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E1:
Everglades
As I've gotten older I've enjoyed reading books from my childhood.
One of my favorites, which was in several school libraries in the late
50's, was about several kids living someplace like the Everglades
or Bayou. They explored in a canoe or similar boat. They
discover
an Island (I think) in the swamp with an uprooted tree. They discover
an
old Indian grave which has been exposed when the tree fell over. Some
time
after the discovery they are camped out there and get scared by the
skull.
As I remember, a professor or archeologist was trying to scare the kids
off. The book may have been a Weekly Reader book club book, I'm not
sure.
Any ideas how to track this down? Thanks!
E1--Sounds as though it may be The
Secret
of Crossbone Hill by Wilson Gage.
I don't want to be discouraging, but I also don't
want to see someone go off on the wrong track. I read The Secret
of Crossbone Hill over the weekend and I don't think it's the
solution
to the book described. The Secret of Crossbone Hill is
about
a brother and sister, spending their summer at the beach in South
Carolina
with their bird-watching mom and researcher dad, who think they've
found
a pirate's treasure map woven into a bird's nest. They go through a
series
of adventures before they find out it's actually a map showing where a
certain kind of rare bird is nesting. The box they find containing what
they think is treasure contains undeveloped film, lost by an old man
whose
hobby is bird-watching and who has been photographing the birds.
I'n not a 100% sure, but E1 sounds vaguely like
one of the Happy Hollister books, The Happy Hollisters and the
Sea
Turtle Mystery. All the details don't exactly match, but
the time would be right. The six siblings, boys and girls, are visiting
in Florida and solve a mystery on Sanibel and Captiva islands. It
involves
Indians, and criminals who try to scare the children away. I
don't
think there were any skulls involved.
Might this be The Secret Raft by
Krantz?
A few possibilities to add to the mix: Barbour,
Ralph
Henry,
Mystery on the Bayou NY Appleton-Century 1943,
hardcover, 237 pages, illustrated by Thomas McGowan.
Sackett, Bert,
Hurricane
Treasure: the Secret of Injun Key Random House 1945, 298pp.
adventure
story, juvenile mystery, "novel set in the Florida Keys Novel of a boy
trying to save his father's land in the Florida Everglades. Map
endpapers"
Though the boys here look too old to be frightened off by a skull. Urmston,
Mary,
Swamp Shack Mystery NY Doubleday 1959 illustrated by Grace
Paull, "Further adventures of the Arnold children; Roger, Clayt, Dunc,
Red, Mark, Linda and Judy." juvenile mystery
Yet another possibility: The Secret of
Mound Key by Robert F. Burgess, illustrated by Vic
Donahue,
published Cleveland, World 1966 "A hunt for buried pirate's
treasure
leads two boys into adventure they never expected. The exotic
swamplands,
shell islands and blue waters of the Gulf of Mexico offer adventures of
their own. An unusual story of Florida coastal waters. Ages 9-12."
(Horn Book Feb/66 publishers ad p.105) More on The Secret Raft
by Hazel Krantz, illustrated by Charles Geer, published by
Vanguard
1966, 190 pages "Opens as an everyday adventure story of
scatterbrained,
impulsive Howie Blake and his friends the Matson twins. Starting with
an
early morning jaunt to see a sunrise on the river, the 3 children
discover
what they believe to be a trio of foreign agents. On a home-made raft
they
trail their quarry up the river into the forbidden, dangerous
swampland,
only to find that their 'spies' are actually a professor with two
medical
students engaged in antibiotic research on an uninhabited island. Later
the children return and help with some of the chores; they are
introduced
to the painstaking methods of scientific investigation and the joys of
eventual success."
Same as C56? Zapf,
Marjorie.
The
Mystery of the Great Swamp
E2:
elves
I hope someone remembers this book. I read it often at my Gramma's
house when I was very young (4-6), and it had originally belonged to my
dad, which would make it from the 30's or early 40's. It was about a
little
boy. One night a little elf came down from the sky and took him up to
the
moon, and then they spent the night painting the stars. There were a
lot of elves, all painting stars--it was their job. Since
reading
the book, I found the poem that goes "Someone needs to go polish the
stars,
they're looking a little bit dim" or something like that, but this book
is NOT that poem.
I wonder if E2 could be The Garden
Behind
the Moon by Howard Pyle.
This wasn't a Howard Pyle book. It was
a picture book, and the illustrations were in bright primary
colors. I remember the boy went to bed,
and the elf woke him up. I *think* they rode a rocket to the
moon, but I'm not positive. (If not,
how did they get there?) They painted stars all night, and then
when
morning got near, the elf took the boy back home. I remember a
two-page
spread picture of stars, all with elves on them, holding tin pails of
paint
and little whitewash brushes. And were they singing? They
might
have been singing, too. Aarrgghh!
The Starcleaner Reunion by Cooper
Edens, published by Green Tiger 1979 - if it is a reprint of an
earlier
book? * Later - nope, doesn't look like a reprint.
Not much to go on but the title - Paul's
Trip With the Moon, by E.W. Weaver, published New York,
Merrill 1912 (c.1899) 92 pages, blue pictorial cloth cover. This looks
too late - The Moon Painters and Other Estonian Folk Tales
by Selve Maas, illustrated by Laszlo Gal. It was published by
Viking
Press, 1971, 143 pages, beautifully illustrated throughout with nicely
rendered pencil drawings. 15 tales plus a glossary of terms.
not much to go on, but perhaps Karl's
Journey
to the Moon, written and illustrated by Maja Lindberg,
translated
from the Swedish by Siri Andrews, published New York, Harcourt 1927. "A
slight but pleasing
modern fairytale. Its illustrations in clear,
beautiful colors and interesting design make of it a delightful picture
book." (Children's Catalog 1936 p.406)
Something about this description makes me think
of an old book I had as a child, Greta in Weatherland. A
little girl goes out on a dark windy rainy night, opens up her umbrella
and is swept away to magic land where weather is made. One illustration
has elves or gnomes hammering out sunbeams.
Twinkletoes. I'm the original
poster of this stumper, and my Mom finally thinks she remembers what
book
I'm talking about! She says it was called Twinkletoes,
but
doesn't have any other information. I'm sure I would recognize it
immediately if I saw it. How about it, Harriet? Can you
finish
the puzzle?
Well, there's a Shirley Temple's
Twinkletoes
from 1936, and a Tiny and Twinkletoes from 1978 by Audrey
Tarrant, and also Twinkletoes by Gwen Evrard,
Colleen
Moore and Thomas Burke.
E2 elves: going only by the title, maybe Twinkle
Toes
and
his
Magic
Mittens by Laura Rountree Smith, illustrated
with
full page plates in colour by F. R. Morgan, published Whitman
1919,
thin octavo, pictorial cloth boards, decorated endpapers, 6 colour
printed
dustwrappers, "from the elusive "For All Children from 5 to 10" series,
an exceptionally rare title."
E4-A: Eileen
and Eddie
This was something I read when I was very young - about six.
It was about two children called Eileen and
Eddie
who
got into some kind of fairyland. It was all very modern and they
got driven around in a car. Despite the fact that it was written
for children, I remember the humour in it being very dry, but I can’t
remember
any specific examples.
#E4-A: Eileen and Eddie. The only
fairy story with cars which comes immediately to mind is The
Gnomobile
by U. B. Sinclair, only in that one, it was the humans who
drove
the gnomes around, not the other way. And if
you read it at six, you're truly a genius:
it's about twelve-year-old reading level. Disney made a movie of
it. Karen Dotrice and Matthew Garber, from "Mary Poppins," played
the two kids.
Possibly The Cinematograph Train
by G.E. Farrow (once well-known as author of the Wallypug
books),
illustrated by Alan Wright, published London, 1904. Bobbie and Evelyn
go
to the cinematograph (the famous first moving picture showing a train
rushing
toward the audience) and find themselves on the train station platform.
This is Dreamland Junction and they take the train to Fairyland, where
a they are met by an odd little driver with a
"well-appointed motor-car". He drives them to
meet the Queen of the Fairies - they and the car shrink as they go, to
fairy-size. The humour is whimsical and could be called dry. "A stuffed
Griffin with a cold is such a stupid thing to be" laments one creature
from Nightmare Forest. Fairy baking powder is put into cakes which make
those who eat them lighter than air so they can levitate and escape
from
the evil giant Mam-on who keeps his subjects as slaves. The names
aren't
quite right - but there's a Prince Eddie in another story, who becomes
a Fairy Tale Prince for a while, and discovers it's harder than it
looks.
