in the end he wasn't really sorry
- only wiser than before. Illustrated by Kurt Wiese. Ages 8 to 11.
October.
$1.50." There's a line drawing beside it of the little monkey
squatting on a tree branch and scratching his head. The monkey's name
and
the date sound about right.
Maybe the series of Quinlan Basic Readers,
including
Day
By Day, by Myrtle Banks Quinlan, published Allyn and
Bacon,
1949. These are stories featuring Winky the Monkey, Jane, Billy &
David.
w47 winkie book: a possible title in the readers
series - Winky The Monkey, (Quinlan Readers) also
featuring
Billy and Jane, dated 1939, "easy reading for the young learner, great
monkeyshines and graphics throughout" 46 pages, 6 x 7 3/4 inches.
In reference to Book Stumper #W47, I don't have
a solution but was wondering if the book she is looking for is also one
that I would like to have. I'm not sure of the title but is
about a Monkey named Winkey that went to school. There was also a
song in the book about things that happen to him that went something
like
this: I am a monkey, I go to school, I do I do I do, I was so
hungry,
I ate my crayons, I did I did I did and also something about I
missed
the nail and hit my tail, I did I did I did. We had this
book
many years ago (50 to 60) when I had just learned to read and probably
belonged to one of my older sisters. I think it was a book that
was
used in school as a reader. I loved that book.
A
Day in Fairy Land
I don't remember the pet caterpillars, but this could be the popular
The
Golden Books Treasury of Elves and Fairies again. See
more
on Most Requested Books. But
that's
really more poetry than story. If it's really that oversized,
then
perhaps it's the rare and elusive A Day in Fairy Land
by Sigrid Rahmas. I've found two editions: Little Neck,
New
York: Ramborn Corp., pictorial boards, no date stated, elephant
folio.
And surely a later printing: Charlotteville, N.Y., Story House
Corp.
[1967]. "The fairies and elves celebrate the fairy queen's
birthday
in a wonderful and delightful way."
---
Fairy Queen's Birthday? c. 1946-50 What I remember is an
oversized,
whitish book with a brown fuzzy spine. Published in Europe. The
lllustrations
were magical to a little girl. Fairies wore beautiful
ballerina-type
outfits. Plot was fairies and elves preparing for the fairy
queen's
birthday party.
A Day in Fairy Land by Sigrid Rahmas.
Pretty magical to adults too; it's quite a book production. See
more
on Solved Mysteries.
This sounds like it could be one of John
Jakes'
American
Chronicles series...The Bastard (1974),
The
Rebels (1975), The Seekers (1975), The
Furies
(1976). I think those were the four I read before I lost
interest
I don't know which one it was, but one of them was very similar to your
description. There's 8 books, total, in the series, following the
Kent family through the Revolutionary war era. A list of all the
titles can be found on this website.
This story line sounds like one of F. Van
Wyck Mason's historicals, available in my local library in the late
1960's and the 1970's. I checked www.bookfinder.com but couldn't
pick out the precise title -- have your poster look through his titles
to see whether any of them strikes a spark.
Agnes Sligh Turnbull, The Day Must Dawn,
1942. I still have this book. The back of the dust jacket
encourages
us, the readers of books, to protect freedom by buying war bonds. I am
a librarian who has just discovered your web site and am
hooked!
I
submitted a query years ago, probably five years ago... and today, I
googled "nanny tea" again, leading me back to your website.... and
found that some divine librarian knew exactly the book I meant... bless
him/her, tears came to my eyes, I *knew* I didn't dream up this
story!!! I have ordered the book, the 1942 version, very
inexpensively from Half.com. I figured I was maybe 12 years old
when I read this book and then lost it... I remember having to pay a
library fine... I will be 52 this year, so for forty years I have been
looking for the story so that I could read it again, but I could never
remember the title. Thank you thank you thank you for your
fabulous website, and for the wonderful people who peruse it offering
lifelines to other bibiophiles!!!!
Day
on
the Farm
D113: Title may be (A girl's name) Day in the Country. Small, thin,
picture book (like a Golden Book, c. 1955) with colored illustrations
and
a few lines of narrative. One page was of a girl walking down a country
lane. On her left was a (white? fenced horse paddock with a (brown?)
horse
in it. There may have been a dog running along with the girl. Also, I
believe
the lane went down a hill toward a house.
There are several Little Golden Book editions (#407, #203-1, #203-31, #304-56) called A Day on the Farm by Nancy Fielding Hulick, and illustrated by J.P. Miller in 1960.
Yikes, now that I have this in hand, I'm not sure it's the correct solution at all....
|
Condition Grades |
Hulick, Nancy Fielding. A Day on the Farm. Illustrated by John P. Miller. Golden Press, 1960. Little Golden Book #407. Minor wear, but overall VG. $8 |
|
I don't have full details for this one, but
could
the person who's looking for a book about a boy squashed flat by a
steamroller
be wanting The Day the Cow Sneezed? It's about a
bizarre
chain of events that does include a
runaway steamroller that squashes people
flat.
The narrator's brother chases a rabbit instead of bringing the cow in,
so the cow stands in the stream and catches cold. The cow
sneezes,
and one thing leads to another, including fireworks and a runaway
ferris
wheel, besides the steamroller. It was published in the 1950's but
there's
a much more recent paperback copy of it at our pediatrician's
office!
My son, now 3, always digs it out for me to read to him.
Flora, James. The Day The
Cow Sneezed. Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1957.
Just guesses, but possibly One Monster
After
Another by Mercer Mayer or The Five Chinese
Brothers
by Claire Huchet Bishop. Both have parts that deal with the sea
drying up.
Both are on the Solved Mysteries pages too; check out the comments
there.
Wallace, Ian, Very Last First Time,
1980's?.
Newer than the enquirer indicates, but maybe worth checking ?
A picture book about a little Inuit girl who
goes under the ice to collect shell fish while the tide is out.
Spillane, Mickey, The day the sea rolled
back, 1979. Actually a
mystery,
two boys in the Caribbean discover amazing things on the day the sea
rolls
back for miles.
A more fantastical take on this idea is The
Plug at the Bottom of the Sea, by R. Lamb, illustrated
by
M. Hopkins, published Allen & Unwin 1968, 143 pages. "Craig and
Cindy find themselves washed up on the side of a windmill when their
dinghy
capsizes in a storm. However, this is no ordinary windmill for its
sails
only move when struck by lightning. The children shelter there and in
the
morning awaken to a strange world that has been completely drained of
water.
So begins a strange journey to replace the plug at the bottom of the
ocean
and restore the world to normality. On their journey they are joined by
a host of strange characters. There is Moses the old sea captain,
Captain
Tiny who is searching for gold, Windmill the seagull, the seahorse
which
they carry in a bottle, the penguin, and not least of all the beautiful
mermaid who is searching for her ten children." (JB Apr/68 p.104)
Day
Willie
Wasn't
This book is about a plump little boy with a girl cousin who teases
him about his weight, calling him Willie the Wisp to be mean. He
becomes quite thin and then scares her when he's almost
invisible.
We checked this book out of a library in a suburb of Philadelphia
repeatedly
in the 70's, and were quite disappointed when we moved to Miami in 1978
and couldn't ever find it again in any library. We were told the
book was out of print when I tried to order it at a bookstore (maybe in
1980). My children and I would be ecstatic if we could find a
copy!!
I think there's something on the Solved Mysteries pages similar to
this,
but I didn't find it on first run-thru.
William Corbin, The day Willie wasn't,
1971. "After his visiting cousin teases him about being fat,
Willie
overdoes his reducing campaign."
Dean's
Gift Book of Fairy Tales
also Dean's Book of Fairy
Tales
and Dean's Mother Goose
Book
of Rhymes
see also Most
Requested Anthologies
I am looking for a book of fairy tales that belonged to my
Great-Grandmother
that I loved as a child. It included the stories Sleeping
Beauty,
Puss in Boots, Thumbelina, Tom Thumb, The Frog Prince (but I think
i was named somthing else. The princess had a golden ball that
she
lost in a pond), and most impotantly The White Cat. There
was another stumper where the searcher described this book, but none of
the answers were the book I'm looking for. The book might have
been
quite old. The illistrations were very detailed and beautiful.
All
the princcesses had very long hair, with curls at the very end.
One
illustration from The White Cat showed a hallway with arms on
the
walls holding torches. This book was quite large, slighly larger
than the dimensions of a piece of paper. It was about 1 1/2
inches
thick. It was hardcover and the cover was a greyish blue. I
can't remember what was on the cover, the name or the
author/editor.
Please help!
I believe this is The Fairy Tale Book by Marie
Ponsot
and
illustrated by Adrienne Segur. It was a lavishly
illustrated
volume, one of my most requested, which has at last been
reprinted.
It is now available again at an affordable $20, and I have copies
available.
Your stumper had me fooled for a while, because "The White Cat" is
named
"Queen Cat" in this version, but your illustration is there.
Sorry. This is not the book I'm looking for. I say a
description
of it from another stumper. The key is
that the story in it i loved the most was The White Cat.
Dean?, (Dean's) A book of Fairy Tales,
1977, reprint. After reading this, I was amazed to recall reading the
very
same story. It all came back to me, very vividly. I adored this story
as
a small child, and frantically searched for it. I hoped it hadn't been
sold at a garage sale, like many of my childhood books were. I was a
"big
girl" then, and wanted to get rid of "kid's books" to show it. It was
among
the last box of books. I was grateful that my mother had the
forethought
to save a few of the best books... Here is is bit of extra info,
gleamed
from the inside coverpage: Published by: Playmore Inc.,
Originally
Published as: Hans Christian Anderson Fairy Tales; Janet
and Anne Grahame-Johnstone Gift book of Fairy Tales; Gift Book of Fairy
Tales; The White Cat. Hope this helps!
The solution submitted by a fellow visiter
to the site was indeed correct! I found the book on an ebay
auction and will be bidding on it shortly!
thank you so much for providing this service! I have been
wondering and longing for this book for years!
I also can't wait to visit your shop. I live in Michigan so I
will
make a priority when I get down to Cleveland! Thanks again
---
All I remember is that is was a large book
(or seemed it to me). It is a compilation of nursery rhymes: The
ones I remember included were winkin' blinkin' and not, lavender blue
dilly
dilly, one about fairies in the rain. The illustrations were so
beatiful.
On the cover was a parade of children - I think playing instruments.
A59 - Might be worth checking Hilda
Boswell's
Book
of Nursery Rhymes and Harold Jones' Lavender's
Blue
-
both large-sized books and have some similarities to the description
here.
I believe another described it in A59: I recall
the beautiful art included "House That Jack Built" "Old Mother Hubbard"
"Jack Sprat" Pictures of A Doctor running up to his waist in water,
mostly
elves depicted in artwork. The old man with Peas Porridge Hot has
a stream of smoke looking like a long beard coming from it. I
want
to say Rand McNally or Random House published it but really not sure.
Father Goose / Tales from Brothers Grimm
(one or both in title), early 80's. Yellow cover, hardback, children
with
instruments are Wynken, Blynken and Nod
Dean's Mother Goose BOOK OF RHYMES-
illustrated by Janet and Anne Grahame Johnstone. Previously
published
as Gift Book of Nursery Rhymes and New Gift Book of Nursery
Rhymes.
My 1977 version has the three poems you cited. The fairies in the
rain is "Millions of massive raindrops/Have fallen all around/They have
danced on the house tops/They have hidden in the ground...." Pictures
to
accompany this show little winged fairies dancing on slate roof, on
gatepost,
on tree roots!
---
I have been looking for this book for about 10 years. I got it from
an aunt when I was about 5 or 6. It was a collection of nursery rhymes.
I can't remember the name of the book or the author, but it had a
bright
yellow hard cover and it was oversized. The illustrations were very
disctinct--elves
and fairies with pointy ears, and it seemed at the time that every
person
depicted in the book had pointy ears. The book had stories about
wynken,
blinken and nod, the old woman in the shoe, the house that jack built,
little jack horner, and tons of others. I mainly remember the
illustrations,
though. If anyone can help me with this, I would greatly appreciate it!
I miss this book.
The Tall Book of Fairy Tales? Except it isn't
bright
yellow, it's more of a brown...
Dean's Mother Goose BOOK OF RHYMES
(Dean & Sons Ltd., London, England) Illustrated by Janet and Anne
Grahame
Johnstone. The 1977 edition has the poems you mentioned and it has a
yellow
cover. In most of the pictures the characters have an elfin quality:
curly
toed shoes, some pointy ears, shaggy hair! I hope this is it! This book
has appeared also as, Gift Book of Nursery Rhymes and the New
Gift Book of Nursery Rhymes.
---
As a child I had a hardback, grey book which I lugged around
everywhere.
I'm sure it seemed large at the time due to my age, however, I am
positive
it had a complete compilation of fairy tales which would, in fact, make
it a pretty large book. It had such stories as The Princess
and
the Pea, Little Red Riding Hood, Princess and the Frog, Puss N' Boots,
Babes in the Woods, Hansel & Gretel, Cinderella, Rumpelstiltskins,
etc. It also had The Little Match Girl, which I
distinctly
remember being the last story in the book. There were full page
illustrations
that were absolutely beautiful. There were several stories which
I did not list because frankly, I'd flip to my favorites which I listed
above. I was born in 1972 and I'm unsure when the book was
purchased.
I do not remember it being a used book. There were no marks or
damage
so I do not believe it was handed down to me. However, I have no
memory of the dustjacket. Everyone in my family remembers the
book
but no one can remember the name of it. It was lost in a house
fire
years ago. I have searched all over the internet and have found
books
that are close but usually they lack a story or two. I
periodically
search every year in hope one will turn up on an auction
site.
So far, I've had no luck. Any information would be nice. Of
course, finding the actual book would be blissful.
Negative answer! C101 is NOT this - at least
not
this printing of it [tho it does have a very modern 1-page version of
the
Sun & Wind removing man's jacket] Bjoland, Esther
M,
editor
Stories
of childhood vol 1 [of 6-vol set] various illustrators
The
Child's World c1947
I'm remember an anthology that my mother use
to read to me when I was a little boy. (72-77) The stories I emember
from
it were Pinoccio, Puss in Boots, and possibly a story about a fellow
who
goes to Hell? and buys a
noodle-maker? off the devil, which his wife ends
up flooding the town with noodles because she didn't know how to stop
it.
