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Book Requestwhen you know the title
Book Stumper
when you just don't know what it's called
Solution
when you think you know the answer
e-mail
when you want the free-form method

Need more help than what the stumper magicians offer here?  You might want to consider joining the newsgroup rec.arts.books.childrens.  This newsgroup discusses many children's books, and its readers may be able to help solve your stumpers too.  There's also a bulletin board on MSN called ExLibris, the Lost Boards (which contains the archives from when Alribis used to have a stumper page).  Yesterdayland.com. has a lot of television memories, but some book ones too.  And it seems that abebooks.com has joined the game too, with Book Slueth.





A11: Adoption
Solved: Understanding Kim

A15: Andersen, Hans Christian. Edition?
Solved: A Gift Book of Fairy Tales 

A16: Anthology with gray cover
Solved: Good Housekeeping Best Book of Bedtime Stories 

A17: Alice and Jerry?
Solved:  Friendly Village 
A22: Anthology, moralistic

Solved: The Children's Gift Book 
A24: All about...

Solved: A Calendar of Happy Thoughts

A26: Arnold rabbit
Solved: Thin Arnold

A29: Anthology of fairy tales
Solved: Fairy Tales (Hadaway)

A31: A is for Apples
Solved: Birds in my Drawer

A33: Aliens on the moon
Solved: Space Captives of the Golden Men


A35: Anthology, gender-bending
Solved: Lots of Stories 

A36: Anthology, 365 bedtime stories
Solved: The Golden Book of 365 Bedtime Stories

A37: Anthology, British
Solved: A Gallery of Children 

A38: Australian girl institutionalized
Solved: Annie's Coming Out

A39: Anthology, fairy tales
Solved:  Grimm's Fairy Tales 

A40: Anthology, another
Solved: Better Homes and Gardens Story Book 

A41: Alcott story about Goddaughter
Solved: Eight Cousins

A42: Anthology, yes another
Solved: Anderson's Fairy Tales 

A43: Atlantic City vacation
Solved:  Sophie and Gussie 

A46: Amish Sleepover
Solved: Katy, Be Good 

A47: Apple Annie and the Poisoned Dog
Solved:  Butter and Egg Lady 

A48: Anthology, witch stories
Looking for a big, hardcover book about a compilation of Witch Stories for Children when I was a kid growing up in the 80's. story:  a girl who was a witch trying to get into a school for witches  she made such a good impression on the administrators because she showed a resenblance to one of the most powerful witches.

A48 may be (though '87 seems a bit late for 'in the 80s') Witch Stories, compiled by Jane Launchbury ; New York: Derrydale Books, 1987. First Printing, Hard Cover.  Stories include Edward and Anna by Jane Launchbury; The Magic Island by Elizabeth Waugh; Witch Wurzel by Elizabth Waugh; The Witches Who Came to Stay by Philip Steele; Grumblog by Jane Garrett and Rachel and The Magic Stone by Deborah Tyler.
compiled by Helen Hoke, Witches, Witches, Witches, 1958.  This anthology may be too early to be the book you are seeking.  The cover shows witches around a flaming cauldron with skulls.  Some of the authors are Peggy
Bacon, Rachel Field, Oliver Wendell Holmes, Elizabeth Coatsworth, and Margaret Embry.
A48 anthology witch stories: perhaps Witches Brew: Eleven Eerie Stories about Magic, Witchcraft and the Supernatural, edited by Alfred Hitchcock, published NY Random 1977. If it helps, the Launchbury anthology includes the following: Edward and Anna by Jane Launchbury; The Magic Island by Elizabeth Waugh; Witch Wurzel by Elizabth Waugh; The Witches Who Came to Stay by Philip Steele; Grumblog by Jane Garrett and Rachel and the Magic Stone by Deborah Tyler.
Manning-Sanders, Ruth, A Book of Witches, 1965.  Possibly Ruth Manning-Sanders?  She did many anthologies about other-worldly creatures, dragons, dwarves, wizards, mermaids, etc.  Here's a list of the stories in the anthology:  Contents: The Old Witch -- Rapunzel -- Lazy Hans -- The Twins and the Snarling Witch -- Esben and the Witch -- Prunella -- The Donkey Lettuce -- Hansel and Gretel -- Tatterhood -- The White Dove -- Johnny and the Witch-Maidens -- The Blackstairs Mountain.
Are you thinking of a book with illustrations?  I remember a picture in a book from the early 80's with a pretty young witch holding a mirror up to deflect a spell and nasty older witch was casting.  The witch had a sweet name - Minnie, Milly?  I forget.  I had not thought about this book unitl I read your request.  The book was somewhat thin, but large (14 by 10?) and had a blue cover.  when she first went to the school there was a portrait on a wall and the admin staff got all "Oh, my!  She's the One!" on her guardians.  Is that the book?  I'll look around my parents' house for you if it is...
Various - Illustrated by Max Ranft, The Witch Book, 1976, copyright.  This compliation includes the stories: Beware of the witch of the Vasty Deep, by Betty Lacey; The entrance exam, by Mary Carey; The witch named Naob, by Helen Kronberg Olsen; Minnie's long day, by Herschel Cozine; and others.



A49: Anthology set of books
Solved: Child's World 

A52: Anthology with magic teapot and hedgehog
Solved: My Bedtime Book of Two Minute Stories 

A53: Anthology; collection of myths and legends
Another book from childhood that was read and re-read.  Collection of Myths and Legends (Tales and Fairy Stories) that had belonged to my Mother.  Book was hard covered and dark brown from memory.  Stores were international and old.  Stories I remember were about St George, Thor, Girl Who lost Her hair in a River, A Glass Mountain and there were many others.  My Mother suggested two titles which I have subsequently found, neither are correct, however there could have been more than one book in the collection - Old Time Tales and Tales from Ebony both have wonderful stories, neither are the right one.  I assume the book was printed in England. Could anyone suggest the title or enlighten re titles above and if there are more books in the collection. Thankyou (at least for reading and considering) and Big Big THANKS if you can pinpoint the book.

Concerning unsolved mystery A53, I ran across a children's story called The Snooks Family in a listserv to
which I subscribe. The person submitting the story says:  "I can't take credit for this one-- in fact, I don't have an author for it, so if anyone knows who to credit, please shout! My photocopy says From Tales of Ebony by Harcourt Williams (Putnam, London)" I also read a version of this on the Storytelling list, so it may be one of those often re-told stories with many variations. I've taken the liberty of making some little changes of my own."
Using google's advanced search I found: Harcourt WILLIAMS (M: 1880 - 1957) Ginger And Pickles [1930] Tales From Ebony [1934] Harcourt Williams was an actor. He was born in 1880 and died in 1957. I found 1 film with Actor containing "Harcourt Williams:" Brighton Rock Directed by John Boulting, GB, 1947. 1 hr 26 min. Thriller/Chiller. Four fairy plays E Harcourt Williams and  The reluctant dragon E Harcourt Williams.  There are many films in which Harcourt Williams played minor roles . . .
A53 anthology myths & legends: well, here's one with Thor, anyway - Old-time Stories, Fairy Tales and Myths Retold by Children by E. Louise Smythe, published by American Book Company, New York, 1896, first  edition, illustrated in b/w and color, 136 pages. Preface reads in part 'This book originated in a series of little reading lessons prepared for the first grade pupils in the Santa Rosa (California) public schools... The spirit of the book may be illustrated by referring to the roast turkey in the story of The Little Match Girl. The story was told as dear old Hans Christian Anderson gave it to the little German children fifty years ago...' and so on. Stories include The Ugly Duckling, The Little Pine Tree, The Little Match Girl, Little Red Riding-Hood, The Apples of Idun,  How Thor Got the Hammer, The Hammer Lost and Found, The Story of the Sheep, The Good Ship Argo, Jason and the Harpies, The Brass Bulls, Jason and the Dragon.
William Patten, Junior Classics: Fairy and Wonder Tales, 1918, copyright.  Maybe you are looking for the Junior Classic, they are a set of 10 books, each with a different subject matter, the first one is Fairy and Wonder Tales. The other books are Folk Tales and Myths, Heroes and Heroines, Old Fashioned Tales, Stories of Courage and Heroism, Stories that Never Grow Old, and Tales of Greece and Rome. First Published in 1918, and compiled by William Patten, there are many later editions as well. Hope this helps!



A55: Animal stories
Solved:  Rand McNally book Favorite Animal Stories 

A56: Ant and flood
Solved: Henry's Awful Mistake

A57: Anthology, poetry
I'm sorry I don't have the name or author of this book.  What I remember is it is a story-poetry book. One of the featured poems is WYKNEN, BLYKEN, AND NOD.  I remember that the illustrations were softly done.  They were not hard colors, but whispy pastels.  The book was hardback with a cloth tecture.  I believe it was blue in color.  If you can find this book for me you are miracle makers.  I am 63 years old.  My mother read to me from this book when I was very young.  That is why I am thinking it might have been published the year I was born.

Wynken, Blynken and Nod is by Eugene Field. Maybe Lullaby Land a collection of his poems selected by Kenneth Grahame, illustrated by Charles Robinson, published by Scribner 1894, containing Wynken, Blynken and Nod, The shut-eye train, etc. There's also his Poems of Childhood illustrated by Maxfield Parrish, published Scribner 1930s in the Illustrated Classics series, which contains Wynken, Blynken and Nod and
The sugar-plum tree. Neither Robinson or Parrish really did wispy pastels, though.
In the 50s I had a book called something like the Tall Book of Make Believe.  It was tall and narrow, and full of wonderful  stories and poems, one of which was definitely Wynken, Blynken and Nod.  It was illustrated by Garth Williams, and had many wonderful coloured illustrations.  The stories included one about Georgie, a little ghost, and there were also lots of poems including the battle between the gingham dog and the calico cat. Does this ring any bells with the inquirer?
Olive Beaupre Miller (ed.), My Bookhouse.Wynken, Blynken, and Nod appears in one of the earlier volumes of the BOOKHOUSE series.  (12 vols in all, + supplements.)  There are various printings, but the edition I grew up on is, indeed, bound in blue, and "wispy pastels" is a fine description of the illustrative style. It dates from the 30's or 40's.  This is a WONDERFUL set.  EVERYONE should have one.
Is it possible that this is the Bumper Book, edited by Watty Piper and illustrated by Eulalie?? Wynken... is the first item in the book. It is presented over four pages with very large elaborate pictures! I'd say the gorgeous illustrations would have tremendous appeal to a child and would certainly be vividly recalled long afterward. While the cover color does not match your recollections, I thought it might be worth a look! Good Luck.
Just a possibility -- A wonderful poetry book I just came upon with your poem in lovely soft colors, blue and yellow! You might want to check out FOR A CHILD Great Poems Old and New-collected by Wilma McFarland, illustrated by Ninon.Westminster, 1947.Good Luck!
Watty Piper, The Bumper Book, 1950, approximate.  Someone has already suggested The Bumper Book which is my guess if it's an anthology.  I am 59 and loved the book.  It also contained (among others) Christopher Robin, The Gingham Dog and the Calico Cat, the days of the week and months with clever pictures, etc.
Arthur Mee's Children's Encyclopedia, 1938.I remember reading Winken Blynken and Nod from a blue textured hardback. It was a collection of children's writings that came with the Arthur Mee's encyclopedia that was sold door to door for many years both in the USA and the British Empire.



A58: Art, early exposure to
Solved: The Boy Who Could Enter Paintings

A59: Anthology, nursery rhymes
Solved: Dean's Mother Goose Book of Rhymes 

A60: Anthology, fairy tales
Solved: Once Long Ago: Folk and Fairy Tales of the World


A62: Anthology, Tomie de Paola illustrations
Solved: 365 Bedtime Stories 

A63: Anthology, fairy tales
Solved: Once Long Ago: Folk and Fairy Tales of the World


A64: Anthology, HC Anderson.  Looking for translator.
Solved: Stories for the Household


A65: Anthology, goblins and leprechauns
Solved: Lots of Stories

A67: Animals and their dried-up pond
Solved: Little Pond in the Woods

A68: Anthology, Wynken, Blynken and Nod
Solved: Children's Stories selected by the Child Study Association
A70: Albino leopard cub saved by monk

Solved: two books!  White Panther and Black Lightning

A71: Appalachian historical re-enactment
Solved:  Simple Gifts

A73: Aris, Earnest--illustrator
Solved:  Tale of Tiggy Pig 

A74: Astral Projection
Science fiction.  Some children have to battle an enemy and the only way they can reach him is to learn to astral project.  They become a triangle form and travel on the astral plan but learn they must take care for if someone cuts their tail on this plane they will never return to their bodies. This was the first book I ever read that dealt with this subject matter.

A74 astral projection: this sounds something like Diane Duane's Young Wizards series, though I can't place the incident, and would say it isn't one of the first three books. The characters are Nita Callahan, her sister Dairine, and Kit Rodriguez.
I just finished re-reading the Young Wizards series and this doesn't appear to match any incident described within them.  It does sound vaguely reminiscent of the part in A Wrinkle in Time where Mrs. Who, Mrs. Whatsit and Mrs. Which take the children to a two-dimensional planet where they cannot breathe.
Wibberley, Leonard, Journey to Untor, NY Farrar 1970.  Just guessing here - the synopsis says "Further adventures of four children who can travel to other worlds - this time to a distant planet where enemies are fought with imagination and will power."
Barthe Declements, Double Trouble, 1987.  About twins who use astral projectiom.
Christopher Fahy, Nightflyers or Night flyers or Nightfliers. (1978 ish)  Hi - I think it might be this book. About teenage kids in high school, bullying and central character learns to astral project. A brilliant book that stayed with me for years.



A75: Anthology with Mother Goose
Solved:  Young Years

A76: Anthology of fairy tales
Solved: A Treasury of the World's Greatest Fairy Tales


A77: Aunt Cozy-Worth?
Solved:  The Wonderful World of Aunt Tuddy

A78: Adventure Australia Amazon Kidnapping
This is a book of three or four stories, likely they were published in a boys magazine first and were turned into a book. It involved 2 guys, real brawny, ex military, hero types who in the first story set off to rescue a little boy who's been kidnapped in the Matto Grasso area of the Amazon. In the next one I think only one of the guys goes to the Outback of Australia and essentially joins an Aboriginal tribe. The last story may have involved diving but I can't remember. It was shorter than the other two which were about novella length.

A79: Alphabet puppets
 I had a book when I was a boy that was the illustrated alphabet.  It was uncommon, though, in that the illustrations were photographs of elaborate puppets. They looked something like Victorian Christmas tree ornaments.  You know, the kind that look like potpourri pillows with gilded stitching.  I know that's vague, but if you've seen it, I think that will be enough.  Thanks in advance for any help in
finding this lost treasure.

A79 alphabet puppets: might be worth looking at The Ark in the Attic, an Alphabet Adventure, by Eileen Doolittle, photographs by Starr Ockenga, published Godine 1987. "An alphabet adventure for young people with one or two photographs for each letter of the alphabet. Each picture contains a myriad of unusual objects, all beginning with the same letter. Includes pictures of antique dolls and toys and many other childhood artifacts and
treasures with accompanying text." "In the charming text, a young girl, alone on a rainy afternoon, finds an old ark in the attic. Setting about to fill it, she plucks and chooses objects of delight from each letter of the alphabet. Bitten by the collector's bug, she embarks on an exciting adventure."



A80: Angle worms on toast
Solved: Angleworms on Toast

A81: Antique sellers
Solved: Property of a Lady


A82: Anthology, children's story collection
Solved: 365 Bedtime Stories

A83: Apartment fire, young girl's aunt
Solved: The Truth About Mary Rose

A84: Anthology, chapter, with missing pages
Solved: Lots of Stories

A85: All in the stars
Solved: The Wondrous Works of God


A86: Anthology, multinational
Solved: Childcraft

A87: Animal's daily routine
This may have been in children's classic set World Book 1950-60.  I'm looking for a book I read as a kid circa 1950-60.  The book may have been written before that.  I'm pretty sure the author was male.  The characters of the story were all animals of the woods or forest.  My memory is very vague but I think the main character was a wolf or bear, perhaps a wild dog.  I seem to remember talking squirrels and rabbits.  Basically an everyday animal adventure book with a main character traveling thru daily routine talking to all his neighbors in the forest and their everyday life experiences.  Kind of a Rikki Tikki Tavi style.  It's been driving me nuts trying to remember the title or author.

This poster may be thinking of the animal books by Thornton W. Burgess. There are lots of titles, including The Adventures of Chatterer the Red Squirrel, The Adventures of Jimmy Skunk, The Adventures of Peter Cottontail, Old Mother West Wind, and many more. All of them seem to be in print.
The poster might check the Thornton Burgess books.  Peter Rabbit and his many friends are followed in their daily lives and have many adventures while the reader learns about nature. They were published in the early 1900's and were in most school libraties in the 50's.
A87 animal's daily routine: another writer in the dressed animals genre is Arthur Scott Bailey, whose Sleepy-Time Tales were published by Grosset & Dunlap in the 'teens and '20s. Titles like The Tale of Tom Fox, of Ferdinand Frog, of Frisky Squirrel, of Fatty Coon, of Benny Badger.



A88: Anthology of Fairy Tales/Bedtime Stories
Solved: The Book of Goodnight Stories 

A89: Airplanes personified
My latest query relates to a different book.  My memory recalls  a book about the goings on at a busy airport with  the characters being different types of aircraft all of which are 'personified'.  I am sure you can imagine the story line with the big cargo plane always  being jealous/angry with the fast jets which are always showing off,  and light aircraft wishing for the day when they will grow up into big commercial airliners  etc. etc. etc.  Any thoughts would be appreciated.

Could this possibly be a Budgie book by Sarah Ferguson, Duchess of Wales??
Disney, Pedro. This could have been a book about "Pedro," the little airplane that takes over his father's mail route.  Originally a cartoon short in "Saludos Amigos" by Disney, 1943.  I remember seeing the story in one of my Disney storybooks.
This looks like a book about Jay Jay the Jet Plane.  There are several - they are based on a cartoon series of the same name.
It sounds like the plot of an MGM cartoon I saw, where an older propelled cargo plane is always being razzed by the younger, faster jets. What's worse is that his son is also a baby jet! In order to raise money for his family, Dad Prop-plane enters some sort of contest against the jets. He tries, nearly crashes, until Junior saves the day and his dad. Hope this helps.



A90: Anthology --- Young Adult Short Stories
Solved: Visions 
A91: Autistic child's brother

Solved: Inside Out
A92: Anne of Brittany

Solved: Twice Queen of France 
A93: Annie's Story

Solved: Annie's Coming Out
A94: Apple for jonny?

Solved: Maria, Everybody Has a Name 

A95: Aunt dymphna
Solved: The Growing Summer
A96: Abused mother escapes-creates identity

Solved: Necessity


A97:  Attic Treasures
Solved: Mrs. Piggle-Wiggle's Magic 

A98:  Anthology for 6th grade
Solved: Aesop's Fables

A99: Anthology Rhyme Collection
Solved: Better Homes and Gardens Story Book 

A100:  Actor's Daughter
Solved: Stars in her Eyes
A101: Amanda with a mirror triangle in forehead

Solved: The Headless Cupid
A102: Anthology burned in fire

Hello...I need your help in searching for two children's books I had when I was a kid.  I was too young to know the title and author.  They were destroyed in a house fire when I was five.  Anyway, they were two books from the same series.  Each book contained five or six stories. These are the stories I remember: --One was about a woman who lived in the forest and made blackberry jam.  She wouldn't share it with any of the forest  animals... eventually she ate so much jam, she became sick of it and shared it with the animals. --another story was about a little girl's teddy bear that would sneak out at night to join other bears in a teddy bear picnic.  Throughout the story, readers were to chant something like, "If you go out in the woods at night, you're in for a big surprise."  Or something like that. --story was about a tree that would bear gifts wrapped in beautiful packages & paper --another story was about a man who was about six inches tall and he found an old woman who made him clothes I know this isn't a lot to go on.  The covers of the book were gold and one was purple.  One book had the picture of the tree on the front.  If you could find out any information, I would really, really appreciate it.

A102 anthology burned: the first story sounds like Mother Raspberry, by Maurice Careme, pictures by Marie Wabbes, published Crowell 1969. "Very cute story about an old lady who lived in the woods, made raspberry jam in the summer & finally resolved her problem with a pesky old wolf who stole her jam."
A102 anthology burned: the other story described sounds like the song Teddy Bear's Picnic, the chorus is almost exactly the same. Not that it helps.
A102 Teddy Bears' Picnic was first published 1947 as a song by Jimmy Kennedy. Many MANY artists have performed it on children's collections since, and many Many MANY book versions have subsequently been published, including anthologies. Mine as a child included a 45rpm record! In it, humans were putting on teddy bear disguises so they could sneak into the teddy bears' picnic unnoticed. Hope you find yours soon!



A103: Airplane fall into magic forest
Solved: Fairly Scary Adventure Book
A104: Astral travelling girl

Solved: Stranger With My Face
A105: Alphabet Hamburgers

Solved:  Me and Fat Glenda 
2002


A106: Antique Doll
Solved: The Wonderful Fashion Doll

A107: Adventures of a jumping man with bells on his ankles
Solved: Mr. Widdle and the Sea Breeze
A108: Animal stories

Solved: Bedtime Stories

A109: Adam
Solved: The Man Who Was Magic 

A110: Australian Boy Scouts
The second book is about Australian Boy Scouts who went into the outback.  My son and I think one of them was named Jerry.  Along the way they found a man who was lost and dying of thirst, his tongue all swollen and black.  It told how they brought him back into the land of the living again.  This was probably written somewhere around 1910-1920; it was my father's book.

Robert Baden-Powell, Scouting For Boys: The Original 1908 Edition
, reprint.


A111:  Animals with human type expressions and activities
Solved: Caroline and Her Friends
A112: Animal Homes

Solved:  Need a House?  Call Ms. Mouse

A113: Arctic animals uncover buried wagon
Solved: What Spot?

A114: apartment house
Solved: The Apartment Book: A Day in Five Stories


A115: apples
Solved: What Will We See? 
A116: anthology

My mother had read a book that was an anthology when she was little about Henny Penny and The Pancake Man.  Pancake Man was the first story in the book.  She also mentioned there was a story about a fox? She cannot remember all of the stories, but these two almost three stick out the most in her mind. She was born in 1939, so I am sure the book had to be published around then if not sooner. It was a fairly good size book with many stories.

Jessie Willcox Smith, A Child's Book of Stories.  This collection contains a story called "Pancake", "Henny-Penny", as well as a couple of "Fox" stories.  It was originally published in 1911 and there have been numerous reprints, including one in 1934.  Unfortunately I don't know if "Pancake" was the first story in the collection, but I bet someone else out there can look it up and let us know for sure. [Here's a lengthy contents list, if it will help: Aladdin and the wonderful lamp -- Ali Baba  or, The forty thieves -- The babes in the wood -- Beauty and the Beast -- Blue Beard -- The boy who cried "Wolf!" -- The brave little tailor -- The brave tin soldier -- The cat and the mouse -- Cinderella  or, The little glass slipper -- The crow and the pitcher -- Diamonds and toads -- Dick Whittington and his cat -- The dog and his image -- The elves and the shoemaker -- The enchanted hind -- The field mouse and the town mouse -- The fir tree -- The fool-hardy frogs and the stork -- The fox and the grapes -- The fox and the little red hen -- The fox as herdsman -- The fox and the rabbit -- The gingerbread man -- The golden goose -- Goldilocks  or, The three bears -- The goose-girl -- Hansel and Gretel -- Hans in luck --Henny-Penny -- Hercules and the wagoner -- The history of the five little pigs -- The history of Little Golden Hood -- How Jack went to seek his fortune -- I don't care -- Jack and the bean-stalk -- Jack the giant killer -- The lambikin -- Lazy Jack -- The lion and the mouse -- The lion in his den -- The little red hen and the grain of wheat -- Little Thumb -- Little Totty -- The magic swan -- The magpie's nest -- Mr. Miacca -- The nose -- The old woman and her pig -- One, two, three -- The pancake -- The princess on the glass hill -- Puss in boots  or, The master cat -- The ragamuffins -- Red Riding Hood -- Rumpelstiltzkin  or, The miller's daughter -- The selfish sparrow and the houseless crows -- The six comrades -- The sleeping beauty in the wood -- Snowdrop -- Snow-White and Rose-Red -- So-so -- The story of pretty Goldilocks -- The story of Mr. Vinegar -- The story of the house that Jack built -- The story of the three little pigs -- The straw, the coal, and the bean -- The sun and the wind -- Teeny-Tiny -- Three billy goats gruff -- The three spinners -- Tired of being a little girl -- Tit for tat -- Tittymouse and Tattymouse -- Tom Thumb -- Tom Tit Tot -- The tortoise and the hare -- The ugly duckling -- The unseen giant -- The water lily  or, The gold-spinners -- The white cat -- Why? -- Why the bear is stumpy-tailed -- Why the sea is salt -- The wolf and the seven young goslings -- The yellow dwarf.]
Childcraft Series - Volume on Tales and Legends. 1970s?  I think this anthology is the one I had from the Childcraft series (I don't know which printing - but I had mine in the earely 70s).  The runaway pancake was the first stroy, and the cover was had a picture of the fox and the stork, which may account for the memory of the fox stroy.
AII6 I think it may be this, which I reproduce from an ad beause it lists a lot of the stories. I can't find my copy to check myself.   Hutchinson, Veronica S.   Chimney corner stories; tales for little children.  Collection of children's stories from: Henny Penny, The old Woman & her Pig, The Pancake, Peter Rabbit, The Three Pigs, Little Black Sambo, Bremen Town Musicians, Cinderella, Lazy Jack, and others. Balch & Company New York, NY 1929



A117: Animal Family
I am pretty sure this book was published by Parents Magazine Press. I belonged to this book club during the 70s for my daughters and this was a book I ordered for them. The story involved a mother, son and daughter beaver, hedgehog, muskrat type animal.  They lived in a little house at the edge of a creek and they had a boat to cross the creek. It was a cute children's story about the brother and sister's life along the creek.  It seems that the title had "Hollow" in it.

Hoban, Russell, Harvey's Hideout. Could you be thinking of Harvey's Hideout?  It's about a brother and sister muskrat who squabble all the time.  The brother has a secret cave and at the end of the book he finds out his sister has a secret cave next door to his.
Hoban, Russell & Lillian, Harvey's Hideout, 1969.  I'm not sure about it, but this one keeps coming up in my WorldCat searches - seems there aren't too many books with muskrats as main characters! "Harvey thinks his big sister is mean and rotten she thinks he is stupid and no-good. As a result, they both spend some lonely hours refusing to play with each other."  A reader's review on amazon.com mentions "all the things Harvey and his sister were doing, like forming my own club, cooking bacon and eggs over an open fire, and swimming in a lake."
I had this book.  I remember the brother and sister eating cheese, which looked funny.  I keep thinking his name is Eddie.  Maybe these clues will help someone come up with the title.
Glad she remembered "Hollow."   Tales from Fern Hollow series by John Patience, published by Peter Haddock.  Titles include:  Mrs. Merryweather's letter;  Parson Dimly's treasure hunt; Sigmund's birthday surprise;  The brassband robbery;  The floating restaurant; The Secret Hide-Out and Enemies of the Secret Hide-Out.
Emmit Otter'sJugband Christmas '70s, approximate. Part of the Parents Magazine Press Series. I had this one--they rode on the river in a little boat and the book ended with a talent contest/Christmas concert. 


A118: Aliens Animals Cousins and Stars
Solved: Ride a Wild Horse


2003


A119: African-American old man learns to read
Solved:  Life is So Good 
A120: Argus for Ruben

Good Morning,  I heard the NPR radio report of your service and thought I would give it a try.  I have an illustration, done in tempra, for a publication.  On the edge of the illustration in pencil is "Argus for Ruben." The painter signed simply as "GM."  (It is not Gil Miret as I contacted him and he said it was not one of his.)  The illustration is a head and shoulders view of a red haired boy, about 12-years-old.  He is peering over a weed covered knoll about to take a photograph.  He is holding an Argus C-Twenty camera. Argus Cameras, Inc. hit their peak following World War II to the mid 1960's and was as familiar as Kodak.  The C-Twenty was an inexpensive 35mm camera introduced by the Argus Camera Company in 1958.  It incorporated a rangefinder and f/stop and shutter speed controls.  It was made of bakelite and metal.  The rendition of the camera is very detailed and accurate but not accurate enough to be used for an ad. To me, it looks like an illustration for a young person's book or perhaps a magazine. So...what do you think?

A121: Anatomy and science for kids
Here's what I know, I was about 10 when I had this book, that was 25 years ago.  My mother worked at scholastic books so there's a good possibility it was published by them but not necessarily so. It was a hard bound, orange colored book, oversize wide.  Illustrated.  The subject of this childrens book was anatomy and other science short stories which explain how certain parts of the body work. For example, I remember one story clearly was about a western shootout where the man who was shot in the belly had a visible hole right through him into his stomach and the doctor attending him would tie a string on bits of food and lower it into his stomach, thus discovering the action of digestive juices. Another story  which I know was in that book involves a journey into the eye where some interaction with the Rods and the Cones happened. Similar to 'incredible journey'.  The book was fairly thick and had a good number of these types of stories.  I have an 8 yr old son and I am VERY anxious to find this book. I hope you can figure it out!

Oversized and orange makes me think of the Childcraft series.  Volume 14: Science and Industry meets that description (10" tall x 14" wide), and certainly has many illustrations and photographs.  But I didn't see the story you cite.  There's a picture of the full series on the Anthologies page, check that out just in case.
Again, sorry I don't have the complete solution, but the story about the stomach is the same as the book "Dr. Beaumont and the Man with a Hole in His Stomach."  Is it possible it could have been included in a collection?
Anthony Ravielli, Wonders of the Human Body.  Just a possibility...this was published in both hardcover and paperback editions.
Thanks for giving it a shot however your suggestions for the book in A121 are not the book.  The book was oversized, probably 18-20" wide by 12" high.  I'm still keen to track it down.  I think the story about the rods and cones in the eye might be the key clue.

Montgomery, Elizabeth Rider, Story behind the Great Medical Discoveries, 1945, copyright. I had a book with this title as a boy, and it certainly included the story of the felloe with a flap in his stomach.  I got the author's name and publication date from AbeBooks, so another book with this title is also possible.



A122: aliens treat humans like animals
Solved: Tumithak of the Corridors


A123: Armenian girl
Solved: The Road from Home


A124: African girl growing up in village
Solved: Thirty-one Brothers and Sisters


A125: Army family full of teenagers -a series of books
Solved: Penny Parrish


A126:  Abstract painter dad
Solved: The Teddy Bear Habit


A127:  ANIMAL STORIES/POEMS/ALPHABET COMPILATION
Solved: Animal Stories

A128: Anthology, 1950's
Solved: My Book House


A129: Australia Tansy Sorrel sisters
Solved: A Family Likeness


A130: Air beacon towers
Young boy works with man who services and builds air beacon towers for early croos-county airplane service.