E5: Elizabeth
doll
Solved: Elizabeth
E6: Elephant
dung
Story line. Short story. Man cleans up after elephants in circus.
Getting teased by 2 locals. He convinces them that elephant manure has
secret properties (I can't remember what). He not only gets them to do
his job but sells them the manure as well. Same kind of twist as Tom
Sawyer
and painting the fence. I read it about 45 years ago. Wasn't new then.
Thought O'Henry but couldn't find it under his writings.
McGraw, Eloise, Sawdust in his shoes,1950.
This is not a short story, but the young man here runs off to join the
circus and this sounds like one of the chapters.
E6 elephant dung: another possible title is Elephant
Tramp, by George Lewis as told to Byron Fish, published
Little Brown 1955. "Lewis was only 16 when he ran away from home
and
got his first job as a pony 'punk' just to be near elephants. His
greatest
ambitions were realised when he took over, at varying times, the two
biggest
and meanest tuskers of them all - Ziggy and Tusko. The book is full of
elephant lore and experiences funny, dangerous and disastrous." (HB
Apr/55 p.132) Again, it's a book, not a story, but it could have been
excerpted.
This is absolutely NOT Sawdust in his Shoes
by Eloise Jarvis McGraw. I know and love the book, and there is
nothing about elephants in it at all.
Spangle. Searcher is looking
for a short story about a man in a circus who sweeps up after the
elephants,
gets teased, and turns the tables in a Tom Sawyer's painting the fence
trick. Check out the book titled Spangle. This is
NOT
a short story but a very thick and heavily researched fictional account
of circus life. It is "gritty" and NOT for children.
However,
the elephant dung story appears in the book in slightly altered form
and
I think the book has lots of references and notes at the end, so it may
point the searcher to the original story.
E9: Early
American
ghost
stories
The same aunt who gave me Paulus and the
Acornmen
also gave us an oversize hardback anthology of Early American ghost
stories.
I remember specifically there was a story concerning General Wayne and
one about Natchez. I think the dust jacket was white with black letters
but the words escape me; there was a ?shades of black and grey?
watercolor
illustration in a square in the center under the title. Usually I
remember
the image of book covers but I'm not 100% sure of the cover; just
Natchez
and General Wayne. I'm not even sure it was for children specifically.
Kudos to your site and thanks again!
Some possibles - the first doesn't look bad: Harter,
Walter, Osceola's Head and Other American Ghost Stories illustrated
by
Neil
Waldman,
Englewood
Cliffs,
Prentice-Hall
1974,
71
pgs
ISBN
0-13-642991-2,
"Juvenile.
Ten
stories
present
the
historical
backgrounds
of
ghosts
still
haunting
Valley
Forge,
the
White
House
and
other
places
in the United
States."
Baker,
Betty, ed. Great Ghost Stories of the Old West Four
Winds
Press 1968 "A collection of eight eerie, spooky, mysterious, and
terrifying
ghost stories for young readers that proclaim that ghosts followed the
Westward trails of America." Smith, Susy, Prominent American
Ghosts
Cleveland, World Publishing 1967 blue cover with black lettering,
illustrated
by photographs.
Another one is Ghosts that Still Walk:
Real Ghosts of America by Marion Lowndes, illustrated
by
Warren Chapell, published NY Knopf 1941 "Sixteen stories of
friendly,
famous ghosts that still come back in America." The picture of the
cover shows a large bare-limbed tree, with a steep-roofed house in the
bush behind it, rather dark.
E9 early american ghost stories: more on one
suggested - Osceola's Head and Other American Ghost Stories,
by Walter Harter, illustrated by Neil Waldman, published
Prentice-Hall.
71 pages. Contents include: THE GHOST AT VALLEY FORGE, BLOODY
HANDPRINTS
ON THE WALL, JAMIE DAWKIN'S DRUM, OSCEOLA'S HEAD, THE HOUSE THAT HATED
WAR, THE ACTOR WHO WOULDN'T STAY DEAD, THE GHOSTS OF FOLEY SQUARE, THE
GHOSTLY INHABITANTS OF FORT MONROE, THE WITCH IN THE POND, THE MYSTERY
OF THE GOLD DOUBLOONS. I don't know anything about
American ghost lore, so I don't know if these
correspond to the remembered stories or not.
E14: Efi
Solved: Where's Wally?
E16: Elevator
Operator
Solved: Strange but True
- 22 Amazing Stories
E19: Encyclopedia
Brown
with
a
twist
of
magic...pre-Potter!
Solved: Lemonade
E20: Eighteen
cousins
Solved: Eighteen
Cousins
E21: Enemy
Brother
Solved: Enemy Brother
E22: Elmer
Solved: My Father's
Dragon
E23: Earth,
behind-the-scenes
Solved: Caretakers of
Wonder
E24: Elevator
goes
back
in
time
Solved: Time at the Top
E25: Essay
Contest
Winner
wants
Bicycle
Solved: Nothing Rhymes With April
E26: Escape
Outside
Solved: This Time of
Darkness
E27: Everything
turned
to
sweets
Solved: The Sweet Touch
E28: Enchanted
Valley, Fairies, Goblins
Solved: Shadow Castle
E29: Elf
in
a
jar
Solved: Poppy, the Adventures of a Fairy
E30: Etiquette
and grooming for girls
Solved: Betty Cornell etiquette series
E31: English
policeman holds childrens hands
REWARD FOR THIS BOOK: red cloth book about 5 x 7-maybe a little
larger. On the front is a London policeman holding two childrens
hands,a
little girl on one side and a little boy on the other. It has several
color
picture pages in it throughout the book.I think the first picture in
the
book has a tissue-like paper over it. I think the story is about a
widower
with two children in London who hires a mean nanny. The children try to
run away and meet a policeman who guides them back home.My copy got put
in a garage sale when I was a little girl.Now I want the book back to
give
to my daughter. The book is for older children.THANKS TO ANYONE WHO CAN
HELP!!!
Ford, Jenifer, The House in Hyde Park,
1956, illus by Joan Robinson. I know this is a long shot.
Shaw, Jane, Susan's Helping Hand.
Children's Press 1960. A bit doubtful about this - some editions
do have a pictorial
cover showing a boy, a girl and an English bobby,
but the cloth is usually green, and Children's Press usually only had a
frontispiece illo, not plates throughout. Plot description is that
Susan's
habit of being helpful leads her into trouble.
L.E.Tiddleman, A Bright Little Pair (1913 approximate)
Definitely the book,but comes in different editions with different
pictures
on front.
E32: Eloise
Wilkin
Solved: A Child's Year
E33: English
girl, snowstorm brings neurosurgeon
Solved: Zara
2002
E34:
The Easter Hanky Bunny
Solved: The Tale of the
Napkin
Rabbit
E35:
elephant in closet, different color
Solved: Pink Elephant with Golden Spots
E36:
European five chinese brothers
Solved: The King With Six
Friends
2003
E37:
Elephant's career choice
Solved: Fuzzy Wuzzy
Elephant
E38:
Easter egg painter
Solved: Grandpa Bunny Bunny
E39: English
children
on
Holiday
Solved: Five Fall Into Adventure
E40: Easter
Bunny
magic
shoes
Solved: Grandpa Bunny Bunny
E41: Embalming,
sun people, tree people
Solved: The Faraway Lurs
E42: English
children's
camping
adventures
Solved: The Far-Distant
Oxus
E43: English
kids
discover
secret
tunnel
Solved: The House of Secrets
E44: Eskmo
child
lost
storm
igloo
Solved: Their First Igloo
on Baffin Island
E45: e
is for eagle balding and spralding
I'm looking for an ABC book. It has
in it E is for Eagle balding and spralding and Z is for Zmu
E46: East
Indian
fable
An East Indian fable about a boy, who when
asked if he had learned his writing lesson, replied that no, he had
not.
His teached proceeded to beat his for failing to learn the lesson.
Apparently
in India, writing lessons contain spiritual or moral lessons. I
do
not remember what the spiritual lesson was, but later the boy returned
to the teacher and told him that he had mastered the spiritual
lesson.
The teacher was very ashamed when he realized that the boy had been
trying
to learn the spiritual message and not just the words themselves.
E47: Ever
So
Much
More
So
Solved: Centerburg Tales
E48: Entering
a
strange
city
Solved: Notes on Arrival
E49: Everglades-boy
pulls raft to solve swamp mystery
Solved: Mystery of the Great Swamp
E50:
Embalming,
sun people, tree people
Solved: The Faraway Lurs
E51:
Evacuation
from Europe
I would have read this story sometime in the
1970's; almost certainly not later than 1980. It is a young adult
book.