(Might have been a different book) There were more stories that I don't
remember, oh wait there was Beauty and the Beast. The thing I remember
most about the book was the illustrations. They were the creepist
pictures
I had ever seen. (at the time) The illustrations for Puss in Boots were
by Dore. The Beauty and the Beast illustrations were by Crane, and I
believe
the pinoccio illustrations were by Folkard.I also remember the stories
being original, not homogenized.In other words they were creepy. I
don't
remember what color the book was. I hope this helps somebody remember.
I would like this book also.
published by Parents Magazine Enterprises for
Playmore, Inc. NY NY, Best Loved Fairy Tales,
including
Mother Goose
Selections, 1963. I don’t think this is
the answer to the original stumper (with the matchstick girl), I
believe
this is the answer to the “anthology” including the “noodlemaker.” The
title is deceptive as I don’t think there is anything of Mother
Goose in it. It also says that it was
originally
published as Vol. 3 - Young Years Library. My copy is the 1974
edition,
and is red with a color picture of a gray-toned swirl which is, I
believe,
Aladdin’s genie on the front, as though projected from a book held by a
boy. The stories included are: Aladdin and the Wonderful
Lamp
~ Cinderella, or the Glass Slipper ~ Beauty and the Beast ~ Sleeping
Beauty
~ Rumpelstiltskin ~ Puss In Boots ~ Whittington and his Cat ~ The Real
Princess [a.k.a. Princess and the Pea] ~ The Tinderbox ~ Jack and the
Beanstalk
~ The Shoemaker and the Elves ~ The Elves and the Changeling ~ The
Servant
Maid and the Elves ~ The Wonderful Tar Baby Story ~ The History of Tom
Thumb ~ Jack the Giant Killer [a.k.a. The Little Tailor] ~ The Husband
Who Was to Mind the House ~ The Emperor’s New Clothes ~ Bremen Town
Musicians
~ Hansel and Gretel ~ Snow White ~ Ugly Duckling ~ Steadfast Tin
Soldier
~ Rapunzel ~ Why the Sea Is Salt ~ The Alligator and the Jackal ~ How
the
Raven Helped Men ~ The Frog Prince ~ Pinocchio’s First Adventures ~ A
Mad
Tea Party [excerpt from Alice In Wonderland] ~ The Little Gnome [a
poem]
Why the Sea Is Salt seemed a bit mature for the child audience, but
what
do I know? It tells the tale of a rich and a poor brother.
When the poor brother must ask his rich brother for food for the
Christmas
table, the rich brother agrees on the condition that the poor brother
do
one thing for him. The poor brother will do anything he asks, so
the rich brother gives him some bacon and tells him to go to
Hell.
somehow he manages to find Hell and gets a magical quern which grinds
out
whatever the user wants. The poor brother knows how to work it,
but
the rich brother ends up getting it but does not know how to stop
it.
So when he asks for herring and broth, made “both good and fast,” the
quern
churns them out as asked and floods the house and it pours down the
street.
I
would say that 90% of the illustrations are
incredibly
creepy and some of the stories are darkly humorous (like this one) and
use very archaic language (who didn’t have to look up the word
“quern”?).
Gyo Fujikawa, Oh What a Busy Day! 1976.
On another note, the Babes in the Wood is featured in Gyo's book, and
is
quite beautifully illustrated. I know it's not the book you're
looking
for (my apologies), but it does come highly recommended.
Jessie Willcox Smith, A Child's Book of
Stories. See A116 ~ The
contributor
who suggested A Child's Book of Stories by Jessie Wilcox Smith seems to
have a book similar to mine and their book has Babes in the Wood.
Bridget Hadaway (retold), Fairy
Tales. 1974/1982/1985/1987.
A Book of Fairy Tales, 1977.
I believe the book you are looking for is "A Book of Fairy Tales" by Dean.
It was published by Playmore, Inc. in 1977 with lovely illustrations by
Janet
& Anne Grahame Johnstone. There was another story that I loved
in there called "The White Cat" that has stuck with me and why I'm
searching
for it too!
I believe this last suggestion is correct.
It was published under a couple different titles, the most common of
which
is Dean's Gift Book of Fairy Tales, London: Dean &
Son,
1967.
I'm not sure if I ever thanked you for helping
me find this book. It was right! I have since gotten
two copies to share with my children. I have enclosed picture of
the book if you'd like to use it for your solved page. Again
thanks
for your help in solving my stumper!
---
I'm afraid my memory is very spotty, but I
would be grateful if by some miracle you are able to piece this
together.
I'm looking for a fairy tale book I had as a child. It was
hardcover,
and thick, a couple of inches maybe. I had it in the early
80s.
I think the title of the book was in brown. I think the
background
was white with brown-toned illustrated characters (from the tales in
the
book, I presume). The cover had a line of characters from big to
tiny walking up a path (maybe to a castle in the distance). The
characters
wrapped around the book from front cover to back cover. I think
the
last character ended with a mouse. I also think there was a giant
somewhere on the front cover. The fairy tale stories were
color-illustrated
on every single page. The type went around the heavily
illustrated
pages. Some pages were not even white, but completely colored. I
think there was more than one illustrator. However, one of the
stories
I think was titled "The White Cat". This story was illustrated as
if the characters were from the 1700s. The illustration for this
story was very detailed: meaning no simple lines or cartoon-like). I
remember
staring at the woman that the cat turned into as a little girl,
thinking
she was an angel. She had tight curls, which were just around her
chin and a silver/white gown, with a corset. She may have held a
rose. The background page color was a pewter-like color.
Another
illustration in the story, which I remember, was of the white cat
eating
with the gentleman. The gentleman may have looked like a Musketeer with
brown, shoulder-length hair. I think he was even wet from the
rain.
There were torches with arms and a white cat eating at a table in a
gown.
The cat was on the right and the man on the left. A banquet was
before
them. There were lots of other stories, but for the life of me, I
don't remember them. I'm guessing "Jack and the Beanstalk" and
some
story with a donkey and a rooster on it's back peering in a
window.
I may be confusing these stories with other fairy tale stories for this
book. The memories I am certain of is of the 1700s woman, thick
book,
and colored illustrations throughout. I wish I had more.
Any
suggestions would be welcomed. Thank you.
This is an old book from the 1890's, but it's
the only book I could find that had both your stories together, and I'm
sending it along because you mentioned the illustrations were old
looking.
However, there is no mention of illustrations in this one, so it's
probably
a false lead. But here's the info -- Fairy Book: the best
popular
stories / Dinah Maria Mulock Craik / 479 pgs / Harper, 1890's
?
/ Contents: The sleeping beauty in the wood -- Hop-o'-my-thumb --
Cinderella -- Adventures of John Dietrich -- Beauty and the beast --
Little
one eye, little two eyes, and little three eyes -- Jack the giant
killer
-- Tom Thumb -- Rumpelstilzchen -- Fortunatus -- The Bremen town
musicians
-- Riquet with the tuft -- House island -- Snow-white and rose red --
Jack
and the bean-stalk -- Graciosa and Percinet -- The iron stove -- The
invisible
prince -- The woodcutter's daughter -- Brother and sister -- Little
Red-riding-hood
-- Puss in boots -- The wolf and the seven young goslings -- The fair
one
with golden locks -- The butterfly -- The frog-prince -- The white cat
-- Prince Cherry -- Little snowdrop -- The bluebird -- The yellow dwarf
-- The six swans -- The prince with the nose -- The hind of the forest
-- The juniper tree -- Clever Alice.
Just an FYI: I'm afraid the book isn't
what is being suggested. I can say that the book was published
around
1980s not 1890s. It was a new book for me at the time. The
illustrations weren't old looking, just the artist choose a 1700s
period
for the drawings for "The White Cat". I appreciate the
attempt.
I'm still trying to see if I can remember anything else worth
mentioning.
Illustrated by Janet & Anne Grahame
Johnstone,
Dean's
A Book of Fairy Tales, 1977. Your description of the
illustrations
from "The White Cat" match perfectly with this book (except after her
transformation,
the beautiful woman is holding a red feather instead of a rose).
From inside the cover of my copy: "Also been published as:Hans
Christian Andersen Fairy Tales, Janet and Anne
Grahame-Johnstone
Gift
Book of Fairy Tales, The White Cat"
Yes!! Yes!! This is it!
I can't believe I thought of the wrong cover! I must have
switched
covers or made one up! Who knows, but yes, I had the 1977
version!
With this info I was able to pull up photos. I've attached
them.
I thought that these may help others in the future trying to remember
this
book. It's a beautiful book, and more beautifully detailed than I
remember. Thank you so much!! I am forever grateful!
Dale Cowen, Deadly Sleep,
1982.
I didn't post the S423 stumper, but I did post M348 ("Macbeth-themed
Horror/Mystery"),
and I think that we were both looking for the same book! The
solution
given here sounds right for what I was looking for too! (It's funny how
this poster and I remembered very different aspects of the book, but
I'm
pretty sure it is the same one - take a look)
---
This is a book that may have been part of a series like Bantam’s
Dark Forces, or Dell’s Twilight: Where Darkness Begins. I read it in
the
mid-1980s, and I’m pretty sure that’s around when it was published. It
was definitely a paperback, intended for the teen/young adult
horror/mystery
fan. What I remember is a young girl (teenaged) visiting a castle-like
estate in Scotland, and nearby is a lake (it may be referred to as a
loch)
with a large stone or rock that hangs over it. On the stone, there is a
conspicuous deep red mark, which legend says is a bloodstain.
Supposedly,
a young girl named Fiona once lived in the house (or her love did), and
somehow he was killed, with a sword or a dagger. He lay dying, and she
went and gave him a final kiss, then pressed her lips against his
wound,
into the blood. Then she ran out to the rock and kissed the stone,
imprinting
it with the bloody lip-print, and jumped into the loch, committing
suicide.
People tried to get rid of the bloodstain, but couldn’t remove it. It’s
possible that they named the stone for her, like Fiona’s Rock or
Fiona’s
Leap. I can’t remember if there was something magical or lucky about
kissing
that spot on the rock afterwards, but if there was, it may have been
spooky
or frightening as well. I feel like something haunts the modern girl
who
is the protagonist, and it makes her do it, and it’s a horrifying
experience.
I think she can taste or feel the blood, or that it grows warm under
her
lips, very different from the cold stone, or something like that. There
are also certainly some aspects that I’m not describing, possibly a
modern
male character and some romance, and whatever this faux Scottish legend
means to the main story. I've been searching and searching, and I'm
desperate!
Thank you!
Dale Cowan, Deadly Sleep,
1982.
It turns out that the mystery was solved only the day after I sent in
my
request. I'd ordered several books from old series looking for this
one,
but I thought it would have a title more like "Watery Grave," so I
wasn't
expecting it to actually be one I'd ordered already. But Deadly
Sleep
it is, and it was indeed the first book in Dell's Twilight series. It
has
since been reprinted as a standalone book, as late as 1992. The stone
certainly
is called Fiona's Rock, complete with loch, unnaturally cold
stone-kissing
and untimely death, and there seems to be some romance and some Macbeth
mixed in as well. I'm looking forward to rereading it.
Dale Cowen, Deadly Sleep,
1982. I didn't post THIS stumper, but I did post M348
("Macbeth-themed
Horror/Mystery"), and I think that we were both looking for the same
book!
The solution given here sounds right for what I was looking for too!
(It's
funny how this poster and I remembered very different aspects of the
book,
but I'm pretty sure it is the same one - take a look at M348!)
Robb White, Deathwatch.
This one recently came up at Abebooks - credit for the solution goes to
AnnainCA!
---
circa 1975. The paperback's cover had a picture of a jeep
parked in the desert. Plot: A guide takes a rich hunter into the
desert,
and finds out his client plans to hunt him, and not the area's famed
antelopes
(?). They end up on a mesa, and the guide outwits the hunter by playing
dead, eventually killing (?) him. The book ends with the guide
returning
to civilization. He may or may not have reported what happend to the
sheriff.
I believe the same author had another book about American saboteurs in
the Pacific during WWII. Most memorable about the latter book was a
scene
where the saboteurs escape their stricken submarine and swim over 100
feet
up to the surface, without scuba equipment, then wreck a Japanese
airstrip.
Robb White, Deathwatch, 1972.
This is certainly it, the cover illustration matches, and I remember
the
taught, suspense-filled story well. Robb White also wrote my favorite
YA
heroic-type story, The Lion's Paw.
Robb White, Deathwatch,
1972. Deathwatch is a suspensuful story about two
men
in the desert pitted against each other, a young man named Bend and a
business
tycoon named Madec. The two men go on a hunting trip, Ben is Madoc's
guide
for hire (he needs money for college). Madoc commits a crime, and Ben
is
the only witness. A hunting trip turns into a survival game between the
two. Hope it's the one!
Possibly Deathwatch by Robb
White?
Richard Connell, The Most Dangerous Game,
1923. This sounds a lot like The Most Dangerous Game.
This has also been movies and one in the 1990's based on it called The
Game with Ice T. Connell also has a book called Murder at Sea
but it may not be the other book you mentioned because I've had trouble
finding a synopsis on it. HOpe this helps you.
please consider J68b solved. I thank you and the readers who
submitted
Robb White's Deathwatch, which is the title I was looking for.
---
A young man is a hunting guide for
big
horn sheep in the deserts of the southwestern United States. When
his customer "accidentally" shoots an old hermit the young man becomes
the hunters next prey. The young man must navigate through the
desert back into town while being stalked and hunted. The young
man is eventually able to overcome the hunter with just a
slingshot. Young Adult Fiction. Please help.
Robb White, Deathwatch. This is definitely your book! I
haven't read it since I was in junior high, but the writing was so
strong and suspenseful that I've never forgotten it.
Robb
White, Deathwatch,
1972, copyright. This is one of my favorites. It's also been
solved before, and is on the solved D page.
Robb
White, Deathwatch.
This book closely matches your description.
White,
Robb, Deathwatch,
1972, approximate. Definitely Deathwatch, one
of my favorites as a kid. The man who hires the teenager as a guide (I
think his name is Madoc) kills an old man out in the desert, then
proceeds to hunt Ben. Ben manages to get away, turn the tables on
Madoc, and bring him back to town...but then he's arrested because
people can't believe that his story is true. Eventually, his
story is verified, and the book ends with him saying "I just wanted to
report a murder."
Robb
White, Deathwatch, 1972,
approximate. This is definitely the book. As soon as I saw
the title I knew it. Even the names came back to me. Thank
you for this site and service.
This is definitely Deception Point
by Dan Brown.
O69 is most definitely Deception Point
by Dan Brown, who is also the author of the DaVinci Code.