A131: American Indian Tales
Solved: American Indian Tales and Legends


A132: Anne with an e
Solved: Anne of Green Gables


A133: Apple Family books
Solved: Mr. Apple's Family


A134: artist, East Asian, Hokusai?
Solved:  Pictures for the Palace


A135: Amanda the snake
Solved: Amanda


A136: Adirondacks extended camping trip by sick woman with a guide
Solved:  The Healing Woods


A137: Annabelle
Solved: No Flying in the House


A138: adolescent girl in San Francisco
Solved: Fifteen


A139: amazon river exploration
this book was read to me by my 5th grade teacher. i dont know if it was a "childrens" book. i recall it as being about a family (possibly father and two children) that went to explore the amazon river. in my memory it was a very exciting book, at least to a 10 year old.

Willard Price, Amazon adventure, 1951.  "Amazon adventure" plot summary:  "One of a series of adventures featuring Hal and Roger Hunt. The boys are accompanying their zoologist father down the Amazon, to explore an uncharted river. They face the natural hazards of the jungle, hostile natives, an anonymous telegram, and a hunchback with bloodshot eyes."  Sound familiar?  It's probably this book, since it has almost entered "classic" status, but there are lots with this plot.  Others:  Morgan Swift and the lake of diamonds by Susan Saunders, published in 1986, about a teacher and twins Jan and Jill that go on a plant research trip to an Amazon tributary - and it turns into a dangerous encounter with thieves and suspicious Indians.  Another one published in 1986, Ambush in the Amazon, by Walter Dean Myers, is about two brothers (I don't know whether there are parents involved) camping in the Amazon who try to save a tribal village from the attacks of what
appears to be a reincarnated swamp monster.  The brothers' names were Chris and Ken.  Also, I could find no plot summaries, but there was a small series of 3 adventure books in the late 1940s/early 1950s about "Tom Stetson" that seem to be set in the Amazon region.



A140: Apple Family
Solved: Mr. Apple's Family


A141: African American cellists
The book was copyrighted in 1992.  It involves two African American cellists on a college campus in the 1971s.  An excerpt was on the SAT test given this past Saturday.

If all else fails, I bet you could contact Educational Testing Service (the group that creates the SATs) and give them the testing date/place.  They probably have to keep records of the copyrighted material that appears on the test and they would be able to tell you where it came from.  Some of their material is really out there--my SAT reprinted some portion of an article on cloud formation.
Rita Dove,Through the Ivory Gate, 1992.



A142: Apple orchard and space ship
Solved: The Space Ship Under the Apple Tree


A143: ABC of NYC
An ABC (alphabet) book from the 1940's or early 1950's (might be earlier) with scenes from New York City.  I remember that "D" was for the Dragon under the streets, in other words, the subway. This was illustrated by a picture of the subway train.  I think there was one picture of row houses in the snow and another of the moon through a window.

Phyllis McGinley, All Around the Town, 1948.  This is an alphabet book of things in the city. It's the only one I could come up with that the copyright dates fit.
A143 I just checked McGinley. It doesn't fit.
In All Around the Town D is for 'D's the Dairy Driver.  'He makes a daily round, With milk that tastes delicious, Or with Butter by the pound...'  Sorry, not the book you're looking for.
Rachel Isadora, City Seen from A to Z. I think this may be too recent but worth a check



A144: Abandoned Doll
Solved: Little Wooden Doll


A145: apple/ cherry tree orchard
Solved: Apple Tree Cottage
A146: Amaryllis

This is a story about two characters - the "student" and a young girl named Amaryllis.  I read it as a young girl - about 12 - in the Cleveland Heights library - it must have been in the young people's section, though I am not even sure they had such things then.  This was in the early 50's.  It's a love story, and I remember that the characters had to part, in the end.  I think it must have been an old story, maybe as old as the early part of the century, though I don't think the actual book was that old.  The story had a European feeling, maybe German.

Diana Patrick, First Your Penny, 1932.  Possibly this?  "This new romance introduces the reader to Diana Patrick's most attractive heroine, Amaryllis Sheridan, known to her friends as 'Ryll'. 'Ryll' is young, lovely, and carefree. The whole world, she believes, is hers to command. She had yet to learn the important lesson of life.. that 'the sweets of life must all be paid for'. First Your Penny is the story of her discovery of the important things in life -- and the meaning of true love".
Gene Stratton-Porter, The Magic Garden, 1927.  I'm not sure that this is the book being sought, but it is an extremely sentimental romantic novel with a lead character named Amaryllis!
Gene Stratton-Porter, The Magic Garden 1927, I agree, this sounds like "The Magic Garden," one of Gene's more sentimental efforts. A strong-willed five-year-old named Amaryllis is neglected by her parents, separated from her brother and shipped off to live with Uncle Paul. She's never allowed to have adventures or get dirty, ("Amaryllis, DON'T!" Sound familiar?) so she runs away and ends up wading in a creek that leads her to a beautiful garden. The boy, John Guido, is about twelve and plays her the "Amaryllis, fairest flower" tune on his violin. They promise to meet again, and they do, each knowing from that moment that the other is their one and only and determined to keep themselves pure. JG works toward becoming a world-famous violin soloist
 her career, if any, isn't mentioned. At the end, you're supposed to think JG is dead but he isn't because he stopped to rescue a homeless dog. (if this is the correct book, you'll possibly recognize the phrase "yellow cur"). There was a film version made in 1927 with Joyce Coad and Philippe deLacy.



A147: Ann Lane
This was one of my mother's childhood books.  She was born in 1919.  All I can remember is the first sentence: "Ann Lane lives in a lane" and that it is about a young girl who goes shopping in town.  Any help in identifying this book will be most appreciated.

A148: An Act of Love
Solved: Awakening (the False Start)


A149: Asian peacock paint
Solved: How the World Got Its Color


A150: Anne Archer
Solved: That Archer Girl


A151: And ye Shall Know Them
Solved: You Shall Know Them


A152: anthology of children's poems
I am missing pages 1-12 from this book.  But the poem on page 13 is If I Were a One-Legged Pirate by Mildred Plew Meigs.  Other poems in this book are The Spider and the Fly by Mary Howitt, The Sugar-Plum Tree by Eugene Field and The Tale of Custard the Dragon by Ogden Nash.  I was a paperback.  Most of the pages are black and white although there are some great color illustrations.  The book has at least 86 pages, that is all I have.  I am 44 years old and this book is probably older than I am although I don't have any dates.

Werner, J. , ed., Golden Book of Poetry, Simon & Schuster, 1947. This book has all the poems you listed.
Werner, J. (editor), The Golden Book of Poetry, 1947, copyright. Although I can't be sure this is the book you have, this book does have the four poems you cited.  My source is "Index to Children's Poetry, first supplement."
Unfortunately this is not the book.  All of those poems listed in the stumper are in that book but here are some more that are not:  The Table and the Chair, Jack Sprat, The confidant, Happy Birds and many more.
Actually, the four additional poems you listed *are* in the Golden Book of Poetry. It's possible you were looking in a later book with the same title that was abridged (for example, the 1949 edition is only 68 pages long).  The one that has them listed is Werner, Jane, ed.  Golden Book of Poetry  il. by Gertrude Elliott.  Simon & Schuster 1947 (Big Golden Book).  112 poems ungrouped.  This book is 97 pages and is 28 cm. tall.  I hope this helps.
Golden Book of Poetry Is this the illustration for The Sugar Plum Tree?   This is the illustration for The Sugar Plum Tree in my Golden Book of Poetry.  (I just did a Google Images search for Sugar Plum Tree.)



A153: animals escape forrest fire
Larger book, about animals escaping forrest fire on a raft down a river. The fire was at night. They rode down the river until they came to a new land and made a new home in a great big tree. The inside cover showed a map of the entire land.

Colin Dann, Animals of Farthing Wood,c. 1979.  This is probably a long shot, but could it be The Animals of Farthing Wood? In this series they are escaping a housing development, but I'm sure I remember a scene involving rafting down the river. Or else it could be Watership Down by Robert Adams, where something like that also happens.
I posted this a few months ago. The response is not the Book I am looking  for. My book was probably written in the 1940s to 1970s.  Last time I saw  the book was in the mid-late 1970s. Any other suggestions?
Anyway, I was in the archives to see if I could solve anything and ran across A153 which sounds a lot like the book I'm looking for (F153). I don't remember the raft or the map but the rest sounds the same. Curiously, my request is indexed F153. Is that on purpose?
I have been looking for this book for several years.  My sister and I used to check it out from the small library in my hometown in Michigan back in the 1960's.  It must have been published in the 40's or 50's as the copy we used was showing its age. Is it possible that this is a book from Canada or England?  As I recall the illustrations seemed to be influenced by Milne. I hope someone can find this one.  I would like to by a copy for my sister.
Albert Bigelow Paine, Hollow Tree Nights And Days, 1915.  Paine wrote several other books about the Hollow Tree animals, Mr. Crow and Mr. Coon and Mr. Possum, etc.  I don't remember a fire but I do remember a flood.  The line drawings do have a sort of Milne-ish (actually Ernest E. Shepherd)quality.
Brian Jacques,  The Redwall Series I'm not sure whether these books fit your dates or not, but it's worth checking out this series. Every book is a thick one on basically peaceful forest creatures, whom face war or disaster and are forced to fight. There are so many books in this series, but it sounds similar to Jacques's books.
animals escape forest fire
Possibly this one?  Friendship Valley by Wolo.  NY: William Morrow & Co, 1946.  A story packed with illustrations about a variety of animals, large and small, who work together to make a home after the tragedy of a forest fire. Endpapers are a pictorial map of "The Little Lake and Friendship Valley," color pictorial paper over board.  I'm sending the same solution for unsolved stumper F153: Forest Fire drives animals to new home.
Wolo (pseudonym of Wolf Von Trutzschler), author and illustrator, Friendship Valley, 1946. This is definitely the book being sought!  A badger, woodchuck, family of racoons, squirrel, hedgehog, and frog escape from a forest fire on a raft, and rescue a kitten as they float downriver.  The fire does occur late at night, and the front and back inside covers do show a detailed map of the place where they make their new home.



A154: Abused Boy and Horse
Solved: Black Fury


A155: albatross
looking for a book from the 1950s about either an albatross or a seagull who lives on the docks. the only image I remember is one in which the bird is caught or enclosed by a small room or box. It may have been in a collection of stories.

Robert Lawson, The Fabulous Flight. Could this be it?  A boy suffers an injury that causes him to shrink to a very tiny size.  He makes friends with a seagull and they have some wild adventures together.  I think there is a part where the seagull is trapped, but I could be wrong.
Could this be Sid Hoff's Albert the Albatross (1961) I'll have to hunt for my book to see if it contains the picture you describe.
Well, I just scanned through both and didn't find the box reference...
Holling, Holling C., Seabird, 1948.  Please take a look at this one. -from a librarian.



A156: Ant is a Hero
Solved: Knee Deep in Thunder


A157: activity book stumper
This is a very old-fashioned hardcover from the 30's or 40's.  Filled with puzzles, riddles, mazes, rainy day and sickbed activities.  I remember one of the first riddles was "what is the longest word...'smiles', because there is a mile between the first and last letter."  One of the odd things about this book is that you were supposed to take a pencil to it (for the mazes, etc.) and it was a nicely bound hardcover!  My grandmother gave this to me in the 60's when I had chicken pox, but I think the book was much older than I was!  A dear, dear book, to which I returned many times.

Kitty Styles, Nicholas Thomas and Timothy series.  These books, in addition to stories, included mazes, games and other activities. Perhaps a more likely possibility would be one of the various "Rainy Day" books that used to be very popular. E.g. John Purcell: Golden Rainy Day Play Book;  Marion Conger and Natalie Young: The Rainy Day Play Book;   Enid Blyton: Noddy's Rainy Day Book  etc.
Big Red Fun Book.  Was it a thick book (maybe 3") and about 8" tall?  Did it include chapters on charades, and handwriting analysis?  I had a book alled either "the big red fun book" or "my big red fun book", and the riddle you mention was one of the first ones in it.  (Another of my favorites was "what goes up a chimney down, but can't go down a chimney up?  An umbrella.) I still have the book somewhere in my collection, so if this sounds right I'll dig it out for more info.
Michael Estrin, Fun for a Rainy Day1945 If this isn't Michael Estrin's "Fun for a Rainy Day" I'll be very surprised. Do you remember a chapter on soap carving, another on knot tying, and a page showing a street accident and you're supposed to look at it for a minute and then remember details? You were indeed meant to take a pencil to the book for the puzzles and designs, and my first edition was a nicely bound black hardcover with gold lettering on the spine. It also came out in paperback. 



A158: Armenian, massacre at Smyrna, Wandering Jew
In the late 1970s, I read a paperback book about a character who could have been the Wandering Jew.  The book ends with a dramatic escape from the city of Smyrna during a massacre that occurred towards the end of the First World War of non-Muslims by the Turkish army. Sorry, I cannot remember the title or the author.

A158 Possibly The 40 days of Musa Dagh by Franz  Werfel;  or The rage of the vulture by Barry Unsworth.  [I decided I didn't really know anything about a wandering Jew, tho I've had the book of that name by Eugene Sue, so I checked Google and found this neat site.]
Charles (?) Whittemore, Jerusalem Poker,1970.  Part of a series of marvelous interconnected books that featured the Wandering Jew as a character. The books are a magical realist retelling of the history of the Middle East, with Jerusalem as the focal point. The Smyrna section is near the end of the second book, Jerusalem Poker, a book about a never ending poker game between the shadowy true rulers of the Middle East. Books were recently reissued by Old Earth Books in a uniform trade paperback edition.



A159: Airplane pilots, two young brothers, 1920s-1930s-1940s
Airplane pilots, two young brothers,1920s-1930s-1940s.  When I was in grade school, ca. 1950, I was mesmerised by a young-person book (late 1940s?) about two brothers who become airline pilots. They start out by volunteering to help barnstormers: filling holes and smoothing rough spots in pastures, and eventually are taken for a hop in a biplane; then work their way up the aeronautical ropes of the 1920s-30s-40s. I never became an airline pilot, but my son has, and so I'd love to put my hands on that book.

This sounds a little like a book called Last Plane Out by John Ball, except that I don't recall there being two brothers in
that one. I have an idea that he has written some YA books about flying, he might be a possibility.



A160: Actor father finds own child
Solved: My True Love Waits

A161: Ashpaddle (sp?)
Solved: The Princess Whom Could Not Be Silenced


A162: Animal Story
Solved: Green Woods and Green Meadows series


A163: Apple tree
Solved: Two Boys and a Tree

A164: American Girl Sent to Rome
Solved: Roman Folly


A165: Alien Being from Under Water City
Solved: Stranger From the Depths


A166: Albacore are running
Solved: Sensible Kate


A167: Ants Rule the World
Solved: No Time Like the Future


A168: Aging backwards on strange island
Solved: Otherborn


A169: Asian little girl does "butterfly" dance
Solved: Dance, Dance, Amy-Chan!


A170: Anthology
Solved: Illustrated Treasury of Children's Literature


A171: Annie, the Anteater
This children's book  begins with, "They were lost, there was no doubt about it." Characters are Annie, the Anteater  Trumpie, the pink elephent and _____, the turtle. That's all I know. My father used to read it to us as children. Since reading that book, he starts every book he ever reads with,"They were lost, there was no doubt about it." Now that he has his first grandchild, I would love to find the book so he can read it to my children.

Tyndall and Bolsover, Annie The Anteater, 1963. From this listing: http://www.trademe.co.nz/Browse/Listing.aspx?id=236004067. Apparently there were at least three books in the "Trumpy Tales" series: The Great Magician, Wise Old Friend, and Annie the Anteater.



A172: Amazon Women/Underwater Civilization
Solved: Across A Wine-Dark Sea


A173: American child who discovers a magical genie
Solved: Mr. Wicker's Window


A174: Active Children
set of three science books appropriate for around age 10, published early to mid 40s.  May have "for active children" in title.  May have been published in England.  Each book dealt with a different aspect of "science".

A175: ABC Trains
Solved: Railroad ABC


A176: Annabel and the Blue Fairy.
Annabel and the Blue Fairy. Multiple chapters. Children's book. Possible English. One chapter about her grandmother's quilt and one about fall--how the colors change I think.

A177: ant (?) beetle (?) front illustration of a picnic
Solved: Ant Ventures


A178: albatross scrimshaw sailing ship
Solved: Seabird


A179: Accident makes goo to eleminate friction
Solved: Bob Fulton's Amazing Soda-Pop Stretcher


A180: Alien sends boy back in time to help king and dog
Solved: Parsifal Rides the Time Wave

2004


A181: American/European myths & legends anthologies
Solved: Wonder Story Books


A182: Adopted boy in box
Solved: Konrad


A183: Antoinette's Philippe
Solved: Antoinette's Philip


A184: Aliens who are afraid of music
Solved: Help! Help! The Globolinks!
This is a story from the 70s, I think.  Aliens who look like schmoos (white, blobby creatures) invade Earth.  Any object they touch turns into a geometric form, like a pyramid or sphere.  Any person they touch slowly turns into an alien.  There's a subplot where this happens to the teenage protagonists' music teacher.  The only weapon humans have is that music injures the aliens.  I remember the female lead singing until she was hoarse.  When I read this book as a child, I found it incredibly frightening; now I think it may have been intended as a commentary on modern architecture.  For years, I was certain that Daniel Pinkwater wrote it, but I think I was wrong.  Can anyone help me?

Gian-Carlo Menotti, Help, Help, the Globolinks, 1970, approximately.  Is there a school bus that gets trapped by the creatures?
Just wanted you to know that “Help! Help! The Globolinks!” was indeed the book I was looking for.  Strangely enough,  the book I read was actually a novelization of an opera of the same name, written by the same man who wrote Amahl and the Night Visitors.  Thanks for solving this puzzle that’s troubled me for years!



A185: Anthology of Fairy Tales-yellow
Solved: The Golden Treasury of Children's Literature


A186: Alligator Pears, Girl looking for mussels or clams
Solved: Penelope and the Mussels


A187: alligator bites of rabbits tail
alligator bites of rabbits tail (why the short tail story)

"Rabbit's Tail." in Smith, Jimmy Neil, ed. Why the Possum's Tail is Bare and Other Classic Southern Stories. New York: Avon, 1993. pp. 141-45. An African American tale told by Sherry Des Enfants of Lithonia, GA. Rabbit gets Alligator into an argument about who has the most relatives. When a couple thousand alligators show up, Rabbit jumps across their backs, counting them and succeeding in his plan to cross the muddy swamp without dirtying his long fluffy tail, until one impatient alligator bites off his tail.



A188: Adventures of a young boy who longs to work in TV industry
Solved: Tee Vee Humphrey


A189: Abandoned Earth colony, accidentally rediscovered
Solved: Another Heaven, Another Earth


A190: Aura surrounds child battling evil
Late 1980s, early 1990s.  I read a paperback book about the fight between good and evil.  Auras are an important part of this story.  Special babies were being born who would fight evil but Satan discovered them by their aura and killed them.  A little boy was born and a priest recognized that he had a special aura.  The baby's aura was disguised and he was kept hidden to keep Satan from finding him. Death is represented by a black horse and carriage.  The boy's safety is critical because one day he will fight to overcome the evil.

Sounds like typical Susan Cooper or Madeleine L'Engle to me
Card, Orson Scott, Alvin Maker series.  Possibly ..... Lots  about auras, plenty of good vs evil, Alvin is the special child, but I don't remember a Death in a carriage.
Sorry, definitely not Alvin Maker.  That series has reached six books, most recently The Crystal City, and the only one where he was young was the first one (? Seventh Son).  No Death by black carriage, but plenty of threat by water and things related to water.
Roderick MacLeish, Prince Ombra, 1982.  Could it be?



A191: Aliens, outer space and a book that tells the future
Solved: Matthew Looney and the Space Pirates


A192: Alphabet nursery rhyme book
This book was a alphabet nursery rhyme book. From what I can remember it was a thick book. It was hard coverd no shine to it. It did have "Little miss muffet" with a picture of her sitting on the tuffet with a spider coming down. The books illustration were very mature as not like a cartoon book. I was born in 1979 and I can remember reading this over and over in the 80's. So from what year it is from who knows. I am wondering if there is some sort of catalog with cover or story page pictures for alphabet or nursery rhyme books? This is not a mother goose book. Well maybe someday I will find this, and that day will bring back so many wonderful memories!

I remembered also that each page had a letter of the alphabet that was at the top of each page, the letters where wispy and the rhyme was under it. This is such a stumper for me. Is there a site to look at that has 1970s books that were popular?
Aexander Key, The Magic Meadow.My sister just lent this book to me, all the details match.



A193: Anthology
My mom said that she got the book through Reader's Digest and they told her that it was published by Penguin.  It would have been in the 60's when I was reading it, so it is at least that old.  My mom said that the cover had blue and white checks or squares.  The poem the Owl and the Pussy Cat was in it and we can both remember a very colorful page, with the owl and the cat dancing on the bottom of the page.  Wynken, Blynken and Nod was also in it with colorful pictures.  Another significant thing that my mom remembers is the poem Little Boy Blue, or Our Little Boy Blue.  Here is part of the poem.  The little toy dog is covered with dust but, sturdy and staunch he stands.  The little tin soldier is red with rust and his musket molds in his hand.  Time was when the little toy dog was new and the soldier was passing fair, that was the time when our little boy blue kissed them and put them there. This is only part of the poem.  If anyone can help with this I would be most grateful.  Thank you for your help.

I can't help with the anthology, but the poem is "Little Boy Blue" by Eugene Field.  You can see online here.  "Wynken, Blynken and Nod" was also written by Eugene Field, and the "Owl and the Pussycat" is by Edward Lear.
Robert Louis Stevenson, A Child's Garden of Verses.  This sounds a lot like A Child's Garden of Verses that I remember from my grandmother's house. We didn't have a very colorful version but I can remember it had toy soldiers, land of nod, etc...
Mother Goose, c.1960.  This was a book some neighbours had, and I envied it, though it was too young for me. I never could get a copy for my kids,but I saw a copy of it not long ago in a used bookstore in Streetsville, Ontario.



A194: Apple Cherry Blossom tree sick girl? broken leg?
I am looking for a book from my childhood (I was born in 1976) so I am guessing it was a 1970-1980 chilren's book.  What I can remember, it's a book about a little girl who was either very sick or broke her leg.  She couldn't go out to play in the spring or summer and  had to wait a year (?) to go out again. There was something with cherry blossom trees or apple blossom trees?  When she finally got better, or her leg healed, she was able to go out and play again...

Alcott, Louisa May, Jack and Jill.  In jack and Jill, the two main characters have a sledding accident and I remember the girl was in bed or convalescing for a year. I don't have the book here and i don't remember if there was an apple blossom connection.
Coolidge, Susan, What Katy Did. Penguin 1985, reprint.  Could it be this often-reprinted story? "Katy Carr was a tomboy, but she secretly longed to be beautiful and patient, to be as kind and gentle as her beloved Cousin Helen. This is the story of the dreadful accident that gave Katy the chance to achieve her aim." "An accidental fall from a swing seems to threaten Katy's hopes for the future, but she struggles to overcome her difficulties with pluck, vitality and good humor. A best-loved story for more than 100 years." Katy is confined to bed for 2 years rather than one, but the idea of blossoming trees as a marker of time sounds appropriate to the book.
Thank you. I looked on the website, but the books aren't correct.  :(  I should have mentioned that it was a "picture" book  because I remember it had pictures, so it wasn't a novel.  Do I just keep checking to see if anyone else has any ideas?  Thanks for all of your help!
I remember reading something similar about the same time. Try searching for a girl who has polio.  I remember a horse in the story I read, and a big tree in a yard that bloomed.  Sorry I can't be of more help, but maybe a lead.
Daphne Hogstrom, What Will We See?, 1968.  I don't know if this is what you're looking for, but there were some similarities.  The girl in the book is not sick, but she basically waits a year to see what will happen to the tree at her new home (a farm).  The story contains illustrations combined with actual photos.  The girl wanders her farm with her doll, Jane.  The trees eventually bud and blossom then she finds out they are apple trees.
Are the characters in your book black?  I remember a story from my childhood about a little girl in the South, something about a tree in her grandmother's yard.  At some point in the book the girl is injured (either a broken bone or a head injury)and I think the cover of the book was purple.  I think the gurl was either visiting or living with her grandmother.
Frances Clark Sayers, The Chinaberry Tree.  I don't know if this is the correct answer but your question made me think of a story I read many years ago about a little girl named TooLoo who wasn't allowed to climb the chinaberry tree because she was too small. She eventually climbed it and got stuck. When her mother got her down, she was put to bed.



A195: Appominombus
Solved: Epaminondas and His Auntie

A196: Artificial structure on Moon's Mt. Pico
Solved: Blast off at 0300


A197: Anthology w/ story about a boy named Zero in the Future
This story was in an anthology of children's stories (might even have been a reading textbook, but I am not sure) that I read around 1978.  It was about a little boy who lived in the future, when everyone is known by a number instead of a name.  The boy is called Zero, and because his number is so insignificant, he is always forgotten by everyone until last. Consequently, he always gets stuck with the brown paint in art class.  So he decides to take a really high number as his name, but it is so long that no one can remember the whole thing and everyone keeps forgetting him again.  Finally, he takes an actual name, but the idea catches on so well that everyone else takes the same name.  In the end, people all start taking different names.  I have been looking for this story for years with no luck, so I would be very grateful to anyone who can give me a clue! Thanks.

Not a solution, but book stumper A197 sounds like the same book as B259.



A198: Anthology, children's
I'm searching for a pair of books, or at least enough information about them to do a decent search.  I grew up in the '50s and my two sisters and I shared a set of two books that our parents gave us.  We were 5 years apart, so the things I remember about the books are different from those my sisters remember because my older one was a more advanced reader and my younger was a toddler.  I've combined all of our memories in this description.  I don't know if our two books were part of a larger set; if they were, we didn't own the rest.  Each book was an inch or so thick, but not large otherwise (maybe 6x8, give or take an inch).  The covers were burgundy or brownish red and reminded me of leather although I don't think they were really leather.  They did not have dust jackets.  I don't recall any pictures on the covers although there might have been words on the spine (don't remember any).  The books contained rhymes and stories for children, from the beginning reader to the more skilled (but still young) reader.  The books were richly illustrated.  One of my sisters remembers Little Black Sambo, lots of poems (one about a backyard swing and the sky so blue; another about a cow who gave lots of cream to eat with an apple tart;  and winkin, blinkin, and nod) plus more stories: about the land of counterpane (a bedtime story); Bre'r Rabbit and Uncle Remus; Snow White and Rose Red.  I remember a story about a boy whose parents were in a circus where all the words were written upside down.  When the boy was born, the parents gave him a name that would look the same right side up or upside down:  Pod.  I recall another poem about a giant in which one of the first lines was "Hi ho, said the jolly old giant, Joe Bean.  I think I'll go for a stroll on the green."  I would appreciate any help that anyone can provide.

This sounds like the Book Trails series. There is more information on these books under Solved Mysteries
Jane Werner, Tall Book of Make-Believe, 1950.  Although the description of the books themselves is definitely not the same, the stories of Wynken, Blynken and Nod, The Land of Counterpane and A Swing Song all appear in The Tall Book of Make-Belive. Is it possible that your sister is remembering this book in addition to the ones you describe? You can find it in Solved Mysteries and Most Requested Books.
In response to the comment provided by a reader, I'd like to thank that person for writing.  I've tried to check on the Book Trails book, but I don't think this is the source of our book set.  Our covers were not so elaborate, but beyond that, the Books Trails description mentions black-and-white illustrations; our books had richly colored illustrations.  I can definitely rule out the Better Homes and Gardens Storybook after having seen copies.  I have other memories about our volumes other than those I already mentioned, but they are more vague and therefore more unreliable: I seem to recall a story called The Land of Nod (which might be the same as the story about the boy named Pod, already mentioned...or not).  I think our books had Hans Brinker and the Silver Skates.  I think both of our books had a mix of stories and poems for beginning as well as better readers (as opposed to books that contain only poems, another only stories).  I don't think either book had projects or "try it" activities.  If there were other books beyond the two we had (a larger set) I was unaware of them.  As I've continued to try to find these books, I've come to realize that book sets from a variety of publishers in the 1950s contained many of the same stories, which makes the search even more difficult.  I have tried searching through the Mysteries Solved section of this website to find a solution, but haven't had a "that's IT" moment yet.  I keep feeling that if/when I find the story of the boy named Pod and the story/poem about Giant Joe Bean, I will have found the elusive needle-in-the-haystack.  I appreciate any and all help, so please continue to share your thoughts and suggestions.
The Book of Knowledge Have you considered a set of books sort of like an encyclopedia called The Book of Knowledge?  They were burgundy, leather textured hardbacks and several volumes contained poems and short story classics.  That was the source of lots of our childhood literature.
Marjorie Barrows, ed., The Children's Treasury 1947, approximate Now this one I have owned all my life it's "The Children's Treasury: A Book to Grow On", published by Consolidated in Chicago. Mine is a 1947 edition, two volumes, dark red-brown covers. Inside the cover is a colorful picture of children dancing in a circle in outfits from all over the world. Joe Bean caught a cloud and thought he'd bring it home and it nearly wrecked his house. His wife was a lot smarter than he was. The Land of Counterpane is one of several Robert Louis Stevenson poems in there, with soft grey-washed pictures. The one about the baby born to the upside-down-reading parents is "Clown Town". "Hi ho the derry o, the baby's name is <b>pood</b>." And the baby's mother (Flo) wore doughnut earrings.  The book is notable for not only having the story about the house that Jack built -- but also the house that JILL built. Hope this helps!
Childcraft series, 1930s to 1940s.  The poem about the "Jolly giant Joe Green" was contained in an encyclopedic style set of books called "Child Craft".  There were something like 20 or more books in the set.  There were many stories and poems included, and the targeted age range probably was from 1st grade to 7th grade children.  The books were richly bound in a dark red leather, and as I recall, good quality paper. So there probably are surviving editions squirreled away in many attics waiting to see the light of day.  It is probably something a dealer would not handle, because the content would be too literary and/or too dated for today's kids.  If anybody knows where to find the Childcraft series, and in particular, the specific book with the Joe Bean poem in it, I would appreciate contact information of where to find it.



A199: Ah Sin
please help - what is the title of an oldish book, probably from 1950's which has as its plot some daring British boys sailing around Australian waters in pursuit of a mysterious yacht owned by a status crazed Japanese noveau riche millionaire with only one son who was saved from a shark attack by one of the boys.  There were many characters including a beachcomber, a Chinese cook called Ah Sin, water buffalos and a submarine.