It concerned a girl(?) who was evacuated from her home during World War
2. What stands out in my mind was that she was relocated to a camp of
sorts,
not to someone's home. I believe that she attended one camp, returned
home
briefly, and then went to another camp. I also seem to remember a
scene where the group of young people are trudging through a blizzard,
possibly when they first arrive at the camp. There may also be a scene
involving peeling potatoes (or I may have that confused with Anne
Frank).
My memories are sketchy, so any ideas are most welcome!
Esther Hautzig, The Endless Steppe.
Set in Siberia. A likely possibility.
Thanks, but I'm certain that it's not The Endless Steppe.
This is only a possibility, as I don't recall
plot details, but you might try The Ark or Rowan
Farm
by Margot Benary-Isbert.
Could this be When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit?
Anne Holm, North To Freedom.
This could be North To Freedom. That story is
about
a boy named David. I probably
read it somewhere around 1970-1972.
This doesn't sound like The Ark
or Rowan Farm. the family in The Ark has been
displaced
from their home in Pomerania and is forced to relocated to a city
somewhere
else in Germany later they move to a farm outside the city and
Margaret,
the oldest girl, helps breed dogs. There is some mention of them living
in refugee camps, but that happens before the book starts.
Lois Lowry, Number the Stars.
Could this be Number the Stars? "Ten-year-old
Annemarie
Johansen and her best friend Ellen Rosen often think of life before the
war. It's now 1943 and their life in Copenhagen is filled with school,
food shortages, and the Nazi soldiers marching through town. When the
Jews
of Denmark are "relocated," Ellen moves in with the
Johansens and pretends to be one of the family.
Soon Annemarie is asked to go on a dangerous mission to save Ellen's
life."
Levitin?, Journey to America
Ian Serraillier, Escape from Warsaw
Escape from Warsaw is about two sisters and a brother who escape from
their
bombed-out house in Warsaw and end up in several displaced-persons
camps
in Europe, trying to find their parents. Much of the story is told from
the point-of-view of the older sister, Ruth. My copy was published in
1963
by Scholastic, and the cover shows the children walking through snow.
Christine
Arnothy,
I am fifteen and I don't
want to die, 1956, copyright. I haven't read this
in a long time, but I think it fits the description.
E52: english
kid
locked
in
pantry
with
nitroglycerin
Solved: The Case of the
Silver
Egg
E53:
English
teen (or preteen) whose parents are killed in a car
Solved: High House
E54:
English
girl
in
Vicksburg
during
the
civil
war
Solved: The Tamarack Tree
E55:
Experiment,
afterschool homework
Solved: Notes on
the
Hauter Experiment
E56:
Elementary
1950's Reading Book
Solved: More Times and Places
E57:
Essay
collection
Solved: Christian Mythmakers
E58:
Exchange
student
-American
in
Mexico
Solved: Alicia
E59:
Exchange
students in America
A young adult book that seemed contemporary when I read it in the
early 1970s. An American college student befriends some exchange
students
- I'm thinking from the Middle East. She accompanies them while they
look
for an apartment and she is struck by how some of the property owners
are
very obviously prejudiced against the foreign students. She and one of
the young men fall in love, and he gives her a saphire ring. They go to
a jewelry store where he buys her a gold chain so that she can wear the
ring as a necklace. Then his parents summon him to come home because
they
have arranged a marriage for him. The book ends much like Betty
Cavannah's
A
Time For Tenderness with the girl heart-broken because he won't
defy
his parents in order to be with her.
E60: eagle
nest
summit
In the late 60's I believe, I read a book
from a high school (or earlier Jr High?) library about a young man who
had an injured/withered arm (or congenital birth defect?) that involved
his climbing an eagle nest as a symbolic goal to conquer a formidable
personal
challenge and his romance with a young woman. In the end, the
young
man tragically fell or died somehow after a climb that saw him meet his
goal, leaving the young woman and her unborn child to survive
him.
His will to live freely, to enjoy nature and his zest for life despite
some personal problems was unique. I seem to recall a title that
included the word 'Citadel' but have been unable to find the book
through
many 'Net searches, so that keyword may be an error. I don't
remember
the author but have tried to scan author lists for a last name in the
middle
of the alphabet (I seem to recall finding the book in the middle of the
fichtion - H to M -section), but have been unable to find good lists of
authors for young people from the late 60's. Any help would
be well worth $2!!
James Ramsey Ullman, Banner in the Sky,
1956, paperback 1967. This sounds like it. It involves
climbing
a mountain in Switzerland called the Citadel in the 1860s. I
believe
its based on a true story about climbing the Matterhorn. It was a
Disney movie in the late 1960s-early 1970s. I checked imdb.com
and
another name for the book and/or movie seems to be Third Man on
the
Mountain.
Please note that E-60, "Banner in the Sky"
was not the solution.
E61:
Elephants
stringing
pink pearls
Solved: Fuzzy Wuzzy
Elephant
E62:
EIGHT
Solved: The 18th
Emergency
E63:
Encyclopedias
for children
Solved: Bookshelf for Boys
and Girls
E64:
Elephants
I have asked at least 6 children's librarians
about this and no one seems to recall. I read a book as a young child
that
had a sick boy, who dreamed of riding an elephant one day. He had some
kind of ceramic elephants in his room. One day he really does get to
ride
a real elephant, it comes with a circus or zoo. It may be set in
Britain?
Maybe just a city. Thanks.
2005
E65:
Ellie?
Emma?
Solved: Never Miss a Sunset
E66:
Elephant
- little girl with stuffed toy elephant
A little girl has a stuffed toy elephant that
she carries around with her in her backpack. The elephant has a
spaghetti
stain on or near its trunk from the little girl trying to feed it. I
believe
the little girl was somewhat sad/lonely/misunderstood. The
elephant
may have been her only friend. Perhaps she had moved
recently?
In the early 80s, I lived in Orlando, FL, and I checked this book out
of
the St. John Vianney Elementary School library over and over again. I
think
about it all the time, but have never found anyone who has even heard
of
the book. It would mean so much to me to be able to read it
again.
Thank you for your time and attention.
Beverly Cleary, Ramona and Her Mother,
1980s. This may be way off, but Ramona Quimby had a stuffed
elephant,
named Ella Funt, that she carried around with her. In Ramona
and
Her
Mother, she sews her a pair of pants. She had had
Ella Funt for a while, so there may have been a spaghetti stain on her
somewhere, I don't remember.
Norma Simon, Elly the Elephant,
1962, reprinted 1982. This is just a possibility - I can't find a
picture of the cover anywhere. Two summaries: "Wendy and her
beloved
Elly are inseparable until the toy is left at school one day." And
"Wendy
tells incidents in the life of her nine-year-old toy elephant who goes
to school with her, but never grows older." Hope this rings a
bell.
E66 Shot in the dark, but it could be ELLY
THE ELEPHANT by Norma Simon. Wendy loves her toy
elephant
(one summary said she sings to it?), and then one day she leaves it at
school. I couldn't find a picture or further summary, so I'm not sure
if
this is a match~from a librarian
Thank you for the suggestions! I obtained copies of both Elly
the
Elephant and Ramona and her Mother, but unfortunately,
neither
is the book I am looking for. I believe my book has more pictures
(perhaps in color) than Ramona and Her Mother, and is not long
enough
to have chapters. Also, my book feels more modern than Elly, and
I'm fairly certain is written for a slightly higher reading level.
Nancy K. Robinson, Oh Honestly, Angela!,
1991, reprint. "Kindergartner Angela has her problems, also. She
takes her favorite stuffed elephant to show and tell, only to find out
that she is expected to donate it to the school's Christmas drive for
the
needy."
I revisited the site for the first time in
a while, and the stumper is now listed as Solved: Oh Honestly,
Angela!However,
that is not the book. In my book, unlike this one, the little
girl
and her elephant are the main focus of the book.
Did the elephant go to visit its cousins when
it was misplaced by the girl?
Another
poster
asked,
"Did
the
elephant
go
to
visit
its
cousins
when
it
was
misplaced
by
the
girl?"
This
doesn't
sound
familiar
to
me,
but
it's
been
well
over
20 years, so it's possible. I would
appreciate it if you would share the title of the book you're thinking
of, if you know it. Thank you!
E67:
Eton
student reunions with girl-protagonist
Solved: Through A Brief
Darkness
E68:
Easter
egg, black
Solved: Surprise for Mrs.