Brown, Dan, Deception Point.
I just read this a few months ago! By the same author as The
Da Vinci Code...
Dan Brown, Deception Point
D108 Dr. Frances R. Horwich ("Miss
Frances")
& Reinald Werrenrath, Jr., Debbie and Her Nap,
1953.
I hope this is the book, it will help me justify keeping so many of my
childhood books :)! I'm 51, and was given this when I was 2 (and
hated naps). It's indeed the same size as Golden Books, but was
part
of Rand McNally's "Ding Dong School" series. The cover is blue and
shows
Debbie as a little blond girl with her hair in 2 bunches, buttoning red
print pajamas. The story tells of her busy morning playing
outdoors
"with her tricycle and her wagon. She had some boards and boxes,
too." She builds a zoo with them, (in the picture, she has used
boxes
for cages, boards for upright bars) and pretends to be various
animals.
When her mother calls her to lunch, "Her cheeks were red. Her eyes were
shining. Her hair was mussed from her cap." The rest of the book
is about lunch, washing dishes, and getting ready for her nap.
Debbie
and her mother help each other and are obviously close and happy.
Debbie
of the Green Gate
Hi--I was wondering if this would ring a bell
with you or anyone else. I read a book about 30 years ago in
which
the main character was named Deborah
Endicott.
This book was written for teenage girls and was set in either the
1600's
or 1700's. This is all I remember. Can anyone out there
help?
This is a wild shot -- but is there any chance
you're thinking of Deborah Sampson, the woman who disguised
herself
as a man & enlisted in the revolutionary army in the 1780s? There
are
a couple of novels based on her story (Cora Cheney, The Secret
Soldier,
'67; Patricia Clapp, I'm Deborah Sampson '77).
Helen Fern Daringer wrote a series of
books about the Endicott family, set in the late 1600s, titles
including
Pilgrim
Kate (published 1949, illustrated by Kate Seredy) and Country
Cousin (published 1951, illustrated by Edward Godwin).
Couldn't
see a Deborah mentioned, but the time and family name fit.
Helen F. Daringer Debbie of the
Green Gate, illustrated by Edward Godwin, 232 pages,
published
by Harcourt, 1950 "Helen Daringer here recreates the life in Leyden of
the English folk destined to become the Pilgrims of Plymouth, as she
tells
the story of fifteen-year-old Debbie Endicott, keeping house for her
weaver
father. She gives a quiet unexciting picture of Dutch ways of life, of
the crafts and arts of the weavers and printers,
of Debbie's pleasure in skating and visiting
the farms and mills in the country. There is a cloud of anxiety,
however,
over the English king's pursuit of Master Brewster, and the spirited
girl
shows quick resourcefulness in leading the king's spies away." review
in
Horn Book, Mar/50, p.105, also shows a line-drawing of two girls
skating
past a tower, one carrying a muff, both wearing skates with high curved
fronts.
D8 Deborah Endicott: did the original poster
ever reply to this? Debbie of the Green Gate is about a
Debbie
(Deborah) Endicott, and is set in the late 1600s so there's a
reasonable
resemblance.
Hi--I'm the one who e-mailed you (a long time
ago) concerning a book about Deborah Endicott. Then we changed
our
e-mail address and I never heard anything, so I mostly forgot about
it.
Imagine my surprise when I checked your site today and saw my
answer!
As soon as I read the title Debbie of the Green Gate, I knew
that
was the book I've been looking for. Thank you for this web site and
thanks
to the kind people who responded to my question.
If it was a Wonder Book rather than an Elf
Book,
it could be Ann Scott's December is for Christmas
Wonder, 1961. "A charming little story about a little bunny who can
read and whose adult family members don't think reading is very
important,
until Jeremy Bunny finds a child's essay on Christmas." "Jeremy
Rabbit discovers that he can read! He starts with Dick and Jane and
goes
on to bigger and better things." illustrated by Alcy Kendrick. It
was
published also under the title How the Rabbits Found Christmas.
Thank you so much for tracking down the title
for me!
Debbie and Her Nap. Maybe
this book? There is a good description of it under "Solved
Mysteries."
Dr. Frances Horwich, a/k/a "Miss
Frances",
Debbie
and Her Nap, 1953. Almost definitely the book. This
was part of a series of books written by Dr. Horwich, who, on a kids'
TV
show that I think was called "Dong Dong School," appeared as "Miss
Frances."
We had a bunch of them when I was growing up, including one where a
litel
girl "bakes" a clay birthday cake for her father while her mother is
baking
a real one, and another one where a little girl grows a vine from a
piece
of a sweet potato. The covers of all of the books had a bell in
the
upper right-hand corner with the words "Dong Dong School" appearing on
the bell.
Dr. Frances Horwich, Debbie and Her Nap,
1953. I just sent in this solution and forgot to mention that the
book does have a mostly-blue cover with a picture of a little girl with
blond hair and pigtails wearing pajamas.
Dr. Frances R. Horwich ("Miss Frances") &
Reinald Werrenrath, Jr., , Debbie and Her Nap,
1953. This is in your Solved Mysteries under "Debbie and Her
Nap".
I'm the person who sent in the solution, and my description reflects
the
data from the first poster. I just want to let this second poster
know that *her* (his?) specific recollections are equally on target --
the bunched hair, wardrobe, 50's-style artwork, baby-blue cover, etc.
Bianco, Pamela, The doll in the
window.
NY, Walck, 1953. I would suggest this one. "Seven year old
Victoria
stood in fornt of the toy shop window. She had come to choose Christmas
presents for her five little sisters. But in the middle of the window
was
a beautiful painted wooden doll, and she wanted the doll more than
anything
in the world. Then she accidentally lost all her money, and found she
couldn't
buy anything at all. An unexpected meeting with a little boy who is a
cub
scout and a very great surprise which comes from the painted doll
herself
help Victoria and all her sisters to have a happy christmas after all."
Tasha Tudor, Becky's Birthday.
If there were candles floating down the river, this is your book.
Gilbert Delahaye/Marcel Marlier, Debbie's
Birthday Party, 1980,
reprint.
There are a whole series of books by this author & illustrator
about
some of the same characters... this looks like the right book to me...
Gorgeous illustrations and fireworks at the end! I hope this is
right/helps!
Let me know if you can if this was right!
OMG.... this is totally the book, Gilbert Delahaye/Marcel
Marlier, Debbie's Birthday Party. Thank you
soooo
much. I did not think I would ever find this book again. This site
ROCKS!
Deegie
and the Fairy Princess
i saw the "stump query" for the above, and the
answer is: Deegie and the Fairy Princess
Thank you so much.
As I was browsing your "Stump The Bookseller"
site, I came across the above inquiry and the answer from one of your
readers.
I am very surprised and happy find that two people (besides myself)
remember
the book. Until now, no one I’ve ever described the book to had ever
heard
of it. I too have been looking for this book for years. I had it when I
was a child and loved it! My hope is that you will be able to help me
obtain
a copy of it.
---
I'm interested in obtaining, or a least identifying, a book that
was read to me in nursery school in Phoenix in the mid-fiftys. It
was beautifully illustrated and told the story of a male character that
had a group of friends (toys?) that vanished/disappeared/were destroyed
and he modeled new figures out of clay or wood and they came back to
life.
I know it's not much to go on but I'd appreciate any clues.
R18 sounds similar to the Deegie and
the
Fairy Princess descriptions on the solved list. BTW two people
on the Alibris board are looking for this as well. Their descriptions
are
"I'm
in search of a childhood memory contained within this beautifully
illustrated
picture book from the early '50's. It s the story of cherub-like
children
who make clay figures in a stream which come to life. The illustrations
are similar to Bessie Pease Gutmann figures. I would greatly appreciate
any information on this lovely little story."and
"I've
been wracking my brain about this book for years - it's about a lonely
child who makes (very good) clay models of imaginary friends &
animals
using clay from a stream. I think they come to life? I think the
illustrations
were black & white drawings with maybe 1 additional colour. I would
has read this around 1960 & it was probably second hand."
The data I have is Deegie and the Fairy Princess by Ruth
W. Rempel, illustrated by Dietrich Rempel, published in
Akron
by Rempel Manufacturing Inc., 1949, 32 pages. I did a web search for
the
authors, and found that a Dietrich Rempel manufactured rubber toys
(Froggie
the Gremlin, Chief Wahoo etc.) in Akron, and his wife was named Ruth.
He
was a designer of the Mickey Mouse gasmask issued to kids. The author
of
the article on him is Dave Lieberth, who has a collection of Akron
rubber
toys and Saalfield children's books. I wonder if he has a copy of the
Deegie
book and what its copyright situation is now? Maybe it could be
re-issued,
there seems to be a demand.
I am SOOOO thrilled. Thank you,
thank you, thank you!!!!! Please do let me know if you can locate
a copy. You are amazing!
---
Hi. I have been haunted by this
childhood
book for years! I can't remember the title and certainly not the
author. It is a large book (I think) like the old copy of The
Littlest
Angel. I had this book as a child in the early 50's.
Anyhow,
it was about a boy who lived on a farm, very happily, playing with the
farm animals, etc. One day a storm came. The clouds had faces and
puffy cheeks as they blew and blew until the animals were blown
away.
He had to hold onto a tree, I think to keep from blowing away. He
was so sad, he went to the edge of the river and made replicas of all
the
animals out of the clay on the riverbank. Suddenly, there was a pink
cloud
in the shape of an armchair, in which sat a fairy type woman who made
good
hot food appear on his table and made his clay animal figures come to
life.
The illustrations were great, and of course, it was a childhood
love.
Hope someone can help me, and thank you in advance :-).
Deegie and the Fairy Princess.
I've seen "Deegie" spelled a variety of ways, and never been able to
actually
find a copy of the book to be sure of the spelling. Evidently the
book was written to promote the clay figures by a manufacturer
branching
out from producing rubber figures. Some of the figures can still
be found on eBay at fantastic prices, but the book doesn't seem to be
findable
anywhere at any price. It was evidently incredibly well-done, for
so many people to remember and ask after it over 50 years later.
Isn't this Deegie and the Fairy Princess
by the Rempels again? Can we get Purple House to reprint it or
something?
Wow. If this is the title of the book,
I will be ecstatic. I don't know, the title doesn't ring a bell,
but that doesn't mean anything. I found it interesting that it
was
published in Akron, as I grew up in Ohio and was born in 1949, the year
that book was published. I can definitely remember the
pictures...especially
the storm clouds and the fairy's pink chair cloud. It was a tall
book, like The Littlest Angel. They really should
re-publish
it like they did Lucky Mrs. Ticklefeather...another favorite
and
one which I recently got my hands on :-D. Thanks so much, I am so
very happy to get a name for this book AND to see others remember it as
well!
By the way, quite a few of the Diamond pottery
figures made for Rempel based on Deegie and the Fairy Princess
are on eBay right now, if you want to put an announcement on your page
for
anyone who might like to see them. Just do a search under
"Rempel"
on eBay. No sign of the book yet, though--haven't seen a single
copy
anywhere!
Deegie and the Fairy Princess: I
ran across a picture of the cover of this elusive book, and thought it
would be useful, since the illustrations seem to have been so
memorable.
Jpg attached.
This book has actually shown up twice on EBay
in recent months. Once it went for well over $100, the second time only
about $60. Having now seen the pictures, I can't say I'm as impressed
as
I expected to be.
Here's
an interesting website about the history of Dietrich Gustav
Rempel's
rubber company and his 1946 "Sunnyslope" line of rubber barnyard
animals,
which were the inspiration for wife Ruth's book, Deegie and the
Fairy
Princess. Though Rempel started with rubber toys, when these
characters
were added, they were made of china, introducing Rempel's efforts in
that
field. Though extremely rare and valuable, they are MUCH easier
to
acquire than the book, Deegie and the Fairy Princess.
The reason must be plain to the meanest intelligence: the china
figures
were lovingly displayed on a shelf, while the book was given to
children
who read it to pieces. Also, both the book and the rubber toys
were
made of perishable materials in sad shape now if they survive at all,
while,
unless broken, china is practically perpetual--look at all the Ming
dynasty
vases and so on still in existence. In the story, a little farm boy
named
Deegie makes animals of clay to replace pets blown away in a
storm.
From the above, it's easy to see the inspiration for the boy's name
(Dietrich
Gustav, D. G.) and his great perfectionism. His perfectionism,
grief,
and love are so great the fairy princess brings his clay animals to
life.
Since Dietrich Rempel designed them, it's easy to understand his
artistic
talent to draw them just as he envisioned. People in search of
this
book rave about the illustrations.
Check this out: A 45 RPM RECORD "COMPLETE
ENTERTAINMENT BY THE REMPELS-- DICK AND RUTH-- 'DEEGIE AND THE FAIRY
PRINCESS',
SIDE 1 AND 2" STORY AND NARRATION BY RUTH REMPEL. THE BACK SIDE IS A
PICTURE
OF MR. REMPEL AND SAYS "REMPEL THE TOYMAKER PRESENTS NEW RIDING SQUEEZE
TOYS--A TOY THEY'LL LOVE AND GROW UP WITH." COPYRIGHT IS 1949,
1962.
Here's more fascinating information: evidently Dietrich Rempel
went
by the nickname "Dick," and years after these characters appeared as
rubber
toys and ceramic figures, they were rereleased as riding toys, complete
with a record of the story read by the author! There's a good
chance
the book was reprinted at this time, so perhaps even a few baby boomers
are hankering after it as well as the older generation!
I was so excited to see so many people on this
website asking about Deegie and the Fairy Princess!
I received the book from my grandma in the very early 50's, brand new
(I
was born in 1948) and have kept it all these 50-some-odd years.
So
many people I mention it to have never heard of it. My problem--I
want to buy another copy. I would like my grandchildren to each
have
a copy--2 grandchildren, 1 book. Any ideas where to find another
copy of this book? It doesn't even have to be in pristine
condition,
as my copy is missing the spine cover, though it is still in one
piece.
Thanks for any and all help.
---
Here's a real stumper: I am seeking
a beautifully illustrated book from my childhood but I don't know the
author
or title. It was about a blond boy who lived alone (on a
farm?).
He imagines the clouds are animals, then the cloud animals come to life
and join him on the farm. I think the boy's name was Dondi, but
it
was not the same Dondi from the comic strips. The thing that
stands
out the most is the lovely watercolor illustrations. Please help
me figure out this mustery!
Similar to Deegie and the Fairy Princess (see Solved
Mysteries
for more).
I think you might have already solved it! I was surfing your
site today, and I found a reference to "Deegie and the Fairy
Princess".