Strangeways, Mark, The Secret Base: a thrilling tale of the Pacific, 1946.  A very similar stumper was recently solved on another site. The story involved a shark attack/Japanese millionaire/Chinese cook/British boys/and a mysterious yacht.  Sounds like the same book this poster is looking for (is that you ElMagnifico??)
Alert - it isn't The Secret Base!! I just got it and there was a mix-up of information!
Nope, tis Elwyn who posted this - it seems we were only half right about this book. Has half the elements but not all - we are still seeking the Chinese cook among other things!
One Ah Sin I know of is a character from the poetry of the 19th century writer Bret Harte - I believe it's from the narrative poem about California prospectors with a title something like Tales of Truthful James.  This was later dramatized by him (with collaboration by Mark Twain) as Ah Sin, or the Heathen Chinee.



A200: Adopted girl learns mother was adopted too
Solved: Grandmother Orphan


A201: Attic doll
Solved: The Wonderful Fashion Doll


A202: Australian school trip
read in about 1949/1950:-  Boys school (in England?), where they also teach the pupils to fly, goes on a school trip to Australia.  Boys are kidnapped and held for ransom at a remote hidden airstrip in the Outback.  Some escape by   commandeering the crooks' planes.  There is also some trecking involved, either in escape on foot from the airstrip where they are held, and/or after a forced landing in a plane they escape in.

A203: astrology, world, careers
There is a world where everything is based on astrology.  Where you live, your career, and even the colors in your area of the city are based on astrology.  I'm not sure is I am mixing this up with another book, but it seems to me this book starts out with an Englishman coming to America by boat to get a girl who plays a part in rescuing the king and queen of the astrological kingdom who may be, unbeknowst to her, her parents.

William Nicholson, The Wind Singer Since your not sure if your plots are mixed I'm going to suggest this one, although it has nothing about astrology, people are segregated into different classes based on testing. They can only live in their assigned part of the city, wear their assigned color, and are limited on career advancement as well. This tale also features, Mud People, really scary Old Children(who steal away youth by touching you), and some kind of prophecy. You may remember remember cities on wheels that sail across the desert, and an evil foe called "the Mora". I hope that's enough information, and I hope you find the right book. 



A204: anthology including dragon who ate cookies
Solved: The Funny Thing


A205: attic with rocking horse
The book I am searching for is a fiction aimed at children probably between 8-12 and is about a little girl, in a big house which may not have been her own.  I'm sure that it opens with a description of her coming in from the garden or going out to play in the rain.  I do remember mention of galoshes (because I had absolutely no idea what they were and still don't) and a friend (a boy) coming around to play.  There was some kind of room/attic in the house which I think may have been kept locked and some sort of key which she found.  I remember wonderful descriptions of her finding jewels in a box or chest of drawers with vivid colours.  It was a hard back book with a light beige/fawn or off-white cover and I would have read it in the early 1970's.  There may have been mention of a rocking horse somewhere. It was almost definitely English and not creepy so no ghosts or anything horrid.  The book was second hand when I read it so probably printed in the 1950's or 1960's.  Please help, it was lost when we moved abroad and I have spent the last 20 years trying to find it.  Unfortunately, I cannot remember the name of the book nor the author.

Rumer Godden, The Rocking Horse Secret.  Just a guess!
I located my copy of the Godden book  after re-reading it, I'm certain that my suggestion was wrong.
Lucy Boston, The Children of Green Knowe.  It's not quite the same as the description, but could it be The Children of Green Knowe? The main character is a boy, Toseland, not a girl, but it has many of the same elements: torrential rain in the beginning, English, a large house not his own, rocking horse in the attic, found jewels. However there are non-creepy ghosts.
Frances Hodgson Burnett, The Secret Garden.  1994, reprint.  Summary From Publishers Weekly Bratty and spoiled Mary Lennox is orphaned when her parents fall victim to a cholera outbreak in India. As a result, Mary becomes the ward of an uncle in England she has never met. As she hesitantly tries to carve a new life for herself at imposing and secluded Misselthwaite Manor, Mary befriends a high-spirited boy named Dickon and investigates a secret garden on the Manor grounds. She also discovers a sickly young cousin, Colin, who has been shut away in a hidden Manor room. Together Mary and Dickon help Colin blossom, and in the process Mary finds her identity and melts the heart of her emotionally distant uncle.  Ages 6-12.
This reminds me of a book I read about the same time.  I think it was titled The Octagon House.  The girl goes into a strange octagonal shaped house to get out of the rain as she walks home from school.  She finds a key that opens a doll house that is the exact replica of the house she is in.  There is something magic that occurs and she finds treasures.  I think there is an old woman involved and the key was inside a box with a velvet ribbon?  I remember the  rocking horse, too.
Another person brought a stumper within the stumper about an octagon house. I don't know if this is the answer to the origanal stumper, but the person is thinking of OCTAGON MAGIC by Andre Norton, 1967 (published in American and the UK). A girl (named Lorrie?) is having problems with mean kids at her new school. She finds refuge in a strange eight-sided
house that has a replica dollhouse inside and I do seem to recall a rocking horse (perhaps there's a connection between her riding the horse and magic happening). It isn't a sinister book, and I think at the end the old ladies who lived in the house end up as dolls in the dollhouse? Anyway, maybe this description will help.~from a librarian
CS Lewis, The Magician's Nephew.  Most of the things that you described are in this book
I have to disagree; this sounds nothing like The Magician's Nephew.  In that book, two children (a boy and a girl) travel to worlds through a wood full of pools using green and yellow rings invented by the magician of the title.  It is a prequel to the rest of the Narnia books, explaining the origins of things such as the White Witch and Lantern Waste, and there are most definitely parts of it that could be considered creepy.
Rumer Godden, The Rocking Horse Secret. (1988)  I agree, this sounds exactly like The Rocking Horse Secret, though I don't remember any jewels (I have a used copy and re-read it within the last year). Tibby, the main character, is the daughter of the housekeeper at a grand house. Tibby has a friend who comes over, a slightly older boy who works in the stables. She explores all over the house and gets in trouble for sneaking around. She finds the will that leaves the house to the rightful owners (maybe Tibby's mom or the stable owner?) in the tail of the rocking horse in the old nurseries.
I don't know if it will help you find your book, but I can tell you what galoshes are. They are a lot like rubber boots but they are oversized so that your regular shoes can fit inside them. They have no lining inside because if you are wearing shoes inside you don't need one. 



A206: abominable snowman
I'm looking for a horror story book about the abominable snowman it may even be called that. it starts with two climbers in the himalayas running for their lives from a monstrous creature (its big, about 40 ft tall with eyes that blaze so brightly they set fire to combustibles) and are rescued by some buddist monks who live in a cave. The climbers return to the USA but eventually after several years the creature travel up from himalayas through Siberia and Alaska down to the Rockies where it proceeds to start killing skiers and locals. The hero realises the creature has found him and gets together a team to hunt it down and kill it. They use crossbows with laser tipped arrows that cause objects to explode when hit. the creature first loses an arm and then in a later fight gets its head blown off! I also remember that it can imitate noises made by animals and people and in one scene it hits a kodiak bear so hard that the kodiak is knocked clean out of its skin. Also it pulls one girl off a ski lift after her clothing catches fire from its eyes and that it lives under glaciers. Also I think the general idea was used for a (abominable!) movie in the 70s about a creature killing skiers in colarado (this one looked like a giant hamster that walked on its hind legs and was killed with a ski stick).

Slade, Jack, Yeti.  Authorhouse 2003.  Perhaps too recent, but it is a horror novel based on the Yeti or Abominable Snowman legend. No plot description available. Another on the subject is Mountain King, by Rick Hautala, Dorchester 2001. "The mountain stood proud and alone, shrouded in mist and snow, surrounded by legends and fear. Some said a demon resided on the rocky slopes, an unholy thing that periodically emerged from the mist to claim a life. Mark Newman had hiked the trails to the mountain's peak many times. He'd heard the tales, but he didn't believe them - until the day his friend
disappeared in a sudden, blinding snowstorm while they were on the mountain. Mark witnessed something he knew couldn't be real - something that would kill again and again."



A207: almost christmas and still no snow
Solved: The Animals' Merry Christmas


A208: American Girl Swiss Boarding School
Solved: A Year to Remember


A209: Angelo's Eatery
Solved: Mr. Angelo


A210: animals snored and roared
Solved: Noise in the Night


A211: Animals on Weekend Pass from Zoo
Solved: The Animals' Vacation


A212: Alphabet animal race
Solved: The Great Alphabet Race


A213: Alien spaceship
Alien spaceship lands in a field with 2 aliens inside.  Characters might be named Eek and Meek.  Children's book read in the mid 1960's.  Book had thick pages that when you moved the page back and forth, the images changed slightly - perhaps holograms, not sure, don't remember exactly.

A214: Anthology with winkin blinkin and nod
Solved: Treasury of Poetry


A215: Animal Encyclopedia
Solved: Animal World in Color

2005


A216: Angel fallen
Solved: Angel Child


A217: "Animal Sounds" in board book form
Solved: Animal Sounds


A218: Antique doll
I remember a book I read in elemntary school in the early 60's about a girl searching for an antique doll. She had to follow clues,from what I don't remember that the previous owner of the doll had written. One of the clues was to go so many steps from a tree. The girl was sitting outside and was in a quandry as she could see no tree close to the house she thought for a while then it dawned on her that she was sitting on a tree stump. The main thing I remember was that at the end of the book after she found the doll there were color pictures of the doll and her clothes. Gorgeous pictures of clothes, a blue outfit in particular caught my imagination. In reading the stumpers it did sound something like "Wonderful fashion doll" but there was no mention of the color pics and these were unforgettable. Thanks for your imput.

Laura Bannon, The Wonderful Fashion Doll, 1953.  I think this may be the one you're looking for it does have color illustrations.
No it's not wonderful fashion doll. I just found one on e-bay with pics and they are not the same. The doll in my book was more of a baby doll. The end pages were one full page for each outfit in bright colors not pencil and watercolors. The blue I mentioned outfit was a deep velvet blue.
I just talked to my sister who is also looking for this book. We brainstormed and here are more clues. I was wrong it was not a baby doll but a young girl doll. The was a riding habit among the pictures. They had bustles and hats and shoes. The girl looking for the doll was visiting a relative when looking for the doll.
I remember reading a book like this as a child.  The girl, Sally, goes to visit her Great-Aunt Sarah.  She doesn't get along with the aunt and somehow she winds up going back in time about 50 years and becomes another girl also named Sally.  The "olden times" Sally has a doll with golden hair which is lost.  "Modern" Sally comes back to modern times and looks for the doll.  In the end it turns out that the cat had taken it and hidden it in the attic.  In the modern time Sally finds the doll because her great-aunt's cat had golden hair in its claw.  In the end Sally's father comes back for her and calls Aunt Sarah, "Aunt Sal".  It turns out that she was the young Sally from the past.  I don't remember the title or author but this might give you more to go on.
Norma Kassirer, J Jackson, "Magic Elizabeth" (for last poster) and "Missing Melinda" for requester.  The last suggestion is the book "Magic Elizabeth"- great story- but I don't think it really matches the request. Mystery involving clues and a doll could be "Missing Melinda"- but no fashion doll stuff at all that I know of. Maybe this is two books being mixed in memory? From the synopsis: "Missing Melinda, Little, Brown and Co. - 1967.  Twins Cordelia and Ophelia find a valuable antique doll in an attic it's stolen, and they have some scary adventures getting it back. The final clue comes, perhaps not unexpectedly, through Shakespeare."
Laura Bannon, The Wonderful Fashion Doll,1953, copyright. This Sounds like the Book.
Catherine Woolley, Ginnie and the Mystery Doll. I don't remember much about this book's plot, but I loved reading this book so much when I was a little girl that I've always remembered the title.  Ginnie and a friend find an antique doll that belonged to her great-aunt.



A219: Aliens find film
Solved: Expedition To Earth


A220: Alien implant chips
Solved: The White Mountains


A221: Anthology set
Solved: Collier's Junior Classics


A222: African Shield and Photos Mystery
Solved: The House in Norham Gardens


A223: Asleep on raft
I am searching for a book I read in the early 1970s about a boy going out on his raft one sunny afternoon and he fell asleep.  When he woke up he was miles from home.  He had drifted down the river.  He didn't know where he was or how to get home.  He floated to shore and had to live in the woods, eat berries, sleep under leaves in the winter to stay warm.  He had a dog but I don't remember if the dog was on the raft with him or had stayed on shore and they stumbled into each other when they boy went ashore.  After several months of living in the wild and doing whatever they could to survive, the boy and his dog made it home.  By that time, all the others had given up hope of ever finding them alive.

J. Bosworth's White Water, Still Water began with a similar raft incident, and the boy spends the rest of the book trying to walk home through the wilderness.  I don't remember the dog, but it's been about 40 years since I read it!



A224: Anthology, international
Solved: Let's Pretend


A225: Alice
Solved:  Parrish family series


A226: Amaryllis
Solved: Hilary's Island


A227: Alexander Fiddlewhistle
Solved: Alexander Fiddlewhistle


A228: Angel Children
Solved: Twinkle-Tots


A229: ABC
Janet & Anne Grahame Johnstone, 1970's.  I have been looking for a book that I had as a child.  I believe that it was written or at least illustrated by Janet and Anne Grahame Johnstone.  This book started with the alphabet.  Each letter of the alphabet had an illustration representing the letter.  After the alphabet section there were many fairy tales.  This was a large book bigger than 8-1/2 x 11 I believe with a blue cover.

There's a Johnstone book called My Pop-up Book ABC,A Dean's DeLuxe Pop-up Book, but I don't believe this fits the bill, as it doesn't have any fairy tales.  Could be another Dean collection though, like the Dean's Gift Book of Fairy Tales.  I don't know if that has ABC's in it though...  See if any look familiar on the Anthology Finder.
A229 NO ABC SECTION IN THE 1977 EDITION
Blackwood Alan, Mulberry bush book of nursery rhymes, 1974.  illustrated by Anne and Janet Grahame Johnstone. Publisher: London : Nelson Young World, 1974.



A230: Adopted by swans
Solved: The Lord of the Rushie River


A231: Andersen Anthology
Solved: Illustrated Treasury of Children's Literature


A232: Ancient Ancestor was Probably Arboreal
Solved: The Manse


A233: Apache Indians
Solved: Killer of Death


A234: Abandoned house
Solved: Dandelion Cottage


A235: Angel
Solved:  Wonderful Window


A236: Alligators Escape from NY Sewers
Solved: The Great Escape or the Sewer Story


A237: alphabet book sheep sharp shape
An Edward Lear- or James Thurber-like kids' book, with alliterative words on each of the 26 alphabet pages, the most memorable of which (which has be "found" in Barking Spiders... by Heck, but with no usable source) was something like "Show me a shampooed and freshly shorn sheep [THE NEXT WORDS ARE VERBATIM!] and I'll show you a sheep in sharp shape." I used it as a phonics helper for Title I kids in the late '70s, but it was not meant to be an "educational" tome. I THINK it was a papeback, rather squarish in shape, maybe 8" or 9" in size.

Yes, though the key words I gave you were, I think, "alphabet alliteration sheep sharp shape," my adult daughter (whose book it was—which I LOST!—and who is about to get her Ph.D. in English and who would be THRILLED if I could give it "back" to her as a Doctoral present!...so you see why I'm so obsessed with this!) remembers it more as a kind of casual phonics book, thinking that there was a also "CH" page, among others, and that what I had thought to have been the "S" page was—duh!—actually more of an "SH" page. Makes sense, BUT, it was definitely NOT a "phonics book," per se, i.e., not an intentionally educational tome; it was still just a playful romp through letters or sounds of letters/letter combinations, using images (the sheep looked like a Tomi di Paola creation) that delighted both kid and parent. More like Sesame Street or Electric Company than Edward Lear or Lewis Carroll, but those guys would have appreciated it, too. Hmmm, it MIGHT have been British (fat lot of good that is! It might have been Hungarian, for that matter—but no, the humor did have a rather British flavor...and I bought in in a Burlington, VT,  bookstore which was run by a very English-bookstore-type British woman, so whether her "influence" is influencing me or whether it was actually something she'd imported—like the Ant and bee books, which only she carried at the time—I don't know). Still the only thing I know FOR SURE is that the "S"—or "SH"— page said, approximately, "Show me a freshly shorn and shampooed sheep," then, DEFINITELY, "and I'll show you a sheep in sharp shape."  Whew! Goodnight!

C.J. Heck, Barking Spiders (And Other Such Stuff), August 2000, reprint. Visit this website for more info. This is definitely the book.
Alas, the CJ Heck (Barking Spiders) book is definitely NOT the book, as I should have made even more clear when I alluded to in passing in it my initial inquiry. Rats! How long do I get to keep this maddening thing out there?



A238: Armada Ghost book
A collection of children's horror stories (an Armada Ghost Book, I think) containing one about a group of three children who go out riding over a hill called Devil's Pike, and are chased by a skelton rider on a skeleton horse.  Thanks.

Christine Bernard, A Shiver of Spooks.  A collection of ghost stories published by Armada in the 1970s, so possible.
The story sought is "The Skeleton Rider" by Christine Pullein-Thompson, an original in THE FIFTH ARMADA GHOST BOOK, ed. Mary Danby (London: Armada, 1973), pp. 16-28.  It's also depicted as the cover art of that anthology.  I can't find any indication that the story has been reprinted or appeared anywhere else.



A239: anthology of bedtime stories
Solved: Tibor Gergely's Great Big Book of Bedtime Stories


A240: Atlantis
Long before I knew anything about the legend of the lost island of Atlantis, I read a children's book that I just loved and all I remember now about it was that a child (boy?) was on some sort of island called Atlantis or was trying to get to it. Possibly running away; perhaps searching for something or someone.  I remember reference to bracken (fern), and somehow I have the impression that it was a British book but I'm not sure.

A240 It is NOT this, which is juvenile but nonfiction hist of Atlantis Wilkie, Katharine E; Moseley, Elizabeth R. Lords of Atlantis.    1979.
Just a thought: E. Nesbit's Accidental Magic is a short story is about a boy who falls asleep at Stonehenge and ends up in Atlantis. It doesn't have bracken or fern in it, though.
A240 This is a total shot in the dark because I've never read it, but perhaps the title will ring a bell. There's a book about Atlantis that was published in both London and New York in 1971. It is BEYOND THE GATES OF HERCULES: A TALE OF THE LOST ATLANTIS by Elizabeth Borton de Trevino. According to the summaries, there is a prohecy that a boy will destroy Atlantis, and his sister can do nothing to prevent the tragedy. And in case the detail helps, it is the Archer family and they tend saffron.~from a librarian
Timms, Edward Vivian, Cities under the sea, 1948.  Sydney: Angus & Robertson, 1948. Two races of Atlanteans on islands of another sea beneath the Sargasso Sea.1948. This could be a possibility.  Looks like it's a fairly rare book.
Thanks to all of you for these suggestions so far.  None of them is the right book yet, but I really appreciate your trying.  Any other suggestions would be very welcome.
Farmer, Penelope, William and Mary. This was already one of the solved mysteries, but I believe it might be british and there is a boy main character.
Jan Siegal, Prospero's Children. This is more for teens and was probably too late, but it does have a main character named Fern who goes back to Atlantis to search for a way to stop the Atlantean queen.  She meets up with a boy who helps her and they fall in love.
Elinor Lyon, Hilary's Island, around 1949.  This sounds like Hilary's Island by Elinor Lyon. Hilary was actually a girl named Amaryllis who pretended to be a boy named Hilary. She named "her" island Atlantis (her favorite of several near-by islands) and she ran away to hide on it. The book was English, and mentioned bracken (Hilary/Amaryllis piled together bracken to sleep on when she ran away).
Beachcroft, Nina, A Visit to Folly Castle.  Long shot, but this features a girl whose family originally came from Atlantis...makes friends with a 'normal' girl who is invited to visit them, they live a very secluded life and the 'normal' girl's younger brother may be involved? I remember a crystal ball that shows things and that the family have strange abilities...it fascinated me as a child, as it was the first I had heard of Atlantis!

E. Nesbit, The Story of the Amulet, 1906, approximate. This is a sequel to "Five Children and It."  It's rather a slim connection to your query, but four children (two boys and two girls) and their friend the Professor do go to Atlantis, and are looking for the other half of their Amulet.  It is a British book, and there very well might be bracken - I can't remember.



A241: Apple Blossom
Solved: The Summer Cat


A242: aesop fable big book
Solved: Aesop's Fables


A243: airstream trailer
book request about family travels u.s. in airstream trailer

A223 Could it  be any of these?  Barbour, Ralph Henry. Three in a trailer. illus Edward C Caswell.  Appleton, 1937.   Greene, Carla.  Holiday in a trailer. photos by H L Van Pett [Van Pelt?]  Melmont, 1955.   Clark, Electa.  Tony for keeps; a story of a house on wheels.  illus by Lisl Weil.  Winston, 1955.  The Feather family car pulls a trailer around the western half of the US as father swaps labor and objects for needed cash. Orphan Tina accidentally joins them, is disguised as a boy so there will be no accusations of kidnapping before they can get her back and adopt her.
Florence Musgrave, Trailer Tribe.  This might be the book. The cover shows a family and their airstream trailer. 



A244: abc shaped letters
I'm looking for an old children's ABC book. Each letter was illustrated by an object in the shape of the letter. H was for horse, and it was a lower-case h in the shape of a horse. The best was Y, which was for yak - a big, hairy thing with horns. I can't for the life of  me find this book. I remember it being pre-1968, but don't have any other information. I hope someone can recognize it ..

Dr. Seuss, pre-1968.  This book sounds a lot like Dr. Seuss's book of ABC's. Although it is common to have a Yak represent Y (such a difficult letter!), I think this might be worth a look to see if it is the one.
H.A. Rey, Curious George Learns the Alphabet In this book the Man with the Yellow Hat drew alphabet animals so George could learn the alphabet.  The little-h horse rings a bell for me.
H.A. Rey, Curious George Learns the Alphabet, 1963.  I have to second the motion for Curious George Learns the Alphabet.  I have the book here on my lap, and the illustrations are exactly as the stumper requester remembers.  Here is the text for each page: "The small h is a horse.  He is happy because he has heaps of hay.  George had his own horse---a hobby horse."  "The big Y is a big YAK and the small y is a small yak  he is still young.  Yaks live in Tibet.  If you haven't seen any yaks yet you may find one at the zoo."
No, it's not the Curious George book. The only word on each page was the spelled-out name of the animal, as I recall.  I remember just the large drawings of animals, one on each page. This may have been a book from the fifties or very early sixties.
Dorothy Schmiderer , Alphabeast Book: An Abecedarium, 1971.  Sounds like Schmiderer's Alphabeast Book -- letters morph (in a sequence of four drawings) into animals.  My copy shows h becomes a horse, and y, a yak.  The only colors used in the book are red, white, and blue, if that helps.



A245: avalanche children trapped neighbor's house
Solved: Landslide!


A246:Adventure ... Something?
Solved: The Valley of Adventure


A247: African Boy
Circa 1974-75 I remember reading a realistic novel about an African boy. Possibly a girl as well. I believe they lived in sub-Saharan Africa and the landscape was somewhat bleak but very beautiful. There may have been some mention of eating ant eggs or termites.

James Vance Marshall, Walkabout, 1978.  Sure, it's not Africa, but the Austrailian outback could be remembered as sub-saharan Africa. Two white teens lost in the outback survive by relying on a young black aborigne who is on a manhood quest, I believe. Very popular at the time.
Kaffir Boy.  This is the exact title of a book I started and never finished; it has quite a lot of description in it but is not a children's book.  Makes reference to eating insects and hatchling birds.   Sorry I don't know the author; I'm going to guess I read it 10 years ago.  Maybe this is the book you are looking for.



A248: Anastasia Ariadne A___? (Witch)
Solved: The Active-Enzyme, Lemon-Freshened Junior High School Witch


A249: Alta in the Shadows
Solved: Alta in the Shadows


A250: Alien spider robots
Solved: The Tripods Trilogy


A251: Angelo artist color-mixing transparencies overlays
Solved: The Adventures of the Three Colors


A252: Amazing Mumford-Sesame Street
Solved: The Amazing Mumford and His Amazing Subtracting Trick


A253: angels in the sky at night
Solved: Sky High


A254: Agamemnon
Solved: Four Little Kittens


A255: Arizona Aviation Services
Solved: Blind Flight


A256: Alexander cat
Solved: Alexander Kitten


A257: Abandoned baby in a cabin
Solved: Baby-Snatcher


A258: astronaut christian novel
I read this book in the late 80's.  It was a Christian novel about an a civilian (reporter? teacher? can't remember exactly) who get the opportunity to go on the space shuttle.  Basically it's the love story between one of the astronauts (who can't stand her in the beginning!) and the civilian.  I would love to read this again, but can't rememeber the name.  I have had 2 mysteries already solved, so I'm hoping for a 3rd!

Stephen R. Lawhead, Dream Thief, 1983.  Could you  be looking for Dream Thief? It's about a sleep scientist who goes to live on a space colony. He also ends up on Mars and in India before the story is over. It definitely fits the bill of a love story and a christian story. This was by far my least favorite books by Lawhead (the author of some of my favorite books of all time, like Patrick, Son of Ireland), but it was ok.

Thanks for the idea, however, I know this is not it.  It was definitely not a Science Fiction.  More of a romance.  Thanks anyway! 



A259: African-American student nurse
Solved: A Cap for Mary Ellis


A260: Angelworms, Scholar, Freckles
Solved: Treat Shop


A261: Anne of Green Gables
Solved: Anne of Green Gables


A262: Animal doctor / detective from possibly late 60s
Looking for a picture book with groovy 60s-style drawings.  Possibly a Dr. Doolittle book for the 60s crowd?  Main character was a detective, I believe animals were involved as well.  I remember a picture where he goes into a record store, and there are posters of the Beatles hanging up.

A263: alien possession
Solved: Human Is


A264: alien war unknown enemy
I read this book in the 70”s.  It was a paperback, and I remember the cover having a picture of a space helmet with a mirror front so you couldn’t see the person’s face.  It was about a trooper in a intergalactic war where it was all about patriotism and fighting for humanity (sort of like starship troopers). Of course there’s poverty at home and discontent, etc. Well the only way you can tell your side from the other side is everyone has the same type of space suits but “we” use special marks on the suits so we can tell our guys.  By the end of the book we find out that there is NO other side, that the government is using the war as a population reduction/citizen control method. The different marks are a way to get the soldiers to fight each other. It was a really good book, and I would love to find it again. I don’t remember anything about the author or title.

Orson Scott Card (author), Ender's Game.  I know that Ender's Game isn't the right book, but man, it sure is eerily similar.
Samuel Delany, The Fall of the Towers, 1977, reprint.  I don't remember the helmet, but the part about the government starting a war for the reason you mention... it's there. This is an edition comprised of three novels, first published separately as Captives of the Flame, The Towers of Toron, and City of a Thousand Suns.



A265: angel cherub polishes Christmas star
I saw this story in a comic book when I was a kid.  It would have either been the late 40's or earl 1950's.   It was one of those big Christmas comic books that were either Disney or Dell, featuring either Disney Characters or Looney tunes.  But they also carried  versions of children's storybooks.   Along with the cartoons, this big comic book featured a beautifully illustrated story of a little cherub-type angel who was polishing stars as part of her job.  She felt very unimportant and alone, and she fell asleep on her cloud. It drifted to earth and settled in the snow.  The animals of the forest found her and curled around her to keep her warm.   Somehow, she was returned to heaven and given the most important job of all -- polishing the Christmas star.

Giant Dell Comic No 1, A Christmas Treasury, 1954.  I have one of these books and the story "Santa and the Angel" in it fits your details except for the part about polishing the star at the end--in this story, the angel (he's a boy) is picked up by Santa at the end  Santa puts the angel into his mitten and takes him back up to heaven for the big Christmas party. Other stories in the magazine include the story of Jesus' birth, The Night Before Christmas, a section of carols, The Little Fir Tree, A Christmas Carol, Hansy and the Spirit of Christmas, and Santa's Christmas Mouse.



A266: Arnold and the noise
I'm looking for a children's book about a boy named Arnold who wonders about a noise in the night. The first lines are: "Arnold was in bed. It was late. It was dark. But Arnold wasn't sleeping..." etc. I think there was a monster called a beazle. The noise turned out to be his dog, I think. Any leads much appreciated! The book was published in the 1970s or before.

A267: Ancient Monks
Solved: Book of Skulls


A268: All I Remember is the Look of the Book
Ok, so it's been a very, very long time since I read the book. I remember some very tangible things about it, though.  The book was a hard back, but it had a sort of velvety matte finish.  The illustrations on the front and within were beautiful; I seem to recall a bright red rose featured prominently, a doe in the fore against a forest scene, I think.  It was framed in an oval... I think.  The only story I truly remember being in the book is Snow White, Rose Red.  I also think the Little Red Hen might've been in it, too.  I was born in September of 1979 in Monroe, Louisiana.  This might explain the wide time range I'm giving of: ca. 1970-1985

A269: Alien Egg
Solved: Voyage of the Space Beagle


A270: Anthology set in blue
We have been looking for a set of children's storys, fairy tales and fables that we had 30+ years ago as children. They were all bound in blue (don't remember if they were leather or cloth) with gold or silver words on the spine and maybe gold or silver pictures on the cover. There were 8 - 10 or more of them. Two stories I remember clearly from them are The Teeny Tiny Woman and a Halloween story about a black cat named Tipity Witchit who dipped his tail in white paint so the witch wouldn't like him. My Mom thinks they may have been associated with an encyclopedia or been an encyclopedia of children's stories. We've been searching for them for years but have not had any luck. Thanks so much if you can help with this.

Through the Gate of My Bookhouse, c. 1948.  Might even be called My Bookhouse Through the Gate but, pretty sure this is the book you want.  Has the following stories I believe - Tippity Witchit's Hallowe'en, Teeny Tiny.
editor: Olive Beaupre Miller, My Bookhouse, 1920 - 1971.  I had this age-appropriate set of books in the 1940s.  My set started with a light green cover for the Nursery Rhymes and advanced through shades of green and then blue for older readers.  I remember Tipity Witchit!  I think he dipped his tail in whitewash.  Later it must have rained because his tail was revealed to be solid black again.  His story was probably in Volume 2 or 3.
For more on My Bookhouse and its various editions, see The Anthology Finder.
I remember the Bookhouse books, my mother had a set of them. I do recall the Teeny-tiny women, I think she stole a scarecrow lady's clothes. With Tippety-Witchet, I remember that Tippety's white tip was to protect him from being stolen away by the witches. One old witch in particular kept trying to pour a shadow on his tail so she could catch him, after she turned his mother into a porceline sculpture! It was a good spooky story full of ghosts and devils and dancing.  don't recall much of the rest of the book.