Bunny
E69:
Empty
packing boxes
Solved: Christina Katerina
and the Box
E70:
Elizabeth
I
Solved: Elizabeth the Great
E71:
Eagle
steals baby
Solved: Tatsinda
E72:
Elaine
going to or from Hawaii
Solved: The Really Real
Family
E73:
Erin
Adventures, 1950-1975. I'm searching
for a book I know very little about. I know it is a children's
book
about a little girl named Erin who has adventures. A good friend
of mine read it when she was a little girl and I thought I would get it
for her...She even named her daughter Erin as a result of reading this
book. My friend is 45 years old, so I thought it might have been
written in the 60s. Thanks for your help!
E74:
Timothy
Chism
Solved: The Runaway Train
E75:
alligator
under bed/house with eyes
I don't know which grade the book was for because though I was a
first grader, I also read my older siblings reading textbooks. This
particular
book included the story of a boy with an alligator under his bed. The
other
story I just remember a house with eyes. I think a man may have lived
in
it. Maybe the cover had burgundy-ish colors? Maybe not. I am 22 now and
would very much like to have that textbook once more. PLEASE HELP!!!
Mercer Mayer, There's An Alligator
Under
My Bed. Sounds like this
Mercer
Mayer classic. Also, 3 of these stories were published together
as
There's
Something There (alligator under the bed, monster in the
closet,
something in the attic), so that could be the collection you mention.
Some commented in the stumper, but it's the
correct solutionThe book I am looking for is not a collection of 3
books.
It's a textbook.
[I just noticed this Alligator stumper
is filed under E. I have no explanation for that.
But
I'll keep it here so the original requester can find it.]
E76:
eagle
chicks
I'm looking for a children's book that I read in Australia, back
in the '60's, when I was in grade school. (I seem to recall that it was
a relatively thick novel.) The plot centers around a boy who
trains
eagle chicks to carry him (in a basket) into the air, once they have
grown.
That's all I've got. Thanks for any assistance that you can offer!
E77:
Easter
Eggs
Solved: The Easter Egg Artists
E78:
Eleven
children; first four are boys
Solved: But Daddy!
E79:
Eve
and goblins in shadows
note: I believe this picture book features a little girl named Eve
(I think) who sees Goblins the shadows in and around her home. I recall
one picture being of a tall book shelf. I thought the title was
actually
Eve and the Goblins, but have not been able to find any information
based
on this title. It would be at least 15-18 years old.
E80:
Escape
Into Light
Solved: Escape Into Daylight
E81:
Emergency
landing on experimental farm
Solved: The Airplane Boys
at Cap Rock
E82:
Entomologist
Solved: Henry Reed series
E83:
Evil
Doll
The book was probably from the eighties or even early
nineties.
It was about a girl might have lived in some sort of orphanage or
something.
She gets this doll and it turns out to be evil. She and a friend
bury it in the woods one night, and the doll is back in her room in the
morning, covered in dirt. The cover was dark, with a dark-haired
girl looking frightened as she held up a blonde doll.
E83 Shot in the dark, but it might be worth
looking
into THE WITCH DOLL by Helen Morgan~from a
librarian
The book was probably from the eighties or even
early nineties. It was about a girl might have lived in some sort
of orphanage or something. She gets this doll and it turns out to
be evil. She and a friend bury it in the woods one night, and the
doll is back in her room in the morning, covered in dirt. The
cover
was dark, with a dark-haired girl looking frightened as she held up a
blonde
doll. I think that the name of this book is a girl's first
name....
And although i may be wrong about this, I think that it may be an "A"
name,
like Anabelle....
The book Im thinking of (see below) is Annabelle
by Ruby Jean Jenson: "bandoned by her mother and neglected by
her
emotionally distant father, a little girl is drawn to an old derelict
mansion
in the woods near her home. To the lonely little girl the house is her
very own castle and it seems to call out to her with a ghostly chorus
of
voices. Inside she finds a family of dolls that welcome her along with
a strange portrait of a woman who smiles down on her like the mother
she
lost. But this house is no playground. It echoes with the memories of a
tragedy that took place nearly a half century ago and the event is
still
being played out by forces beyond the grave. Dolls come to life,
seeking
to protect a mysterious girl named Annabelle and a ghostly wraith
stomps
through the old mansion, crazed with a demonic rage... Ruby Jean Jensen
delivers a creepy haunted house chiller with her trademark style and
resident
killer dolls. A must for Jensen fans and a fun read for horror lovers."
Ruth Arthur, A Candle in her Room,
1966. Sounds like Ruth M. Arthur's A Candle in her Room
to me. The girl in the book moves into a new house and (I think)
finds the doll, either in the attic or in a hollow tree. The
doll's
name is Dido, and she is evil. Somehow, she convinces the girl to
do magic. I remember the girl burying Dido and trying to burn
her...and
both times she comes back. I don't, however, remember the
resolution!
The cover has a picture of a girl standing over a bonfire, poking it
with
a stick.
The plot of the Evil Toy returning
sounds a bit like Steven King's story about an evil clockwork monkey. I
do recall both the Twilight Zone and Night Gallery featured dolls bent
on revenge against an evil father figure--the NG one was quite
terrifying with her dark eyes and big teeth! She did have blonde hair,
would this be similar?
E84:
Elizabeth
Solved: The Fairy Doll
E85:
Encyclopedia
for children
Solved: Childcraft
E86:
elephant
and boy
Solved: Pete's First Day
at School
E87:
English-style
riding stable
Solved: Pony School
2006
E88:
Elf-mortal
wedding
Solved: Shadow Castle
E89:
elizabethan
girl kidnapped by fairies
Solved: The Perilous Gard
E90:
Evil
Antique Store
Solved: Beware of this Shop
E91:
Elephant's
coat shrank
late 70s early 80s-grandmother read me kids
book about elephant with new coat, but the coat shrank in water?
Tony Brice, Little Bobo and His Blue
Jacket.
Also
published as part of the Rand McNally Book of Favorite Animal
Stories
E92:
Earth
is flooded by aliens
Solved: Conquerors from
the
Darkness
E93:
English
parochial school
I'm seeking a YA book about a girl (16 or
so) whose father moves them to England after her mother dies. Her
new school dress code is so strict that she is not even allowed to wear
the locket that is her very special keepsake from her mother. I
remember
one scene where the protagonist is at a rugby match with a guy she kind
of fancies, and she feels slightly too dressed up in her American jeans
and nice sweater. Thanks in advance.
E94:
Elephant
at school
An elephant spends a day in a school and makes
things like a biscuit and ( i think ) a cup and other things but all
the
things he makes a way too big and all the kids get to enjoy the things
he makes cause they are so so so big in different ways to their
intended
use.. it is a picture book from the 60's or 70's.. i would love
to
find this book.. the idea of the site is a wonderful one.. may it
prosper!
E86 (and E94???). Clevin, Jorgen , Pete's
first
day
at
school, 1973. This must definitely be the
solution
to E86 and it could be the solution to E94. The cover shows
Johnny
and Pete - and Pete is a regular large elephant, so his size could have
come into the story. Pete, the elephant, has happy experiences on
the first day of school. "Johnny and Pete live at number 14
Flower
Street. Where do you live? Shall we say hello to them? That red knob is
the doorbell. Press it with your finger and say :
dingalingaling."
Pete the elephant goes to school for the first time. Reader answers
questions
at each stop-light. Final story page has a 'blank' TV screen with a
message
seen only when held up to the light !Cover is indeed white as remembered
E95:
Eddie
spaghetti
Solved: Spaghetti Eddie
E96:
Earth
Gone, New World, Dirt
Solved: Journey to Terezor
E97:
E
Eater machine likes to gobble up Es
Solved: The Book of Foolish Machinery
E98:
Enslaved
human boy uses rhyme to fly spaceship
Solved: The Silk and the
Song
E99:
English
children find cave
I read a series of maybe four or five books in the early seventies,
though the books would have been written earlier I think, in which a
family
of children, I am pretty sure English, find a secret cave. I
recall
that the entrance to the cave is facing out over a steep isolated cliff
so is mostly unknown, but they find it by a little hole in the ground,
which goes down through the top of the cave. They build campfires
and the smoke goes up through the hole. There were probably some
mysteries involved, but I do not think it was a mystery series per se.
The description of E99 in the book stumpers
sounds
to me like Five Run Away Together by Enid Blyton.