When I read the description of that story, I was reminded about the boy
making the animals out of clay, a detail I had forgotten. Then
when
I saw a picture of the cover, I was certain it's the same book. I
never in a million years would have remembered the name without
you.
Now if only I could find a copy - it looks like it's out of
print.
Thanks for your help! It was well worth the $2.
---
I'm looking for a book i loved as a
child. It would have been 30+ years ago. It had a little boy that was
loney
and made creatures out of mud or sand and they turned into the real
thing
and were his friends, then there was a beautiful princess in the clouds
that took him to a castle in the end. He was a little blone boy, the
book
had very pretty pictures and was a nice easy read. It was
probably
about 20 pages or so. HELP...
Rempel, Ruth, Deegie and the
Fairy
Princess. Little boy makes animals out of clay, fairy princess
makes them come to life.
You found the answer! That's the one!
Thanks so much!!!
---
I have been trying to learn the
name of a book I loved as a little boy in the early 60's I remember a
boy who lost his animal friends in a tornado or the like and I can
remember one of the last pages, where he had created likenesses of them
out of clay on a long table. and a fairy godmother or someone brought
them to life. I googled the info and came upon your website to learn
that it was "Deegie
and the Fairy Princess". Now if I can just find a copy! Thanks
so much.
Bristow, Gwen, Deep Summer.
(1937) The sequels are The Handsome Road (1938) and This Side of
Glory (1940). The first book is about a woman named Corrie
May
the last book is about one of her descendants, Cordelia. The
series
goes from the early 1800s to World War I.
Prob not this one, as she has only one othr book
Shadow on the water - Barnwell, Robinson Head
into the wind illus by Avery Johnson McKay
The Gwen Bristow series is exactly what I
was looking for. Thank You.
THE DELICIOUS PLUMS OF KING OSCAR THE BAD by Rick Schreiter, NY Harlin Quist (1967). "Geoffrey Hopewell, the story's hero, quietly goes about his business of eating the delicious plums of the king & proving that perseverance truly is the key to success. Magnificent illus in shades of brown, tan peach. Several pictures of Uncle Benjamin traveling in his hot-air balloon, including on the dustjacket cover. A delightful book! Illustrated by Rick Schreiter." I managed to remember the title almost three years ago. As I described it, the king decides to hoard all the plums from a special tree for himself, one boy refuses to accept this, declares he'll ask for some, everyone laughs and says his head will roll, including his enemy Tobias Smudge, and the hero gets taken to the castle by his uncle in a balloon. The humor reminds me of Roald Dahl, somewhat, and even when it doesn't, you know it's post-1960 from scenes like this: "Sometimes he and his friend Kevin would sit on the hill where you could see the castle and Geoffrey would talk about Kings and Plums and Why Things Are the Way They Are." Or: "SUDDENLY, over him fell a huge moist shadow!"
This is the Demu Trilogy by F.M.
Busby.
Destiny
of Fire
Historical fiction set in medieval Spain. Story includes a
pair of star-crossed lovers whose fates are tied up with a heresy,
possibly
Cathar or Albigensien. Title may include the word 'light' or
'fire.'
Approx. date 1986.
There are so few children’s books about
medieval
Spain, I thought I would mention one I recall: Elizabeth Borton De
Trevino:
Casilda
of the Rising Moon, Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1967. This
story is about a princess who becomes a saint in medieval Spain. There
is some conflict between Muslim and Christian belief systems, and she
has
a silver locket with the image of the cross and/or a rose hidden inside.
Anya Seton, ? Green Darkness.
I'm sure this is by her - she certainly wrote a love story based around
the Cathars - but not sure if it is her Green Darkness
or
another of her titles ...
Zoe Oldenbourg, Destiny of Fire, 1960,1981,1999.
3rd vol. of trilogy (preceded by The World is Not Enough &
The Cornerstone). "Set in 13th-century France, this novel
chronicles
the suffering of a noble family that was part of a pacifist sect deemed
heretical by the Roman Catholic Church, and whose members were
persecuted
during the ensuing Albigensian Crusade."--NYT,'99
Detectives
in Togas
This one I definitely know! There are
only
two books in this series. The Mystery of the Roman Ransom
and Detectives in Togas by Henry Winterfeld.
They were translated from German, so there may have been more.
Reprinted
a few years ago in paperback as Odyssey Classics by Harcourt.
Hello Harriett--Those sure sound like them;
please thank your assistant stumper-solver! That's quite interesting
about
them being translated from German...I didn't know that. Time for a trip
to the used shelves...& thanks again for your marvelous service! :)
Catherine Coulter, Devil's
Embrace,
1982.The
ship captain's name is Anthony Welles and he kidnaps Cassandra the day
before her wedding to someone else.
It was Catherine Coulter, Devil's Embrace.
I ordered it and its sequel already. This website provides an
important
service to us absentminded folks and I thank you and the person who
solved
it immensely.
I believe this is a Sesame Street
book,
and that my son used to have it. The characters were all Muppets. The
story
was called something like Darling Daisy Dora and the Dreadful
Dragon
but I'm not sure it was the title story. Maybe The Sesame Street
ABC Story Book with stories for each letter (this being the D
story).
Sesame Street, The Diamon D and the Dreadful Dragon,
1971.
Thanks to your help, I was able to track it down. My description was a
bit incorrect. The land was Dundeedle, not Dundee. Heck, I was close!
This
site is a valuable resource!!
Diamond
in the Window
Hi -- for years I have had a vague memory
of a book that involves a set of siblings (maybe three?), magic and an
attic. I was probably around 9 or 10 when I read it, so I think it is
probably
from around 1972. And I also think that it's along the lines of
A
Wrinkle in Time. Thanks for any thoughts about this.
#A69--Attic Magic: Makes me think of Susan
Cooper's Over Sea, Under Stone, but that mystery
only
starts in the attic, doesn't stay there. You may want to check
out
Jessamy,
by Barbara Sleigh, and one called Behind the Attic Wall,both
on the "Solved Mysteries" pages, but a lot of stories involve attics,
including
one called The Castle in the Attic I haven't seen anyone
ask about yet.
A69 - The searcher might try Jane Langton's
Diamond
in the Window. There are children and an attic involved.
M is for Magic has sibblings and
an attic
Well, it starts in an attic, and Curry is
something
like L'Engle in style. But I don't know how many children are involved:
Curry,
Jane Louise The Mysterious Shrinking House (original title Mindy's
Mysterious Miniature) Scholastic 1970, "Mindy found the
miniature
house hidden in the attic of the old barn. It was so perfect it looked
like a real house--that had somehow shrunk. But she never guessed its
terrible
secret or that she herself would be trapped inside."
I had submitted a stumper and just checked
the answers -- the name Diamond in the Window jumped out at me,
and I'm on my way to the library to check! THANK YOU!!
Maybe Betty Erwin's Go to the Room
of the Eyes, published by Little, Brown 1969? It involves a
treasure
hunt through an old house and a secret room. I don't know whether
there's
magic involved or not.
The Diamond in the Window was indeed the book I've been
searching
for!! I can't thank you enough -- for over twenty years I've
wondered
about this, and as soon as I read the first page I knew it was the
one.
Please pass along my thanks to the kind people who had suggestions.
(Funny,
but one of my comments had been that it was along the lines of A
Wrinkle
in Time, and in fact it was next to that book on the shelf at the
bookstore
-- Langton and L'engle. Strange the things one's mind holds onto.)
---
A brother and sister are put in the care of
their aunt and uncle when their parents (who are head of a
transcendentalist
institute I believe in New England) disappear. The book is about
the chidren's search to find their parents. At the end of the
book,
the parents are found trapped in a seashell. I read this book in
the mid-1970's.
Jane Langton, The Diamond in the Window,
1962. There are a few wrong details in the seeker's summary, but
I'm quite sure this is the right book. "Eleanor and Eddy are
seaching
for th elost children, Ned and Nora, who vanished from the old room a
the
top of the house without a trace. In the room, they find verses
scratched
on the window by Prince Krishna before he, too, disappeared. No the
verses
beome clues to guide them, but hte search is long and mysterious,
leading
the children deep into dreams that turn into real-life
nightmares."
The first of the Hall Family Chronicles which include The Swing
in
the Summerhouse, The Astonishing Stereoscope, The Fledgling, The
Fragile
Flag, and The Time Bike.
Jane Langton, The Diamond in the Window,
2001, reprint. This is from the Hall Family Chronicles about the
magical adventures of children whose parents run a 20C transcendental
school.
Langton, Jane, Diamond in the Window,
illustrated by Erik Blegvad. NY Harper 1962. I think this
is
it, though it isn't parents who are lost, but children (who have grown
up in the meantime to young adults). And although there is an adventure
in a seashell, and the young heroes have trouble escaping from it, I
believe
the missing children (and Indian prince) escape from the mirror-globe
in
the garden. It does take place in New England, and the uncle and aunt
who
raise the main characters do run a transcendentalist school.
---
A young girl or teen (who is unhappy?) dreams
an adventure (on an island?) Each night she can't wait to return to the
adventure - picks up where she left off. probably 1960's
Joanne Greenberg, I never promised you
a
rose garden, 1970s? This
sounds
like the book you are looking for, the girl was in a hospital with a
mental
illness and she had to choose between her sanity or her imaginary world
Thanks, but this is not the book. It was a much more benevolent
magical story for juveniles (ages 10-12? or so) -- all ended happily.
I'm
beginning to think I made it up, since no one can remember it.
Thanks
for your help.
Could this possibly be Jane Langton's A
Diamond in the Window?
Catherine Storr, Marianne Dreams,
1958, renewed 1964, reprint 1989 and 2002. Here's the cover
blurb on my Puffins edition: "The eerie story of a girl whose
dreams
become haunted by a boy in a lonely house. Soon after Marianne found
the
pencil in the old workbox, she began to have strange dreams of an old
house,
with a boy in the upstairs room. Then the amazing truth dawned on her:
it was *she* who had created the house and the boy because whenever she
drew something during the day, that night she would dream about
it.
As the dreams become more sinister, and it seems that the boy is in
great
danger, so Marianne wonders whether she is to be trapped forever in a
cycle
of pictures and dreams... This marvelous haunting story has
become
a classic since it was first published in 1958."
Thanks for the tip! I will check it out. I loved Jane Langton as
a girl, but it never occurred to me that she might be the author.
I am almost positive that Diamond in the Window is
correct.
I will get a copy of the book and check it out. Thanks to the poster
who
solved this for me. It is quite amazing because I have a strong
memory
of loving this book, but no longer remembered the plot, and did not put
two and two together. Thanks again to Loganberry.
---
A brother and sister must solve puzzles to save their missing
parents. I believe their parents have been kidnapped. I read the book
in
th 70's. It was illustrated. I believe one illustration contained a
stuffed
bird (which may have been part of one of the puzzles.)
Langton, Jane, The Diamond in the Window.
Eddy and Eleanor solve magical puzzles looking for their aunt and
uncle,
who were kidnapped by an evil arabian magician, along with the
magicians
brother, the good shah. (The children are orphans, however, which might
be confused for looking for parents.) One of the puzzles involves
realizing
that the "eyes" in a clue refer to the feathers on a stuffed peacock.
If it's a missing aunt and uncle rather than
missing parents, this book could be Jane Langton's The Diamond
in
the Window.
Langton, Jane, The Diamond in the Window,
1962. The Diamond in the Window was the first
fantasy
novel I ever read, when I was in fourth grade. I don't know how
many
times I borrowed it from the library, and as an adult I finally bought
my own copy. Diamond is about the orphaned Eleanor and Eddie, who
live with their Aunt Lily and an uncle whose name I can't
remember.
The youngsters learn that another aunt and uncle, Ned and Nora,
disappeared
as children. The stuffed bird you're thinking of is the peacock
in
the foyer landing. Incidentally, the house in the novel is a real
house in Concord.
Jane Langton (author), Eric Blegvad
(illustrator), The Diamond in the Window. This is
probably
the book sought, though some of the details are wrong. Eleanor
and
Edward Hall seek their deceased parents' siblings, Ned and Nora Hall,
who
disappeared years ago during a treasure hunt created by Prince
Krishna.
The stuffed bird is Percival the Peacock, who plays a prominent role in
the mystery. A wonderful book, followed by at least five sequels
in the Hall Family Chronicles. See the "Solved Mysteries" D page
for more.
I think this is the episode with the stuffed
peacock from The Diamond in the Window.
I will check out A Diamond in the Window,
it sounds like the right book. I remember the children meeting with
their
uncle at the end of the story, but I couldn't remember why he was
there.
This explains it. Thanks so much!
---
I remember only one scene in the book and
absolutely nothing else: The children in the book wander into a
building
of some sort and confront a series of hallways, all lined with mirrors.
There are many corners, and many choices to be made about which way to
go. At first, they are attracted to the odd looking faces in the
mirrors
- their own, but slightly changed. As they choose their direction, they
at first make choices in which their faces become more and more
unattractive
and the children themselves become more and more quarrelsome with each
other until they are all fighting with each other and saying nasty
things.
At some point, one of the group makes the connection between the
choices
they make, the behavior they are exhibiting (nasty and mean) and the
face
reflected back at them (nasty and mean). They decide at some
point
to turn back and make different choices, ones that are kinder and
ultimately,
of course, they end up kinder to each other with kinder gentler faces.
I believe this was a small chapter book, suitable for ages 9 to 12 or
so,
along the lines of "Search for Delicious" and those kinds of books
(these
were the kind my daughter loved at that age). We read this
together
about six to seven or eight years ago but I am not sure how old the
book
was at the time we read it.
Langton, Jane, Diamond in the Window
or Astonishing Stereoscope. I am not sure which of
these two books this stumper is from. Eddy and Eleanor have a series of
adventures and one consists of them choosing from various images of
themselves,
and having to go back and make different choices after the ones they
initially
chose led to some more scary outcomes.
Jane Langton, The Diamond in the Window
I think this might be the scene in Jane
Langton's
book Diamond in the Window, where the kids enter a
nautilus
shell.
Langton, Jane, The Diamond in the Window,
1962. Again!
Jane Langton. This sounds like
Eleanor
and Eddie again--I think the Swing in the Summerhouse.
Isn't this a scene from The Diamond in
the Window?
Jane Langton (author), Erik Blegvad
(illustrator), The Diamond in the Window, 1962.
This is chapter 13, "The Gift of the Mirror" from The
Diamond
in the Window.