A271: Animal friends share food
Solved: Turtle's Flying Lesson


A272: Authors are two young girls
Solved: The Far Distant Oxus


A273: Aladdin, magic lamp, cave
I read a book back in the 1970's maybe early 80's when I was young about Aladdin and his cave or magic lamp. The illustrations where wonderful and I remember that the pictures of the Genies, I think there was more that one were great, and they were huge figures compared to Aladdin. There was one picture I remember where the Genie is kneeling next to Aladdin and the geneie takes up the whole page. Very vague I know but I have searched for about 10 years for this and have still not found it..Please help if you can.

A274: Aliens or people with bowl-shaped heads
I am looking for a book that my sister & I remember reading in the 60's about aliens or a species of people that need to keep their saucer-shaped heads filled with water or they will die. I think that the drawings of these creatures were blue pencil on a white background.  Any help finding the this book would be much appreciated!

I was born in 1960, and I have fond memories of an illustrated book about one of these "aliens."  He was a child-sized mythological Japanese imp (kappa) who had a bowl shaped depression on top of his head that had to be kept full of water.  He was usually very strong and quite mischievous, but the water had to be replenished periodically or he would become weak and ill.  In the tale I remember best, the kappa befriended a little human boy and decided to live with him.  He wanted to keep his identity a secret, so he engaged the boy in a playful water-throwing battle and managed to replenish his supply without admitting he wasn't human.  I remember more than one story about this kappa, but I cant remember the name of the book or the author, and I dont know if these were multiple tales in a single book, or a series of picture books by the same author.  I can't even tell you if the author is of Japanese descent (many libraries have culled "inauthentic" folktales from their collections).  I've found three possible children's books from the correct time period for you.  The first is 'Kappa' and other stories by Shigeru Tomiyama (1949, 54 pages).  The second is Kappa’s tug-of-war with big brown horse the story of a Japanese water imp by Dorothy Walter Baruch (author) and Sanryo Sakai (illustrator) (1962, 36 pages).  The third is Clinton and the Kappa by Edgar C. Grove-Merritt (author) and Yasuo Kazama (illustrator) (1965, 38 pages). I haven't seen any of these and don't know whether the illustrations match your description.  When searching for stories, please note that some adult tales feature frightening or monstrous kappa, quite unlike the odd and endearing creature I remember.  Good luck in your search!
I don't know the specific book in question, but the description of the beings sounds like it must be about the Kappa (of Japanese folklore).
Another possibility: Kap the Kappa by Betty Jean Lifton (author) and Eiichi Mitsui (illustrator), 1960.  Here's an online description: "A RARE Vintage Japanese Fairy Tale. Deep in the rivers of Japan, as all Japanese children know, there live mischievous little Water Elves called kappas (pronounced koppas). They have shells on their backs, webbed hands and feet, and shallow bowls of water in the tops of their heads. As long as the bowls are full, the kappas are gay and strong. But should the water spill out, they become very weak and may even die.  This is the story of a young Kappa Prince named Kap. One day he wandered too far downstream from his royal palace and was lifted out of the water on the end of a fishing pole. The next thing he knew he had been adopted by a Japanese family, who hid the fact that he was really a kappa from all the villagers. But no one could hide Kap's mischievous nature, and soon he was playing tricks on everyone. Kap's pranks will delight American children, who will share his adventure when he tries to find his way back to his river kingdom."
It turns out that Betty Jean Lifton wrote a sequel to Kap the Kappa, and it is also illustrated by Eiichi Mitsui.  It is Kap and The Wicked Monkey (1968)--- another possible solution for you!



A275: Anthology of stories and poems
Solved: The Golden Books Treasury of Elves and Fairies


A276: Ants
CHILDREN'S BOOK READ IN THE 60'S - PLOT:  KIDS HAD CLOSET IN BEDROOM THAT WHEN YOU GO THROUGH IT YOU GO INTO ANOTHER DIMENSION THAT MAKES YOU AS SMALL AS ANTS.

Sounds like The City Under the Back Steps by Lampman.   See more on the Solved Mysteries page.
Mary Chase, Loretta Mason Potts.  Also titled Colin's Naughty Sister-  I could be way off base but your description made me think of this book.  The children do go through the back of a closet and end up by a bridge.  When they cross the bridge they become ant-size (although they don't realize this at first).  They go into a castle and meet a lady who turns out in the end to be bad.  She has kept Colin's sister Loretta living away from her family for many years.  Loretta is finally happy to live with her family after they band together to separate her from the lady by destroying the castle (doll-sized if you don't cross the bridge).
Chase, Mary, Loretta Mason Potts.  They didn't become as small as ants, more the size of dolls in a dollhouse, but the closet was the portal to the farm that led to the small size place.
I love The City Under the Backsteps, but the children don't have a magic closet--they shrink because they're bitten by an ant. Does the original requester remember actual ants being part of the story?
The Indian in the Cupboard.  I think this may be the book in question.
Absolutely, positively NOT The Indian in the Cupboard or any of its sequels.



A277: Alligator in crate crashes
I have the vaguest memory of this one.  A boy is taking a train (to visit his grandma?), and a crate falls off, crashes open, and releases an alligator/crocodile.  I think the boy had a toy train set at home, and then got to take a real train ride.  I would have read it in the 70's, but have the feeling it was older than that.  I seem to remember line drawings--realistic, not cartoons; maybe 50's-style (the boy had a crew cut?)  Maybe I'm getting two different books mixed up?  I'm pretty sure the boy was traveling alone.    I'd love to figure this one out--it's been driving me nuts!

A278: apple tree house
This is a picture book about a young couple/family that while driving down a country road finds just the house for them.  The house is red with a green roof and looks just like an apple or apple tree.  It may be that the house is old/abandoned and they have to repaint it first.  Mostly I just remember those two colors being important to the story.  The illustrations, line drawings, I think, may have been in red and green.  Would have been from sometime in the 70's, I'd guess.  It's not the Apple Tree Cottage.  Do you recognize this?

Are the children named after varities of apples too?  If so, try Jean McDevitt's Mr. Apple's Family, illustrated by Ninon,  1950.  See more on Solved Mysteries.
I don't believe it's Mr. Apple's Family.  The story is more about the house, and I'm not sure if there are any children.
Virginia Lee Burton, The Little House.  Could this be The Little House - the line drawings sound familiar, the main colours are red and green, the house gets battered and bruised but is eventually renovated and at the end a new family find it is just the house for them...
Hi, I'm the requestor for the above stumper.  It is not The Little House by Burton.  Somewhat similar, but the house is never in the city.  There is definitely an emphasis on apples with regard to the house.
 Apple Tree House Did the stumper ever check out Mr. Apple's Family by Jean McDevitt?  Best in Children's Books (1958) printed an excerpt from Mr. Apple's Family called, "The Apples' New House."  If the stumper requester only read this story, it might explain why s/he remembers that
"[t]he story is more about the house."


2006


A279: anklebiter dogs and thieves
Solved: The Hey Hey Man


A280: Aunt Meg
The book I am looking for would be in the young adult genre.  I read it in 1967, 68 ,69 or 70.  It was about a young girl who goes to live with her Aunt Meg for the summer.  She finds out her Aunt is a witch, and another witch, Lanie, has a magic stone that she drops and is picked up by the little girl.  Lanie and some other witches go into the little girls’ room looking for the stone; the girl sees them and follows them back to their hiding place in the woods.  This is where she finds out her aunt is a witch.  There is also something I the book about magic potion or food.

Could this be Sneaker Hill, by Jane Little?  There's an Aunt Miranda, who's studying for a certificate in witchcraft.  There are some suspicious other witches, who don't know her niece (and son!) exist.  Aunt Miranda can't cook, so I remember some parts about her inedible meals, and the witches meet in the woods.  Something to check, anyway...
I just read Sneaker Hill (by Jane Little, drawings by Nancy Grossman, published by Atheneum, NY 1967, 183 pages) and I'm sorry to report that it's probably not the book being sought.  Sneaker Hill was written for 9-12 year olds, so it is not a Young Adult book, and the plot elements don't match the stumper requester's memories.  Susan Derry spends her spring holiday with her cousin Mathew and Aunt Miranda.  There is no witch named Lanie, no magic stone, and Susan discovers that Aunt Miranda is studying witchcraft at the end of chapter 2, when Mathew tells her.  Aunt Miranda cooks delicious meals, but because she's an inexperienced witch, they don't turn out exactly as she had planned (she conjures fortune cakes instead of cookies).  The witches meet in a cavern inside Sneaker Hill, not in the woods.  If the stumper requester doesn't remember a battle where an army of rats, Sneakers (the shy humanoid inhabitants of the hill) and magical creatures rout the witches, then this is not the book s/he is searching for.
Bruce/Katherine Coville, Sarah's Unicorn.   Could it be 'Sarah's Unicorn'? Not sure if thats what you were after.



A281: Archaeologists
Solved: Motel of the Mysteries


A282: Atlantis
Solved: Stranger from the Depths


A283: Automated house
Solved: Lazy Tommy Pumpkinhead


A284: Anthology
Looking for an anthology with a story about peas beans and choc pudding.  Also my sister remembered another story from the book. She think's it was called "the man with 40 hats"

Fiona Waters (Editor), DOUBLEDAY BOOK OF BEDTIME STORIES, 1992, reprint.  Not sure if it's the same anthology, but it does contain  Betty Van Witsen's "Cheese, Peas, and Chocolate Pudding."
It was Peas beans and chocolate pudding. It was a storybook from the 50's or 60's. It also had astory about a lady who put her cakes in a hatbox. I've checked all the doubleday books and did not find any of these stories.......thanks
Sheldon, William, Believe and Make-Believe, 1957.  Published by Allyn & Bacon, Inc. Illustrated by Cheslie D'Andrea and Winnifred Westlake. This anthology contains the Van Witsen story about a little boy who will only eat cheese for breakfast, peas for lunch, and chocolate pudding for dinner, nothing else, until while playing like a doggy and rolling around on the floor under the table, someone drops a bit of a new food into his mouth. He chews, he swallows, and he likes it!  Part of the Sheldon Basic Reading Series for fourth grade level. Includes a glossary and word list. Includes 2 poems by Rosemary and Stephen Vincent Benet,  Captain Kidd,  Indian (a poem),  The Old Sailor by A. A. Milne,  The Story of Polly Patchwork by Rachel Field,  Little Rooster by Kate Seredy, and many more.Color illustrations.  320 pages. Sorry, can't attest to the other stories.
sidonie matsner gruenberg, Let's Hear a Story: 30 Stories and Poems for Today's Boys and Girls, 1961.  Found this collection by Doubleday on the "Find in a Library" website.  It has Mrs. Goose's Hatbox Cake, which I've been searching for for years and it also has the cheese, peas, and chocolate pudding story. A search online also turned up several copies for sale!



A285: Animal parents travel send letter
The animals' parents go away (bears or rabbits, maybe).  They send a letter to the childen.  The little animal can't read and finally finds a wise owl to read it to him.  It tells when parents are returning. They return, bringing gifts for the kids and other forest pals.  I've been thinking about this book for at least 50 yrs!!   I'm almost positive it's a Little Golden Book.

A few more details: The book is from the early 50's. I remember a picture of the letter sent to the animal kid from his parents on their trip, propped up on the mantel over the fireplace, unread. The kid(s) wander through the forest asking each animal "Can you read my letter?" When the owl reads when the parents are returning, I think they plan a welcome home party.  The end shows a picture of all the animals, each opening a gift the parents bring  the ones I recall are an alarm clock, a comb, and mirror.  I can't imagine why this book is haunting me...maybe my parents left me at home for a long time when I was kid! 



A286: Anthology with monkey
I am looking for a book that my parents read to me all the time when I was a child.   It has been been misplaced in the past twenty years, and I would like to find out the information on it, so I can get a copy for my children.  I remember it was a yellow hard back that was full of short simple stories for children.  One of the stories was about a bee biting a monkey's knee.  Another story was about birds pulling out all of a monkey's hair until he was bald, and how he used different things for a 'wig' until it came back.  Any help would be GREATLY appreciated.  Thanks!

I wrote originally that the book was yellow.  It was actually light purple.  I am sorry for the confusion.
I'm afraid I don't know the title of the anthology, but perhaps this bit of information might help.  We also had this book for my son when he was little.  It was an anthology of stories  - one about bees bothering a monkey - in a rhymning sing-song fashion - but it also included a story about (and here I think the inquirer is mistaken) a lion who generously gave away his hair to his friends, and then needed his friends' help in replacing it.  The lion story apparantly was also sold separately (and has previously been solved here) as Tony and His Friends (1969 Golden Book.)  I don't believe this anthology was a Golden Book product, and I'm sorry that I don't remember its title, but perhaps the inquirer could do a search on Tony and His Friends, (since that particular title is known - I beleive - ) and find the anthology's title through publishing records that way.
Jacobs, Leland B., The Read-It-Yourself Storybook, 1971, Golden Press.  Contents: The monkey and the bee, by L. B. Jacobs.--Tony and his friends, by K. Wagner.--Emily's moo, by T. Gergely.--Come on! Play ball, by I.-M. Vogel.--Peek-a-boo, by I.-M. Vogel.--Eddie's moving day, by J. Deering.--Too many Bozos, by L. Moore.
Read-It-Yourself Storybook by Leland Jacobs is correct! Your stories are the first two in the book!  " I need some hair for a nest," said the bird. "Take all you want," said Tony. Another bird the same, and another-till he is bald!



A287: Abused Girl
Solved: Alice


A288: Agapantha hair
Solved: Naughty Agapanthus


A289: American Heroes
Solved: ValueTales series


A290:Alphabet book
A schoolmate of mine (1992-3ish) had this alphabet book which was illustrated beautifully and with incredible detail. Each letter had an illustration and almost everything in the paiting started with the corresponding letter. Sort of like a "look and find" alphabet book with no clues. It was hardcover and quite large. I've been asking people about this for years but can't find anyone who's ever seen it. I appologize for the sparse info but alas I know neither the illustrator's name or the publisher. Here's hoping this will be the end to my search. Thnx

Wilks, Mike, The ultimate alphabet, 1992.  I'm positive you're thinking of this book - each letter has incredible detailed pictures - with hundreds and hundreds of objects for each letter - i think the "s" page has over 1000.  I see there is now an "annotated ultimate alphabet".
Wonder if this is Animalia, by Graeme Base?
Grahame Base, Animalia, 1987.  Extremely detailed illustrations (picturing, for example, crimson cats with crayfish, coke cans, candles, cacti, camels, castles and more in the background) in an oversize book, along with captions for each page (such as "Lazy Lions Lounging In the Local Library").
This must be Animalia, a beautiful alphabet book by Graeme Base.
Base, Graeme, Animalia.  Possibly Animalia, as it contains many lavish and detailed pictures  that contain many examples of words starting with that letter.
Graeme Base, Anamalia, 1987.  Richly illustrated, finely detailed, mysterious in tone, but beautiful to the eye, this book is the first to come to my mind when someone asks for an alphabet book illustrated with paintings.
Graeme Base, Animalia, 1987.  This book has incredibly detailed illustrations for each letter of the alphabet, and each picture features as many items beginning with that letter as possible.  For example, Horrible Hairy Hogs Hurrying Homewards on Heavily Harnessed Horses.
Graeme Base, Animalia, 1993.  It sounds like Animalia. My favorite illustration shows "Lazy Lions Lounging In The Local Library". The lions look at books titled "Lassie Come Home", "Let's Learn Latin", and "Life In Luxembourg."
I bought this probably around that time.  I can't find the title.  Mary Engelbreit is the illustrator.
The concept here is a common one for ABC books, dating back at least a century.  But I'm voting for The Ultimate Alphabet as the solution to this stumper, as it is less well known as Animalia, with more objects detailed in the drawings, and no catchy captions that the stumper requester might have remembered.
Graeme Base, Animalia, 1986.  Animalia was published earlier than 1992 but it has beautifully intricate illustration. All of the illustrations are associated with a letter of the alphabet.
Graeme Base, Animalia, 1987.
Mitsumasa Anno, Anno's Alphabet, 1975.  Could it be Anno's Alphabet?  The letters were carved, I think, and the drawings very intricate.  Here's a description:  Each letter of the alphabet accompanies a full-page picture puzzle of an object whose name begins with that letter: anvil, bicycle, etc.
I've looked into both titles suggested and am reasonably sure neither is the one. I do not recall any words whatsoever on the pages and the paintings were very realistic - like still life.  I believe~ there were ants on the "A" page and maybe even visual referances to alchemy? The scale of the book was similar to Anamalia, being taller than wide.Thnx again!
Base, Graeme, Animalia.  If you want to rule out Animalia, check your memory of this: certainly there are ants on the "A" page, that's not unusual. But on the "D" page, for Dr. Who fans everywhere, there is a Dalek in the background. No other alphabet book in my memory has that!
Leonard Baskin, Hosie's Alphabet, 1972.  ANIMALIA sounds right, but it could also be HOSIE'S ALPHABET.  Here's the card catalog description:  "A full-page illustration of a creature for each letter of the alphabet, including a bumptious baboon, furious fly, ghastly garrulous gargoyle, and quintessential quail."



A291: Airplane builder
Solved: Me and My Flying Machine


A292: Amaryllis
Solved: The Magic Garden
A293: Albino

Solved: Ceremonies


A294:Amusement Park Island
A girl is on an island with an amusement park or funhouse on it.  At the end of the book there is a chase scene where she is hiding in the attractions, which are closed and deserted.  I think there is a room with a statute of witch, either wax or animatronic, which possibly stirs a pot containing paper fortunes.  I would guess the book was written in the 70s or 80s.  Thanks for your help.

A294 Sounds like it could be JUST TELL ME WHEN WE'RE DEAD by Eth Clifford. This is one of her Jo-Beth and Mary Rose mysteries (they are sisters). They go looking for their cousin on an island. There is an amusement park involved (the cover has them riding in a roller coaster car heading into a mountain cave). It was published 1983 and 1985. ~from a librarian
It is not Just Tell Me When We're Dead, though I appreciate the guess.  I don't remember the main character being with a sister.  I think either her relatives or family friends ran the amusement park.
Lorire  McLaughlan, Cinnamon Hill Mystery. (1967)  It's been a long time since I read this, but as I remember, there's a girl (who does have a lot of sisters, but they're not really in the story) a boy who considers himself an inventor (who may be her cousin) and a mystery.  The whole mystery wraps up in an amusement park...but I don't remember much more than that.  It's definitely not the JoBeth and Mary Rose books by Eth Clifford, though some of the elements are similar.



A295: Anthology
The cover, some of the first and last pages of this book are missing.  It is a children's book with an alphabet section near the front, a large middle section of poems about animals and people and a later section of a few short stories (though I'm not sure how many).  The illustrations are beautiful and look to have been done mostly by one person.  I remember there being quite a few horse pictures (because I was a horse crazy kid).  Identifying and getting my hands on a complete copy would be a dream.

A296: Animal mothers and babies, rhyming
Solved: Over in the Meadow

A297: Adults over age 15 die
Solved: The Girl Who Owned a City

A298: Aliens arrest a sci-fi writer for disclosing their technology
Solved: Security Check

A299: Augusta and chicken pox
Solved: The Chicken Pox Papers

A300: Anthropomorphic cats go to the movies
What I mainly remember about the book was its front cover.  I was a kid in the single digit age in 1991-93 when I found it.  It was in the bargain bin of a small bookstore on the Ocean City (New Jersey) boardwalk, so from that, I presume the book was published in America.  The cover had simply drawn cartoonish cats with roundish heads, standing on two legs and dressed in clothes, waiting in line in front of a movie theater.  I may be wrong, but I think the colors on the cover were pale.  The movie theater had a sign on it that was surrounded by lights.  I remember that the back had a description of the novel, including the line that made the young me put it back and not buy it - "not a book for children" (though that is a paraphrase).  I don't remember much about the plot descripton, except for the fact that these celebrity movie cats led quite racy lives.  The book seemed thick to me as a child - I'd guess about 200 pages - and I'm not sure if it had any internal illustrations.  It was a large size paperback (I think it's called a "trade" paperback, rather than the small size of most "rack" paperbacks). It would not  have been published any later than the early 90's, and if I had to guess at the most likely era, I'd say the 80's. It is NOT Samurai Cat Goes to the Movies, though that book is from the right time frame.  It is also not Omaha the Cat Dancer, Life and Death of Fritz the Cat, or any other graphic novel.  Any help would be hugely appreciated!

(1950-1960)  Could this be one of the Jenny Lind Cat Club books by Esther Averill?  I think there's a theatre production in one of them...maybe The Hotel Cat?
Kobayashi, What's Michael?  (1990)  Perhaps one of the What's Michael? collections published by Eclipse in trade paperback/softcover circa 1990? Some info on the series can be found on Wikipedia. These are translations of a popular Japanese manga/comic and do fit most of the criteria, since the requestor is not sure if the insides were illustrated or not it's worth trying.
No - I've read the Jenny books, and they're not it.  Also, I'm positive these were dressed, upright cats, and that the book wasn't aimed at children. Another forum suggested The Cinematic Cat: A Cat's Guide to the Great Movies by Bob Bruno might be the book I want, as the front cover is very close to what I described, but I need to see the back cover to be really sure.  Does anyone have copy they can take a picture of for me?


A301: Animals turn round in circle before going to sleep
My 72-year old mother’s favorite childhood bedtime story involved various animals “turning round” before settling down to sleep.  I assume the book was published between 1900 and 1945. The book was read in the 1930s. One of the animals was a lamb.  The last character was a child who (predictably) went to sleep.

Helen Earle Gilbert (author), Marge Opitz (illustrator). A similar stumper was posted within the last couple of years, and it was solved as Go-to-Sleep Book by Helen Earle Gilbert (author) and  a Junior Elf Book published by Rand McNally in 1949.  I've found copies that bear a copyright date of 1936 and 1959, so it's probably an older book that was reprinted numerous times.  I don't know if this is the book you're looking for, but it's worth a look!  Please see the Solved Mysteries "G" page for more information


A302: Angels shining their stars
Solved: The Shiniest Star



A303:Alien and little boy
Okay, this is one for the books...if you guys can help me find this book, I will give you my firstborn son: I read this book when I was about 7 (that would be 1987) and in the book, there was a boy, who became friends with an alien.  When the little boy put on these magic glasses the alien gave him, what was around him would transform into something else (e.g., once, he looked at an ice cream stand with the glasses on, and it was actually the alien's spaceship).  I also remember that the little boy went up in the spaceship with the alien, with another friend to visit the alien's planet.  When the boys got hungry on the way, the alien pushed a button the the dashboard of the spaceship, and the entire cabin began to smell like their favorite foods.  The boys sniffed and sniffed, and then discovered that they were no longer hungry, because the scent had filled them up.  I can't remember anymore details, but I remember LOVING this book and I would love to get a copy.  Can anybody make sense of this description???  I found the book in the school library as a kid. Thanks!!

Alien and little boy  - Could this be The Space Ship Under the Apple Tree by Louis Slobodkin?  I remember that the alien's ship was disguised as an ice cream cart, but don't know the details because I never quite finished the book.  There are sequels I've never read, as well.
Cameron, Eleanor, The Wonderful Flight to the Mushroom Planet. (1954)  A mystery man inspires two boys to build a space ship which takes them to the planet of Basidium to help the Mushroom people.



A304:Alligator/crocodile mother cares for eggs
I am looking for a picture book about a mother crocodile or alligator. The book takes place in a swamp and it tells all about how the alligator/crocodile gathers grasses to build a nest, lays eggs, protects eggs, babies hatch, swim with mother. I think the book must be from the 80's or 70's, definently not newer. The illustations are have a lot of green in them, muted, not bright.

Sayre, April Pulley, Crocodile Listens, 2001. Even though this title is from 2001, it fits the description. I think it might be the one.
I don't think it can be Sayre's Crocodile Listens. I had a crocodile book that sounds very similar in the early 80s, and it was not that one. The only further detail  I can suggest are that my book was rectangular in shape, was landscape format, not portrait format, and there was a fair amount of white space left on many of the pages.
Evelyn Shaw, Alligator. (1972)  This looks like a good possibility.  "Alligator" is a "Science I CAN READ Book" published by Harper & Row, for ages 4-8, illustrated throughout in color by Frances Zweifel.  The book discusses the life cycle of the American Alligator, and man's threat to its existence.  The cover of this book is a soft green color, sort of mottled or textured looking, not a flat or solid color.  Pictured is an alligator, with a fern in the foreground, palmetto fronds in back, and some clumps of long grasses. If this isn't the one you're looking for, a couple of others that might be at least worth a glace are "The Life Cycle of the Crocodile" by Paula Hogan (1980), or "The Crocodile and Alligator" (part of the "Animals in the Wild" series from Scholastic) by Vincent Serventy (1986).  Cover of the Hogan book is brown, with picture of crocodile in circle at top, and the word "Crocodile" printed 3 times at bottom.  Cover of the Serventy book shows a photo of an alligator, lying on a rock or bank, reflected in the water. Title is printed on a yellow band at top of page. Good luck!
David Knight, I Can Read About Alligators and Crocodiles, 1979.  This is a possibility, if the book you remember was from a school book fair and was for fairly young readers.  This book was published by Troll.  I found a picture of the old cover here: .  The newer (1999) cover is different but I don't know about the inside illustrations.


A305: Archologist/xenologist girl on alien planet
Book search description: Archologist/xenologist girl on alien planet.  The main character is a young woman born to archeologist parents on an alien planet.  The parents were excavating alien burial mounds and are now deceased, leaving her as the sole human on the planet.  A spaceship from earth lands and the humans offer to take her back to earth, which is now an entirely city-based world with no open land.  The newcomers notice that she is much taller than humankind is now.  She continues the excavations, finding that the most recent graves of the aliens have extremely elongated and brittle bones.  I read this book in about 5th grade, around 1981.

Monica Hughes, The Keeper of the Isis Light, 1980.  One of my favorites! I am quite sure this is the one you are looking for. It is the first of a trilogy by a great Canadian author who has written many juvenile/young adult science fiction books. The other two are The Guardian of Isis and The Isis Pedlar.
Unfortunately, it's not the Isis series, which I read and loved at about the same time I read the stumper book.  This one didn't have a Guardian taking care of the girl, and didn't get into the generations of recent-Earth folks settling into the planet.  But thanks for the Isis reference - I didn't know there was a third one!
H.M. Hoover, 1970s/1980s, approximately.  It sounds a little like one of H.M. Hoover's books, but I don't remember the plots well enough to pull the correct title out of my hat!  You could try Only Child, Winds of Mars or maybe Orvis.  Good luck!
H M Hoover, Another Heaven, Another Earth, 1981, approximate.  It's this book; it takes place on the planet Xilan, and the main characters are Gareth (the Xilan colonist) and Lee (one of the explorers).



A306: alphabet book from 70's
Solved: The Sesame Street Book of Letters


A307: Andersen series
I'm looking for some illustrated storybooks that I had as a child in the seventies. If I recall correctly, the ones I had were Hans Christian Anderson's "Emperor's New Clothes" and "Little Mermaid" (though they were probably more within the series). The books were average size (not too small) and had very thick, hard pages covered by something like a transparent textured vinyl. It is possible that the illustrations were actually photos of dolls, but I can't be sure. These are fuzzy memories, but I think the books are unusual enough that even if I'm wrong in some of the details, they can't be mistaken for any other books.

Try a web search of "puppet storybook" and see if any of those books look familiar. Some of them had a very distinctive 3-d cover made from vinyl and the rest of the book seems to match your description.
You are looking for the Golden Press books with the black covers! The illustrations are actual photos of posed dolls and the cover shows a holographic-like 3D image. I have a few of these books (they were favorites of mine too!). The Emperor's New Clothes was published in 1966.
About that holographic cover...  We hadHansel and Gretel when I was a child, and my mother said that it could be played on a record player.  I don't remember it ever working very well, but it would be interesting to check out the possibility if anyone has a copy and still owns a turntable.
Various, Golden Press books illustrated by Shiba Productions, late 1960's/early 1970's. These were by Golden Press, and had lenticular 3D pictures set into the covers.  The illustrations were photographs of dolls in scenes and were done by Shiba Productions.  They included Emperor's New Clothes, Thumbelina, Little Mermaid, Little Tin Soldier, Snow Queen, Wild Swans, Puss in Boots, Sleeping Beauty, Hansel and Gretel, and Snow White.



A308: American Indian couple, Trail of Tears?
I'm looking for a book that was in my Jr. High Library around 1981. It was about a young Indian man who needed to capture horses to give to the father of the girl he loved, so that he could marry her. While he was off trying to get horses, his girlfriend and several other girls were taken by an enemy tribe.  Their captors wanted to know if the girls were virgins (which they all claimed to be). The girls were treated well, though they did have to work hard. I believe the intention was to incorporate them into the tribe by eventually marrying them, rather than keeping them as slaves. The one girl then discovered that she was pregnant. At first she was able to conceal it by cutting herself once a month to produce a little blood, so that she could go away to the "women's place," which may have been near a waterfall. But after a few months, her condition became apparent.  As punishment, she was buried alive, with only her head above ground, and left to die. Her boyfriend found her, and I'm pretty sure he arrived in time to rescue her. They may have later been forced off their land, onto the Trail of Tears. I had thought that the names of the couple were Laughing Boy and/or Slim Girl, but the book I'm looking for is definitely NOT "Laughing Boy" by Oliver La Farge, despite the similarity of the names. It is possible that I am combining details of multiple books. The incident with the pregnant, captive girl being buried alive is the one that most sticks in my mind, though I think it was a relatively minor plot point, and the focus of the book was more on the boy. Any suggestions are appreciated.  Thanks!

Scott O'Dell, Sing Down the Moon, 1997, approximately.  Could it be Sing Down the Moon? It was about the Navajos being captured by the Spaniards, I think.



A309: American Indian boy cheats on manhood test
I'm looking for a book I read in the early 80's. It was about an Indian boy who was preparing to emark on his manhood trial. He and the other boys his age were all to go out into the forest, alone, unarmed, and I believe naked, where they must kill a deer, and survive on their own for some number of days, to prove that they were men. This boy decides to cheat on the test by burying a secret cache of food, weapons, and mocasins. I think he does so because he is trying to impress someone (a girl? his father? an older brother?) and it seems like he didn't think of it as "cheating" but as being smarter than the others, and better prepared. Anyway, when he doubles back to collect his supplies, he is caught and disgraced. He is either kicked out of the tribe or runs away, and must survive for awhile on his own. I think he later redeems himself and returns, but I'm not sure about that part. There may have also been something later in the book about a vision quest, where he spends several days camped on a cliff ledge, fasting, seeking his animal spirit guide - or that might have been from another book. Thank you for any suggestions!