I
read
a
series
of
maybe
four
or
five
books
in
the
early
seventies,
though
the
books
would
have
been
written
earlier
I
think
Enid
Blyton's
famous
five
series
was reissued in the early seventies, in paperback editions
published by Knight books. The series (of 21 books in total) was first
written in the late 40s to early 60s. The one I think it is would be
Book
3. in which a family of children, I am pretty sure English
The four children in the series are English: Julian, Dick, Georgina
(who
wants to be a boy and prefers to be called George) and Anne find a
secret
cave. I recall that the entrance to the cave is facing out over a
steep isolated cliff so is mostly unknown, but they find it by a little
hole in the ground, which goes down through the top of the cave. They
build
campfires and the smoke goes up through the hole. This is what makes me
think it could be this book. In Five Run Away Together
the
five stumble across the cave quite by accident, when one of them falls
down the hidden hole in the ground. Further exploration reveals that
the
cave cannot be seen from the front entrance in the cliff. Also, when a
fire is lit, smoke escapes through the roof hole. There
were
probably some mysteries involved, but I do not think it was a mystery
series
per se. Well if it is this book, it is part of a mystery series,
so perhaps I'm wrong... would be my suggestion though!
Blyton, Enid, Five Run Away Together
(Famous Five #3), 1944. I have read this book and I think this is the
one
the requestor wanted. Four children and a dog go to a uninhabited
island and find a cave with a hole in the ceiling. They lower
their
stuff through the hole and lower themselves through it too, to save
them
having to climb the rocks to the front entrance near the beach.
(which
can't be seen from the mainland).
They Found a Cave. I can't
remember who wrote this book, but I read it back in the 60s. 4 or 5
children
find a cave - I recognise the description with the secret entrance in
the
top, and run away to live in it -I think one of them was called Nancy.
Only problem I think it was set in Australia.
Ransome, Arthur, Swallowdale,1931.
In
Swallowdale
(the
second
of
the
Swallows & Amazons
series), the Walker family find a secret cave in the cliff-side of a
valley
in the English hills. (re other postings, note that one of the Amazons
is Nancy).
E100:
English
girl fears her step brother is a murderer
Solved: I Start Counting
E101:
Escaped
Slaves join Trail of Tears
Escaped Slaves join Trail of Tears
Scott O'Dell, Sing Down the Moon.
(1970) Fourteen-year-old Navaho Bright Morning and her friend
Running
Bird are kidnapped by Spanish Slavers and sold. Bright Morning later
escapes,
but when she returns, she finds her village under occupation by the
"Long
Knives", or American soldiers. The Americans force the Navaho out of
their
lands, and onto the Trail of Tears.
Before 1988, approximate. This was a wonderful store of
escaped
(or freed slaves) living in the hills. The only parts I clearly
remember
is an older woman painting an apron for the protagonist. The picture
was
of the protagonist wearing the apron, so it went on for infinity.
Eventually
they end up joining Indians in the Trail of Tears to Oklahoma. It was a
children's book, with chapters that I read in 1988.
Dolores Johnson, Seminole Diary:
Remembrances
of a Slave. (1994)
Might
this be the one you're looking for? "An African American woman
and
her daughter find the diary of Libbie, one of their ancestors who was
sold
into slavery. The diary describes how in 1834 Libbie, her father, and
her
sister escaped from their cruel master. The family is eventually taken
in by the Seminoles. Unfortunately, their peaceful new existence
doesn't
last long as the United States government forces the Seminoles to give
up their land in Florida and move to a reservation in Oklahoma.
Illustrated
with oil paintings."
E102:
Elephant
missing; escapes on ice blocks
Solved: Big Max
E103:
Egyptian
slave girl named Sari
A book my teacher read to us in the early 1970's...I've tried off
and on to find it again. It was set in Egypt, there was a young
Egyptian
boy who was the son of I believe a landowner so was wealthy, and Sari
was
one of the girl slaves. They became friends. That is all I can
remember,
other than I loved the tale and would love to find it again.
Thanks!
McGraw, Eloise Jarvis, Mara, Daughter
of
the Nile, 1953. I wonder if
this book is Mara, Daughter of the Nile Mara is a slave with powerful
friends.
She works as a double-agent spy and eventually earns her freedom.
Could you possibly be thinking of Mara,
Daughter of the Nile by Eloise McGraw?
Definitely not Mara, Daughter of the
Nile by Eloise
Jarvis McGraw. Co-incidentally, I was re-reading that
one this afternoon, and it doesn't match at all. Main characters
in that one are Mara, a slave, and Sheftu, a nobleman.
E104:
evil
mirror world
late 80s or 90s. There were three
children
and their parents had just died, I think. They end up befriending their
images in a special mirror and the images keep telling them what a
wonderful
world the mirror world is and asking them if they would like to join
them
in their wonderful, carefree, happy mirror world. The children
do,
but it was all a trick so the evil spirits could get out of the mirror
where they were trapped. Now the children have to find their way
through the evil, harsh mirror world to find their way home.
E105:
Evil
dolls haunt and cause mischief
This is such a wonderful site,you have already
helped me track down a book from my elementary years. I am currently
looking
for a book that I remember checking out from the library when I was in
6th grade-1990-and it seemed to be an old book then. It was a
collection
of short stories about different dolls and in each of the stories the
dolls
haunted people or caused mischief of some kind. I vaguely recall one
story
that mentioned a doll found sitting in a chair behind a desk, and this
was unusual to a character in the story because the doll had obviously
moved. There may have been several black and white sketch-like
illustrations
and it was a thick book, so it probably contained 10-20 stories. I
think
the cover may have been a sage or pale green, but this was the
protective
cover that the library kept on it. I have thought about this book often
in the past 16 years, please help me prove it wasn't a figment of my
imagination!
Thanks!
Could this maybe be The Mystery of the
Silent
Friends? The three dolls in that one are anamatronic not
haunted,
but they are at the centre of the big mystery in the story. See solved
mysteries for more details.
Seon Manley and Gogo Lewis, The haunted
dolls: an anthology, 1980.
Doubleday,
1980. Christie, A. The dressmaker’s doll. Timperley, R. The peg doll.
James,
M. R. The haunted doll’s house. Blackwood, A. The doll. Jerome, J. K.
The
dancing partner. Danby, M. The grey lady. Andersen, H. C. The steadfast
tin soldier. The Doll’s ball. Hawthorne, N. Feathertop. Tapp, T. The
doll.
The Life of Aunt Sally, alias Blackmore, alias Rosabella, alias Amelia,
as related by herself. Pearce, J. H. The puppets. Manley, S. The
Christmas
of the big bisque doll. Crawford, F. M. The doll’s ghost.
There's a book THE HAUNTED DOLLS: AN
ANTHOLOGY
selected by Seon Manley and Gogo Lewis, 1980. The stories
include:
"The Dressmaker's Doll" by Agatha Christie, "The Peg-Doll" by Rosemary
Timperley, "The Haunted Doll's House" by M.R. James, "The Doll" by
Algernon
Blackwood, "The Dancing Partner" by Jerome K. Jerome, "The Grey Lady"
by
Mary Danby, "The Steadfast Tin Soldier" by Hans Christian Andersen,
"The
Dolls' Ball", "Feathertop" by Nathaniel Hawthorne "The Doll" by Terry
Tapp,
"The Life of Aunt Sally", "The Puppets" by J.H. Pearce -- "The
Christmas
of the Big Bisque Doll" by Seon Manley, "The Doll's Ghost" by F. Marion
Crawford.~from a librarian.
Seon Manley and Gogo Lewis, The
Haunted
Dolls:
An
Anthology,1980. I'm certain that The
Haunted
Dolls: An Anthology is the book you want. In addition to the
details
provided by other contributors, I would like to mention that the cover
is indeed pale green in color.
E106:
evil
mirror world
late '80's/early '90's. There were three
children and their parents had just died, I think. They end up
befriending
their images in a special mirror and the images keep telling them what
a wonderful world the mirror world is and asking them if they would
like
to join them in their wonderful, carefree, happy mirror world.
The
children do, but it was all a trick so the evil spirits could get out
of
the mirror where they were trapped. Now the children have to find
their way through the evil, harsh mirror world to find their way home.
Jane Langton, The Diamond in the window.
I'm wondering if you're referring to The Diamond in the Window
by Jane Langton. There is one chapter in which the two children
(who
are orphans being raised by their uncle and aunt) are trapped in a
world
behind a mirror that reflects their own images as they grow older.
E107:
exploring
an abandoned house
I believe this book was an award winner around
1974. I read it in the fifth grade. The story takes place at rundown
summer
cabins. A kid staying there along with a nother kid, explores an old
abandoned
house in the woods. I remember something about light bulbs being out,
so
instead of the sign at the cabins saying one thing, it seemed to say
another.
ak sar bin is Nebraska backwords, it wasn't that, but very similar.
Nancy Woollcott Smith, The Ghostly Trio,
1970s.
This was a Scholastic Book Club book that I read way back in the
mid-70s.