Jane Langton, The Diamond
in the Window. See C359, a few stumpers above this one!
Jane Langton, The Diamond
in the Window, 1962. This sounds like the chapter in
The Diamond in the Window called "The Gift of the Mirror."
There's
a lot more to the book but that is definitely what happens in that
chapter.
Thank you for a valuable service. I would have never
remembered
the
title and google searches on “brother sister shell question” did not
help.
One of your "solved" mysteries with the
tag line "multiplying mirrors" is definitely the diamond in the window
by Jane Langton.
---
1978-1982. This children's book features
a brother and sister protagonists who have to solve some kind of
mystery
revolving around their house. I specifically remember the little girl
doesn't
like her freckles, and she has some sort of maze where she can choose
to
cover them with powder, which leads her to another set of choices.
Eventually,
she does not like where her choices lead her, so she traces her way
back
to the original choice of whether to cover her freckles or not. This
time
she chooses NOT to cover them and she does like where her choices lead
her. Her brother also goes though this maze of choices, but my memory
is
less clear about his path. I would LOVE to find this book for my
daughter.
Please help.
Jane Langton, The Diamond in the Window.
This
episode occurs near the end of The Diamond in the Window.
The boy Edmund's choices culminate in a decision whether he wants to
grow
up to be a leader or a famous explorer (responsibility or
adventure).
There are several sequels.
Jane Langton, The Diamond in the Window.
One of my favorites! Eddie, Eleanor, and Georgie appear in The
Swing
in Summerhouse, The Astonishing Stereoscope, The Time Bike, The
Fledgling,
The Fragile Flag, and The Mysterious Circus.
Jane Langton, The Diamond in the Window.
A really wonderful book. Eleanor and Eddy Hall live in a huge,
exotic-looking
house in Concord. One day they discover a room above the attic
that
has toys and two beds in it, and learn about Ned and Nora, their aunt
and
uncle who disappeared as children. When they sleep in the beds
they
start a series of adventures in their dreams adventures that the
missing
children had also had, and from which they never returned.
Langton
wrote several other books about the Hall family - The Swing in
the
Summerhouse, The Astonishing Stereoscope, The Fledgling, The Fragile
Flag,
The Time Bike. I like the first two best.
Clark, Catherine Anthony, Diamond
Feather,
or The Door in the Mountain, Illustrated
by Clare Bice, Macmillan, 1962.
The Diamond Feather, or the Door in the
Mountain, by Catherine Anthony Clarke, illustrated by
Clare
Bice, published Toronto, Macmillan 1962, 224 pages. "On Hallowe-en
Jone
and Firelei, two orphans living with kind Mrs. Carmichael near the
Canadian
town of Silverslide, wander into the deserted streets of the Old Town.
Here they meet Pete, the Frozen Man, who mistakes them for his
long-lost
children and rows them off to his home across the lake. He soon
discovers
his mistake, but forces the children to stay with him until the magic
'diamond'
feather is found. Armed with this, they set out for the mountain to
look
for Pete's children. What happens then, when Pete has an accident and
the
children go through the door in the mountain with the mischievous
Rock-Puck
to the Valley at the Edge of Time, makes a thrilling and eventful
story.
They visit the White Bird Indians; they travel with the Wind; they
dance
at a ceremonial feast; they return the magic feather to Diamond
Feather,
wife of Chief Raven; they meet Pete's children and bring happiness to
him
at last. After all their adventures Jon and Firelei return happily to
Silverslide,
much better able to appreciate their comfortable home with Mrs.
Carmichael."
(from the dustjacket)
Dickon
Among the Indians
I was wondering if any person who accesses your site could recall
a book I read in the Fifties, about a boy whose parents either die or
are
killed by a red Indian tribe and is then taken in by them. He lives
with
them for a number of years learning their ways, customs, and language.
I'm not too sure of the title but I think it was, Dicken Amongst The
Indians.
as to the author I haven't an inkling. I would be grateful if anybody
could
come up with information about the book and if it is at all possible to
purchase a copy.
Dickon Among the Indians by M.R.
Harrington, Illustrated by Clarence Ellsworth, 1938. My father left
this with me when he moved to a new apartment years ago and I still
haven't
read it! I have the impression it's rather unemotional, however - not
like,
say, The Light in the Forest. I searched under "Dickon"
and
"Harrington" and came up with three titles by Harrington. Check 'em
out.
At least one was reprinted in 1991!
Here's two possible titles, though I found no
descriptions. Among the Indians by Eddie W
Wilson
(House of Field, 1941) or Nick Wilson, Pioneer boy Among the
Indians
by
Howard
R Driggs (Aladdin Books, 1951).
Harrington, The Indians of New Jersey,
Dickon Among the Lenapes, 1963,
reprint.
This sounds close to what you're looking for - it's a reprint of
Dickon
Among the Indians, 1938. It's about a boy who is rescued
by a Lenape family and learns their ways.
M.R. Harrington, Dickon Among the Indians.
First published in 1938, I think re-published by Puffin Books in
1949. Another edition of the book is called The Indians of New
Jersey:
Dickon Among the Lenapes.
M. R. Harrington, Dickon Among the Indians,1938.
Also by this author: The Indians of New Jersey: Dickon Among the
Lenapes and The Iroquois Trail: Dickon among the
Onondagas
and Senecas so it looks as if Dickon had quite an exciting
life.
Dig
for
a Treasure
I remember a book that I read in the early to mid 60's. My
older brother remembers it, too, so it may be from the 50's. It
is
a chapter book and I don't remember it having illustrations, although
it
may have. The opening chapter tells of a family, driving
through
the country to their new house. The parents have put all their
money
into the house and the Dad has left his job and is, I think, going to
write.
As they drive down the country road, they are passed by fire trucks and
arrive at their new property to find that the house has burned to the
ground.
They are in despair until one of the neighbors says that he seems to
remember
that there is a stone cabin back in the woods. The family moves
into
the cabin, which is built against the side of a hill. I think
that
their cat keeps disappearing and appearing oddly and they finally
discover
that in the back wall of the cabin there is an
entrance
to a cave hidden behind some furniture. I think perhaps
they
eventually find a treasure. My brother thinks that Indians may be
involved but I don't remember that. I think there may have been a
sequel. I can remember the spine of the book (or its sequel) had
a cat chasing a balloon on it.
*Dig for a Treasure*, by Dean
Marshall, written sometime around 1950. Second in a series
about
kids living in the Connecticut countryside; the other two books are *The
Invisible Island* and *Wish on the Moon*.
First
read these books in the late '60s, and ILL'd them last year so I could
read them again.
Yes, I saw those over-priced ones on
Bibliofind...unbelievable!
I found copies at the Enoch Pratt Library here in Baltimore, so I will
at least get to read them again. But I think I would like to try
to find copies to own. I didn't realize that Dean Marshall was a
woman...from
Kentucky. There is
actually a web-site about her and about her
books that I found by searching with Google! My brother, by the way,
has
been in your store...bought an oriental rug there...and says it is very
nice. It surely looks nice from the pictures! Thanks again.
HRL: Sounds like Al Perkins' The Digging-est Dog, 1967. It wasn't Parents Magazine Press, but it was part of the Random House Beginning Reader series (started by The Cat in the Hat), and was certainly widely available through the Children's Weekly Reader Book Club of the 70s.
I'm pretty sure this is a Graham Masterton
book, possibly the Djinn. I remember the story is set in
the present day, and it is descendants of the original two sisters who
are involved. There is a graphic chapter where the descendant of the
ugly
sister has sex (willingly!) with every incarnation (possibly 100?) of
the
demon, which gives the other girl time to try and escape.
That's it!!! I just got a copy today. Thank
you so much!!!!
Lee Wyndham, Beth Hilton, Model,
1960. I am pretty sure this is the book described. It was
part
of a series for young girls about careers and romance. In it,
Beth's
cousin is a model, but Beth doesn't think she has her cousin's
beauty.
She ends up becoming a model and towards the end eclipses Lisa's career.
Emery, Anne, Dinny Gordon, Freshman, 1959. I
posted this stumper, but someone on another board gave me the
answer.
In this book, Dinny's three best friends each have a particular beauty
problem (one is too tall, one is chubby, one has acne) and the tall one
does indeed begin charm school and become a model for the local
newspaper.
None of them can understand why Dinny, the only one with no beauty
problems,
is not interested in dating.
Philip Wylie, The Disappearance.
In this book Earth suddenly becomes two physically identical worlds,
one
with only women and girls, the other only men and boys.
Do
Not
Open
I read a children's book when I was young
about an old woman who lived by the beach, and every day she would go
out
beachcombing because she collected glass bottles. This one
particular
day she found a little bottle with a genie inside it. All I
remember
is that she was a pretty tough old lady and when the genie started
badgering
her with questions she kept saying, "None of your beeswax!" Does
anyone know what book this was?
DO NOT OPEN by Brinton Turkle.
Old lady finds a small bottle on the beach. When it asks her what she
desires, she says, "None of your beeswax!" Then,
when she releases the evil genie, she tricks him (by playing on his
pride)
into making himself small and re-traps him in the bottle. (Sent
above
to you before, but my mind was elsewhere and I put the author as STUDS
Turkle! Actually, it's Brinton Turkle. Sorry about that.)
G22 genie & beeswax: Do Not Open,
by Brinton Turkle, published Dutton 1981, has been reprinted.
The
publisher's description is "Following a storm Miss Moody and her
cat
Captain Kidd find an intriguing bottle washed up on the beach. Should
they
ignore its "Do not open" warning?."
Brown, Margaret Wise. Doctor Squash the Doll Doctor. Illustrated by J.P. Miller. S&S, 1952. Little Golden Book #157.
Prudence Andrew, Dog! 1973.
Andrew, Prudence, Dog!
1973, Nelson. "A ten-year-old boy who is forbidden to have a dog
finds a stray and hides him in an abandoned car."
Lois Lenski, Davy and His Dog,
Oxford U Press,1957. Lenski wrote 6 Davy books this might also be
A
Dog Came to School (1955).
D71 dog for davy's field. Probably A
Dog for Davie's Hill, written and illustrated by Claire Bice,
published New York, Macmillan 1956, 120 pages. "Everyone laughed at
the old beggar Billy Bayne who sang Scottish songs and talked of the
days
of Bonnie Prince Charlie. But Davie Mathieson one morning shared his
lunch
with him, largely because of the hungry little dog old Billy had on a
rope.
"A bonnie wee dog, but dreadful thin," thought Davie. Davie was
surprised
and delighted a few days later when old Billy, who was ill, asked him
to
take care of his dog Fly. Fly could help Moss and Sweep, the sheep
dogs,
on the hill, and Davie planned to train him for the Trials. Every day
they
ran out on the moors and up to Craig Dhu. Fly was mischievous and
learned
slowly, but Davie was patient and how thrilled he was when Fly placed
first
in the Novice Class at the August Trials. But it was bad luck too,
because
Davie lost Fly to Sandy Big Alec through a trick. The story reaches an
exciting climax when Davie helps to capture sheep stealers at Craig Dhu
and he and Fly prove to everybody that they belong together." (from
the dust jacket) However, just to confuse the issue, there's also David
and the Mountain, written and illustrated by Christine Price,
published Longmans 1959. "David was sure that his dog Fly could be
as
fine a sheep dog as her mother had been, and he was as impatient for
Fly
to have a chance to prove herself as he was to prove that he was old
enough
to take part in the gathering of the sheep on the mountain. Especially
interesting are the contrasts to be found in present-day Wales:
tractors
and buses are taken for granted by farmers and villagers, while the
highlight
of their lives is the Eisteddfod with the 'chairing of a bard according
to the Ancient Rites of the Bards of Britain.'" (Horn Book Apr/59
p.130)
Davy and his Dog, by Lois
Lenski,
published Oxford University Press 1957 "The fifth book about Davy,
who
shows young readers what fun it is to take care of his dog Spot, as
well
as to play with him. Two-color illustrations. Ages 3-6." (Horn Book
Dec/57 p.461 pub.ad) The dog's named Spot, not Fly, though.
Unkelbach, Kurt,
The Dog in My Life:
Thumper of Walden.This was one of my old favorites. The
girl's
family breeds and shows Labs, hence her breeder talk in show and tell.
On her 12th(I think) birthday she gets her pick of one of the litters
to
be her own to train and show, and chooses one with a too-big head and
other
substandard features. The book covers a series of misadventures,
including mistaking a wild skunk for their de-scented pet skunk and
Thumper
being stolen & sold to a quirky rich dog-loving lady. Thumper
eventually
grows into his awkward features and becomes a champion. Good book -
wish
I still had it, even though I practically memorized it.
Patricia Lauber,
Clarence the TV
Dog, 1971. I keep thinking this is Clarence the TV Dog. The
"three
dogs and seven bitches" line has stuck with me through the years,
partly
because my mother always had one or two pedigreed Shelties around along
with a lot of books on dog breeding and training.
Kurt Unkelbach,
The Dog In My Life,
1966.
This is a Scholastic book based on a true story. The family raised AKC
Labs and were involved in dog shows. The exact line is "I said we had
two
dogs and seven bitches." The teacher made her stay after school and
called
the mother. Then the mother visited the principal and "the teacher
didn't
ask us about pets again." Great book about family life and told in
first
person by the 15 year-old Carrie and her dog, Thumper of Walden.
Unkelbach, Kurt, The Dog In My Life:
Thumper
of Walden, 1966. Thanks to the contributors who have led me closer
in my search to find a book from my childhood! Two people have posted
The
Dog In My Life: Thumper of Walden as the mystery book, and I am
positive
that is correct. Thanks so much!
Shirley Hughes, Dogger.
David loses his favorite stuffed animal Dogger. The toy turns up
at a school carnival for sale but before David can tell his parents a
little
girl buys Dogger. She refuses to sell it back to him until his
big
sister trades it for an enormous teddy bear she won at the
carnival.
This book was also published under a different title- possibly 'David
and
Dog' but I'm not sure- I've read only the 'Dogger' copy.
Brigitte Weninger, What's the Matter, Davy?,
1999. Maybe a stretch, but worth a shot! When Davy loses his toy
bunny Nicky, he cannot fall asleep at night. His sister lends him her
doll,
and his mother makes him another toy bunny similar to his old one. Davy
is still upset for nothing can replace his favorite toy. After a great
deal more searching, Nicky eventually reappears, the delighted rabbit
graciously
gives the toy his mother made to his younger sibling.