Claude Aubry, Agouhanna, 1972.  I'm sure this is the book you are looking for!
Young Agouhanna, an Iroquois chief's son, does not enjoy hunting and running with the other boys.  Little Doe, a female childhood playmate, and White Eagle, his best friend, try to encourage him as the time of his manhood trial draws near.  White Eagle remains near him in the forest and Little Doe demands to pass the ordeal test along with Agouhanna.  At thirteen the chief's son undergoes his vision and receives a spirit animal  from that time on he is at peace with his nature and with the formerly frightening forest.
I will definitely check out Agouhanna, but I don't think it's the one I'm looking for. I don't remember anything about a girl trying to pass the manhood challenge.  One other thing I remembered that I'm pretty sure was from this book is that the boy was unusually close to his mother, past the time of normal childhood closeness.  She may have been the one who suggested that he hide the supplies in the woods, or might have helped him to gather them.  I remember a scene where the mother is plucking the hairs from his chin, using a clamshell as tweezers, but I'm not 100% sure that scene is from the same book. Thanks for any suggestions!



A310: Annabell, the stories of ?
Solved: Kate Smith Stories of Annabelle


A311: Angel in a boy's body
Solved: Prince Ombra


A312: American Bandstand
Solved: TV Bandstand


A313: Animal Parade
Solved: The Fairy Kitten


A314: Anthology
Solved: Read-It-Yourself Storybook\


A315: All the pretty horses
Solved: All the Pretty Horses
All the Pretty Horses


A316: Archie
Solved: The Playful Little Dog
I am seeking a children's book-- Elf, I think, though Golden  Book size. I think the cover was red. The story featured a 50s-era  family that was moving to a new house, and there was a boxer dog  named Archie.
I hope you can help me!

Jean Horton Berg, The Playful Little Dog, 1951. This is a Wonder Book, similar in size to Little Golden Books.  Archie the Boston Terrier and his owners move to a new neighborhood.  Across the street lives a big dog.  Afraid that the big dog will eat Archie, Archie's owners put up a fence.  When the big dog comes running over, Archie jumps over the fence.  The big dog chases Archie, and then the two dogs lie down and rest together and become friends. 



A317: Aunt, well-disciplined
Solved: Rebecca Of Sunnybrook Farm


A318: Australia
Solved: Pastures of the Blue Crane


A319: Alison and the Unicorn
Solved: The Beast With the Magical Horn


A320: Andy and Arthur
Solved: One Teddy Bear is Enough


A321: Anthology
Solved: The Illustrated Treasury of Children's Literature


A322: Anthology With Enormous Cat, Bull, Dick Whittington
Solved: A Treasury of Animal Stories


A323: Aesops Fables?
I think this book was written during the 1940's. I remember it as being a larger book, perhaps size 8 x 10 or a little larger. It was fairly thick, at least an inch or more. It had  block print illustrations (looked stamped but in colors). The paper used in the pages was heavier paper.  I specifically remember a story in it called  The Woodpecker, about a woman who made pies and wore a red babushka. She was very selfish and a number of beggars came by and she couldn't give them a pie and so she turned into a red headed woodpecker. That is all I can specifically remember. This was one of my favorite books as a child. I have searched for it a long time with no success. Please help!

Watty Piper, The Road in Storyland, (1932). The story entitled the Old Woman Who Wanted All The Cakes appears in the Platt and Munk Company's The Road in Storyland, which I believe was reprinted a number of times in the 1940's and 50's.  The story about an old woman who is transformed into a woodpecker for refusing to give a beggar a piece of pie made quite an impression on me too when I read it about 50 years ago, and was the subject of a previously solved book stumper.
Platt and Munk seems to have cornered the market on this one!!On this site- in archives, it is cited in three of their books. As someone mentioned Road to Storyland, also Folk Tales Children Love- Watty Piper- 1934 illustrations by George and Doris Hauman( unattributed, I believe), and finally Magic Story Tree-Lucille and H.C. Holling-1964. In this last one it is called The Woodpecker, if memory serves me. I have the book-somewhere! Can't locate it right now. I am sure your solution is one of these last two books. Given the Hauman's woodcut type pictures, I think the second title might be your best bet!! Stumpers R 142 and W 183 seem to be looking for the same volume.
Thankyou for the tips but I know that the name of the book is Aesop's Fables and it a collection of fables, the one about the woodpecker is just one of many.



2007

A324: Animal town
Solved:  The Golden Storybook of River Bend


A325: Adam has the ticket
Looking for a book from mid-80's where boy named ? Adam falls asleep and visits a land with houses, etc. made of food. Petit fours, jail of peppermint sticks, houses of teapots. He wakes up and finds the ticket in his pocket.

Heinrich-Maria Denneborg, A Trip to Lazibonia,1971. Could A325 be A Trip to Lazibonia by Heinrich-Maria Denneborg? The children are awoken by the dream boat that takes them off to the magical land of Lazibonia!  Through the pyramid of rice pudding to the only place where roast chickens fly straight into your mouth, cheeses are scattered like stones and gingerbread cottages really exist so that the residents can simply lie around. Cooked fish swim in the milk river, honey roast hams run around ready to be carved for lunch. Fountains abound to deliver your favourite drink on a whim.  Need to loosen your belt? Clothes grow on trees and the grass is made of every imaginable colour of hair ribbon. Activity of any kind is frowned upon but if you want to learn you can start at the top and work your way down to kindergarten where you can just have fun all day!"



A326: Alien Children in silver cocoons
Solved: Born into Light


A327: aliens eat egg yolks
Friendly aliens come to earth and are wasting away, because they cannot find a food they can eat.  The day is saved when someone finds out they can eat egg yolks.

Cameron, Eleanor, Wonderful Flight to the Mushroom Planet, 1954.  Sounds like the Mushroom Planet books.  Most of the activity takes place on their planet, but one alien did come to Earth--Mr. Bass--and he manages to get two boys to build a spaceship and take a hen along to save his homeworld.  Egg yolks fill in some missing piece in their diet and the population is saved.
Zena Henderson, The Anything Box.  This is an anthology of stories I read a few years ago from the library so I can't check the details but I think it had a story in it similar to what you're seeking.  The story I recall had aliens landing on earth and living in a refugee-type camp while negotiations were ongoing among the officials.  A young boy made friends with a young alien, the mothers got to know one another as well, and the humans accidentally discovered that the aliens required something in their diet to survive that was no longer available on their home planet- it may have been salt they were using on a hard-boiled egg at a picnic.  The other book that comes to mind is Eleanor Cameron's Mushroom Planet series- in those books the boys travel to the Mushroom Planet and leave behind a chicken as the people of the planet are dying from lack of sulfur and need the eggs to survive.
The story in Zenna Henderson's The Anything Box about the aliens who need salt is called "Subcommittee". They need salt water, not only to live but to be able to reproduce. To me, it is one of Henderson's best stories. Henderson's other collection of short stories is called Holding Wonder. Her "People" stories were anthologized as InGathering about ten years ago.



A328: adolescent boy
Adolescent boy is at picnic in park with family on July 4th.  Heads behind a tree and finds a door/falls in a hole and winds up in an underground world/civilization.  He is put on trial for some crime that he has committed.  He's taken in by a family while he awaits his trial.  Eventually, he either escapes or is found not-guilty and he finds his way up to the surface.  The end has fireworks and the boy with his family.  The book was probably written in the 1980s or early '90s.

You're POSITIVE this isn't The Forgotten Door by Alexander Key, written more than 40 years ago? It's awfully similar, though among other differences, the beginning and ending have shooting stars, not fireworks. See Solved Mysteries. A lovely book. One amateur reviewer said it helped expand his idea of masculinity greatly, too.



A329: Alligator with dog biscuits and balloons?
I've been pulling my hair out trying to find my favorite book as a child!  I remember an alligator living in an apartment as a part of a human family.  He may have had his own room or bed, and he was like the family dog and even ate doggie biscuits!  I also remember him floating across the street to another apartment by means of a balloon tied to him, but I'm not sure why he did such a thing.  I'm almost sure that the book is not "Lyle, Lyle, Crocodile", but I've been known to be wrong.  My mother believes the alligator's name was Alfred.  Any help you could give would be MOST appreciated!

Bernard waber, Lyle, Lyle Crocodile, 1965.  I remember those books, they were grand. There are a series of them, just in case you were only exposed to one of them.
I'm suggesting this only because his name is Al.  Enright, W J Pat.   Al Alligator and how he learned to play the banjo.  illus by W J Pat Enright.  Dodd, 1947.
Mircea Vasiliu, Where is Alfred?, 1978, copyright.  This book is about a girl named Susan who lives in a city and has a pet alligator named Alfred that loves to eat dog biscuits. One day he falls out of his high-rise window into a treetop. Susan looks all over for him and eventually discovers him in the tree, but all attempts to rescue Alfred fail until Susan has the idea to tie dog biscuits to balloons which are then tied to the end of a fishing pole and extended out of a window.  Alfred leans out to take a bite and when he does, he floats gently down to the ground. Susan makes Alfred a roof garden and soon neighbors with a pet turtle and another alligator move in and Alfred makes new friends.



A330: Andre and the Ant
Solved: Henry's Awful Mistake


A331: Apple, The
Solved: Who's Got the Apple


A332: animals hidden, letters bordering pages
Solved: Puzzle Island


A333: Allison Farrington
Solved: Special Year


A334: alphabet/record boxset
Solved: The Letter People -- Reading Readiness Program


A335: alligator/ crocodile
Alligator/Crocodile horizontal format book from the 1970's or earlier.  In the 1970's, I used to check this book out of the library.  I always found it on the shelf because it stuck out way further than the other books on the shelf (it was short and very long.) I'm pretty sure the cover was green, and I believe it was about an alligator or crocodile.  I've searched this site and have found several alligator or crocodile books, but when searching those titles, I can't find any that are a horizontal format book. Please help!  Thanks.


A336: anonymous boy
Solved: The Forgotten Door


A337: animal birthday
Solved: Fussbunny


A338: ant, stick of butter, and some bread
Solved: More and More Ant and Bee


A339: army of ants
Solved: Leningen vs. the Ants


A340: american primer
Play- New American Readers For Catholic Schools 1942

A341: Abandoned Girl Gets Palomino Horse
Solved: Pagan the Black


A342: Adventure, Boy, Snake, Morse Code, Train, Ningland
I remember as a young boy reading this book many times but can't remember the title or the author.  The small amount I can remember from the book is that it starts with a boy at a train station and I think a steam train arives.  At this point he meets a snake and they set out on an adventure together, with the snake communicating via morse code hisses.  I think then go to a land called Ning with the song/anthem 'There'll always be a Ning-Land'.  Can't remember much else but would really like to find some details. Thanks.


A343: aliens doodle wig and nog visit earth, think cars are alive
I remember this children's book around 1969-1972, about three aliens named Doodle, Wig and Nog, one of whom visits earth and reports about its inhabitants, which are actually cars he sees from his spaceship.  It may have been called "A Place Called Earth."  They all decide that they would like to visit the earth and see the people who live there.  The aliens all have teardrop-shaped heads with dots and wigs on top.  Very cute drawing style, a colorful children's book.

Sure sounds like the Tweedlebugs from Sesame Street - not sure of the book's title, though.
This sounds like the children's poem "Southbound on the Freeway" by May Swenson. Perhaps her poem was expanded on in another book? (The aliens are not named in this poem) The poem can be found in the 1967 anthology Reflections on a Gift of Watermelon Pickle, which is still in print.



A344: alone in cave, 13 matches
Solved: All the Dark Places


A345: animals have a party, secret codes around each page
Solved: The Eleventh Hour:  A curious mystery


A346: American teen goes to Cuba
Solved: Cargo for Jennifer


A347: Animals live in brownstone apartment building
Solved: The Brownstone


A348: Apple tree Christmas
Solved: Apple Tree Christmas


A349: ABC the elephant
1932. Father-in-law remembers it was an Alphabet book, only remembers certain lines: ABC the elephant, LMNO the elephant, etc....not much to go on but all he can recall!

A350: Ann, undersea fantasy, dolphin
Book with a preprinted, blue cover, published circa 1967-1968, about a girl named Ann (?) who has adventures in an undersea fantasy involving a dolphin. Chapter book of 100 pages (?) with line drawings of the period. I remember being attracted to the story partly because she spelled Ann without an E, as I did.  I used to have a possibly false memory that the AUTHOR's surname was Downer, like mine, but exhaustive searchers for author = Downer and title = Dolphin have brouht up nothing.

Herbert Kenny, Dear Dolphin, 1967. The author name doesn't match what the requester remembers, but I''m fairly certain this is the book. It's an Alice in Wonderland sort of story with a young girl, Ann(e), who follows a dolphin into the sea and runs into a pirate who lives in a sunken shipwreck. I loved this book when I was a child, and got to re-read it again when I visited my parents' house last year.



A351: Anthology, Plays and Poems
Among the titles: a play "The Ghost of Benjamin Sweet"; a poem "TheLittle Peach" by Eugene Field (about Johnny Jones and his sister Sue); and a play "The Diamonds" or "The Diamond Necklace" (not to be confused with the French story).  This story is about a woman confined to a wheelchair who owns a renowned necklace of diamonds.  A thief attempts to steal it and it is later revealed that the young woman who cares for the necklace owner is an accomplice.  I can add a few more items contained in this anthology I'm seeking.  "The Chronicle of the Drum," poem.  A story about a girl named "Daisy" who is hired to be a kind of nanny / maid and learns a bitter lesson about her place in the family most memorable scene is her playing blocks with the toddler she's caring for. I believe the story about Daisy is "A Start in Life," by Ruth Suckow.  This anthology is circa 1945-50, possibly earlier.  Thanks to anyone who can help!

The Winfield Diamond.  Not exactly a solution, but the story about the diamond necklace sounds suspiciously similar to an old radio play from "The Unexpected" series, called "The Winfield Diamond."  A female jewel thief, while casing the Winfield mansion with the intent of stealing a famous diamond, is approached by Mr. Liggett, the butler, who offers her the position of secretary to the elderly Mr. Winfield, an invalid. She is later given the location and combination to the safe by Mr. Winfield, with instructions to remove the diamond and ship it to a buyer.  She removes the diamond, intending to steal it, but is caught by the butler and ordered to return the diamond and leave the house immediately. Then, of course, the "unexpected" twist - on her way home, she hears a news broadcast that the diamond has been stolen by an international jewel thief, Light-Fingered Liggett, with the aid of a female accomplice posing as the old man's secretary.  She ends up in prison, while Liggett gets away with the diamond. Of course, the genders are switched from the story you recall, but perhaps it is some variation of this one?



A352: Alien "motes" feeding on starlight
Solved: The Power of Stars


A353: Anderson, Hans Christian,  Biography
Solved: The Shoemaker's Son: The Life of Hans Christian Andersen


A354: Apostles, illustrated book
Solved: Jesus and the Twelve


A355: Animals in die-cut book with button eye
I'm moderating a program at the Eric Carle Museum of Picture Book Art in Amherst, MA in December, with Wendell Minor as one of the guests. In an interview, he said that his all-time favorite book as a child - this would have been right after WWII, mid forties - was a "die-cut book where every animal had the same button eye and you’d learn all about the cows and pigs and horses and what kind of sounds they made." I know that's not much to go on, but I'd love to be able to locate a copy for him. I have my fingers crossed that you will help solve this mystery.

I believe this book is called “The Bright-Eye Book”, illustrated by Milo Winter, verses by Marjorie Barrows, 1941. It has a jingly eye on the last page, and each animal is placed to have this jiggle eye as its own eye. There is a bird, a fish, a dog, an owl, a lamb, a duck and a squirrel.



A356: Apartment, huge party, pan for hat
Solved: Ghost in a Four Room Apartment


A357: American Indian children
I had the book in the 1960s, and I probably got it from my older cousins.  It seemed like an old book at the time.  I suspect the publication date to be in the 1940s to 1950s, maybe earlier.  Each chapter was a story about an American Indian child from a different tribe.  One story was about an Anasazi or pueblo boy called Turtle boy, who was slightly crippled from a badly healed broken leg.  Another was about a girl in a Pacific Northwest tribe---I remember that she was described as knowing alls sorts of uses for cedar bark.  Another concerned a girl living in Michigan, who was a slave or captive in another tribe.  She found a large nuggest of pure copper, and used it to bargain with the cheif for her freedom.  Another story was about plains tribes --- they may not have had horses.  Most of the stories seemed to take place before arrival of Columbus and Europeans.  In retrospect, it seemed remarkably modern and accurate--lots of details about the cultures of different tribes.  Physical description: fairly large book about 11" tall by 8" wide Blue cloth cover.  Some color illustrations.

Holling C. Holling, The Book of Indians, 1935, copyright.  This book contains four chapters about the home life of Indians from various regions of the country, and eight chapters relating the adventures of specific Indian children. Chapter titles are: Something About Indians, People of the Forests and Lakes, Otter-Tail Goes Hunting, Flying-Squirrel Gathers Bulrushes, People of the Plains, Buffalo-Calf and the Great Herd, In the Days of Rides-Away-Tinkling, People of the Deserts and Mesas, Little Turtle and the Cliff Dwellers, What Corn Flower Found, People of the Rivers and the Sea, Raven and Whale-Tooth Hunt a Whale, and Cedar-Bough's Bargain.  The book includes six color plates, plus line drawings by H.C. and Lucille Holling.  The cover features a stylized drawing of a thunderbird or eagle below the title. Some editions have a blue cloth cover with either orange or black print, others have red cloth with black print.  The dust jacket shows a full-color picture of an Indian Chief in feather headdress riding a horse. Inside the front and back covers are maps, showing where the various tribes lived.



A358: Ankh mirror is window to a parallel universe
Solved: The Other World


A359: "Alphabet soup," book of poems
A book containing several poems.  It's perhaps a wartime book.  The only thing I remember from it is "Poop-a-doop-doop, poop-a-doop-doop, have you ever had any alphabet soup?"


A360: Animals story collection
It was a collection of small childrens books, each with a different coloured cover. One of them was a story about a little dog (spaniel?) getting lost in the woods, and I think an owl helps him. The other books are stories about animals too. I read them around the late 80s/early 90s.


A361: alphabet book
1950's-1960's.  it's most likely a golden book, though it may be a wonder book. there is a line that i remember that is definitely in this book. for the letter "A"..."A was for ape, who stole some white tape, and tied up his toes in four beautiful bows." also.."I was for ice..." and "X was for king Xerzes...".  all the pictures were in full color.

Edward Lear.  I've never seen a full color version of this, only one with black and white illustrations by the author, but the text is definitely Edward Lear!
This is one of Edward Lear's alphabet poems.
Lear, Edward.  I am sure there are many published versions of this set of limericks.  The alphabet limericks were written by Edward Lear.
Lear Edward, Edward Lear's A nonsense alphabet, 1962, reprint.  There is a version of Lear's alphabet illustrated by Richard Scarry, published by Doubleday in 1962.



A362: AnnaMarie
Solved: Big Big Story Book


A363: alphabet book illustrated by Oxenbury
Children's alphabet book author unknown, illustrated by Helen Oxenbury.  Goes,  Big A little a what begins with a, aunt annie's alligator AAA, Big B little b what begins with b, barber, baby, bubbles and a bumblee. etc. Dr. Seuss, Dr. Seuss's ABC, 1960, copyright.
Dr. Seuss, Dr. Seuss's ABC.  More info: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dr._Seuss's_ABC.
Helen Oxenbury, Helen Oxenbury's ABC of Things, 1933 (reprint). The text you quoted is the Dr. Seuss ABC book, but Helen Oxenbury has done an ABC book as well. Each letter has an illustration and a few words starting with that letter that relate to the illustration. I think it was originally published in the 1970s, but there have been a couple of reprints done. It doesn't seem to be currently in print, though.

2008


A364: animal book
large dark brown book with I think an orange zebra on the corner of the cover. It was all about animals. I loved this book when I was 4, this was in 1989, but it was a book more for adults. It was sort of like an encyclopedia and had photos and I think illustrations. It may have had a jacket, I'm not sure, and it was a thicker book.


A365: Apple Brown Betty/Children's Stories
This is a collection, I believe and there is a short story about a mother making Apple Brown Betty.


A366: Almanac
Solved: Grandfether Groundhog's Almanac


A367: amulet to see invisible folk
I read a series of children's books in around 1986/87 (England). There were, I think, three of them, possibly with a blue, green and orange patterned cover each. A boy and girl had an amulet of some kind (maybe a coin or a pendant) that meant they could see some kind of invisible people, fairy folk perhaps, when they were touching it. There might have been witches, as I have a vague recollection of people flying on a broomstick. I remember a scene with the boy leaning out the window to talk to the people, and having to relay to the girl what they were saying as he was the one touching the amulet. I'm almost certain that the invisible folk were normal people sized, and for some reason I have a vague image of a cat, although that might have been one of the children's, or a neighbour's, pet.

This sounds rather like it could be The Spiderwick Chronicles, a series of 5 books by Tony DiTerlizzi and Holly Black -- which, incidentally, have just been made into a movie; the trailers I've seen everywhere for it seem to match your description of the books.
Unfortunately, it isn't Spiderwick. The books I am looking for were available around 1986, and Spiderwick came out in 2003. The amulet in this had to be worn, I believe, not held and looked through.
Nesbit, Edith (aka Edith Bland), Enchanted Castle.
E. Nesbit, The Story of the Amulet.  
The text is online at http://www.fullbooks.com/The-Story-of-the-Amulet.html .


A368: Anthology, greyish cover
Solved: McCall's Read Me a Story Book


A369: Animated bugs, book series
Solved: Bugg books


A370:  Aliens
Aliens that were in American West before Indians
(Apologies to the person who submitted this: we lost the additional description you submitted a couple weeks ago. If you resend it, we can post it!)

Aldrin, Edwin "Buzz", Encounter with Tiber, 1996, copyright.  In the 1990s, astronaut Buzz Aldrin wrote a science fiction novel.  Its premise was that a group of aliens visited Earth in pre-historic times and dominated the early humans there, but then the aliens left to return to their home planet.  In the 21st century (I think), we humans discovered traces of their presence and left in a spaceship to look for the planet.  If I remember correctly, the aliens landed in or near Arizona.  Please note:  this isn't a children's book; it's a long novel for adults.
Zenna Henderson, The People stories, 1950s-1970s, approximate.  Could be Zenna Henderson's many short stories and two novels, about The People, aliens with powers of telepathy and telekinesis who land in the American Southwest in the 19th Century.
Andre Norton?, Time Travellers.  http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/19145.  This one has aliens in America before the Native Americans got there.  I think there are a lot of books that match that description, though. Do you remember anything else?


A371: All the Pretty Little Horses
I had a picture book when I was a child in the late fifties/early sixties which was probably All the Pretty Little Horses or All the Pretty Horses.  It was most likely a Little Golden Book, but I am not certain.  The lullabye was stretched out through the pages of the book, with illustrations of various horses throughout.  This book would have preceded the Susan Jeffers book by at least 15 or so years.

Margaret Wise Brown, Garth Williams (illus), The Golden Sleepy Book,  1948 & later reprints, copyright.  All The Pretty Little Horses stretches over several pages, with pictures of the horses in various colors, poses, and activities.  The song & music are printed at the end, so you can sing/play it, as well as reading the poem.  This book also contains other stories/poems, including The Whispering Rabbit (about a bunny trying to wake a sleeping bee that had flown down his throat when he yawned), Rabbit (a poem), The Dreaming Bunny (about Bunny No Good, who sits day-dreaming in a large cabbage while the other bunnies do their chores, but who saves them all from an approaching fox that they were too busy to notice), Sleeping Child (poem about Indian, White, African and Chinese children going to sleep, "safe in (his) mother's arms"), Close Your Eyes (poem instructing a little donkey, silly sheep, little monkey, old black cat, etc to go to sleep), Going To Sleep (how different animals go to sleep), and Whip-Poor-Will (a poem). In my copy of this book, All the Pretty Horses takes up three pages, but I have the "G" edition.  If you could find an earlier edition, it might run longer.  Many of the Little Golden Books were originally printed in longer (40+ page) versions, then later condensed (to 20+ pages) with more of the text packed onto each page, and many of the illustrations shrunk down and combined, or eliminated altogether.  I'm almost certain that is the case with this book, and that the older editions would have had "All the Pretty Little Horses" stretched out over more pages.


A372: Abused English boy travels back in time
Solved: A Chance Child


A373: Anthology purple or blue from easy to advanced
I was born in 1967 so I remember this book from around 1971(?).  (I also saw it in a toy store during my freshman year in college: 1985-1986.  Why didn't I buy it?!?!)  It was a large hardcover book (8.5 x 11?) and I think it was thick.  It was a collection of stories and the first story was very basic and only had a few words per page.  The stories got progressively more advanced (more words per page, etc.)  I wish I could remember what the stories were about.  I remember lots of color on the cover and in the book.  Many dark and vivid colors.  This was not a plain white or drab book.  I remember I loved the book though.  Perhaps one of the early pages had a picture of a large tree?  Not sure.

The Illustrated Treasury of Children's Literature, 1955, copyright.  Edited by Clifton Fadiman.  Blue hardcover 8 1/2x 11 inch book that came in both a white dust jacket and a cardboard storage box.   First few items are nursery rhymes with full color pictures.  Last parts of the book are excerpts from novels and some tales from mythology .  The book was reprinted in the late 60s/early 70s, and like you I received it then.


A374: Adult book on child/adolescent psychopathology
Solved: Those Children: Case Studies from the Inner City School


A375: Anthology/Treasury of Children's Animal Stories
Pre-1980, probably earlier collection of children's animal stories and poems. I remember Kipling's "The Cat Who Walked Alone", Louis Untermeyer's story "The Dog of Pompeii", Goldsmith's poem "Elegy on A Mad Dog" (or something like that), Vachel Lindsay's poem "The Bronco Who would Not Be Broken", and a hilarious Thurber-like story about the author's Great Dane puppy, especially the embarrassment of walking him by the local girl's school.  Would love to find this for my son!


A376: Amnesiac girl, shipwreck, deformed finger
This book was likely published in the early-mid 1970's. It was about an amnesiac young girl/woman (15 or 16) during the 18th century who got fished out of the ocean after a shipwreck. She was blond, and had a partially missing pinky finger. There was some kind of link to either piracy or smuggling, and a ship's captain who also had the same finger deformity.


A377: Animals have birthday party
approx 1990-1998. Animals have birthday party, each gets a key to unlock a gate that has a chocolate tree inside... or as best I can remember.


A378: Animal ‘dolls’ posed, Nursery Rhymes
Solved: A Puppet Treasure Book of Nursery Tales


A379: Asian boy uses a lantern to fly in the air
Solved: Tubby and the Lantern

A380: Albino girl, cave
Solved: Ceremonies


A381: Ant bite shrinks person
Solved: The City Under the Back Steps


A382: Angel Alien
1975-1988, juvenile.  A pair of spaceships travel to Uranus ? where an Alien presence is signaling.  The cover art I think had the spaceships look like orange mushrooms.  The story is about the hazards of deep space travel.  When the meet the Alien he introduces himself as Gabriel and some of the technology he has includes a magnetic suspension bed to sleep in midair.  After the meeting is done they realize that because of some supernatural time effect what seemed like days to them was weeks and they conclude that Gabriel must really be the Angel Gabriel.


A383: american running mexican hacienda
Author: margaret?  nonfiction.  american woman in her early 30's marries a mexican man and moves to mexico to run the hacienda. thought title had words in it like "blue skies" or "clear blue skies". american woman struggles with running hacienda as she is not easily absorbed into household nor given respect/authority easily by existing members of household. i read this in my later teens so perhaps the book was written in the 1970's.

Elizabeth Borton de Trevino, My Heart Lies South.
  This sounds a little like My Heart Lies South, by Elizabeth Borton de Trevino, who won the Newbery for I, Juan de Pareja.   Description (it's been reissued by Bethlehem/Ignatius):  "What happens when a thoroughly twentieth-century American lady journalist becomes a Mexican señora in nineteen-thirties' provincial Monterrey? She finds herself—sometimes hilariously—coping with servants, daily food allowances, bargaining, and dramatic Latin emotions. It is like stepping back a hundred years. In this vivid autobiography, Newbery Award winning author Elizabeth Borton de Treviño brings to life her experiences with the culture and the faith of a civilization so close to the United States, but rarely appreciated or understood. This special young people's edition presents the humor and the insights of a remarkable woman and her contact with an era which is now past, but not to be forgotten."


A384: anthology of children's stories including Bartholomew Cubbins
I recall owning a book in the late 50s or early 60s, a collection of children's stories by various authors, which included "Bartholomew Cubbins" or a story almost exactly like it, but NOT illustrated by Dr Seuss.  May have also had a story about a boy & girl whose mom carved wooden birds. Any ideas?