All I remember of the plot is three friends, two boys and a girl,
exploring
(and breaking into..even though they didn't take anything or do
anything)
summer homes. At one point, there's groaning in one of the
houses,
and the kids have to figure out if it's ghosts, or a more logical
explanation.
I think one of them had some connection with the cottages--maybe the
parent
was a caretaker? Flashlights figured prominently, for some
reason.
Just a possibility! Good luck.
Margaret Goff Clark, Mystery of the
Missing
Stamps, 1967. Could it be
this
one? Mark's new stepfather is the caretaker for a summer camp.
(Think
cabins in a resort area that families rent for the summer, not sleep
away
camp.) His new friend, who works as a busboy at the restaurant,
is
accused of stealing. Along with jewelry and other portable
things,
a valuable stamp collection goes missing, and Mark is determined to
discover
who's doing the stealing and prove his friend innocent. There's
also
a younger girl, staying at one of the cabins, who becomes involved in
the
mystery. At one point, there's something about the lights going
out
and the sign for the camp being changed as part of the mystery.
Maybe
worth a try!
No, I don't recognize either suggested solution. It seems that the
name of the summer cabins might have appeared to be tar pin et pin dar,
because of some of the light bulbs being out on the sign.
Elizabeth Enright, Gone-Away Lake.
While the story is not quite the same, "tar pin and pin dar" could be
"Tarquin
et Pindar" written in Latin on the "philosopher's stone" discovered by
Portia Blake and her cousin Julian. The abandoned summer cabins
are
there on the swamp that used to be a lake but I don't remember the
lights.
See the Solved Mysteries for more.
Interpreting
Condition
Grades
|
Enright,
Elizabeth.
Gone-away Lake.
illus
by
Beth
and
Joe
Krush.
Harcourt
Brace
and
World,
1957.
Ex-library
edition
with
usual
marks
and
edgewear,
but
interior
and
dust
jacket
both
very
clean.
VG-/VG+.
$12
Enright, Elizabeth. Gone-away
Lake. illus by Beth
and
Joe Krush. Harcourt, 1957, 1990, 2000. New hardcover
edition.
$17
|
|
E108:
Evil
witches, good dragon
I read this in the late 1970's-early 80's-
I believe it was a new book at the time and was geared towards age 10
and
up. A bunch of kids go down a manhole, where they enter another world
in
which witches are bad and dragons are good. They break into the
witches'
house while the witches are out and look thru all their potions (eye of
newt, etc.) The witches get home early and catch one of the kids, the
boy
who was the know-it-all. They put him in a cage and plot to kill him? I
believe there was some sort of witches council that was going to occur.
Meanwhile, the other kids escape and go to find the dragon, who is good
and can help them. I think he may be one of the last remaining dragons.
He lives in a cave an is rather weak. He feeds them blue pudding, and
somehow
musters the strength to go fight the witches. He flies with the
children
on his back to get there. That's all I can remember!
Alison Farthing, The Mystical Beast.
This is the one! Check it out in the solved stumpers.
E109:
Elaborately
illustrated 1970s chapter book
Solved: Victoria at Nine
E110:
encyclopedia
type volumes of childrens stories
group of maybe 8-10 encyclopedia like volumes of childrens stories.
One volume was an index. Memory says they were some combination
of
cream and light blue/grey color. May have published in the 1960's or
early
seventies. Huge collection of stories. Many are not you typical
endings,
etc. ie:I think it was the end of the cinderella story that had her
evil
step mother dance in hot iron shoes... a little weird. Alladin went
into
the cave of wonders and ate fruit that looked like jewels off of trees
there. Beauty of Beauty and the beast had a ring that would transport
her
back to see her beloved father. Her jealous sister messed things
up.
It would mean so much to me to be able to find this set, any help would
be greatly appreciated. I whiled away many a rainy day with those
stories
as a child.
The Junior Classics The stories
you mention are all in the ten volume Junior Classics,complete with the
unuusual endings, and the tenth volume is an index. My set is
more
colorful than you describe, though. They were given away with
Collier's
Encyclopedias in the 1950s and 1960s.
Interpreting
Condition
Grades
|
Martignoni,
Margaret
E,
series
editor.
Collier’s junior classics.
Collier, 1962. 10 vols, cloth, each a different color;
linen
interior hinge; all good, with all pages good; vol 4 has a 3/8’
dig
in spine; child’s name The young folks shelf of
books. [NHQ19915] $80 plus postage |
|
E111:
Evacuees
Trading Places
Solved: Searching for Shona
E112:
Eileen's
nicknames
Solved: Many Names for
Eileen
2007
E113:
Elizabeth,
blind
Solved: Light a Single
Candle
Light a Single Candle
E114:
Elephant:
very shy, named Emeline?
Solved: Ella the Elegant
Elephant
(series)
E115:
Esther
preparing to be queen
Solved: Behold your Queen
E116:
Elf
boy (?) and children stop wilderness development
Solved: Beneath the Hill
E117:
English
and German spies meet in Africa
I am asking about a book I saw as a Readers
Digest condensed in the 1970's, about an Englishman and a German
meeting
in Africa before WW1. The book was a spy novel, the Englishman
takes
on the German identity.
E118:
English
inheritor asks butler to bring him used soap
Solved: Frances Donaldson, Edward
VIII, 1978.
E119:
English
Sister/Brother Win American Trip
My sister and I vividly recall reading
a library book during our grade school/junior high school/possibly even
high school years from approximately 1963-1973. My sister will be
55 in November, and I was 52 in July. This was a book that made a
great impression on us because we both checked it out often and have
thought
about it for years but cannot recall the author (we think it was a
British
writer), title, or any of the characters' names. We were
fascinated
by it because it took place in England, and we had paternal
grandparents
who had immigrated to the USA in 1908 from Scotland. What we can
recall about the plot: The story takes place somewhere in England
and is about a family of four, a mother and father and their two
children,
an older boy and younger girl. The boy may have been 12 or 13;
the
girl may have been 9 or 10. I may be confusing some of the
details and may be mixing them up with bits of storyline/plot from
other
books from the time we read this book, but I am almost certain that
when
the book begins, it is the morning of the girl's birthday, and she may
be in a play or some other special school function because I seem to
recall
that she 'dresses up' for school. Or she may be dressing up
because
it is her birthday. This book had some simple, black-and-white
line
drawing illustrations throughout the book, and the illustration that my
sister and I think we remember is a half-page picture of the girl with
her long, wavy hair (her hair may have been blonde). The book
explains
that she wore braids to bed so that when she woke up the next morning
and
brushed out her hair, her hair was wavy from being braided. I
think
she received some birthday presents at the breakfast table. I may
be confusing this with another book, but I think she received a box of
chocolates, which she took to school with her to show and share.
But when one of her friends at school chose one of her dearest favorite
chocolates, I think she was horrified and 'took back the box and
quickly
shut the lid', or words to that effect. As the story
unfolded,
their school announced a chance to win a trip to America that the
students
could win by studying American history/geography and earning the
highest
test score, and maybe the winner of the contest could take another
person
on the trip. The boy was very good in school and may have
expected
to win. Or maybe the girl expected to win. I think this
English
family had some relatives that had previously immigrated to America,
and
I think that the parents and children all hoped to go to America on
this
trip. We think that money had to be saved/earned for the parents
to go. We just can't remember, but we think they did get enough
money
so that all of them could go, but the money was lost/misplaced and/or
believed
stolen. Finally, at the end, the boy, or the girl, won the
contest
by getting the highest grade on the test, the lost passage/trip money
was
recovered, and they were looking forward to the entire family's taking
the trip. My sister and I would be SO grateful if anyone
remembers
such a book. We are beginning to doubt ourselves. I tried
Abebooks
BookSleuth Forum but had only one response, and their recollection
didn't
match how we remember the book. Since we both read this book so
frequently,
we are amazed that we have no recollection of the author, title, or the
characters' names. This may have been an older book (1940's? –
1950's?),
but we checked it out from the school library from 1963-1973.
Thank
you for your time and help.
E120:
Evolved
dolphins, scientific expedition
Solved: The Secret Oceans
E121:
environment,
blobby family, pollution
Solved: Barbapapa
E122:
"Elbert,
the Littlest Elf" story book
Solved: Come Follow Me...
To The Secret World of Elves and Fairies and Gnomes and Trolls
E123:
80s
Teen spooky fiction: Alien fireflies incubate in your ear and grant
powers!?
I read this book *ages* ago, so only remember a few details, I'm
not sure if it was part of a series though, the ending seemed to set it
up for a sequel. Here's what I remember, some of these points may
be wrong, it's probably 15+ years since I read this: Contempory
setting
(1980s forest america). Family on vacation in a log cabin
in
a forest, son and daughter are the main characters. Features a
waterfall.