Hughes, Shirley, Dogger,
1988. It's a dog, not a duck. The boy's name is Dave and
the
sister's name is Bella. She wins a teddy at the school fair and
swaps
it for the lost dog. There's also a British version (1977) David
and Dog. It always made our family cry too!
Shirley Hughes, David and Dog,
1977. Could this be it? David has a special stuffed animal
named Dog that he loses. Dog turns up for sale at a school fair
and
a little girl buys him and refuses to give him up. David's sister
Bella then trades a big beautiful teddy bear she has just won in a
raffle
for him.
Doggy
Book
Am helping my Sister, now approaching her eighties, look for a book
that she often read to her son when he was a small child. She wishes
for
a copy for her own remembrances, and to leave her son. The title (we
believe)
was Old Dog Trey (Sp ?). The story
started "One day Mr. and Mrs. Dog and Little Dog Trye (sp ?) went
for
a walk ....." Any guidance and help in procuring a copy of
this
story will be greatly appreciated.
I think this person may be confusing two
different
things. "Old Dog Tray" is a song by Stephen Foster,
but the words aren't like this story. Maybe it's one of the many
books that have titles starting with "Little Dog..." or "Old Dog...",
such
as
Little Dog Toby by Rachel Field, about a dog who
joins the circus. Or Little Dog Tim by Elizabeth
Stewart, I don't know what that story is.
#D17, "Dog Tray," is not Old Dog Tom
from the Beacon Readers, if that helps. (I am looking for the
rest
of the Beacon Readers, published by Ginn, if anyone has them.
That's
the only one I have.)
Two possibilities here: Opal Wheeler's
biography
of Stephen Foster for children: Stephen Foster and his Little
Dog
Tray." (c. 1940) Another might be a Victorian-era
book
-- the Hollow Tree Book, about the coon and the possum
and
the old black crow, that lived in a hollow tree and were always
outwitting
"Mr. Dog." Don't know the author, but clearly inspired by Chandler's
Nights
with Uncle Remus. Hope this helps.
This, I think, looks pretty good: The
Doggy
Book Akron, Saalfield 1940, unpaginated, 12 1/2" x 9 3/4",
bright
colorful covers featuring Mama Dog, Papa Dog and Tray Dog "Mr. and Mrs.
Dog and their son Tray are all dressed up in their very best clothes
and
start on their promenade down the street and meet Kitty Gray! What do
you
think happens next?"
Diana Wynne Jones, Dogsbody, 1975.
I'm pretty sure this is your book.
Diana Wynne Jones,
Dogsbody, This
is exactly the book you are looking for: the dog star sirius has been
exiled
to earth in the form of a dog and is the companion to an (abused?)
young
girl.
Diana Wynne Jones, Dogsbody, 1975.
Sirius the dog star, is reborn on earth as a puppy with a mission to
search
for the lost Zoi, the murder weapon of the stars." A wonderful book by
a great author!
Diana Wynne Jones, Dogsbody
The book you're looking for is Dogsbody
by Diana Wynne Jones....a superb British fantasy author (Lives
of Christopher Chant, Dark Lord of Derkholm, Howl's
Moving
Castle and many others)
Horwitz, Joshua, Doll Hospital,
1983. This book matches the requestor's description -- black and
white photos of the interior and workings of the New York Doll
Hospital.
The 1983 date may be a reprint not sure. At any rate, the
ISBN
is 0-394-85332-6, or for the library binding:
0-394-95332-0.
Publisher: Pantheon. Enjoy!
Doll
of Lilac Valley
Hello again. I thought of another children's
book from the 60's that I'd like to try to locate. In this story, a
girl
goes to an auction or a yard sale and doesn't have enough money to buy
anything "good". The only thing that she can afford is a bundle of
rags.
When she gets a chance to look through the rags she discovers that a
doll
is inside the bundle, and she's thrilled. Any ideas as to what
this
book is? Thanks for your help.
The book about the doll that is found in a bag
of rags at an auction is The Doll of Lilac Valley by Cora
Cheney.
Thanks so much for your wonderful service.
The two "mysteries" that I had posted were solved correctly by you or
your
readers, and I have now re-discovered 2 old favorites: The Doll of
Lilac
Valley and The Winged Watchman. I will certainly recommend
your
site to others searching for long-lost favorites!
This is almost certainly one of the Classics
Illustrated
Junior series, #560 - The Doll Princess. You can
probably
find it listed for sale on eBay.
Classics Illustrated Junior, The Doll Princess, June
1959.
Yes - The Doll Princess by Classics Illustrated Junior is
right!
Thank you so very much for helping me. I would never have gotten the
title
right without your assistance. I ordered the comic book from a dealer
and
it came today. I can see that my memory of the story was alittle fuzzy
(after 40 years.) What a pleasure to read the story again and have
memories
come back!
Dollhouse
Caper
The first one I thought was called the
dollhouse
family but all my searches have led me to things that weren't even
close.
It was about a dollhouse family that came to life, I believe the young
boys who owned it knew that they were alive but the parents
didn't.
I remember one part where they were going on an outing or a trip and
the
youngest boy made himself throw up so the parents would take him home
due
to some mystery going on with the dollhouse people. It wasn't the
dollhouse murders which is what everyone suggests to me when I tell
them
about it.
I own it. It's called The Dollhouse
Caper,
by Jean S. O'Connell, published by Scholastic in 1975,
illustrated
by Erik Blegvad. The isbn is 0-590-11843-9. One of my
favorite
books.
more on the suggested The Dollhouse Caper,
by Jean S. O'Connell, illustrated by Eric Blegvad, published
Crowell
1976, 87 pages. "Mr. and Mrs. Dollhouse and their lively children
comprehend
the threat to the humans' house from two thieves whom they have
overheard
'casing the joint.' From TV they, like their three male owners, are all
too aware of the methods and terminology of such robbery. Hoping to
alert
the boys to the danger, they ingeniously make changes in the dollhouse
which are not immediately apparent, since each boy believes another has
been playing with it. The human family is seen driving to its annual
post-Christmas
skiing vacation while their house is entered by two thugs masquerading
as moving men. Suddenly the boys, talking together, realize that the
dollhouse
people have been trying to tell them something, and they are able to
convince
their parents that they must return at once. The pen-and-ink drawings
add
to the individuality of the dollhouse characters and make their
two-floor
establishment a realistic setting for the action." (HB Jun/76 p.291)
Hariette Arnow, The Dollmaker,
1954. D244 is almost certainly The Dollmaker by Hariette Arnow--a
great book that was made into a movie starring Jane Fonda.
This sounds like The Dollmaker
by Harriette Arnow. Gertie and her family move from rural
Kentucky to Detroit to make a "better" living during the war.
Gertie
is a wood sculptor/craftsperson, her daughter is killed on the railroad
tracks and the family eventually moves back to the country. The
movie
is excellent, starring Jane Fonda as Gertie.
Harriette Arnow , THE DOLLMAKER,
1954. "Strong-willed, self-reliant Gertie Nevels's peaceful life
in the Kentucky hills is devastated by the brutal winds of change.
Uprooted
from her backwoods home, she and her family are thrust into the
confusion
and chaos of wartime Detroit. And in a pitiless world of unendurable
poverty,
Gertie will battle fiercely and relentlessly to protect those things
she
holds most dear -- her children, her heritage . . . and her triumphant
ability to create beauty in the suffocating shadow of ugliness and
despair."
In 1954, Harriette Arnow published her most impressive work, The
Dollmaker. It remained on the best-seller list for 31 weeks and
also placed second in the National Book Awards and won the Friends of
American
Writers award the next year. It was made into a 1984 TV movie
starring
Jane Fonda.
Not sure this is right, but one book, nearly a
century old, is The Book of Live Dolls by Josephine
Scribner
Gates(?).
#D18--Doll Comes Alive: The Story
of Live Dolls, published in 1900, is now over 100 years old. An
oldie but goodie which should be reprinted. There's a book called
When
the Dolls Woke, I'm afraid would be much too recent to be this
one, but I may have seen a recent edition of an older book.
Did they definitely decide #D18, "Doll Comes
Alive," was The Story of Live Dolls? Someone on
the
Alibris "lost books" list suggested Big Susan as the
story
of a doll which comes to life. I hope that wasn't the one they
wanted, as a "fair copy" is $700. I'd
really
like the Story of Live Dolls (I've only read the excerpt
from Better Homes and Gardens Story Book), but not THAT
much.
Not much, but another possibility: Mystery,
John (Pseud. Lester Sinclair) John Mystery's Eenie Weenie
Winnie
Has a Party: the Doll that Came Alive. Publicity Press, Sydney
1938 4to card covers with full colour illustration on front and logo on
back. Illustrated in black and white throughout and first illustration
in colour. Decorated eps, with front ep comprising a letter from John
Mystery.
Unpaginated. "Verse story for younger children"
D18 doll comes alive: saw a possible on eBay,
part of "Nelson's Books for Nursery Nooks" and the complete title is DOLLIE
DARLINGS - TELLING HOW THE PLAYTHINGS CAME ALIVE AND THE WONDERFUL
THINGS
THEY DID. This is a story of a young girl's adventure with her
dolls, toys and imagination. Full page, full color illustrations
throughout,
book measures 10.5" by 8". Illustrations shown are of girl in
willow-plate
scene with Chinese doll, flying kites with Japanese doll. Frontispiece
shows her standing on globe
with baggage.

Doll's
House
D25 is definitely one of Rumer Godden's
doll books, but I can't remember exactly which one, either The
Doll's
House or Home is the Sailor. The
villainess
doll is named Marchpane, I believe.
D25 - Is (for sure) Doll's House
by Rumer Godden. Marchpane (or Marzipan) is the evil
doll.
I was fascinated by this book as a child because one of the chapters is
only a paragraph long and that seemed so strange.
Isn't this The Doll's House by
Rumer
Godden? The wicked doll is named Marchpane -- she's dressed
as
a bride and has spent years in a drycleaner's shop.
Stumper #D25 is referenced in #D13...D25 is that
story about the penny doll, by Rumer Godden. I remember reading
it as a child. There was a family of dolls living in their dollhouse,
&
when the evil Marzipan?/Marchpane?
came to live w/them, she made their lives
miserable.
At the end of the story, the sweet mother figure, who was made of
celluloid
(I think), ended up being burned up due to The Evil M.'s conniving.
Sorry
I can't remember
the title of the story either, but maybe the
plot details will stir someone else's memory!
Yes it does!! And that is the book! YAY!!
Thanks! Rumer Godden's book The Dolls House...
|
Condition Grades |
Godden,
Rumer. The Dolls' House. Illustrated
by Tasha Tudor. Viking, 1962. Second printing, 1963.
A beautiful copy. F/F. <SOLD> |
|
K48 Sounds like it could be Hilary McKay's
DOG
FRIDAY, DOLPHIN LUCK and THE AMBER CAT. McKay is
a British author. Her books feature quirky families who do often get
themselves
into funny scrapes. The train incident happens in DOLPHIN LUCK.
~from a librarian
This is just a guess since the events described
don't ring a bell, but I immediately thought of the Blossom
family
series by Betsy Byars. The kids' names are
Junior,
Vern, Maggie, and (?)Ralphie, Pap is the Grandfather, and the dog's
name
is Mud. They have hilarious fun getting into trouble. Some
of the titles are The Not-Just-Anybody Family, A Blossom
Promise,
The Blossoms and the Green Phantom, and WANTED...Mud
Blossom
(they put Mud on trial because they think he ate the visiting classroom
hamster).
Hilary McKay, The Exiles, 1991.
I think Hilary McKay is the right answer. Your question
refers
to a number of different books. Dolphin Luck, Dog Friday and
the Amber Cat are related and answer some of the
questions.
The girls sent to the beach question (and the new neighbor) is answered
by The Exiles which is followed up by The Exiles
at
Home and The Exiles in Love.
Yes, we have a winner!! The book I was looking for is Dolphin
Luck. Thank you so much.
Someone on the Alibris board suggested that
this
is Don and Donna Go To Bat, by Al Perkins,
illustrated
by B. Tobey, published New York, Random House 1966. The original poster
hasn't replied yet to say whether this is
correct or not.
B100 baseball switcheroo: more on the suggested
title - A Random House Beginner Book, yellow hardcover with picture of
the twins and red & blue lettering. "Children learn that gender
doesn't really matter in baseball. But true to the period in which it
was
written, Donna ends up the scorekeeper not the star. That is left to
Don."
Donkey's
Glory
I remember the story of a little donkey named Labin who was very
small and sad. I don't remember much of the story except he is
chosen
to give Jesus a ride. Whether it is the first Christmas or Palm
Sunday,
I am not sure. He may be involved with both. It was a
library
book I read quite a long time ago, but remember as being a great
story.
It may have been called, Labin, the Christmas
Donkey or something like that. I believe Labin
was
in the title.
No luck on a Christmas donkey of this name
(several
by other names) but in Nan Goodall's book Donkey's Glory,
illustrated by Sylvia Green, published New York, McKay 1959 there's a
donkey
called Laban "In this book the little donkey that carried Mary to
Bethlehem
and then to Egypt became the grandmother of the one that carried Jesus
on the triumphal procession into Jerusalem. The three little donkeys,
Trottemenu,
her daughter N'Imah, and snow-white Laban, are bound to be loved. This
book was published in the early forties in England where it has gone
through
many printings." (Horn Book Apr/59 p.123)
Thank you, that is the book. I will keep my eyes open for
it now.
---
Please help my father find a book that he would like to give to
my children. He says that it is a book he read at around
1951.
It is a childrens nativity christmas story narrated by a donkey called
trottemenu. Please could you help us?
Donkey's Glory, 1940.
Found
this on this site. Was a previous stumper. Name of the book
was Donkey's Glory.
Nan Goodall, Donkey's Glory.
Read the description of this book in Solved Stumpers - it could be the
one you're looking for.
Nan Goodall, Donkey's Glory
Marcia Martin, Donna Parker On Her Own.
I'm pretty sure this is the one. Donna stays home with her little
brother
and a teacher as a chaperone, while her parents travel to India. She
has
various mishaps, helps plan a school dance and has a party of her own.
Martin, Marcia , Donna Parker: On Her Own.
NY Whitman 1957. "When Mr & Mrs Parker go to India on a
business
trip, Donna & Jimmy are left in the care of a teacher from Jimmy's
school, mayhem ensues, things are very different." This book was asked
about on another forum, and a poster remembered that the girl makes a
sandwich
loaf frosted with cream cheese (difficulty in getting unsliced bread in
1950s), that they eat ice-cream sundaes, and accidentally picking rare
flowers in a greenhouse.