Pauline Rush Evans (ed.), The Family Treasury of Children's Stories,
1956, copyright.  This is a three volume set, The 500 Hats of Bartholomew Cubbins is in Volume 1.  There's only one illustration for the story, and its by Dr. Seuss.  I didn't see a story about carving wooden birds, but I didn't look that closely, either.
Thank you, but this can't be the one I'm thinking of if Seuss is the illustrator.
I think we had a similar book.  It was an anthology of stories from around the world (I believe it had a section on Norse mythology as well).  It had the same basic story as the 500 hats of Bartholomew Cubbins, but without those names.  It may be The Norton Anthology of Children’s Literature. Ours was green with gold writing.
Elsa Jane Werner (ed), Tibor Gergely (illus), The Golden Book of Nursery Tales, 1948, copyright.  A long shot, but perhaps the story you are thinking of is a Swedish tale called "The Cap That Mother Made." A little boy named Anders has a beautiful new cap that his mother has made for him. Everyone he meets admires the cap and wants it for themselves. When an old woman tells him that he looks grand enough to go to the king's ball, he decides to do so. The soldiers at the gate admit him after he claims that his cap is "as good as a uniform." Inside, the princess immediately walks up to Anders and takes him by the hand, causing all the richly dressed ladies and gentlemen to turn and bow to them. She offers to trade him a kiss for his cap, then fills his pockets with cakes and cookies and puts her jeweled necklace around his neck, but he still will not give it up. The king enters, and offers to trade his big golden crown for Anders' cap. Knowing that he can't argue with the king, Anders doesn't say a word - he just clutches his cap tight with both hands and runs all the way home, trailing cakes, cookies, and jewels. When he tells his family what happened, his brothers and sisters think him foolish for turning down the riches - but he defends his decision, saying that nothing in the world is finer than the cap his mother made for him. Other stories in the book include both traditional favorites (such as The Three Bears, Three Little Pigs, Three Billy Goats Gruff, Chicken Little, Little Red Riding Hood, The Gingerbread Boy, The Tortoise and the Hare, The Ugly Duckling, and The Bremen Town Musicians) and harder-to-find stories (like The Boasting Bamboo, Bobo and the Roast Pig, Silly Will, The Little Boy Who Tried to Obey, The Huckabuck Family, Pelle's New Suit, The Little Scarecrow Boy, and The Hollow Tree Store).
The Cap That Mother Made.  Just a follow-up to my previous suggestion. If the story "The Cap That Mother Made" sounds right, but The Golden Book of Nursery Tales does not, versions of the same story can be found in other anthologies, too. One is "The Children's Treasury: A Book To Grow On" (compiled by Marjorie Barrows) c.1947, 1951. Other stories include The Little Gray Pony, A Child's Garden of Verses, Quacky, Nursery Fun, Posh and Tosh, Pelle's New Suit, Horace, The Little Red Hen, The House that Jack Built, The Cat and the Mouse, and The Billy Goats Gruff. Another book containing the story is "Road in Storyland" (edited by Watty Piper) c.1932. This book also contains The Rooster and the Fox, The Pine Tree and its Needles, Olaf and the Three Goats, Boots and his Brothers, King Midas, The Dog and his Shadow, The Shoemaker and the Elves, The Elephant and the Monkey, The Stone in the Road, The Star Dipper, The Old Woman Who Wanted All The Cakes, Little Half Chick, and The Country Mouse and the City Mouse. Finally, you might try the book "First Fairy Tales" published by Merrill, and illustrated by Mary Sherwood Jones and Ray Evans Jr. c.1948. Other stories include: Golden Cobwebs, Lambikin, The Gertrude Bird, The Star Dipper, The Little Red Hen, Aiken Drum, A Never Ending Tale, The Three Wishes, Two Frogs, Silly Jack, The Runaway Rabbit, The Gingerbread Boy, and The Tiny Pine Tree's Wish.


A385: Around the World Bedtime Story
Solved: Come Over to My House, Come Over to Play 

A386: Australian Brother, Sister and Cousin lost, do some time traveling, come home
Solved: The Way Home

A387: Apartment on Central Park
I read this book sometime in the early 70s.  It had a blue cover and was about a girl, an apartment on central park, she could see the window of her apartment from the park.

Eighteen,
1970's.  I have been looking for a book called "Eighteen" for at least a decade off and on online. The description from stumper A387 of the Apt in Central Park sounded familiar. It was about a young teen girl who goes off to get her own apartment at age 18. I remember there was a love interest and perhaps they got the apt togheter. its been 30 years since i read it but i love that book!


A388: African girl living in African Village
It was in the mid 1960's that I read this book. I remember a fight with wild boars, her rising early and eating cold yams from the iron pot that huing outside her tent, I remember brothers being able to hunt and her being forbidden to. I believe her name started with an 'N". Her father may have been the chief of her village.

Reba Paeff Mirsky, Thirty-One Brothers and Sisters.
  Her name is Nomusa.
Thirty-One Brothers and Sisters
? See Solved Mysteries.
Reba Paeff Mirsky, Thirty-One Brothers And Sisters, 1952, approximate.  This is the story of Nomusa, daughter of a South African Zulu chief, her desire to go on an Elephant hunt with the men, and her adventure with a fierce wild boar. Nomusa is a heroine that girls and boys will admire. Illustrated with numerous sepia ink and pen drawings. Winner of the 1952 Charles Follett Award. Reprinted in 1956, 1958 and 1969. Sequels are "Seven Grandmothers" (Warmhearted, capable Nomusa determines to become a healer of the sick - witch doctor or nurse, she is not sure which) and "Nomusa and the New Magic" (Nomusa finds that not everyone is willing to welcome the new knowledge that is coming to Zululand. One of the objectors is Damasi, who is afraid that if Nomusa learns to read and write and becomes a nurse, her bride-dowry will be more cows than he can possibly get together.)
Reba Paeff Mirsky, Seven Grandmothers.  I think this must be one of the 3 books about Nomusa, a Zulu girl, which I also read in the '60s.  The titles are:
Seven Grandmothers [Nomusa's father is indeed a chief, and has six wives -- hence the second title], Thirty-One Brothers and Sisters, and Nomusa and the New Magic (in which she is nearly grown up and decides she wants to be a nurse like the one who visits her village).  I think the name of the boy she likes is Damasi, and they fall in love in the last book.


A389: After Dark
After Dark? 1985?  This children's book was in the Public Library of our town.  It was a hard cover book about 11" high and 8" wide.  It had large colorful pages of illustrations and the book was about how sights, sounds and activities in the neighborhood are different in the morning than nighttime.  There was one page that my daughter remembers very well, it had a prominent red bird in the picture.  I hope you can find this book as it would mean a lot to my daughter.  Thank you.

Budney, Blossom, After Dark,
1975, copyright.  After dark / by Blossom Budney, illustrated by Tony Chen. Discusses the sights and sounds that night brings to a child’s home.


A390: Arabian girl and American girl, horses
i would like to find the title or author of a book about arabian horses and a girl from arabia. she comes to spend a year with an american girl named gabrielle, and they go the horse show route. they meet a couple of boys, and one turns out to be her fiance from arabia, they meet a girl called peaches, gabbys father bought about 4 horses from the girls father. one town they stop at is murdo south dakota, where the time line runs down main street.


A391: Amish boy, radio, Cheyenne Mountain, Armageddon
I am looking for a book I read probably 20 years ago about an Amish or Mennonite boy who intercepted a radio communication from Cheyenne Mountain, Colorado after a cataclysmic even that killed most of earth's population.  He set out to find survivors.  I don't know the title or author, just know it was a paperback, possibly with Armageddon in the title.  Thanks for your help!

Leigh Brackett, The Long Tomorrow.
  This one's about two boys from a quasi-Mennonite postapocalyptic farming community, who find a radio set and become interested in searching for a hidden community where technology has been preserved.
Just wanted to add that the first time I read it, I too expected the hidden enclave to be in Cheyenne Mountain - it seemed to be foreshadowed.  However, it was actually in a valley or canyon and was called Barterstown.


A392: Angel New Baby Heaven From Above
I had this book mid to late 60's.  A young angel falls from heaven.  Two youngsters dress it in clothes that are for the new baby they are expecting, having to scrunch it's wings in. They return the angel to heaven by pushing him/her on a swing.  When the new baby arrives,it is the children's angel.

Val Teal, Angel Child,
1946, copyright.  On Solved Pages "A".


A393: Abraham Lincoln poem
I'm looking for a poem that begins:  When Lincoln was a boy like me / he studied every night / with nothing but the fire / or a candle for a light.  / He wrote all his arithmetic lessons / on a shovel's humpy back / and all he had for pencils / were some bits of stick burned black.

2009


A394: Ape's body, girl's brain
Solved: Eva


A395: All-star football game vs. aliens in outer space
Late 70's/early 80's. A guy takes a trip to outer space to play an intergalactic football game against aliens who love American football. Vince Lombardi is resurrected to coach the humans. Past and future football greats are cloned to play.They erase the guy's memory when he goes home.

I can't remember if it was a football player or coach who goes into space to partake in this football game. If I recall correctly, it's an alien civilization...possibly in the future. They discovered American football many years before and it has become the intergalactic pastime of this galaxy. They're obsessed with the original heroes of the game - humans from the 20th century. They either go back into time and kidnap them or simply clone them, but either way the premise is that they want to challenge the original human football players to a Superbowl of sorts. Their players are aliens of all shapes and sizes. They've evolved the game to the point where original humans wouldn't even be able to play the game...the field is enormous, the balls weigh a ton, etc. So for this exhibition game, they scale the game back to the original human dimensions. For the protagonist, it's a chance to play football alongside all the greats from his era (Unitas, Namath, Lombardi, etc.). There are some players he's never heard of, and is told by the aliens that these are great players from the future (HIS future anyway, as ALL the humans are from the past as far as the aliens are concerned). He actually writes one of their names on a piece of scrap paper and puts it in his pocket, hoping that someday in the future he'll recognize the name and draft the guy before anyone else does. Unfortunately, after the game he returns to Earth/present with his memory of his intergalactic trip wiped clean. He finds the scrap of paper in his pocket, doesn't recognize the name, and throws it out.

Higdon, Hal, The Team That Played in the Space Bowl,
1981, copyright.  This isn't quite as described, but might be a possibility. "To insure victory in the upcoming Space Bowl, the leaders of the planet Gann kidnap what they believe is a top-flight professional football team, which turns out to be a college squad that has never won a game or scored a point.


A396: All Girls School - I read it in the 70s
Solved: A Sense of Magic


A397: Artist loses wife/kids in car crash, finds he has cancer after meeting someone else (70s)
It was written in the 70s about a painter who lost his family in a car crash, met a new woman, then found he had a terminal disease. I think he was named Paul. Last line is "Black, said the painter, is the purest of all colors." It is in a dream of him looking into his grave.


A398: animated animals travelling thru Europe
Solved: Busy Busy World


A399: abusive family takes in runaway girl
Paperback book.  I read it sometime during the early 80's.  On the cover is a picture of a doll with a broken head or a hole in her head.  It is about a young girl that runs away from home and is taken in by an abusive family.  They tie her to a bed, burn her with cigarettes & hose her off outside.

Ketchum, Jack, The Girl Next Door
.  I've never actually read this book but I've heard a lot about it. I don't think the girl was actually a runaway, and from what I've heard, the book is graphic...but she was definitely abused. It's based loosely on the Sylvia Likens case.

A400: American girl visiting English relatives sees ghosts
Solved: The House on Parchment Street

A401: Anora book 1920s
Hello, My grandma was born in 1924.  Her father was a principal and two students said that they had read a book where the main character was Anora and that he should name his new baby that, and he did.  She recently turned 85 and wants to know what the book was.  I have no idea author or title. Thx.

Tomas J. Trujillo, Anora.
  I found a book called "Anora" by Tomas J. Trujillo.  Not sure if this is the book you were looking for.  Good luck!

A402: Adventures of the Wing Ding Dilly
Solved:
The Last of the Really Great Whangdoodles

A403: Across Country Bus Trip
This could have been a social studies or geography textbook, but may have been a fiction story about a classroom of kids that (I think) won a cross-country bus trip and they went to all the notable U.S. cities and sites, including Mount Rushmore, maybe Niagara Falls.  I think they started on the east coast and ended up on Catalina Island.  The protagonist was a girl.  I read it in 5th grade back in 1959/60.
A404: Alternate worlds, travel between
I am looking for a young adult novel about boys travelling between alternate worlds.  I think that one was essentially an apprentice in some kind of guild that regularly travelled between worlds and may have even partolled the paths between worlds.  The second was from a world like ours.  The third was an indentured servant or slave to a man who caught ghosts.  This was a respected profession in their world and involved gold wire in some way.  The ghosts were some kind of energy beings that may have been involved in the the travel between worlds.  I read this when I was in junior high in the early 80s.  To my memory, the book was published in the 70s.  I am fairly sure that it was a young adult novel but it is possible that it was published for an adult audience.

No sooner did I send it than I discovered what it was: Dianan Wynne Jones's "The Homeward Bounders." 

A406: American Girl of Yesterday
I am looking for the short story "Wishing Day", written by a subscriber to American Girl Magazine in 1969 or '70. Or '71? Nothing like the "American Girl" series of today! Each issue contained a "By You" section where readers contributed their own stories and poems."Wishing Day" appeared in a special "All By You" issue. In this story, Wishing Day is an annual event at a school. You write the name of the person you want to be and put it under your pillow. In the morning you are that person, body and personality, but with your own mind running alongside his or hers. You stay that way for 24 hours with the option to remain as that person if you like it (a few have done so). I believe it was supposed to take place just before Halloween, in that kind of atmosphere -- goodnaturedly assuming other identities. An ugly, clumsy but intelligent girl wants to try being the most beautiful girl in the school and is almost certain beforehand that she will want to retain that girl's body and identity. She finds out that they have an exact opposite set of interests and activities. What pleases her (study, reading) is tiresome and boring to the pretty girl, and vice versa (endless parties and social events). The ugly girl is relieved to return to her own body, even laughing when she breaks some eggs in the kitchen. (We don't find out who the pretty girl decides to be.) I have been looking for the issue of American Girl in which that story appeared for many years. It had a black cover with a silhouette of a girl and the words "ALL BY YOU". There were a number of other stories and an excellent poem based on Simon and Garfunkel's "America" in that issue. And because this is turning into a query, Loganberry is getting another $2 from me.

This story sounds familiar to me too!  I also remember it as appearing in American Girl magazine, but perhaps you should expand your search to a little later. I believe I was reading American Girl from about 1970 to about 1975.
A407: Alien Forces
Young adult novel from the 1960s or 1970s; alien force crashes in small town; inhabits people--not really clear if the force is sentient or not but has an aversion to technology; people possessed by the force send-out lightning-like charge that destroys machines and technology.

Peter Dickinson, The Weathermonger, 1969, copyright. Could you be thinking of The Weathermonger?  Its one of a trilogy (the other two being Heartsease and The Devils Children) - in it the UK has returned to a pre-technological way of life - technology and machines are seen as evil (there is a scene in which lightening attacks a car which the protagonists are trying to use) The source of the anti-tech is not an alien, but Merlin, who has awoken but is kept drugged, but several of the other details, and the publicaton date all fit so I thought it was worth suggesting.
Louise Lawrence, The Power of stars.This is a long shot, but the book may be one I posted as a stumper myself, and this was the solution.
The Louise Lawrence book sounds like it might be the book I'm thinking of--I've ordered an old copy and will let you know once I review it. In the meantime, many thanks for your tip! 


A408: Amnesiacc aretaker father, daughter is caught in a storm in a mansion, family reunites
Trying this Stumper again - not THE VELVET ROOM!  From the 70s - teen girl whose family often moves, father gets  job as caretaker for  vacant estate, girl spends time in the empty mansion, (maybe) finds a  library, and gets caught there during a violent storm, turns out dad is missing son of owner

I am the poster of this Stumper A408.  This Stumper was posted once before (not by me), as No. 5503, and I added a comment.  It was erroneously suggested that it was The Velvet Room, but it is not.  I wanted to hook my Stumper up with the first one in hopes it might spark someone's memory, as this is the only Book Stumper I've asked that hasn't been solved very quickly.  Thank you.

Antonia Barber, The Ghosts, 1989, reprint.

'No, sorry, not THE GHOSTS.  I read this in the early to mid 1970s, plus the plot is not what I was looking for  thank you, anyway, for trying.'


A409: Airplane abducted by aliens
  Solved

A410:  Anthology - unusual fairy tales, big purple hardcover, vibrant watercolors
No Cinderella, Puss-in-Boots, etc. Instead: salt grinder turned ocean salty; 3 sleeping sisters & pomegranate, bee sits on mouth & prince chooses; witches almost boil boy seeking girl; toads come from bad sisters' mouths, pearls&roses from good. Long-ish but generic title. All illus by same artist.

Michael Foreman (also illustrator)
, Michael Foremans world of fairy tales.Just a guess, but your description of the illustrations reminded me of this artist. He has illustrated several books of original as well as traditional stories, so check out his other works as well if his watercolor style seems familiar.
Brother's Grimm, Brother's Grimm
, varied, approximate. You should look into books featuring the Brother's Grimm stories, because the bee sitting on the princess's mouth and choosing is from the Queen Bee.  The frogs coming from princesses mouths are also by them.
A411: Animal Friends
Solved: Good Neighbors

A412: Aprann Li
Aprann Li by Yves Dejean. I did find the book via Worldcat and they are in libraries in NY, FL, MA and CA. I have made an interlibrary loan request for one but would really like to purchase the book. At the bottom of the title page it has -©1983 by the Center for Human Services. Thank you


A413: An Abstract 'Me'
Solved: Me


A414: animals have picnic in forest
Solved: Will You Come to My Party


A415: Anthology: Witch chases children & puts spiderwebs on her wounds
 I read this fav book in the late 70s/ early 80s, it was an anthology of short folk tales - possibly european in origin. The story I remember concerned a witch chasing children - the witch got hurt and returned to her home to put cobwebs on her wounds. Can't recall any other details sorry. thx


A416: Mystery, airport port, crossword puzzle
  Solved: What could Go Wrong?


A417: Awaiting a Sibling
  It's a book my mom had checked out for me from the Salem Library in Oregon when she was pregnant with my sibling in 1986.  It was a book about a little girl (named Dana?) and her mother who is pregnant with her soon-to-be little brother.  The book had photographs instead of hand illustrations.


A418: Arabian  Nights
Solved: The Land of Green Ginger


A419:  Animals Get Color
Illustrated 1970s book in which all the animals are black and white. They visit a cave? where they receive beautiful colors.

Don't think this is the one, but your description reminded me of a chapter in a Christian children's book about tales from Africa. The stories had a Biblical slant, but were often upbeat. The one in question was about a wild horse who could not decide whether he wanted to be black or white  in the end he became a zebra because he just could not make up his mind. Hope this helps.
This sounds like a telling of an African folktale - all the animals are white or grey, then there's a cave where they all go to get new coats.  Zebra is eating so doesn't go until it's too late - there's only pieces of black left.  He makes a coat, but when he puts it on it bursts at the seams because he has eaten so much.  Thus he is white striped with black. For one retelling see Greedy Zebra by Hadithi, though that's late enough that it's not the one this requester is looking for.


A420: Alphabet book "emma washes her ears"
 looking for an Alphabet book written probably in the late 70's.  It was a big book -- like 18 inches -- with a hard cover.  it had hand drawn illustrations.  Each letter had two pages.  The "E" had an illustration of a little girl, and a caption of "Emma cleans/washes her ears"

421: Age of Aquarium
 1978? 5th grade, ordered from form at school, gold and blue cover with hand drawn letters. Lots of hand-drawn pictures. Boy gets an aquarium from parents to show they "get it" w/a note about the "dawning of the age of aquarium." pocket sized. Pictures remind me of Warm Fuzzy Book

Doubt this is it, but it does remind me of a Peanuts strip where Sally is setting up a fish tank, telling her brother Charlie Brown her reasons is that "This is the Age of Aquariums"!
It's still a cute bit.


I just remembered that I think on the cover, the letters might have been formed by people or animals or other things, forming the shapes of the letters, like if there was an “H,” it would have two people standing upright, facing each other with arms linked, forming an H. I’m pretty sure I ordered it from a book order at school, which would mean it’s probably Scholastic, unless there was some other company using the same sales model at elementary schools in Iowa in 1978-1980, which is when I bought this book.


A422: A Letter For...
From 1960's, Yellow main or background color of cover, 10 X 16, about a duck who wants to receive mail, a pig is the mailman who feels sorry for her.  The neighbors then throw her a party each sending her mail.


Ian Munn, The Little Mailman of Bayberry Lane.
Ian Munn (author), Elizabeth Webbe (illus), The Little Mailman of Bayberry Lane, 1952, copyright. I think this might be the one - except the mailman is a chipmunk, rather than a pig, and it was Mrs. Pig who never received any letters. The little mailman sent out a bunch of letters to Mr. and Mrs. Goose, The Ducks, Mr. Turtle - basically everyone except Mrs. Pig - inviting them to a surprise party in her honor. The party was a huge success and was the happiest afternoon of Mrs. Pig's life. All the animals played croquet on the lawn and had a wonderful time. This was printed as a Rand McNally Elf Book, a Rand McNally Tip Top Elf Book, and was included in The Rand McNally Book of Favorite Animal Stories.
Ian Munn, The Little Postman of Bayberry Lane. I think this might be the one - except the mailman is a chipmunk, rather than a pig, and it was Mrs. Pig who never received any letters. The little mailman sent out a bunch of letters to Mr. and Mrs. Goose, The Ducks, Mr. Turtle - basically everyone except Mrs. Pig - inviting them to a surprise party in her honor. The party was a huge success and was the happiest afternoon of Mrs. Pig'\''s life. All the animals played croquet on the lawn and had a wonderful time. This was printed as a Rand McNally Elf Book, a Rand McNally Tip Top Elf Book, and was included in The Rand McNally Book of Favorite Animal Stories.

A423: A Boy and His Dog
An Eskimo boy and his dog stranded on ice floe, starving.. Boy has to decide if he will eat  the dog before the dog eats him. Childrens literature text book from late 60s.


Radko Doone, Nuvat the Brave: An Eskimo Robinson Crusoe, 1939, copyright. The tale of a crippled Eskimo boy who becomes trapped on an ice floe while seal hunting. He is carried to an uninhabited island where he must survive alone for two years before being rescued. I don'\''t know for sure if he has the dog with him on the ice floe, but he did have a dog (a big, black dog named Kakk). An excerpt from the book that I found online talks about how the dogs liked him because he was gentle with them, and how they all obeyed his voice. Even Nuvat'\''s father had to admit that he was the best trainer of puppies in the village - but he had no dog team of his own, because, as a cripple, he was not allowed to hunt with the men. Sounds like it might be the book you are looking for.
A Boy and His Dog, Doone, Radko, Nuvat the Brave,1934, approximate. A children's lit textbook from the 1960s has this description for Nuvat:  "an Arctic setting and an Eskimo hero.  Despised and disheartened, Nuvat is carried off on a floe.  He maintains life for two years, completely alone except for his dogs."
Hugh B. Cave, Two Were Left.
Radko Doone, Nuvat the Brave. The tale of a crippled Eskimo boy who becomes trapped on an ice floe while seal hunting. He is carried to an uninhabited island where he must survive alone for two years before being rescued. I don'\''t know for sure if he has the dog with him on the ice floe, but he did have a dog (a big, black dog named Kakk). An excerpt from the book that I found online talks about how the dogs liked him because he was gentle with them, and how they all obeyed his voice. Even Nuvat'\''s father had to admit that he was the best trainer of puppies in the village - but he had no dog team of his own, because, as a cripple, he was not allowed to hunt with the men. Sounds like it might be the book you are looking for.
Hugh B. Cave, Two Were Left, 1942, copyright. This is Cave's "Two Were Left."  It was first published in the June 1942 issue of THE AMERICAN MAGAZINE  it's been reprinted in many anthologies and textbooks and there are at least a couple of copies of the full text (which is only two or three pages) on the web.  Cave published something like a thousand stories in his 94 years of life, and this short piece may be his best-known one.
A Boy and His Dog, Radko Doone, Nuvat the Brave.
Radko Doone, Nuvat the Brave.The tale of a crippled Eskimo boy who becomes trapped on an ice floe while seal hunting. He is carried to an uninhabited island where he must survive alone for two years before being rescued. I don't know for sure if he has the dog with him on the ice floe, but he did have a dog (a big, black dog named Kakk). An excerpt from the book that I found online talks about how the dogs liked him because he was gentle with them, and how they all obeyed his voice. Even Nuvat's father had to admit that he was the best trainer of puppies in the village - but he had no dog team of his own, because, as a cripple, he was not allowed to hunt with the men. Sounds like it might be the book you are looking for. (I've submitted this twice before, but it hasn't shown up in either of the last two updates, so here's hoping third time's a charm!)


A424:Alaska
 The book I'm trying to find is about Alaska.  It was written by my Great Uncle, Lee Gardner, before Alaska became a state.  My mother had a copy that got destroyed when her home was flooded.  I sent a query to the Library of Congress and they suggested you.


A425: ALPHABET book with BEAUTIFUL PLUSH/puppets, not drawn.
All I remember is that it was an alphabet book with beautifully detailed plush or puppet representations of each letter.  Perhaps there were animals or something that each letter started with.  All I really remember is a feeling of elegance.  They were photographs of real objects, not illustrations.

Oscar Weigle, Tadasu Izawa, Fun With The Alphabet (A Puppet Storybook), 1969. Published by Grosset and Dunlap. Front cover is white, featuring a 3D image on a lenticular plate. Picture is of a large letter "A" (in yellow, with red and white scalloped borders) in front of a little house, with a little boy leaning out through the triangular part at the top, as through a window, and a little girl in front of him, pulling a wagon that contains a red-and-white striped beach ball. There is also another printing (as a "Winker Puppet Storybook") that has a pink cover with a 3D lenticular plate of the boy flying in a little airplane.


A426: Amos the Duck Can't Talk
There was a book that my mom used to read to me in the '60's that I can't find.  In the book all the other ducks kept saying, "Amos can't talk, Amos can't talk."  He turned out to be a swan and not a duck.  Sound like an ugly duckling story but not sure.  Any help out there? Thank you!

Bradbury, Bianca, Amos Learns to Talk: The Story of a Little Duck, 1951.
Bianca Bradbury, Clare McKinley (illus) , Amos Learns to Talk: The Story of a Little Duck,1950, 1963 (reprint). A Rand McNally Elf Book about a little duckling (Amos) who goes around visiting the other animals on the farm to find out how they talk, because he thinks the quacking of his brothers and sisters sounds funny. When he gets lost, he discovers just how wonderful his mother's "Quack Quack" sounds.


A427: Anthology of Inventors
Children's Anthology about inventors; I read it as a child in the late 80s. Specifically remember Edison, Farnsworth,  and Henry Ford, but it was a large series. Can't remember the series name, and hoping to buy the whole series if we discover it! Thanks! Just found out I misunderstood the definition of anthology, and it's actually a series of books. Can you amend my posting to say "Series?"

Maybe the Childhood of Famous Americans series? Everyone seems to remember them fondly!


A428: Animal stories in the wild
Wild Animal stories, sim. to Ernest Thompson Seton but (short) book length (not short stories) for younger audience, say 6-10 yr old.   Each follows the adventures of a wild animal.  I read maybe as many as 10 of them in the early '60s, but they were worn library books by that time.
I submitted a question last evening, about an author of wild animal stories similar to Ernest Thompson Seton, but for a younger audience.  I just realized that I should have specified that it's not Jack London.

Thornton Burgess, Old Mother West Wind stories/Adventures of series. You could be looking for the Thornton Burgess books.  The series does follow wild animals, but they wear clothing and have more human-like problems.  However, I think there are a few that are more "life in the wild" types.  Worth checking out, anyway.






B10: Buttercups
We are looking for a children's story (read at least 60 years ago).  A young girl from a poor farm family is told to pick buttercups and boil them. While she is not looking, a fairy or leprechaun drops gold medallions into the pot, and the family is delivered from poverty. It is NOT The First Buttercups or The Field of Buttercups.

Any chance this is Enid Blyton's Buttercup Farm Family? Published by Lutterworth in 1952, 95 pages. It could just be a real-life farm story, because I couldn't find a plot description. It's also not quite old enough, but just in case.
The story (or one with similar motif) is in a Victorian-era book titled One Minute Bedtime Stories. I'm not certain of the title and I can't remember the author, but she wrote all the stories in the collection. Story line goes something like this: Young widowed mother has to work and must leave her three year old daughter home alone each day. (Guess things were different then). Nice rich man comes by and little girl is boiling water in a pot because she believes she can extract the gold from them. She does and they boil them up -- girl doesn't seem him slip gold coins into the pot. She calls the buttercups "Cuppity-buts." Hope this helps. Love your site.
How exciting to have a real clue for this! I couldn't find a title similar to One-minute Bedtime Stories from the right time period, though, so these are the best possibilities I found on first search: Kernahan, Jeanie Gwynne & Coulson:Bedtime Stories, published London, James Nisbet 1911 1st edition, 8vo, 187pp, frontispiece, line illustrations and plates by Dorothy Furniss, cover is illustrated pale blue cloth lettered & decorated in gilt.
Byrum, Isabel C.: Bedtime Stories, published by Gospel Trumpet Company 1911, red cloth hardcover with paste-on b/w photo of two children on front. Cowles, Julia Darrow: Stories to Tell, published Chicago, Flanagan 906,  8vo 124pp hardcover has red and black illustration of woman with two children.
this seems to match some of the criteria for the possible anthology - Sandman's Three-Minute Stories, by Abbie Philips Walker, illustrations by Clara E. Peck,  published New York, Harper, 1925, 171 pages, about 50 stories "None are the usual stories, however, and all include animal and/or plants as their heroes and main characters. For example, "The Bee That Didn't Work," "Mr. Fox Goes Calling," "Whitie Kitten Rebels," "The Moon Lady Calls the Fairies," "What The Apple Tree Said," and "Granny Turtle's Tea Party." "Santa Claus and the Sandman," "The Moon Elves," and "Calico Cat Thinks Queer Things?"
Louise Chandler Moulton, New Bed-Time Stories, 1880.  You might want to check this one out as well -- I can't find a description, but the date works, and the title is promising as well.



B26: Baseball diamond from vacant lot
Solved: Play Ball!


B27: Big and strong...
Solved: How the Chipmunk Got Her Stripes 

B28: Bird on the wing
Solved: Marilda and the Bird of Time
B33: Brothers are detectives

Your page was so successful in helping me find some long-lost books of my childhood that my husband has asked me to write you about some books he only vaguely remembers.  The books were about two brothers who were detectives, narrated by the younger brother.  The story he remembers the most of concerned a lion-tamer who was mauled by his lion during a performance.  The boys investigate and discover that the lion had been shot by someone with a pellet gun just before the performance.  My husband says he also remembers a scene in which the younger boy is eating breakfast and his mother is complaining that the older boy and father have already left the house and they aren't all sitting down together and eating breakfast as a family.  I hope someone will come up with the name for these.

Well, if they were brothers, this would look like a decent bet:  West, Nick Alfred Hitchcock and the Three Investigators in the Mystery of the Nervous Lion NY Random House 1971. "Southern California's Jungle Land has a lion to rent to Alfred Hitchcock for his new movie, yet there is a problem: the lion is so nervous!"
the three investigators were not brothers.  they were good friends.  thier "office" was in a junk yard owned by the aunt and uncle of one of the three.   they had many secret entrances to get in and out un-noticed.  i remember one was named pete, and one was on the heavy side.  they were always ready to take on a case for their friend alfred hichcock.
Sounds very much to me like the Hardy Boys Detective stories.
Robert Arthur , The Three Investigators(series), 1985.  I recently read a book in this series the stories are about three friends, one of whom is named Jupiter Jones.  They have a base they've built in a junkyard and they solve mysteries. (there is actually a website dedicated to this series of books) I hope this helps.
NOT the Three Detectives Mystery of the Nervous Lion...they were not brothers, and the lion was nervous because of people banging on the bars of the cages in order to find the bars in which diamonds had been hidden (I think). They were Jupiter Jones, Pete and Bob I think. No mention of a pellet-gun, or 'performances...think this lion was in an animal park/sanctuary or similar...



B35: Blue eyes?
Solved: Blue Boy

B36: Bears and kids
Solved: Freddie Bear 

B37: Black Eyed Susan
Here goes, As far as I remember the book was entitled Black Eyed Susan (not the recent version of a girl living on the prairie).    It seems from memory that this little girl had a cave she liked to go to and she had an adult friend who was a painter? maybe.  I read the book when I was in first or second grade and I am thirty one years old now.  If you have any ideas of the book, please let me know as I have always wanted to find a copy of it.  Thank You.