Alien gasbags behind the waterfall? Glowing alien fireflies in
the
forest attracted to lights + people. Fireflies enter your ear and
gestate inside! Characters with bugs go deaf in one ear.
Fireflies
are vulnerable to loud noises. Sister character turns her Walkman
up high at one point and kills the bug in her ear. Infected
characters
get sugar cravings. Fireflies portrayed as creepy for most of the
book, but it turns out they're beneficial symbiants that give special
powers
to their hosts when they reach maturity. End of the book had a
character
accidentally stepping through into a different dimension because of
symbiant.
Not Animorphs (this has already been suggested).
2008
E124:
Emanuel
and Levi
Solved: Wonderful Good Neighbors
E125:
Evil Dolls, young adult book
I remember reading a young adult book
about evil dolls that started making bad things happen for a
family. I don't remember much about the book except that there
was a grandfather clock, and there was a line in the book about how
February was the month when all the bad things happen. I think
the dolls possibly were alive.
Sleator, Among the Dolls. Not sure, but it sounds similar
to Sleator's book, about a girl who gets drawn into a dollhouse full of
spiteful, ill-tempered dolls. The girl had had issues with her family,
things only made worse by the enchanted dollhouse; once inside it she
faces a very severe life. Hope this is some help.
Ruth
M.
Arthur,
A Candle in Her Room, 1966, copyright. Could this
be it? I have not reread this recently but it is a fabulous but
scary book about evil doll Dido and how she haunts and changes the
lives of three generations of women.
Sleator,
William,
Among the Dolls,
1975, approximate. Could it be Among the Dolls,
by William Sleator? I
think there was a grandfather clock, but what I most remember is the
family of dolls pulling this girl Victoria into their lives...and that
they were scary! The dolls were mis-matched (and I remember
William, the baby, was bigger than some of the adults) and I think they
were all, except for one, evil. (The non-evil one ended up
helping the girl to escape.)
E126:
Evil spirit from past haunts young girl
Solved: Jane-Emily
E127: easter
book
I have been looking for this book
since I was little (in
the eighties). I don't remember much about it except that I think it
was about a little boy who was waiting for Easter and the Easter bunny
to come. The most vivid memory of this book I have is the full-page
illustration of an Easter basket somewhere within the book, with a tall
chocolate bunny sitting in it. I used to have a lot of Golden books, so
I'm not sure if it was one or not.
E128:
Evil step-mother, disabled brother
The book was written in the 70's about
a missing father/evil step mother, there was a painting of the woods,
and a disabled younger brother. The step mother turns out to be a
witch. The book was for young adults, and had a stark black and white
dust jacket.
Josephine Poole, Moon Eyes. The children's father has gone
away on a vacation to relax from stress, leaving the children alone in
the house with a housekeeper that comes in daily to help out. The
younger child, a boy, doesn't speak. A woman shows up who is a
step-Aunt. She moves in against the girl's wishes and she turns
out to be a witch. A big dog with "moon eyes" keeps turning
up. The girl has to fight against the witch to save her younger
brother. "First we'll wait, then we'll whistle, then we'll dance
together."
E129:
Elephant that likes gumdrops
The story was about an elephant that
liked gumdrops. At the end of the story, people would give her pennies
to buy gumdrops from a gumball machine.
E130:
Easter story about
young boy and old man
I can't remember a great deal about
the book, but it was probably read to our class by my teacher in the
1950's. It may not have been an Easter tale, but for some reason I
think it was. Vague recollections that either the young boy or
the elderly man had polio and the man lived at the top of a hill. It
seems that it was an inspiring story because it's been on my mind all
these years, but those are all the details I can recall.
Dubose Heyward, The Country Bunny & the Little Gold
Shoes, 1939,
copyright. It's a longshot, but the country bunny has to hop up
the biggest hill with the Easter egg for the sick little boy before the
sun rises.
E131:
Elf must reunite scattered crystals
I have been looking for this book for
years to read to my children. My teacher read it to me when I was
in school so it was probably early 80's. Seven ( I think )
crystals are scattered around the world and it is an elf's job to
travel all over the world to reunite these crystals into one before the
villain can get them. I remember that it was almost like seven stories
because every time he finds a crystal it is an adventure. Thank
you. By the way I think this website is a wonderful idea!
A.C.H. Smith, The Dark Crystal, 1982,
copyright. Perhaps this is too obvious a suggestion, but have you
looked at this one? Based on the Jim Henson movie, it tells of a race
of grotesque birdlike lizards called the Skeksis, who rule their
fantastic planet with an iron claw. A prophecy tells of a Gelfling (a
small elfin being) who will topple their empire, so they have
exterminated the race, or so they think. There remains one male
Gelfling, the orphan Jen, raised in solitude by a race of peace-loving
wizards called the Mystics. The Mystics were once one race with the
Skeksis, until the splitting of the Great Crystal split the tribe into
good and evil halves. To save his world, Jen must embark on a quest to
find the missing shard of the Dark Crystal (which gives the Skeksis
their power) and restore the balance of the universe, before the three
suns converge. Along the way, he is aided by new friends Kira (the last
female Gelfling, raised in secret by the Pod People), Augrah (a wise
old woman), and Fizzgig. (The A.C.H. Smith version is an approx.
180 page novelization of the movie; if you are looking for more of a
picture book, you could also try "The Tale of The Dark
Crystal" by Donna Bass (c.
1982)
which
is
a
48-page
version.)
No,
I am afraid that isn't the book. This book has two children
looking for the crystals and I think the villain in the story may be
the elf and they have to find the crystals and unite them before he
does.
E132:
Eric and Tricia, Hawaii, surfing lessons
This is a book about a guy in Hawaii
named Eric who meets a girl named Tricia who gets surfing lessons and
they fall in love. Her grandmother has him arrested and he ends
up on the run.
E133:
enclave men roam
controlled
Solved: The Shore of Women
E134:
English children traveling in a canal boat
Solved: The Big
Six
E135:
Ex-warrior, spinal injury, post-apocalyptic
world
Solved: The Black Mountains
E136:
Etoile
Etoile is the main character of a book
read by a family member in the mid to late 1800s. The book is
important as this family member named her daugher after the Etoile in
the book and so became the first Etoile in the family. Her
granddaughter was later named after her, as was her great great great
granddaugher (my baby). I know that the original real Etoile was
born in the late 1800s in Louisiana. This is all that the family
knows of the book. I would like to find the book and give a copy
to my baby's grandmother and keep one for our family, too. Any
help would be greatly appreciated!
Walter Crane, Princess Belle-Etoile, 1874. You can find the story for
free on Project Gutenberg.
Walter
Crane,
Princess Belle-Etoile,
1874. There is a lovely illustrated free! copy of this short
story on Project Gutenberg.
Terry,
Rose,
The Assassin of Society,
1857,
approximate.
Google-searched
and
found
this
short
story,
with
a
character
called
Louise
Etoile.
If
I
find
more
I'll
post
them.
E137:
England invaded by socialist forces, adults
killed, orion, charlemagne
Trilogy i think? Maybe late 60s/70s??
young adult book, England has been devasted by a virus, most adults
killed, invaded by socialist army (known as Freaks?) Group of kids /young adults flees to
London, meets gangs at St. Pauls, crippled child who hears voices,
betrayed/captured, one flees to Germany.
Rosemary Harris, Quest for Orion.
E138:
EL train goes by girl's neighborhood
Girl lives with family in busy
neighborhood in Chicago (?) Maybe during the depression or right
after. I remember some comments about the EL train rumbling by.
Frieda Friedman, Dot for Short, 1947, copyright. This could be
the book being sought but it is set in N.Y.C. in the 40's. Ten
year-old Dot Fleming lives on Third Avenue facing the El tracks with
her cabbie father. mother, two older sisters and younger brother.
They're used to when "the El train roared past and the sound filled the
room for several seconds." Dot is self-conscious about both being
short and not as pretty as her sisters. She ends up having a
wonderful year full of accomplishments. One of Friedman's best
books about girls growing up in N.Y..
Frieda
Friedman,
Dot For Short,
1947, copyright. Dot and her family live in a New York apartment
near a train. They would always have to pause their conversations when
the loud El train went by.
Maybe Dot for Short
(1947) by Frieda Friedman?
It's in NYC and Dot is the 10-year-old daughter and third child (out of
four) of a cab driver. (Friedman often focused on happy, working-class
families.) Dot finds a way to raise money when her dad has a heart
problem. Also, her 12-year-old sister asks permission to "care for a
baby" and her dad is shocked because he's never heard of babysitting.