Someone else on another discussion group remembered the book. It
was "Donna Parker: On Her Own". Which is evidently part of a series
(maybe
from the 50's). I mentioned that they made a "cake" that was really a
sandwich
with cream cheese frosting and someone remembered it. Do you have a
copy
of this one for sale?
Marcia???(Martin maybe???, Donna Parker
on Her Own, 1956. This sounds like DONNA PARKER, ON HER
OWN...it
is about 3rd in the series
---
I read these books in the 70s but I believe
they were set in the 1950s or 1960s. The main character is a
young
woman…mid to late teens…who is a camp counselor. There are
several
books with her as the main character
Marcia Martin, Donna Parker Mystery at
Arawak.
This
might be one of the Donna Parker books. There were seven books in
the series but I've only read the Arawak one. She is a camp
counsellor
in this one. Other titles are Donna Parker at Cherrydale,
Donna
Parker- Special Agent, Donna Parker On Her Own, Donna Parker A Spring
to
Remember, Donna Parker In Hollywood,
and
Donna Parker Takes
a Giant Step.
Marcia Martin?, Donna Parker
Series.
Hmmm... this might be the Donna Parker series - the time period fits,
but
she was only a counselor in two of the books - at Camp Cherrydale
and Camp Arawak (or something like that!).
Donna Parker series. This
could be the Donna Parker series by Marcia Martin (some sites
say
Marcia Levin). Google and see if they seem familiar. My sisters and I
read
these as kids--we had the Whitman hardcover editions. In Mystery
at Arawak, Donna is a camp counselor. I seem to remember
something
about her cabin presenting an opera or a drama.
Donna Parker series. There
are several books in this series and in at least two of them Donna has
a summer job as a camp counselor. They were still pretty popular
during the '70s. There's a Donna Parker page here.
Marcia Martin, Donna Parker at Cherrydale,
1957. This sounds like one of the books in the Donna Parker
series of the late 1950's. In this story, Donna and her best friend
Fredricka
(with very red hair!) apply to be counselors at a local summer camp.
They
have adventures with the boys from another local summer camp, and Donna
wins a sewing machine for her mother? Another book in the series was
Donna
Parker on Her Own, which tells the story of what happened when Mr. and
Mrs. Parker went to India for many months on a business trip.
Marcia Martin, Donna Parker at Cherrydale
and
Donna Parker, Mystery at Arawak. 1950s-60s. The
books
could be part of the great Donna Parker series published by Whitman in
the 50's and 60's. There are seven books in all about teenaged
Donna
living in the town of Springfield but only Donna Parker at Cherrydale
and
Mystery at Arawak are about her summers as a camp counselor...
Marcia Martin, Donna Parker at Cherrydale,
1957. There is a seven-book series about a teen-ager and two of
the
books (#1 Donna Parker at Cherrydale and #6 Donna
Parker
Mystery at Arawak) are about the things that happen at camp
while
she's a camp counselor.
|
Condition Grades |
Martin, Marcia. Donna Parker On Her Own. Illustrated by Sari. Whitman, 1957. Laminated glossy boards, yellowing pages (typical for Whitman series books, not brittle). Some wear to spine, but overall VG. $12 |
|
Newton, suzanne, M.V. Sexton
Speaking,
1981,
1990. When sixteen-year-old Martha Venable Sexton gets a summer job at
a bakery, her whole life changes as she finds friends, discovers men,
learns
to balance individuality with "blending in", and comes to terms with
her
guardian aunt and uncle."
A good book (I bought a copy in the hope it
was "the one", greatly enjoyed it), but sadly not the one forwhich I am
searching. My book is a little more on the juvenile side (characters
under
15?); and I think that definitely the proprietor of the bakery is a
relative
(and her guardian?). Not as serious/adult a book as M.V. Sexton
Speaking.
Perl, Lila, Don't ask Miranda, 1979.
I hesitated to send this earlier as I can't remember all the details of
the book or the kiss with a boy. Miranda yields to the pressures of
trying
to be popular and ends up stealing and cheating to buy favour. A bakery
figures in the book (which she steals from) and her wise and
understanding
Aunt Friedl. A possibility?
If you could please post the following to
G400, I would greatly appreciate it! The solution is Don't
Ask
Miranda, by Lila Perl. Never hesitate again - this is it!!! Thank
you,
thank you, thank you! I never thought I would see this book again!
Hans-Joachim Burgert, Samulo and the
Giant,
1970. Again, I can't find a decent enough description to tell for
sure if this is the one: "Everyone in Paradisburg thought the newcomer
Samulo very strange until he rid the town of a troublesome giant."
The internet guess is not correct. I know this much if nothing
else. I've been talking to my brother about it and he concurs that the
little boy wasn't growing except he remembers there was a little girl
involved
as well and something about not eating right. If that helps,
thanks,
if not I appreciate it anyway.
This is Jack Kent's Dooly and the
Snortsnoot
(G.P.
Putnam's Sons-1972)
A little more info- Mother feels that Dooly needs
to eat more vegetables to grow big like his father! Treena is the
little
girl who helps Dooly with his Fee Fi Fo Fums!
Just wanted to let you that I stumbled on to
your website as I was browsing and was looking at your solved stumpers
and found exactly what I've been looking for. I have been looking for
the
title of this book I had when I was little (70's) for the past 3yrs.
And
thanks to you I can stop racking my brain. Dooley And The
Snortsnoot.
All I could remember was that he slept in a matchbox when he was
small,and
his parents were worried about him,and then when he started growing he
would play King of the Mountain with the village children. Not a lot to
go on I know. God Bless you in your endeavor in helping people refresh
their memories.
This apparently refers to the Kensington Rune
Stone. I just did a Google search and found multiple sites, many
referencing books and articles about the mystery. You might be
able
to track down your book that way.
Minnesota Norse exploration. Try Nevil
Shute''s "An old captivity" (1940), most recently reprinted by
House
of Stratus in 2000. This is a timeslip - in the 1940s a pilot and
a professor's daughter are on an expedition to a Viking site in
Greenland.
The story and characters "slip" back to the eleventh century when they
are two slave children taken by the Vikings to Vinland (later America)
where they carve their names on a stone.
Coatsworth, Elizabeth, Door to the
North, 1950. I'm
the original poster, and I dearly wanted to find this book again.
Finally, among some files from the very first library I worked in, I
found
it!! It's called Door to the North, by Elizabeth
Coatsworth.
It must have been long out of print since it never popped up on any of
my keyword searches. Mark this one "Solved" (at last!), and All
Hail
The Packrat!!!!!
This is a long shot, but could this book be Dorp
Dead, by Julia Cunningham? "A very bright boy,
who
has learned in a year in an orphanage how to withdraw himself
completely,
is apprenticed to a ladder maker into whose timed routine he fits very
well until he realizes the threats of this existence." I don't
remember
if he kills the man, but I do think the boy is free in the end because
the man is dead.
Cunningham, Dorp Dead, 1965,
approximate.
This is the book I was searching for!! Thank you for your help.
Dorrie
the Witch
Well, Don Freeman's Tilly Witch certainly has red
hair,
but it is not the book...
This person should really take a look at the
Dorrie
books by Patricia Coombs. She did not have red hair, but she
did
have a crooked hat and mismatched socks, and lived with her mother. In
Dorrie
and the Museum Case, she ends up fading (and looks like she's
covered
in white flour).
I think that may be it! I guess my
memory
failed with regard to the hari. Everything else is right on. I
completely
forgot about the mismatched socks until reading that discription.
Thank you so much!!
---
There was a book/possibly series of books
that I read in the early 1970s which was about a little witch who lived
in the attic of an old house. She had a cat and was skinny and
pretty,
looking like a girl more than like a witch per se. But she did
wear
a witch hat and had a broom. I think she also wore striped thigh
high stockings. She was either an orphan or perhaps lived
with a distant relative, but I think she was
essentiall a servant in the house. I cannot recall the storyline
but I think the story took place in this old house, not outside of
it.
This was a picture book, the illustrations were somewhat stark and I
think
pen and ink style. Thanks!
One from the Dorrie Witch
series?
See Solved Mysteries.
Patricia Coombs, Dorrie the Little
Witch. sounds like the Dorrie the Little Witch
books
by Patricia Coombs. The Dorrie website is here:
yes, you were right! it was dorrie the witch. I feel so
satisfied
to know what it was-now I can buy a couple for my daughter to enjoy as
well- she is five and loves witches. thanks a bunch
|
Condition Grades |
Coombs, Patricia. Dorrie and the Witchville Fair. Illustrated by Patricia Coombs. Lothrop, Lee & Shepard, 1980. First edition. Ex-library copy with usual markings. Front free endpaper removed. VG-/VG-. $35 |
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Could this be Spiderweb for Two: A
Melendy
Maze? There is a girl named Opal (not a main character,
but
a friend) and I remember that someone likes to eat pickles.
(Maybe
Oliver, who is one of the main characters.) This particular
volume
features Oliver and Randy, the two youngest Melendys. They're left at
home
when their older brothers and sister go away to school. On the first
day
of their (supposedly) boring time without them, they recieve a clue
that
leads them through clues to an unknown treasure. It's the last of
four books about the Melendy family, so it is part of a series...
Probably
worth checking out, anyway.
Thanks for the suggestion!!! I checked out
the Spiderweb for Two and the other Melendy Family books. The
Opal
in this book is named Opal Clyde and not Opal Duncan. I remember that
the
book was told in first person and I thought the boy's name was Homer -
it's not Homer Price or the Mad Scientist Club series, but along that
ilk.
I may be wrong. I appreciate your suggestion though! Maybe it's
just
a bad dream!!!! Thanks Harriett for a great web site!!!
Ethelyn Parkinson,
Double Trouble
for Rupert, 1950s. This has to be one of the Rupert Piper
titles
-- Double Trouble for Rupert, Triple Trouble for
Rupert,
Rupert
Piper and the Dear Dear Birds and others. I read them
in the 1960s, too, and still have copies of some of the titles in the
series.
Patsey Gray, Double Standards,
1983. This one is by Patsey Gray (thats not a typo, she really
uses
the "e" in her first
name)....girl stays with relative for summer
at farm, lives in tree house (doesn't actually build treehouse,
though).
Printed only in paperback (unlike Gray's earlier horse books), its
fairly
easy to find.
S249 This is DOWN A DARK HALL
by
Lois
Duncan and has been republished in recent years. ~from a librarian
Lois Duncan, Down a Dark Hall.An
evil man and woman hand-select young women for their exclusive private
school
each girl channels a famous artist/musician and
the couple sells their artistic productions as previously undiscovered
work of the artist or musician. Very creepy.
Down a Dark Hall--Lois Duncan
---
Looking for a book about a girl who is chosed to attend a special
boarding school, even though her grades aren't that good--her and her
best
friend applied and the friend wasn't accepted even with her much better
grades. Once she gets there, there are only about 6 kids in the
whole
place. She's very tired in the mornings and after a time the kids
find out they're being "used" to write musical pieces and literary
masterpieces
and things like that while sleeping and the teachers are submitting the
kids work as their own to the cultural world
Lois Duncan, Down a Dark Hall. See
Solved Mysteries. This one is definitely "Down a Dark Hall".
Duncan, Lois, Down a Dark Hall.
Why does the exclusive boarding school Blackwood have only four
students?
Kit walks the dark halls and feels a penetrating chill. What tterror
waits
around the next corner? The children are psychic and are
channeling
famous writers and composers.
Lois Duncan, Down a Dark Hall.
This one is in the solved mysteries section. "Suspicious and
uneasy
about the atmosphere at her new boarding school, fourteen-year-old Kit
slowly realizes why she and the other three students at the school were
selected."
Duncan, Lois, Down A Dark Hall.
(1974) This is definitely Down A Dark Hall by Lois Duncan. The
main
character is sent off to the Blackwood boarding school, to which her
best
friend did not get accepted. There are only a handful of students at
the
school, which is old and creepy. The main character thinks the school
seems
evil, and then she and all the other student start having weird dreams
and sensing presences around them. It turns out that the one
thing
the students all have in common is some sort of psychic power - I
think it's ESP, which is very big in Duncan books - and the ESP is why
they were selected to come to the school. The ESP makes them open
to possession by ghosts, and the school has been set up so that the
ghosts
of dead artists - musicians, writers, painters - can take over the
students'
bodies and use them to create all the masterpieces they never got to do
while they were alive. I don't remember the teachers selling the
work as their own, although they may have been - I remember it as the
teachers
selling the stuff as "lost" masterpieces of great artists. Maybe it was
both. The students eventually start to figure out what is going
on,
and also that their bodies are being "used up" by the possession, and
they
will die if they don't escape. Somehow in the end they get out -
the details are fuzzy, but I think there's a fire, and somehow a letter
that one of the girls got a servant to mail (their regular letters were
being stopped) got through and help arrived.
Lois Duncan, Down a Dark Hall.
I'm sure this is the book you are looking for. All the elements
are
there the boarding school with only four students, the unexplained
exhaustion
of the students, the masterpieces, etc.
Lois Duncan, Down a Dark Hall.
(1983) This is definitely it. I won't say anymore so as not to
spoil
the twist!
Lois Duncan, Down a Dark Hall.
(1983) I think this is the one! Here is a summary of what I found
on Amazon: Why does the exclusive boarding school Blackwood have only
four
students? Kit walks the dark halls and feels a penetrating chill. What
terror waits around the next corner? Suspicious and uneasy about the
atmosphere
at her new boarding school, fourteen-year-old Kit slowly realizes why
she
and the other three students at the school were selected.
Lois Duncan, Down A Dark Hall.
I haven't read the book in years, but the poster's description sounds
like
the summary on my library's website.
This is DOWN A DARK HALL by Lois
Duncan, 1974 and republished since.~from a librarian
Duncan, Lois, Down A Dark Hall.
(1983) This definitely sounds like this story. Haven't read it in
a long time but I remember her waking up tired and her muscles sore
from
playing an instrument all night or something like that. It was a
boarding school, creepy and dark tone, like most of Lois Duncan's
novels.
Duncan, Lois, Down a Dark Hall.
Loved this book in junior high! Just the right amount of creepiness!
Lois Duncan, Down a Dark Hall.
(1974) Sounds like Down a Dark Hall. Very creepy, and very
popular in the 70s/early 80s.
Dr.
Goat
Ah, yes, quite a favorite. Dr. Goat by Georgiana.
Read more, see pictures, etc. on the Most
Requested Page.