B37, here's a possible : Evelyn Trent Bachman: "Black-Eyed Susan" ; 1968, Viking. Hardbound picture cover, no dust jacket, 159 pages. Illustrated by Lilian Obligado. "Tomboy Susan is the despair of her mother and sisters in rural Missouri during the Depression." Though 160 pages sounds heavy going for a 2d grader.
Phillips, Ethel Calvert Black-Eyed Susan Boston, Houghton 1921, 170 pages, "Susan was a very little girl who lived with her grandparents on a farm. She had no one to play with and was lonely until Philip Vane, a little boy about her own age, came to live next door. Then when some gypsies left a little orphan girl as a present for Susan, her joy was complete."  Gray, Joslyn Black-eyed Susan New York, Scribners 1924, 221 pages, "Sue left her serene New England home, where she was thoroughly spoilt and waited upon, to visit an aunt she had never seen before in Dakota. She was a most extraordinary character, this aunt, and so were the orphans Myrtle and Merton."
The title isn't right, but the plot sounds similar: Blyton, Enid The Children of Willow Farm: a Tale of Life on a Farm Country Life, 1942. Cloth, 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall "Four children move to a farm, where they learn about the countryside from Tammylan, a 'wild man' who lives in a cave in winter, a tree house in summer." 27 b/w illustrations, 5 of which are full page. 152 pages.
A couple of similar points - John and Susanne by Edith Ballinger Price, published by Century 1920s? "Two runaways from a New York orphan asylum find refuge in an artist's country home where they become indispensable members of his family." (Books for Boys and Girls 1927, Toronto Public Library)
Yet another - Susan, Beware! by Mabel Leigh Hunt, illustrated by Mildred Boyle, published Stokes 1937, 243 pages "Susan Merrill who lived in Indiana in the (18)70s went through a succession of scrapes. There were many more chances for a tomboy to collide with authority than there are now. Susan at ten didn't see why she shouldn't have as much fun as the boys (she did, as a matter of fact) or why being a lady was necessary yet." (Book Review Digest 1937 p.509)



B38: Bunny's lunchbox
I am looking for a book I read in the mid-seventies. It was about a bunny who wanted a lunchbox with firetrucks on it. I can't remember if he got the lunchbox of his dreams or not: someone else I asked about the book (who also can't remember the title) seems to think that the bunny didn't get the exact lunchbox he wanted, but he learned to like the one he got (since his mom gave it to him). If you can tell me the title, that would be great: ideally I'd like to buy two copies of this book.

Not exactly firetrucks but... The first story, Wish I May, Wish I Might, in the book Bear's Magic and Other Stories is about a rabbit with an old lunch box.  Everyone else in his class has pictures on their lunch boxes.
So rabbit wishes on a star several nights in a row for a new lunch box.  There's no answer at first, but rabbit reminds himself how far away the stars are.  After three nights (and after his mother overhears him), he gets a new lunch box with "trucks on it -- a dump truck, a garbage truck, a tow truck -- more than ten different trucks!"  The other two stories in the book are about a mouse who makes a birthday wish, and a bear who wishes it would stop snowing.  It's by Carla Stevens, with pictures by Robert J. Lee.  Scholastic, 1976.
It's a boy, not a rabbit, but stories about lunchboxes are thin on the ground. The cover shows a green lunchbox with a bee-type hornet, not the TV character.  Green Hornet Lunchbox by Shirley Gordon, Houghton 1970 31 pages. "Story about a little boy whose mother bought him a new lunch box. His friend did not have a lunch box & ate at school cafeteria." "The story, illustrated charmingly by Margaret Bloy Graham, of Joey, whose friend talks him into buying his lunch and not using his wonderful Green Hornet lunchbox - for a while." another possible:  Goldberg, Martha. illus.by Beatrice Tobias The Lunch Box Story: A Beginning To Read Book Holiday House, 1951. "A lunch box mix-up causes tears and brings a  new friend."



B39: Beware, beware!
Who is the author and can I get the text of a poem that starts "Beware, beware of the green-eyed dragon of Delaware"

Greatrex (Rex) Newman, Performed by Stanley Holloway, The Green-Eyed Dragon, 1950's.  This sounds similar, though, not exact.  This poem was written for Stanley Holloway and has the line "Beware, take care of the green-eyed dragon with the 13 tails".  As I have seen several versions of this poem, it's possible that someone
may have thrown in a line about the dragon being from Delaware.  Here's the link for the text.



B40: Best Friends
Solved: Best Friends

B41: Bethany and Wade
Solved: The Edge of Time

B42: Bedtime stories
Solved: Tibor Gergely's Great Book of Bedtime Stories
B44: Bed runs away

Solved: Tucked-In Tales


B45: Blue parakeet
Solved:  A Bird in the Family 

B46: Bill's house with no windows
This story is of a boy named Bill (?) who lives in a house that has no windows and he tries to "catch" light for it.

Definitely a long shot Nathan's Dark House by Florence Bourgeois, illustrated by Ninon McKnight, Garden City, Doubleday Junior Books, 1942 (Horn Book, Nov-Dec/42 ad p.363) "A Colonial Quaker lad's venturesome endeavours to obtain glass windows to lighten his house."
More plot description for Nathan's Dark House (60 pages, grades 4-6) "Story of a young Quaker boy living near Salem, New Jersey in the 18th century. Nathan's most persistent dream was that he could earn money enough from his various selling ventures to supply his parent's dark house with glass windows. Interesting period detail, especially of early glassmaking and many attractive pictures in colour and black&white."
Not sure of the exact title but I think it was Silly Willy or Silly Willy. He tries to catch sunlight in a pan and carry it into his house.
At last, a decent clue! Maybe this, then - The Adventures of Silly Billy, by Tamara Kitt, illustrated by Jill Elgin, published Wonder Books 1961, 61 pages  "Silly Billy decides to set off to find a boy sillier than he, he
ends up helping a king and getting a gold crown which he takes home to his parents."
B46 bill's house with no windows: I've now seen a copy of The Adventures of Silly Billy by Tamara Kitt. This could be the book, but the match is not exact. The boy's parents call him Silly Billy because he does things like planting popcorn and giving the hens hot water to produce boiled eggs. He leaves home to find someone sillier, and solves the problems of a man trying to carry water in a sieve, ten men who can't count themselves, and lastly a rich man who sends his servants out with pans to catch sunlight and bring it into his windowless house. When he returns home with the gifts the grateful men have given him, he tells his parents to call him Wise William from now on.



B47: Bunny book, maybe Easter themed?
Solved: Three Little Bunnies

B49: Benjamin, Lost dog
Solved: Benjy's Dog House
B52: Ballerina, red

Solved: Ballerina Bess
B54: Blue Jay

Solved:  Reggie's No-Good Bird 
B56: Blue dishes

Solved: Blue Willow 

B59: Butterball
Solved: Butter Ball

B60: Benjy and the beast
Solved: Bengey and the Beast

B63: Bureau collects lost articles
Solved: What the Witch Left

B65: Boarding school spooky tale
Solved: It's Murder at St. Basket's
B67: Bobby Shafto

Solved:  Bobby Shafto's Gone to Sea

B68: Balloons Flying Boy
Balloons Flying Boy:  A young boy who dreams of tying a large number of balloons together and floating to a nearby town.  He does this and is given a heroes parade, as it ends, he begins to imagine a few more balloons could get him to the next town... ( this is possibly set in New England or maybe Europe)  Note: This is NOT The Red Balloon, nor is itThe 21 Balloons

Not really enough information, but maybe Sandy and the Seventeen Balloons by Jane Thayer, illustrated by Meg Wohlberg, published by William Morrow, 1955 "Food for the imagination in this story of a little boy who loved balloons, but got more than he could handle." (ad in Horn Book, Apr/55)
#B68--Balloons Flying Boy:  Around the World With My Red Balloon.  Beers, V. Gilbert, Illustrated by Krisvoy, Juel.  Nashville, TN, U.S.A.:  The Southwestern Company, 1973. This wide, decorative cloth hardcover illustrated story about children travelling around the world with their red balloon telling all the children of the earth about Jesus depicts a fantasy trip in a hot air balloon featuring animals and characters from around the world in charming color.  This book seeks to build early thoughts about missions in the mind of your child.  It helps him to think of others who need to know about Jesus--and what they need to know.  It talks about children around the world, and those in our own back yard.  The illustrations are shiny and colorful and show children of different parts of the earth.  The boy is dark-haired and travels in a basket beneath a single red balloon (not a bunch tied together) and the illustrations have a very "It's a Small World" look and feel.  The narrative is in rhyme.  An educational book that teaches geography, ethnic culture, sociology, Christian missionary work, and God's teaching all around the world.  The pages are unpaginated but appear to be 25.
Do you have the "17 baloons" title? That could be it!  It is NOT the christian based poetry book!   (but thanks to whoever sugested it!)
I am the person that submitted this question originally.  Thank you for the suggestion, but "Sandy..." is NOT the book.  Just got a copy I purchased of Sandy and the Seventeen Ballons and it is close, but NOT it.  Still hoping someone out there can find this book!  HELP!  :)



B69: Beacon Readers
Solved: Beacon Readers

B71: Burglar Bunglars
Solved: Clothes Make the Man

B72: Bobbsey Twins, but not quite
Solved: Honey Bunch

B73: Bionic boy
I know it's a long shot but I'm hoping someone out there knows this book: I read it during the 80's, it's a kid's science fiction book about a boy who is involved in a car accident and has his insides replaced with robotics (he performs his bodily functions through his finger..) I have no idea of the author or title, but the cover of the book I read was a yellow brick wall background, with red oozing down from the top. I remember that someone in the book went over Niagra falls in a barrel.. does anyone know this book? HELP!

B73 - I'm sure this is by Roald Dahl - don't think it's The Magic Finger - but he certainly did one where the boy's parents run off and leave him and he's in some kind of accident and a friendly lady doctor puts him back together      with some 'improvements' including the ability to 'go to the bathroom' through the end of one of his fingers! It certainly ends up at Niagara where he or his parents, not sure which, go over the Falls in a barrel. I just can't remember the title at the moment - most infuriating!!
Hi everyone - I'm the original poster and I can't tell you how excited I am that someone knows this book! I'm holding my breath til someone remembers the title /author!! Thank you all so much!
Thanks for your email - some ladies from Alibris and I have been desperately tracking down Roald Dahl to no avail. The info in this post is spot on! It rings even more bells for me and I'm dying for them to repost with the title!!!
Possibly Goldenrod by Jim Slater, illustrated by C. Chamberlain, published by Cape in 1978, 118 pages. I haven't been able to get a decent plot description but it seems to be about William Rod, a boy blind since birth, who is bionically enhanced in some way to give him improved hearing and super sight. His companions are an Indian mystic and a guide dog. After he uses his 'super-powers' he is drained for a while. There's something
about the hijacking of a trans-continental airplane as well.
Hi again! I still can't find the title of this and it's beginning to *really* annoy me! I've looked at all the info on Roald Dahl I can find but can't identify a title. Beginning to wonder if it's someone else after all - but can't think who else writes in this vein... Illustrations almost certainly Quentin Blake - who did most of Dahl's books - spiky line drawings, sometimes with colour, but not, I think, in this one. Have tried looking at list of stuff QB has illustrated in case I can find it that way to no avail so far. Hang in there, poster, I'm not going to let it defeat me - and at least you know it *does* exist!!
I am next to certain this is NOT by Roald Dahl, so I too am looking at other books illustrated by Quentin Blake - perhaps one of Margaret Mahy's?
Seth McEvoy, Batteries Not Included, 1985.  This is mostly a guess -- Seth McEvoy had a series of three or four Pocket Book (mass market pb) originals in series "Not Quite Human" about either a bionic boy or a robot built expertly in the apeparance of, and with the mental processes, a boy  the first title was BATTERIES NOT INCLUDED.  I've not read them but the description of possible cover seems vaguely familiar to me from one of those volumes.  Worth a look, maybe.
Jan Needle, Wagstaffe, the Wind-up Boy, 1987, copyright.  A search for the phrase "pee through his finger" brings up a theatrical adaptation of this book: http://www.fantasticfiction.co.uk/n/jan-needle/wagstaffe-wind-up-boy.htm.  According to the summary on the theatre website:  "Wagstaffe is an adventure story, which should never have happened. Wagstaffe is a boy so awful his parents run away from home and join the circus. For a while he lives in a teenage bliss of slobbing about. Then he meets the articulated lorry.... Well what would you expect if you amuse yourself by throwing eggs at the windscreens of passing motorists on the motorway? Almost by chance, and thanks to a good doctor, Wagstaffe survives. He is rebuilt with the most bizarre modifications including a key to wind him up and he has to pee through his finger. He has inadvertently become the most unlikely superhero with the most ridiculous powers. Life is one big accident for Wagstaffe and he unwittingly uncovers a dastardly plot to send his missing parents over Niagara Falls in a barrel. How bad is Wagstaffe? Will he try to save them? Can he possibly conquer the most impossible odds? Will there be a happy ending?" Sounds like the book you're looking for! :)



B74: Bible stories
Solved:  Uncle Arthur's Bedtime Stories

B75: Brave, his pony and his friend
Solved: Groundhog's Horse

B76: Bee mystery
Solved: Kit Williams' Untitled

B77: Bobwhite quail wins race
Solved: The Bird Foot Race in Follies

B78: Bunny-boo
Solved: Bunny Tales

B81: Bible stories, series, illustrated by Margaret Tarrant?
I am trying to locate books I remember from my childhood, c. 1953. Bible stories for children.  The stories were told by a mother to her three children, Beryl, Derek and Pauline.  Each story had a full-colour facing illustration, I thought by Margaret Tarrant, certainly in her style.  The stories covered the whole Bible, from Genesis to the life of Jesus, and I still remember some of the pictures.  Would have been a UK publication. I beleive I had more than one book, one quite large, and the otheres smaller.
Later...another requester?
When I was a child in Guernsey, some one bought me several books of bible stories.  They were, I thought, illustrated by Margaret Tarrant, but I do not seem able to track anything like that down.  The stories were told by a mother to her three children, Beryl, Derek and Pauline. The stories went right through the bible, from creation right through the life of Christ.  I loved the pictures, and have always wished that I still owned the books.  I do not think they were by Enid Blyton, but that is the author I first thought of when I started my search.  Is there, to your knowledge, a UK site like Loganberry?  I think your website is great - informative and quick to load.  Very efficient  and interesting.

There is a Blyton book like this, but no idea if it has the 3 children or whether it was part of a series: Blyton, Enid, illustrated by Grace Lodge Before I go to Sleep: a Book of Bible Stories and Prayers for Children at Night,  London, Latimer House 1947. 124 pages, quarto, pictorial end papers, coloured plates, line drawings. and another book on the same lines again, maybe not a series: Jones, Mary Alice,  Tell Me About The Bible Rand McNally 1949. "The author has written another beautiful and significant book for children, of vital importance to their religious growth. In the same simple conversational style she introduces small boys and girls to the fascinating story of the Bible that will lead them on to a fuller understanding and enjoyment of the Book of Books. Beautifully illustrated in colour and b/w. Colour frontis. The eps make up a full colour scene of children at play. Illustrated blue and red boards."
I have looked up the Mary Alice Jones books, but I think they are illustrated by Pegalie Doane, and this is definitely not the style of illustration I remember.  So, all you great people out in cyberspace,
please keep your suggestions coming.  Thank you so much for help so far!
Definitely not an Enid Blyton book.  Checked with the official Enid Blyton website and they e-mailed me back.
B81 bible stories: more on one suggested - Before I Go To Sleep, by Enid Blyton, illustrated in 3 colors by Catherine Scholz (US edn different illus), published Little, Brown 1953, 128 pages. "Bible stories, simply and
reverently retold after the King James version - each followed by a short prayer which carries over the meaning of the story into a child's everyday activities." (HB Feb/53 p.3 pub ad) Nothing definite on the Beryl/Derek/Pauline bedtime story structure, though.
Joyce Lankester Brisley, My Bible Book, 1940.  A possibility - not Margaret Tarrant, but similar style and period. Brisley, the author/illustrator, is best known for the Milly-Molly-Mandy books



B82: Ballet dancers dress up as flowers
Solved:  Little Ballerina 

B83: Beaver in a dress
Solved: Harvey's Hideout

B85: Big cheese
Solved: Seldom and the Golden Cheese

B88: Betty June
Solved: Betty June and Her Friends 

B89: Bed of Newspapers
Solved: Not Under the Law

B90: Becca's Book
I am 27 years old. I remember looking at one of my mother's old books when I was a child (about 8 years old or so). I remember the book because I loved the beautiful pictures it had in it. I don't know if the book was hers when she was a child or if it was one she had from teaching 2nd grade. I almost think it was hers from childhood.  Here's what I can remember about the book:  The book was of average size. I think it was divided up into chapters. There were not pictures on every page, but some in each section. The story was about a family. I remember there was a mother, father, and I believe a son & daughter and maybe a baby. Part of the story was about the family moving to a new house. The one part I remember so vividly was a part where the children went to the candy store. There was a picture of the candy store counter. The picture was in color and it was an actual photograph, not a drawing (if I remember correctly). It showed all the different types of candy that they used to sell at the nickel & dime mom & pop stores in the olden days.  I know this isn't much information, but I really can't remember much except those beautiful illustrations.  Any help you can offer will be greatly appreciated.

Not much help, but the book sounds like a school reader in format. I've seen some that were illustrated with photographs. The poster might want to browse through EBay in the Books: Children: Early Readers section and see if any of those ring a bell.
This is a 1st or second grade reader (2nd more likely) from the Alice and Jerry series.  Maybe Streets and Roads.



B91: British army officer's wife
Solved: Mrs. Tim 

B93: Bible story book
Solved:  Uncle Arthur's Bedtime Stories 

B94: Bedtime Story Omnibus Dog Long Ears
Solved: "Bed Time" Stories Omnibus

Stories for Bedtime, (1979) Brimax Books, . There was a revised edition a few years earlier and the book was printed in England. I have been looking for this book for nearly a week, several hours of searching each day! There are several b/w drawings and some really nice pictures - I am ordering my book ASAP, as it's pretty hard to find these days! Try doing a serach on the Illustrator, Eric Kincaid...some of his artwork will remind you of those wonderful childhood days! Good luck, all! :)



B95: Boy falls into pig pen
Solved: Spot


B96: Bonjo
Solved: Magic Tales


B97: Birthday Party soap
Solved:  Hurray for Captain Jane!

B98: Bunny lost blue ribbon
Solved: Bunny Blue

B99: Betty & Bobby Squirrel
Solved: The Story of Bobby Squirrel 

B100: Baseball switcharoo
Solved: Don and Donna Go To Bat

B101: Blyton-like books
Solved: Lone Pine Series 

B102: Betsy Malone
Hello.  I'm looking for a children's series for my mother.  The information she gave me was the main character was an army brat named Betsy Malone and my mother remembers these books from her childhood.  (She was born in the late '30s so I would imagine it was from the late '30s or '40s but possibly earlier.  I'm sorry I don't have more to go on.

Leonora Mattingly Weber, Beany Malone. sounds like the right series not Betsy Malone
B102 betsy malone: perhaps Beany Malone, but the Malone's father wasn't in the military, but in journalism. Janet Lambert's heroines Tippy and Penny Parrish were army brats, as are the children of the Jordon family in a related series. One of the Jordon children is named Bitsy, but that's as close as the names get.
Lenora Mattingly Weber, Meet the Malones1999, reprint I feel sure that your mom is thinking of the "Beany Malone" series by Lenora Mattingly Weber.  Though Beany is not an army brat, the first two stories in the series take place during WWII.  In "Meet the Malones", Beany's journalist father travels to Hawaii to cover the war, and sends 3 war orphans home to live with daughters Mary Fred and Beany and the rest of the family.  Oldest sister Elizabeth is married to a soldier that is sent overseas, she has her baby on a train while coming home to stay with the family.  Mary Fred helps entertain soldiers staying at a local military base (the series is set in Denver, CO) while trying to resolve her own mixed-up love feelings about a show-off football player and a cowboy named Ander.  In the second book, "Beany Malone", Elizabeth's injured husband comes home after the war, ex-GI Ander's troubles at college endanger Mary Fred's chances of joining a sorority, and Beany befriends a shy girl named Kay.  Do these plots sound familiar?  If not than maybe it is the character Bitsy Jordan from Janet Lambert's books.  Most of us who grew up with these series read both, and it would be easy to get the names mixed up.  But, good news, both series have been recently reprinted by the same company, Image Cascade, and you can get descriptions of all the titles by visiting their website, imagecascade.com! 



B103: Bunny doesn't like to eat anything
Solved: Fussbunny

B104: Bear visits grandmother
Solved:  Little Bear's Visit

B105: Bulldozer
Solved: Bulldozer

B106: Beauty and the beast, retelling
Solved: Beauty

B107:  Ballet Dancer / Boy with a scar on his face
Solved: Paquita the Ballerina from Mallorca 

B108: Boy goes on quest
Solved: King with Six Friends

B109: Button Jugs
Solved: Button Jugs

B110: Bagnold the doll
Solved: The Journey of Bangwell Putt

B111: Bunny as doll
I am 32 years old looking for a childrens book I read in my early years putting it in the early to mid 70's.  The story as I remember is as follows-  a yound girl found a little bunny in the bushes, she dressed it up as her doll, and took care of it, the bunny jumped out of her carriage, some boys has teased her along the way.  When she found the bunny it  turned out the bunny had a family of her own in some bushes.  I am not sure the name of the book - maybe "the dressed up bunny" but that may be way off.  I am not sure where to begin to look.  I donot have a working computer of my own and am using my parents when visiting.  I  would likke any information you can give me on this .  Or a route to take to try to lacate this book.  I apprecaite any imput you can give.

B111 bunny as doll: this is similar to Push Kitty, by Jan Wahl, illustrated by Garth Williams, published Harper 1968. "Much to Kitty White's dismay, his little mistress dresses him up as her child and takes him for a stroll in her doll carriage." Of course that's a cat in a doll carriage, not a rabbit, so it probably isn't a match.
Muller, Gerda, The Dressed-up Rabbit.  Racine, Golden 1972.  The title sounds right, and the date is good. A Big Golden
Book. Cover shows rabbit with green mittens and orange scarf. Plot description rather scanty - "A little girl visits her grandmother in the country and learns about protecting animals and plants."



B112: Boy and Blocks
Solved: Building Blocks
B113: Boy travelling in wilderness

Solved: The Magic Forest 
B114: Bah, Humbunny!

Solved: Humbug Rabbit
B115: Ballet/Labanotation Girls Novel

Solved: A Dance for Susie 
B116: Bedtime for Edie

Solved: Edie Changes Her Mind
B117: Boy in outer space

Solved: Jed's Junior Space Patrol
B118: Blue truck

Solved:  Rackety-Boom
B119: Boarding school stolen doll(s)

Solved: Nancy and Plum 
B120: Bowlegged knockkneed horse

Solved: So'm I 
B121: Bread book by diPaola

Solved: Tony's Bread
B122: Boy from another planet?

Solved: Dar Tellum: Stranger from a Distant Planet
B123: Birthday Plant

Solved: The Happy Birthday Present
B124: Boy, Bear and Dog

I had a book which I just loved as a child about a little boy who has a teddy bear he lugs around everywhere.  Page after page the book recalls all the adventures of the little boy with his bear.  The little boy is given a dog at one point in the book and the puppy of course mangles the bear's ear and mom has to stitch him up.  The book continues on with the adventures of boy, bear and dog.  Then, the boy goes to school. The bear is placed in the window to watch when the boy comes home each day. Eventually the boy leaves for college(?) or his own life and the bear is simply left on the shelf. I believe, but not sure, the grown man comes back and gets the bear to give to his child. I remember the illustrations had a lot red coloring.  I want to say there was something red in each picture.  I also believe the story was told from the view point of the bear.

This must be the same book as B136.
B124 boy bear & dog and B136 boy bear & puppy sound like the same book.
Gladys Schmitt, Boris, the Lopsided Bear, 1966.  There is definately a boy (Jody), a bear (Boris) - a gift from Aunt Doris... The boy explains to Aunt Doris why Boris came to be as he is... lopsided, one ear partially chewed, two different eyes... there is a drawing of a dog tossing the bear in the air (the dog had chewed his foot).  Aunt Doris performs an "operation" on Boris to fix him up like new.  There is no red in the book, though.  The cover I have is pink with a brown bear on a green and white bedspread/bed.  Illustrations are by Karla Kuskin.  I hope this is it!



B125: Boy finds cat
Solved: J.T.

B126: Beau for Emily?
Solved: Emmy Keeps a Promise

B127: Bassett Hound Kidnapped
Solved: Something Queer is Going On

B128: Bunny wrong color
Solved: Spotty
B129a: Burning man jaunting

Solved: The Stars My Destination

B129b:  Brown Mouse
Solved: Brown Mouse

B130a:  boy sky green different colors
Solved: A Horse of Another Color
B130b: "blank" The Hideaway Cat

Solved: Hildy's Hideway

B131: baker family
I must have read these series of books hundreds of times and yet all I can remeber is that one of the children my be named Dot. One of the girl's possibly Dot, goes on a diet. She sees her image in a store window and within weeks she stops looking like a "lollipop" and start looking like a "lollypop stick". I also recall that one of the girls wants to take the big cake in the window to the house of a girl friend who is having a birthday. Her father, the baker, says no, but will bake her another. She takes the one in the window only to find out it is made of wood.

B131   Baker Family    The story about the girl who brings a wooden cake to a friend's house is called The Baker's Daughter by Margery Bianco.  ( I think the cake was actually cardboard).   I read this story in The Junior Classics, but it was reprinted there from a book called A Street of Little Shops  , which might have the story about Dot the lollipop girl in it.
Frieda Friedman, ca. 1945 - 1955. Sounds likely that this is one of Frieda Friedman's books, although I couldn't swear which.  Dot appears in a least a couple.  A Sundae with Judy sounds like a good possibility (I think there's definitely dieting in that one), although I don't remember Dot for Short, so might be that.  Family does run a bakery.
Following up my suggestion - I just saw the description of Sundae with Judy in K19: Kubla Khan kids, which specifies candy store rather than bakery.  Hmm. Still might be Friedman, maybe?



B132:  Boy and his elephant Rex
Solved:  Elephant for Rent 

B133:  Bunny in Invisible Bag
Solved: Morris's Disappearing Bag

B134:  Bunchy
Solved: Bunchy
B135: Ballet class with French girl

Solved: Ellen Tebbits

B136:  Boy, Bear & Puppy
I was born in 1972.  When I was around 5 or 6 I had a book about a little boy he gets a Teddy Bear as a gift.  The story is told from the bear's point of view. The bear talks of the great adventures they have sleding and such.  Then one year the boy gets a puppy as a gift and the puppy mangles the bear's ear, but the bear says he didn't mind so much because "mom" sewed it back on.  Finally the boy has to go to school and the bear sits in the window and waits for him and the dog waits by the door.  Then, I believe, the day comes when the bear is put on a shelf because the boy is going away to college.  But the boy comes back and gets the bear and gives it to his little boy.  I think I'm right on the ending..I could be wrong.  I do remember the full page color illustrations having a lot of red in each one.  For example, if the bear and boy are out riding in a toy car, the car is bright red. If they are sledding, the boy has on a bright red coat or scarf.  I believe the dog is an orange/red dog like a retriever.  Also, this book could have been a hand-me-down, as I have a sister 5 years my senior.  My age and the age of the book may very well not coincide.

This must be the same book as B124.
B124 boy bear & dog and B136 boy bear & puppy sound like the same book.
Gladys Schmitt, Boris, the Lopsided Bear, 1966.  There is definately a boy (Jody), a bear (Boris) - a gift from Aunt Doris... The boy explains to Aunt Doris why Boris came to be as he is... lopsided, one ear partially chewed, two different eyes... there is a drawing of a dog tossing the bear in the air (the dog had chewed his foot).  Aunt Doris performs an "operation" on Boris to fix him up like new.  There is no red in the book, though.  The cover I have is pink with a brown bear on a green and white bedspread/bed.  Illustrations are by Karla Kuskin.  I hope this is it!



B137:  Blind Boy Rescues Friend
Solved: The Dark of the Cave
B138: Black ballet dancer

Solved: Another Way to Dance
B139:  Bear--search for "ghost" bear

Solved: The Flaming Bear
B140: Byron dragged behind truck, killed

Solved: Between Dark and Daylight

B141:  Boy Who Sprouts Wings
Solved: Black and Blue Magic
2002


B142: Baby who won't come out
Solved: Baby Come Out

B143: boy ran away into forest
Solved: Little House in the Fairy Wood 
B144: Bunny changes color

Solved: The White Bunny and His Magic Nose 

B145: "banquish," egg (stone?), bumblebee
Solved: The Witch Family
B146: Bobby and Betsy

I don't remember much, but I think this boy and girl were twins.  I thought they were the Bobbsey twins because I read those books.  I found out that wasn't right.  Please help.  Maybe I made them up!

Carolyn Haywood?
There is a Carolyn Haywood book called Betsy and Billy, but the two of them were friends.
Katherine Elizabeth Dopp, Bobby and Betty on the Farm, 1920s or 1930s.  There were two or three books for young children featuring "Bobby and Betty"  the above is one of them.
Carolyn Haywood, the "Betsy" books.  Sounds like Carolyn Haywood to me, but it was "Billy" and Betsy, not
Bobby.  Billy was featured in several of the Betsy books.