This sounds like the books by Scott
Corbett
about
Nick and Dr. Merlin. The first one is DR. MERLIN'S MAGIC SHOP,
1973. Then, THE GREAT CUSTARD PIE PANIC, 1974, and
THE
FOOLISH DINOSAUR FIASCO, 1978.~from a librarian
Corbett, Scot, Dr. Merlin's Magic Shop,
1973. Maybe this one? "When he stumbles across Dr. Merlin's
Magic Shop on a foggy day, Nick finds himself pitting his wits against
the famous magician." Looks like it was published with another
title
-- The Great Custard Pie Panic, 1974. "On a walk through
the fog Nick and his dog discover a wonderful bakery but the owner
turns
out to be the magician, Dr. Merlin!"
This stumper is solved! The book I was looking for was Dr.
Merlin's
Magic Shop, though I was disappointed because I remembered it as a
nicer story than it is!! Thank you very much for your help. Happy
New Year.
I'm pretty sure the title was Go Cart Challenge.
Edward Radlauer, Drag Strip Challenge,
1969. 83 pages, Chapter book, what we would call "High interest,
low reading level". Photo illustrations. I remember weeding this
book from my library about two years ago, so I don't have a copy of it
to check the details. It was white, with a photo of a red dragster in
action
on the cover. It seemed to appeal to older boys, and it appeared
well-loved
but fairly dated when I had to remove it from the collection. I don't
know
if it is about go-carts at all, but it certainly has a lot of elements
in common with your stumper.
There was an entire series of "Challenge" books
by this author. I have since weeded them (darn it), but I
remember
Karting Challenge, Dragstrip Challenge, Motocross Challenge - maybe
even
Soapbox Challenge.
TITLE: A Dragon for Danny Dennis,
this is a Whitman Fuzzy Wuzzy book. AUTHOR: Dorothea Tostrud
ILLUSTRATED BY: Judy Stang COPYRIGHT: 1963 by Whitman Publishing
Company.
I ran across this information in an ebay auction.
Tostrud, Dorothea, A Dragon for Danny
Dennis,
illustrated by Judy Stang. Whitman Fuzzy Wuzzy 1963. "The
cover
and inside pages contain a dragon that is fuzzy to the touch. A little
boy wishes for a dragon and sees them in his dreams and all around
until
he "gets" one of his own."
Dragon
John
This is a book that I have been unable to locate, long out of
print.
It was by Robert Lawson, most famous for Rabbit
Hill but the book I am looking for is Dragon
John. Probably published in the late l930's.
Lawson illustrated a dragon book written by C.S. Forester that was
titled
Poo-Poo
and the Dragon. His wife wrote the book you're looking
for,
Lawson, Marie A. Dragon
John. Illustrated by Marie A. Lawson.Viking Press, 1943.
Illustrated by Marie A. Lawson.
Andre Norton, Dragon Magic,
1972. "Four boys find a dust-covered puzzle in an old abandoned
house
and try to find it's
secret power. As each boy tries to find it, he
enters into an exciting adventure in the past, in a fantasy world
occupied
by strange men and dragons of lore."
Andre Norton, Dragon Magic,
1972. Four young teenaged boys enter a vacant house, looking for
treasure, and find a dusty
box containing a jigsaw puzzle with a picture
of four dragons on the front. Each dragon takes a different boy
to
a different place and time, suitable to his ethnic background.
The
African-American boy, Ras Brown, goes back to ancient Egypt and
Nubia.
Sig Dortmund goes back to Viking times. Artie Jones ends up in
Arthurian
England, and Kim Stevens, adopted from Hong Kong, finds himself in
ancient
China. I didn't see anything about chopsticks, though.
D105 Judy Varga, The Dragon Who
Liked
to Spit Fire, 1961. "No one realizes Prince Frederic's
new
pet is a
dragon--until he begins to spit fire."
D105 I guess it isn't Eleanor Herder's Darius
the dozer or Darius the dragon [in play form]
because
there is no palace.
>Ods bodkins, things have changed! When
Darius,
medieval dragon, is unearthed from his peaceful underground cave by a
bulldozer, he is thrust into the noise and
pollution
of the 20th century. Instead of the clear streams and flowering meadows
he remembers, he finds only tall buildings, shiny honking creatures,
loud
noises and strange smells that make him cough. Darius sets out to find
the king of this land. Along the way he leads the Young People in a
Crusade
and lands in jail. Join the fun as a medieval dragon meets the modern
day,
and pollution, generation gap and urban sprawl fall before a gallant
foe.
This may be the correct book, I won't know
for sure until I see it. Some weeks or months after we began
dating,
my husband and I discovered we shared the same favorite book as
kids.
(The dating began in 1975, the book we read
separately around 1961!) Anyway, nobody
either of us has ever mentioned it to since then has ever even heard of
it. Our own 4 kids are grown well beyond the age for it, but I
was
never able to find it any other way. If this is the right memory,
it will make a great Valentine's gift for that "old boyfriend".
Thanks
for sharing the exciting detective work, I've loved this site!
Barbara Rinkoff, The Dragon's
Handbook,
1966.
This is definitely the one you're looking for! I have a copy too.
I don't remember the author or title myself,
but
if it's the book I'm thinking of, the main dragon saved the boy's life
when they were both young by feeding him dragon milk. The milk
made
a connection between the two of them in the years following. All
the dragons are originally from the moon, but dark side ones are
cannibals.
There is also a subplot about bats helping the dragons and, at the end,
the main dragon has to escape an erupting volcano with 2 bats, one of
whom
(Malachi) gets sucked back into it. The final part is an ice
cream
party for the humans using dragons milk so they feel a connection to
the
dragons and won't kill them anymore.
I
am writing about this book as I was the originator. Unfortunately, I
still don't have the title, but it's good to hear that I'm not crazy
for it. But I DO think whoever wrote this is on the right track! I
remembered the bats when I heard the name, and one getting sucked into
a volcano! Gosh, I really wish I could find this. Hah.
Susan Fromberg Schaeffer, The
Dragons of North Chittendon, 1986, copyright. Hey there. I
have FINALLY found the book that I was looking for! It's The Dragons of North Chittendon by
Susan Fromberg Schaeffer. It took me nearly 20 years to figure this
out, and Google saved the day!
Janet E. Morris, Dream Dancer
series.
(1980) These may be too recent to be the ones you're looking for,
but the Dream Dancer trilogy (Dream Dancer, Cruiser Dreams, and Earth
Dreams)
do involve travel through "sponge space", and the series is written by
a female author. Is it possible you read them in the 1980's? The
story follows a young girl, Shebat, who is lifted from a life of
grinding
poverty on decaying earth into the seething morass of intra-family
power
politics, civil unrest and light speed technology that is the
"Consortium,"
run by the charismatic and manipulative Kerrion clan.
Thanks for tracking down the Dream Dancer
series by Janet Morris. I definitely messed up the time sequence on
dates,
reading it much later than I had thought. Probably a result of
spending
too much time in "sponge space" or simply the whim of the Lords of
Cosmic
Jest. Thanks again good hunting
After reading of someone’s search for a
children’s
book regarding a Dream Maker & his bag of troubles…I remembered a
book
by Tony Ross (or at least illustrated by him) that I believe is
entitled The Troublemaker. I hope this may help
you
out!
I believe this is a book called The Dream
Master by Theresa Breslin ...It seems to be out
of
pint though...
There is a book illustrated by Tony Ross,
written by Andrew Matthews, published London, Methuen
1991,
101 pages, called Loads of Trouble. It sounds as if it
might
be based on the folktale of sacks of troubles. And it
is illustrated by Tony Ross. If I can get hold
of a plot description, it might be the book wanted, if it isn't too
recent.
Dream Master, by Theresa Breslin,
published Chivers 1999, 164 pages. "This tale concerns the
adventures
of a young man from London named Cy who rather enjoys his dreams. One
morning
he dreams of ancient Egypt and finds himself IN his dream, a situation
which does not at all please the one who controls all dreams--the Dream
Master. Cy and the Master go back and forth between the dream world and
the real world, even bringing in a young Egyptian prince named Aten." This
makes me wonder if it is the correct title, since the plot of the book
wanted sounds like the folktale of the sack of troubles.
Alexandrina Woods, Little Gray (Grey)
Doors,
1926.
This may be older than the book you're looking for, but it does contain
a story about a mirror and also a magic needle--maybe how she created
her
dress? "Collection of several different stories: Little
Gray
Doors, The Mirror, The Magic Needle, Paternoster, and The Fairy Glen."
many thanks for the suggestion, but I don't think that this is
it.
The book very definitely began with a story about a labyrinth and ended
with one about a mirror, and I would have remembered if it had had a
fairy
glen in it. As far as language goes, the closest I've found so
far
were some stories by a Canadian writer named Anne Montrose, if that
helps
at all. Please continue to help -- I'd love to track down this
book.
Helen Morgan, A Dream of Dragons. This book
has been identified, finally!
Orson Scott Card, Ender's Game,
1977. This has got to be Ender's Game, and the
rest
of the books in the Ender Series.
Surely one of the many from the Ender Wiggins
series by Orson Scott Card?
This does not sound like Enders Game
to me - Ender and the others wer enot transported to the future and
there
were no psychic powers - instead hildnre were trainsed as battle
commanders,
and fought believing it was a game (in order that they would fight
without
worrying about real casulties. Some of the later books in the series do
involve forms of telepathy but if it is a single book you are recalling
I don't think this is it / (But read Ender's Game anyway
- it's brilliant!)
Sorry, it's not Ender's Game. I haven't read that
series,
but Ender's Game doesn't seem to have the "ordinary people
transported
to an alternate universe" aspect at all. The main characters in
the
books I read were not geniuses. One of the central characters was
definitely female. And by the way, I think O46 may be talking
about
the same book (though I don't remember anything about two moons) but
it's
not any of the books that have been guessed for that one so far.
I agree this does not sound at all like Ender's
Game, except for the fact he uses the word hegemony. Maybe
another
of his books, or try Anne McCaffrey. She has a couple of series
that might fit, The Pegasus series or The Ship
who
Sang.
Well, there is group called the Hegemony in the
Hyperion
series of books by Dan Simmons. Look it up in Wikipedia and see
if that sounds like your book. The details you mention don't familiar,
but then I've only read the first two books.
Sounds like it might be one of Jean and Jeff
Sutton's books. Maybe Whisper from the Stars or
The
Boy Who Had the Power? There were several with psychic children
and space ships...they wrote together in the 60s. I think he died
in the early 70s, and she kept writing. But it sounds like one of
their co-written titles. Not very helpful, but maybe enough to
jar
someone else's memory.
T. Davis Bunn (originally under the pen
name Thomas Locke), The Dream Voyagers,
1997-1999.
I read this stumper and said "OH, I own this one!" but was slightly
perplexed
by the description of it as a series when the copy I own is a single
volume.
Then I did a search to come up with the author (my copy's on loan &
I could only recall the title) and discovered the original version was
a series of four books, published under the name Thomas Locke, while
the
version I own was published later under the author's real name.
If
you're trying to find the end of the story, I suggest a copy of the
single-volume
version, as it gives _an_ ending to the plot. (It also leaves lots of
loose
ends that could be tied up in a sequal, but the two main characters,
Consuela
& Wander, have their story wrapped up.) The series titles are
Light
Weaver, Dream Voyager, Path Finder, and Heart Chaser,
if you're interested.
Thomas Locke, Dream Voyagers. (1997-1999) Yes, these
are the books! Thank you very much for your help.
Wersba, Barbara, The Dream Watcher,
1968, repub. 2004. "A teenager considers himself the
"All-American"
failure until he meets an eccentric old lady who helps him to see the
true
value of being an individual." I couldn't find a scan of the
original
cover, but I am almost certain this is it. The boy references
Walden,
and old Mrs. Woodfin talks about Sarah Bernhardt.
Wersa, Barbara, The Dream Watcher, 1968. Thank You!
As soon as I read the name of the old lady in the solution, Mrs.
Woodfin,
I knew it was right. I even recalled the name of the boy, Albert
Scully.
Unfortunately, the edition I knew and would most want to have is no
longer
in print (I beleive its the 1976 reprint that I read). I am in for
another
long search just to find the edition I want. My $2 was very well spent!
9 titles total: Ballet for
Drina
(1958);Drina's
Dancing Year (1958); Drina Dances in Exile
(1959);
Drina
Dances Again (1960);
Drina Dances in New York (1961);
...
in Italy (1962); ... in Paris (1962);
...
in Madeira (1963);
... in Switzerland (1964).
Issued by Vanguard in the US and Hodder in Great Britain; pb reissue
(Scholastic
Apple, with Estoril as author) in 1989. According to GSC "The
series
follows Drina from her first ballet lessons to her performances as a
prima
ballerina."
The site states there is 9 titles in all - I
wish to correct that as there is 11. The remaining two titles are
Drina
Goes On Tour and Drina Ballerina.
Roger Price, Droodles
books, 1950s and 60s. Roger Price wrote several books in the
Droodles
series one of them may be what you're looking for.
Roger Price, Droodles.
D99 Coould it be Roger Price's Droodles?
Price, Roger, Droodles.
An artist friend gave me the title.
Got to be Drujienna's Harp by
Ellen Kindt McKenzie. She's a local author (or was? I'm
not sure she's still alive) and I have a signed copy. It was one
of my favorites as a teen.
Yes! That's definitely it. I was starting to remember that the title
had the word "harp" in it, so that's a clincher. Thank you!
Drusilla and
Her
Dolls
My grandmother (she's 88) has been talking
about a book she enjoyed as a young girl called Drucila's Doll.
I have searched everywhere for this book and can't seem to find any
information.
I don't know who the author is and it may be possible that this story
is
part of a collection. If anyone has any information it would be
greatly
appreciated.
Drusilla and her dolls: a
true story of a little girl in Boston in the 60's [and that's *1860s!]
by Belle Bacon Bond, illustrated by Marjorie Very, published
1921,
57p.
Duck
and His Friends
A short illustrated child's book about animal characters who built
a raft one morning and floated down the river to visit a friend who
made
pancakes and put butter & honey on the pancakes. I vividly
remember
the illustration of the pancakes! I never ate syrup on pancakes
again.
K. and B. Jackson, Duck and His Friends, 1949. Duck and His Friends was one of my favorites. It is a Little Golden Book illustrated by Richard Scarry. Rabbit and Mouse decide to help their friend Duck who won't swim by building a raft (after which they eat pancakes). Duck refuses to go rafting but ends up saving Rabbit and Mouse who fall into the water.
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