B147: Bedtime Stories, with rhymes/poems
For years I have yearned to somehow get a hold of my absolute favorite book from childhood.  It was an anthology of stories along with some rhymes and poems.  What makes my quest a stumper is this:  Neither I nor those in my family who remember my having this book recall its exact title, my father bought it in Tehran, Iran when we lived there from 1975-1977 (but he doesn't recall buying the book or where he bought it from!), at that age (grade school) I didn't concern myself with the publisher's name and location nor the name of the editor or various authors and possible various illustrators, and within a year or so I lost the dust jacket, and don't really recall what it looked like. And then, shortly thereafter, the book was lost in one of our family's moves.  Possibly - and this could just be my imagination - the dust jacket was somewhat glossy and colorfully illustrated and medium blue (possibly from a sky) might have been a predominant color for it.  Being that I got it in the Middle East in the mid 70s, it might have been published somewhere other than the U.S. - London or Amsterdam or the like.  However, there are a considerable number of specifics that I do recall. I'm almost 100% sure had the term "Bedtime Stories" or Bedtime Storybook" was in its title because that's how my sister, mother and I referred to it back then.  It was approximately 9" X 12" and 1" to 1 1/4" thick and had a hunter or pine green cloth (canvassy) hard cover. The pages were of a matte, relatively sturdy texture.  It was full of colorful illustrations throughout, mainly or exclusively watercolors.  My general memory of them is that they were colorful (all full-color) and striking but never overtly so, many of them warm and glowing, some with a more developed use of line than others.   Some of the contents were:  some Aesop'\''s fables such as The Lion and the Mouse (brown tones), The Fox and the Stork (brown tones), The Tortoise and the Hare (probably), the Fox and the Grapes (probably) as well as The Teeny Tiny Woman, Henny Penny (brighter colors), possibly Brer Rabbit (?), a story about a taxicab (a vague remembrance of an illustration of a cab chugging along a highway/freeway), a story about a dollhouse or dollhouse family (I seem to recall a sequel or two of this story within the same anthology and illustrations predominated by pink), One, Two, Buckle My Shoe (double-page spread of small illustrations), A is for Apple (all the way to Z is for ..., double-page spread of small illustrations), The Nut (or Nutmeg) Tree (a soft small illustration of a lone tree bearing one or several golden pears or nutmegs with a light blue sky in the distance).  I think the book also contained Little Red Riding Hood and there might have been a story about a train or an engine (the color red stands out in my mind with this one), and a story about patchwork or a quilt because I seem to recall an illustration of such.  And there were a lot of other stories.   I think many of the stories had double-page spread illustrations and the endpapers just might have been dappled with little illustrations. I'm almost sure that it was written in American rather than British English.  Based on the illustrative style of the book and its availability as brand new at the time my father purchased it, I'd assume it was published in the early or mid 70s (earliest, the 60s, but I doubt this).   Children ages 6-10 could read it on their own. To this day I cannot quite believe that my most cherished childhood storybook is lost in time forever.  Isn't there someone out there who knows of this book, who has ever owned  or still owns it?  I've done different Internet/website and library catalog searches and I don't know where and how else to go. And now I've found your website.  I'd be SO grateful for any leads!

That sounds very much like 365 Bedtime Stories by Nan Gilbert, originally published I think in 1945, by Whitman Publishing in Racine, Wisconsin, and reprinted in 1955 and 1970 and even more recently.  It's heavily illustrated, and there is one story for every day of the year. There is also a newer version (not as good as the older one) called More 365 Bedtime Stories.
The Childcraft set I have at home contains all the rhymes and stories the writer mentions in her request.
Based on the page dedicated to Nan Gilbert that's linked to the "Most Requested Books" page, 365 Bedtime Stories is not the book I'm searching for.  None of the descriptions/characteristics of that book are similar to the book I had as a child,  but I sincerely thank whomever it was who responded to my query.  My book's illustrations had a late1960s - 1970s style to them and it had traditional rhymes and poems and stories (e.g.,  some Aesop's fables) as well as those that weren't traditional or well-known (it had multiple authors).  The book I had was published 1977 or slightly before (My father bought it before we left Iran sometime in 1977) and it had a solid, plain, non-decorated canvas or linen dark green hard cover.   I would be out-of-my-mind elated if someone were able to nail this one on the nose!  I'm glad for this wonder of a website. response #2:  My book was definitely not a Childcraft book, and it was not part of a larger set.  I own a 15-volume Childcraft set (1973 edition) that I've made thorough use of since I was a toddler.  This Childcraft set was my second favorite reading material as a young child, especially Poems and Rhymes, Stories and  Fables, and Children Everywhere, but the book I seek was its own and its style, layout and such were completely different from those of Childcraft (e.g., it had no photographs, no black and white illustrations, completely non-gloss pages, no index, and it came with a dustcover which, to my memory's disadvantage - except what I recall in my original description above - I lost about a year after my father bought the book).  Some of the stories/rhymes/poems from that book appear in these volumes, but it contained many more that do not.  Over the past few years I've done various searches on the Library of Congress website and no fitting description comes up.  Is there a comparable government service in other countries such as the United Kingdom, the Netherlands, Switzerland, Canada, Australia, Germany, just in case this book was published outside the US?
My Book House-In the Nursery. At first I thought this was the book being looked for, but on further reflection it may not be. It does have a hard green cover and cute endpapers and it is full of stories and rhymes and beautiful artwork, but it also is the first in a series and has a picture on the front cover. The book being looked for may also be the second one in this series, which is for older children. A few more stories and longer poems. I don't recall that title, however.
It's been about 18 months since I last had any possible leads on my request.  Since then I have been searching many online international libraries and booksellers, still with no leads.  I just finished reading Rumer Godden's The Doll's House and I feel certain (and shocked and excited to have encountered it after all these years!) that it is the one of the stories in the anthology I am seeking.  This anthology, as I recall it, had the story divided into chapters, or two or three different sections, but probably not back to back/consecutively,  possiblyto allow a visual and mental break for the reader to read other stories in between.   Does anyone know of a singular anthology that contains all of the following plus additional stories (that escape me now): some Aesop's Fables (listed in my original request); The Doll's House  by Rumer Godden; the poemThe Nutmeg Tree ("I had a little nut tree, nothing would it bear, but a sliver nutmeg and a golden pear. The King of Spain's daughter came to visit me,  all for the sake of my little nut tree." ); The Little Red Hen;  Teeny-Tiny (or TheTeeny-Tiny Old Woman);  Little Red Riding Hood;  a story about a yellow taxicab; Number 9: The Little Fire Engine ( possibly included); and the  One, Two, Buckle My Shoe and the A is for  ... - Z is for ... alphabet (alternately called, I believe, The Nonsense Alphabet)?   I also distinctly remember that this book also contained The Boy Who Cried Wolf.  I'm not quite ready to give up yet.
MA Donohue & Co, A Patch-Work Quilt of Favorite Tales,1933. It's a long shot, but my Mom has this book that she's had from childhood.  It has "A Patchwork Quilt," "Peter Rabbit," "Little Black Sambo," "Little Red Hen," "3 Little Pigs," "3 Little Kittens," "Chicken Little," "3 Bears," and a poem entitled "Little Sleepy Head".  The front cover looked like a patchwork quilt with each quilt square containing pictures from each story in the book.  One of the front pages shows a little girl sitting on a bed that has a quilt on it I believe.
AMERICAN CRAYON CO., American Childhood's Best Books Deluxe Edition Ages 4 and up to 8, 1946.
I still have not had the fortune of finding this most cherished book.  I will look into the last two suggestions posted, although I still believe the copyright date is from the '60's or '70's.  I wish there were still something more specific I could remember to make this stumper more likely to be solved.  The only other thing I can recall is that the print was probably aroud 10- or 11-point font size, not what would be considered "large print".
Various, Best In Children's Books, 1950, approximate.  This is a many book set of books that had all kinds of stories compiled inside, from nursery rhymes to Bevery Cleary stories, etc. There are many, many volumes and each book had more than 20 short stories, poems, etc. I have seen these on ioffer and ebay, etc.



B148: Boys' stories anthology, pre-1975
Solved: Giggle Box 

B149: BOY PASSES AWAY/HAND PROPPED UP WITH PILLOW
Solved: Uncle Arthur's Bedtime Stories
B150: blonde/browneyed girl amid whitehaired/blue eyed people

Solved: Tatsinda
B151: Bush pilot fights forest fire

Solved: Young Bush Pilot 

B152: Boy kills best friend gets away with it
This was a short story in my grade school class distributed hardcover book (early 80's)where a boy goes hunting and accidentally kills his best friend.  Most of the story is then about the boys fear that he will be found out and then towards the end he is eating dinner with his friends parents and everyone blames the shooting on either on someone else or it was accidental and he never comes clean but will live with what he's done for the rest of his life.

I don't have a title for this one yet but it's making me crazy;  I think we had the same book!
This sounds like a short story I read in college.  It was called "The Stone Boy."
If it is The Stone Boy, you can read it online.  The story I remember is somewhat different, though.
NOT The Stone Boy, which was made into a terrrific movie with Robert Duvall and Glenn Close. Different plot.
Richard Brautigan, So The Wind Won't Blow It All Away,1982. If the querent hadn't said that this was given out as a school assignment, I could swear it was Richard Brautigan's final, very short novel. The narrator clearly has something to reveal, but can't quite bring himself to remember. Instead, he obsesses on the price of hamburgers, accumulating a vast amount of data about them. It turns out that when he was twelve, the hamburger and a box of bullets were the same price and he went with the bullets. He and his friend went hunting in the woods and he accidentally shot and killed his friend. Already a social outcast, this incident forced his family to leave the area. He tries to blot it from his memory, but never can. This is loaded with details and incidents from Brautigan's real life, so that many people think the accident may have actually happened to Brautigan. He did accidentally shoot a friend at about that age but the friend was only slightly injured. On or about the same day, the son of a prominent local attorney *was* killed in a hunting accident, and Brautigan merged the two stories.



B153: Bonner, John
Solved: John Bonwell: A Novel of the Ohio River Valley, 1818-1862

B154:  Briony, Dilys and Rees Young Adult Novel
Solved: A Candle in Her Room 
B155: biologist cracks counterfeit ring

Solved:  Trouble at Clear Lake 

B156: Boy from regular world training to be witch/warlock in enchanted woods
Solved: Rebel Witch

B157: boys mixed stories, space, lunar
Solved: Stirring Stories for Boys 

B158: Boy, English, timetravels, becomes grandson
Solved: Steps Out of Time

B159: Boy detective/superhero
Solved: Alvin Fernald, Superweasel

B160: Boy and Beelzebub
Solved:  Big Joke Game 

B161: Boots the Cat
Solved:  Boots the Kitten

B161a: Birds as clock, scissor, icecream cones
Solved: Ice-Cream Coot and Other Rare Birds 
B162: Boys gets lost in magical forest trees talk and give him things

This is a child's picture book.  Would have been out in the early to mid 1970's (I was born in 1967).  It was about a little boy who goes into an magical/enchanted forest.  I believe he gets lost. The trees can talk and move and each one gives him something along the way. One tree gives him ice cream, another
marbles and other trees give him some other things.  I cannot even BEGIN to remember what the name of the book is.  Does this ring a bell to anyone?? I would love to order it for my son for x-mas this year.

I remember that one, at least parts of it, no title or author, sorry! The boy was always scared of the forest and usually took the long way around, until something, sounds, music? encouraged him to go through the trees. Only really recall the blue telephone tree.
Schloat, The Haunted Forest.  Found this on another website doing the same thing as this one. http://www.auntbook.com/identified4.html. Scroll down a bit to see the description.


B163: Blyton mystery book- Anytime Tales
I am a reference librarian in Texas but this has me stumped!  I had a book as a child in England, that was published in the late 1940's, probably, as it was a hand-me-down from my older sisters.  Title was
Anytime Tales by Enid Blyton (an anthology).  It is NOT, repeat NOT, that title that was published in the 1970's - nothing like it!  It was a sizable format (the size of a British child's 'annual') and had on the cover an illustration of a little girl, kerchief on head, sitting amongst rolled up carpets and obviously taking a break from Spring cleaning by sitting reading the same book Anytime Tales with her own picture on the cover (sort of a receding mirror image effect - the book with a picture of the book with a picture of the book). This item does not come up in WorldCat database and an authority re: Blyton tells me that even her publisher is not completely sure of all the editions of her stories that were pumped out.  So, this boils down to Have you ever seen one of these?

Enid Blyton, Anytime Tales, 1945.  I don't know if this is it, but there's an Anytime Tales from 1945 (listed without author's name) on this site  -- might be worth going there to see if that's the one.



B164: Betsy or Betty Buttons
Solved:  Betsy Buttons

B165: bells ring old woman's offering
Solved:  Why the Chimes Rang
2003

B166: Billy Goats Learn Math
Solved: Arithmetic for Billy Goats 

B167: Bedtime Stories, angel, fire truck
Solved:  Little Lost Angel
Solved:  Number 9 - The Little Fire Engine 
B168: Boarding School Secret Places

Solved: The Secret Language


B169: Bach and Mendelsohn
Solved: Beyond Desire : a novel based on the life of Felix and Cécile Mendelssohn


B170:  Boy inventor has light-up goggles for night vision
Solved: The Furious Flycyle


B171:  Boys and apple trees
Solved: Two Boys and a Tree


B172: Bear family lives behind the hall closet door
Solved: Susan's Bears


B173:  Baby osprey fall from nest and learns to fly
Around 1970 we had a book about a baby  osprey who falls from the nest and other birds shout advice about how to fly, such as ""Swoop!' called the eagle", or ""Dive!' cried the pelican".

B174: boy that has a secret that scares monsters
Solved: The Book of Giant Stories


B175: boy named boo
I was looking for a book about a boy named Boo that I read my son in the early '60s and a book that I read my grandfather it was Robin Hood but it was illustrated in just in one color , I believe green it had a red cover and was large , atleast 8x11. It was a beautiful book and I read it in the '30s

With no other description to go on, these are the titles I could find: Boo, the Little Indian by Peter Abbott, Avon Pub. 1952 -- Boo: the Boy Who Didn't Like the Dark by Munro Leaf, Publicity Products, 1954 -- Adventures of Boo and Sam & The Return of Boo and Sam by Ruth Johnson -- Boo by Robert E Barry, Houghton Mifflin, 1959.
#B175--boy named boo:  Well, here is a book about a tomboyish girl named  Boo:  I'm Boo ... That's Who!  Gregory, Diana.  Reading, Mass.:  Addison-Wesley, 1979.  Ill. By Susan Spellman Mohn.  After moving from Los Angeles to a small town in the Virginia horse country, 13-year-old Boo comes to the reluctant conclusion that the only way to make friends is to join the local stable and learn to ride.
I had a book, as a child, titled A Boy Called Boo (if I recall the title correctly).  It was about a boy who was very sensitive about his nickname, given to him by his sister when he was an infant.  She could not pronounce his real name other than calling him “Boo.”  The name stuck as a family nickname, that causes him embarrassment when he meets a new neighbor girl who will be his classmate in school.  He goes through much angst until the girl reveals to him that she understands his embarrassment because she, too, had a family nickname.
Sounds great, but I can't find anything by that title to confirm it, or add an author's and publisher's name...



B176: boy from another planet
Solved: The Forgotten Door


B177: boat
Solved: A Little Old Man by the Sea


B178: Baby Raindrop in clouds falling to earth
Solved: Little Bitty Raindrop


B179: Boy & Dog's day on the Railroad
Solved: Pogo's Train Ride


B180: BOOKWORM OR INCHWORM
not a lot of details here.  a young children's book about a worm, for years i've been thinking it was an inchworm, but i recall it involved books and climbing high, maybe a bookworm?  the details are so sketchy, just a sensation i have.  but, he might have been measuring things, too.  i would have been about 6-7 when i read it, in the mid-70's.  i know for sure it wasn't eric carle's "the very hungry caterpillar."

There are lots of stories with similiar elements.  My favorite is Clifton Fadiman's Wally the Wordworm.  But there's also Leo Lionni's Inch by Inch.  And then, if you want to talk about really climbing, there are the caterpillars in Trina Paulus' Hope for the Flowers.
Could this be Richard Scarry's character Lowly Worm? Lowly appears in several of Richard Scarry's books.
Mattern Joanne, Inchworm Helps Out.  Illustrated by Stephen Lewis
Here's the description of Wally The Wordworm (Clifton Fadiman, Lisa Atherton-illus., Stemmer House, 1983): "A worm with a voracious appetite for words who has grown bored with those he finds in the tabloids, discovers the dictionary where his flagging appetite revives. Includes puns, puzzles, and plays on words."



B181: baseball book hit the wall
Solved: The Last Put-Out


B182: Bear who was not
Solved: The Bear that Wasn't


B183: brownstone, policemen, girl, ears pierced with straws
I read this book in first grade and it detailed the story of a girl, possibly African American, living in a brownstone. A policeman was involved in some way, at one point he was carrying the girl, and she most wanted to get her ears pierced. When she did, it was using straws, like drinking straws. No one has any idea what I'm talking about when I try to describe this.  I think it was in a reader, c. 1978.

B183 If family was from Barbados it  would be Marshall, Paule. Brown girl, brownstones.  Random, 1959.
I don't know... Brown girl, brownstones is a pretty thick book for a first-grader...
Bell Mathis, Sharon, Sidewalk Story, 1971, copyright. If you read the story in first grade, it might be Sidewalk Story by Sharon Bell Mathis (1971). It's 58 pgs in paperback. I''ve read this story to my third grade class. It's about Lilly Etta Allen, a 9-year old African American girl living in a brownstone. She wears straws in her ears instead of real earrings while she waits for gold earrings on her birthday. But the main plot involves her trying to help her best friend Tanya, whose family is being evicted from their apartment. Near the end, a reporter discovers Lilly Etta sleeping atop Tanya's belongings in the street and possibly carries her off the pile since it's raining.



B184: Boy befriends "evil" dragon
Solved: Tears of the Dragon


B185: Basement
Solved: Harry and the Terrible Whatzit


B186: Boston illustrated book
My book is set in Boston, and I believe the heroine/protagonist is a little girl. As far as I remember the plot has something to do with her visiting various local landmarks. The book is illustrated with drawings rather than photos, I think in a mix of black and white with splashes of color, but if not then maybe just color. I think it may have been published in the 1970's but I suppose it could have been earlier, and the book was set in the present rather than being a historical story. My paperback copy had a blue illustrated cover, and I think the title was written in scrolly type writing and ran vertically along the left side of the front cover. Also, the book was short vertically and longer horizontally. Not much to go on I know but I appreciate your help, thanks.

For what it's worth, Mary Ellen Chase wrote a book titled Journey to Boston, dated 1965.
Inger Elliott McCabe, A Week in Amy's World, 1970.
?, As I was crossing Boston Common. This was a picture book that my kids enjoyed in the mid-70's or thereabouts. I
can't remember the details, but the refrain was "as I was crossing Boston Common, not too fast and not too slow." Maybe others will remember the details.
A Week in Amy's World: New England would be a good match expect that it is illustrated with photos, not drawings.  Summary:  "Seven year old Amy of Cambridge goes to school, sightsees in a museum, visits her grandparents, and waits for snow."  Maybe one of these three books will ring a bell, though.  Today in Old Boston by ElvaJean Hall, 1975, 48 pp., sketches by Joanna Adamska-Koperska.  Summary: "Explains the historical significance of Boston's most important historic buildings and sights."  Or, Hear Ye of Boston, by Polly Curren, 1964, 39 pp., color illustrations by Kurt Werth, color map on end papers, 27 x 28 cm. (slightly wider than taller).  I don't know whether the illustrations are photos or art, they are called "pictures" in the description.  Finally, I found A Beacon Was Hoisted, by Barbara Ratner Gantshar, 1975, 40
pp., color illustrations, "Short rhymes introduce the sights of Boston and their historical significance."
A Week in Amy's World: New England would be a good match expect that it is illustrated with photos, not drawings.  Summary:  "Seven year old Amy of Cambridge goes to school, sightsees in a museum, visits her grandparents, and waits for snow."  Maybe one of these three books will ring a bell, though.  Today in Old Boston by ElvaJean Hall, 1975, 48 pp., sketches by Joanna Adamska-Koperska.  Summary: "Explains the historical significance of Boston's most important historic buildings and sights."  Or, Hear Ye of Boston, by Polly Curren, 1964, 39 pp., color illustrations by Kurt Werth, color map on end papers, 27 x 28 cm. (slightly wider than taller).  I don't know whether the illustrations are photos or art, they are called "pictures" in the description.  Finally, I found A Beacon Was Hoisted, by Barbara Ratner Gantshar, 1975, 40 pp., color illustrations, "Short rhymes introduce the sights of Boston and their historical significance."
I think As I Was Crossing Boston Common can be eliminated.  While it is the correct shape (wider than it is tall) it doesn't feature any specific places around Boston.  It's about a parade of animals (and little-known ones at that) that come in alphabetical order.
Kathryn Lasky, I Have an Aunt on Marlborough Street.  Possibly too recent, but another possibility



B187: Bimulus nights
Solved: When the Sky is Like Lace


B188: bendemolina
Solved: Bendemolena


B189:  black children with colorful parasols
One picture in the book shows black children in the back of wagon going to church.  Each one had a colorful parasol.  The children were poor and lived in a rural area of the country.  I don't remember much of the plot.  I more remember my mother's commenting about the colorful parasols.  This was a library book that my mother got for us in the early to mid 50s, which makes me think the book was written in the 30s, 40s, or early 50s.  It was a large hardback book.

B189 Eva Knox Evans, Araminta books.  1930s. Other possibilities could include Inez Hogan's Nicodemus books.



B190: Battle for the universe
Science fiction, ACE Double I believe, I read in early 70;s probably from early 60's late 50's.  A man is walking down the street in a small town and trips on a crack in the sidewalk, falls to the ground, is knocked out.  When he comes to, he realizes that he is not human but an agent of a galactic empire.  He is sad that he has to leave his wife and kids and join the cause of  (the next part is suspect - he is able to launch himself into the air and changes shape, into a delta wing, rises above the galactic plane and sees enemey forces approaching this part of the galaxy, he "radios" in to tell his galactic govt about the invasion).  This is the important part:  There are two sides to the battle for the galaxy and eventually the universe. Each side keeps upping the technological stakes until one side completely destroys the universe and RECREATES  IT WITHOUT THE OTHER SIDE EVER HAVING EXISTED.  This is not Van Vogt's "The Silky" or "The Star Kings", books I thought it was and bought.  Thx

B190  Here is an address for a listing of ACE Doubles.  Perhaps the reader will recognize a title.



B191: Brr said Mrs. Gray squirrel
Solved: Pillowtime Tales


B192: Bunny saves TG Turkey with helicopter ears
My husband fondly remembers this books from the late 1950s/early '60s: T.G. Turkey is saved from being the main course at Thanksgiving by his friend the bunny, who twirls his/her ears like helicopter rotors, and they escape!

B193: Behind the Couch
Solved: A Child's Garden of Verses


B194: Boys fly after putting ointment on shouderblades  (spaceship?)
Solved: Black and Blue Magic


B195: Boys fly after putting ointment on shoulders (spaceship?)
Solved: Black and Blue Magic


B196: bear
Solved: Teddy Bear of Bumpkin Hollow


B197: Ballet student learns notation
Solved: A Dance for Susie

Lee Wyndham, Dance to My Measure and Ballet Teacher, 1958 and 1956, copyright.  I believe that this question refers to not one but two books by Lee Wyndham, the author of the Susie series. Dance to Measure is about a young woman named Shelly Andrews who studying to become a ballerina. She takes a summer job working at a playhouse and learns Labanotaion and choreography. When the choreographer has an accident, Shelly must choreograph a new musical for the playhouse theatee. She realizes that balet choreography, rather than dancing is her true vocation. Ballet Teacher is a book about another young woman, Nora Graham, who longs to be a prima ballerina. When an automobile accident ends that dream, she finds happiness.. and love in her new profession as a ballet teacher.


B198: bunnies arrive every day of a month
Solved:  April Rabbits


B199: boy becomes ant, shirttail
Solved: City Under the Back Steps


B200:  Birthday for Bird
Solved:  A Birthday for Bird


B201: Benny and the Seeds
Solved:  Seeds and More Seeds


B202: Boy who can Teleport
Solved: The Case of the Vanishing Boy


B203: biting ants in tree
Solved: Giants and Witches and a Dragon or Two


B204: BunBun (mrs Bunny?)
Solved: Waggy and His Friends


B205: beaver, bear, dam, will-o-the wisp
1955-1960  The cover was brown. Many illustrations of a beaver and a bear. Descriptions of the beaver dam and how he built it with mud. The bear and beaver face or discuss danger in finding one's way in the woods or swamps owing to the will-o-the wisp.

I don't have a description, but there is a book titled The Bear and the Beaver by Charles Frankel, ill. by Bill Crawford (Sloane, 1951).



B206: brave, I am brave
sesame street book,  1987.  This was a sesame street book which starred Oscar the grouch, he faced several situations which he dealt with by repeating to himself, "I am brave, I am brave, I am brave, brave, brave".  This book was extra large sized and I believe had (a blue) Oscar on the cover?

The books I've found featuring Oscar are: A Day in the Life of Oscar the Grouch, How to be a Grouch, Oscar's Stinky Birthday, and Oscar's Book.  It seems kind of strange for Oscar to be proclaiming his bravery, though--that seems more in keeping with Elmo, Grover or Big Bird.  I would name Grover as the most likely candidate, since he is blue and Oscar is most definitely green.
It's gotta be Grover.
Norman Gorbaty, Sesame Street: Goodnight Little Grover.  How about this one?  I can see how going to bed might spark fears, thus leading to the "I am brave" comment.  Plus it was published in '87.
No, it isn't Good Night Little Grover--I had that one all memorized from nightly readings, and it's just about Grover's going-to-bed routine.
Dan Elliott, Deborah Hautzig, Joe Mathieu, A Visit to the Sesame Street Hospital, 1985.  Could this be it?  Sounds like a good reason to be brave. "Grover, his mother, Ernie and Bert visit the Sesame Street Hospital in preparation for Grover's upcoming tonsillectomy. The familiar characters change an unfamiliar hospital into a place to be trusted, and many typical questions are discussed."
The Monster at the End of the (this ?) Book, earlier than 1983.  Grover spends book trying to keep reader from turning pages only to discover at the end that he is the monster the title mentions. He does frequently say that he is not really scared but I don't remember a regular chant of  "I am brave".



B207: Boa
Solved:  Isadora


B208: Benjamin or Roger
Solved:  The Boy Who Could Make Himself Disappear


B209: Baby Robin Learns to Fly
I can't remember the title of this book, but it was a children's book about a baby robin learning to fly. The mother robin would try to get the baby to fly, and say "Itty bitty Bobin-boo, why can't you fly?" Just one of those books I can't get out of my head, and would love to read to my 2 yr old daughter!

Ruth Boldan, Sammy Robin Learns to Fly.  One possibility.
Edna Mitchell Preston, Ickle Bickle Robin,1973.  "While his father is saying that he is a crybaby and his mother that he is too young, a little robin learns to fly."  I haven't read it to be sure about the "Itty bitty" line, but the title sounds like it might be the same one.



B210: Bessy, I'm a little messy
Solved: Henry's Wagon


B211: Basho haiku with Japanese drawings
Large dark cover, perhaps one of a series. Besides the Japanse section there's another on medieval tapestry. Simplified line drawings with color touches. One of a girl sweeping plum blossoms. Another of a fat little baby with a topnot. A haiku, "One chestnut, only one, his hand can hold, my little son."

Olive Beaupre Miller, Little Pictures of Japan, 1925. Although the medieval tapestries part does not fit, the rest of what you described sounds like Little Pictures of Japan.



B212: Blossoming
this book was about the emergence of a butterfly from a cocoon, but not a science book. it was about someone "blossoming"

Trina Paulus, Hope for the Flowers, 1972.  Could this be it?  "A tale partly about life, partly about revolution and lots about hope for adults and others (including caterpillars who can read). A strange allegorical tale seemingly about a caterpillar who can't find a purpose in life and when does tries to walk all over others to reach the goal, then discovers what living life is all about with love and friendship, only to be caught up in the trials and "dog eat dog" part of life again. Finally, exhausted, depressed and near "death" tries to recapture hope for living. Hope that he can really change to be a beautiful butterfly."
Robert Kraus, Leo the Late Bloomer.  This is a stretch because Leo is a tiger, not a butterfly, but the key phrase near the end is something like "Then one day, Leo bloomed!"  Prior to blooming, Leo is pretty clumsy. Leo's father is very worried about him and watches him constantly for signs of blooming, but Leo is just a late bloomer.  It has very colorful illustrations by Jose Aruego.
This might be Marilyn Sachs' The Fat Girl (1983) "In the end, Jeff's cocoon releases a butterfly (Ellen) who no longer needs him."
Deluise, Dom, Charlie the Caterpillar, 1990.  Perhaps this is the book you are thinking of.
Ernst, Lisa Campbell, Bubba  and Trixie, 1997.  Here is another title with the same theme.



B213: Black woman sets up scholarship program
about a black woman who set up a scholarship for black children to send them to college if they made decent enough grades. It may have been in Philadelphia.

coleman, evelyn, The riches of oseola McCarty, 1998.  This might be the one you want. But she is from Mississippi, not Philadelphia.
Ella K. Carruth , She Wanted to Read: The Story of Mary McLeod Bethune,1977.  It's been a long time since I read this, and I no longer have my copy to check the details, but could this be it?



B214: Brother and Sister Detectives
I remember reading in the Coronado (CA) Elementary School Library (4th? or 5th? grade) a series of mysteries. The principals were a brother and sister team (English?) who would get very deep into exciting, foreign adventures/mysteries, somehow.  They'd always get back home fine in the end - mystery solved, bad guys dealt
with. These were book-size books, and very compelling as I can recall. This was 1950 or 51, so they could have been published any time before - they were not new then, and for all practical purposes, could have been set in the thirties. I remember them eating hard biscuits and such. I couldn't find these books for my four kids - maybe for the grandchildren?? Many Thanks!

Enid Blyton, Adventure series (The Island of Adventure, etc.).  Sound like possibilities. There are actually two brother/sister pairs who end up living essentially as one family. Otherwise, definitely fit the description.
Early 50's-mmmm maybe Dorothy Clewes mysteries that involved the Hadley family. Their father is a police inspector. Peter and Eileen are the main characters, younger brother John to a lesser degree. Some of the Hadley family stories: Mystery of the Blue Admiral, The Mystery of the Lost Tower Treasure, Mystery of the Jade Green Cadillac - there are several others as well, I believe!
B214 If it is this author: Clewes, Dorothy, Roller skates, scooter and bike. illus by Sofia Coward, 1966.  juvenile mystery; gypsies; roller skates.  Rory, Kay and Gerald series
Here's another suggestion! Hilda Boden's Marlow series with Terry, Barbara and Carl. Titles include: Marlows at Castle Cliff, Marlows into Danger, Marlows and the Regatta, Marlows Pigeon Post, Two Lost Emeralds, and others! Boden has other mysteries in which the Marlows do not appear. I'm not sure if there is another series there.
Margaret Sutton, c.1932.  Judy Bolton mysteries? Judy's brother and she were sent on a bunch of mysteries ala Nancy drew/Hardy boys



B215: blueberry pie for an elf
Solved: Blueberry Pie Elf


B216: Bound Girl
Solved: Bound Girl


B217: Baby Ben
Solved: The Wild Baby


B218: bears eating getting ready for hybernation
Solved: The Smartest Bear and His Brother Oliver


B219: "Beep beep" said the Jeep
Solved: Beep! Beep! I'm a Jeep!


B220: Bunnies dressed in clothes (in color)
Solved: Three Little Bunnies

B221: bear fur coat
Solved: Not this Bear!


B222: Bertram and the rhinoceros
Solved: Bert