E139:
eskimo girl survives banishment
Solved: Nuvat the
Brave
E140:
Elephant's knees and Chocolate Cake
This book was teaching children about
how somethings can be made fair (chocolate cake) and some things are
just that way (Elephant's knees which bend differently than other
animals). I thought the name was That's Not Fair, but I can't
find it anywhere. I read it to my children in the mid
1980's. I would love to find at least two copies.
Jane Sarnoff, That's not fair, 1980, copyright. I don't know if
this is it. The only description I can find is: "Becky thinks her
older brother Bert has the best of things in their family and "that's
not fair."
David
Henry
Wilson,
Elephants Don't Sit On
Cars, 1977, copyright. I am only mentioning
"Elephants Don't Sit On Cars" because another website claims this to be
the answer... but after listening to an audiobook sample, I am pretty
convinced that this is NOT the "That's not Fair" book... unless there
was a part about an elephant doing "number 2" on a car. I do not think
that "Elephants Don't Sit On Cars" is a picture book either.
E141:
Elves working in cave
before 1971, childrens. I
believe it had several different stories in it. I know it had an
illustration on inside of front and back cover that showed many elves
working or partying in a large cave or underground dwelling. All
illustrations appeared to be mostly black pencil not much color.
received it in 1971. probably about an an inch and a half thick.
possibly had fairies or tales written on front cover. Cover exterior
was either plain yellowish orange definitely quality binding. received
it as a first baby book. No way it was made after 1971. Received it in
Florida.
2009
E142:
"Everyone waits for Joe"
Hello, I have a memory of a book
where, "Everyone waits for Joe." Joe is a train conductor and the
contents of the train include potatoes and tomatoes and each little
segment ends with, "everyone waits for joe." "The cow waits on
the hill" is another line from the book.
I just remembered that I forgot to tell you that "Joe" from this
bookstumper is a train conductor and he travels from town to the
country where the book, children's book, takes place. This
book was a gift in the early 70s. I remember one page featuring a
horse who also waits for Joe.
Betty Ren Wright, Train Coming! This is a Whitman Tell-a-Tale
book. "This is a train whose name is Joe. Listen! Hear his
whistle blow? Ooooh! Ooooh! This is the shiny,
silvery track that Joe must follow to town and back, with a car full of
milk, and a load of potatoes, a car full of carrots, and one of
tomatoes- and a red caboose that comes along with a bangety, bumpety,
rattle-y song. Everyone waits for Joe. The farmer waits, and the
hired men, the cow on the hill and the pig in the pen, the big old
rooster making lots of noise, and the farmer's Thirteen girls and boys.
Everyone waits for Joe." etc.
E143:
English translation of russian book: Burn,
Burn, My Star: How to Sing
Book on Opera Singing by famous singer
Boris Shtokolov. Title translated by Wikipedia as "Burn, Burn, My
Star: How to Sing." Found the Russian version on Worldcat:
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/40354430 . Looking for an English
translation.
E144:
Evil siblings, young adult
novel, 70's or 80's, horror
Teen lives next door to four siblings,
youngest is evil, older ones seem weird but Cat is his friend -
discovers the parents experimented to try to get evil kid, each more
succesful than last but Cat is second youngest.
E145:
Elementary Twins
Elementary book - girl seems to change
day to day. school
classmates notice when she eats something she had said she was
previously
allergic to. It turns out the girl is a twin and her and her sister
alternate
going to school. details maybe sketchy! haven't read in years.Putnam,
Polly,
The
Mystery
of
Sara Beth'
Putnam, Polly, The Mystery
of Sara Beth, 1950. I
loved
this book as a kid! The twins, Sara and Beth, are from a poor family
that has
recently moved to a cold climate from a warm one. Their family can only
afford
one new coat for the girls, so they take turns going to school,
pretending to
be one girl named Sara Beth. Another girl at school figures out their
secret by
noting inconsistencies in their behavior, which as you said, changes
constantly. For instance, one of the girls loves the class pet, a
guinea pig,
and her twin is afraid of it.
E146:
Egg Society
A thick, hardcover with a white
jacket. The characters are egg-shaped in the
illustrations (if I remember correctly -or were born from eggs?) and
their
color determined what they were to be in life - i.e. blue
=doctor. But one character decided to go against what
his society expected him to be.
E147:
Englishwoman goes to France in search of family history
Book from
my school library--must have been 1950s or early '60s.
Middle-aged, unmarried Englishwoman goes to
France searching for family history from clue in old photo
album--picture of a
girl in a garden restaurant? She got a
new dress made by sister seamstresses and learned about father's past.
I
think E147 is Family Album by
Antonia Ridge. Dorothy Durand goes to France in search of her
father's
family following clues in her father's photo album. There is a
photo of
his family's hotel/restaurant in Nimes. She eventually meets up
with her
cousins who are ribbon makers in Saint Etienne. The dress is made
for her
cousin Catherine before she sets off on a round the world trip.
E148:
Even Steven
I'd love to find a book I read in camp
in the late 60s.Boy named Steven lives on island, goes to school by
ferry. He likes to draw and/or paint,
often when he's supposed to be doing something else. This gets him into
trouble
at home and in school. The phrase "Even Steven" is used at least once.
E149:
Evergreen Tree Embossed on Cover
Solved:
Jim Forrest
E150:
Edith Wouldn't Go to Bed
Circa 1970s, children's story. The
story is about a little girl, named Edith, who didn't want to go to
bed.So,
her parents let her stay up all night but I believe she wasn't allowed
to
play with anything and there was no one to play with or talk to. In
addition,
she got very tired and eventually wanted to go to bed because she
realized that
she wasn't missing anything, but sleep, in the night.
Johanna Johnston, Edie Changes her Mind, 1964,
copyright. You were
close - these are the "Edie" books by Johanna Johnston (apparently
written about her own little girl).
2011
E151:
Explorers
of
Kentucky
1920 - 1950, nonfiction. Probably
a textbook for grades 4 through 8.
Believed to have been written or co-authored by a lady who lived in
Paris, KY during the 1940's and maybe 1950's. The book tells about
Daniel Boone's travels in
Kentucky along with some of the other early explorers including George
Rogers
Clark.
E152:
Emmaline
Eliza
Porter
Brown
Date, 1950.The main
character is a little girl named Emmaline Eliza Porter
Brown.
My name is Emmaline so I thought it was wonderful. The little girl had
a horse, and she and the horse raced
a train. Of course, they won. That is all I really remember
about the
story.
My
first
granddaughter
will
be
born
soon,
and
I
would
love
to
find
this
much
loved
book.
Her name is Emmaline.
Madye Lee
Chastain, Nellie.
E153:
Elevator,
time
travel,
girl
YA
paperback
novel
about
a
girl
who
enters
a
time
traveling ( elevator?) and goes
back into time to when her mother was young-her age. I believe it was
an Apple
Paperback? Sometime in the early 1980's.
Francine
Pascal,
Hanging Out
with Cici. From
the "creator" of Sweet Valley High a novel which is bibliotherapy-ish,
but
quite entertaining for all that. It might just conceivably make life a
bit
easier for a teenage rabel and her mother. Present-tense narration by
13
year-old Victoria who wants her mother to treat her as a pre-adult, not
a silly
little kid: ''I can't believe she was ever my age. I think she was born
a
mother. No wonder we can't get along.'' Victoria is in big trouble with
her mum, when a time warp throws her into the company of Cici, a
lively,
naughty and strangely familiar girl of the 1940's. They fool about,
share
jokes and experimental smoking: Cici attempts to shoplift and cheat in
a school
test. Of course, Cici is her mother and when Victoria eventually jolts
back to
the 80's, she and her mum get on much better. Should be popular in the
library and might be considered for class use, to explore the
generation gap.
Edward
Ormondroyd, Time at
the Top, 1970. I
wonder
if you're thinking of Time at the Top. Susan does take an elevator in her
building to the top floor, but she ends up in a 1900s world. She makes
two
friends, and helps them save their mother. In the end, she brings her
widowed
father back in time to meet their widowed mother, and...There is a
sequel, where I think Susan returns to the
present to bring back something to save her step-mother...so maybe
that's
the one you're looking for.
E154:
East
and
West
Winlock
SOLVED: Joanne Oppenheim, On the
Other Side of the River, 1971,
approximate.
E155:
Evil
(ice?)
queen
transforms
prince
An evil (snow or ice?) queen puts a
spell
on a prince and
turns him into an animal/monster. His love must grab him in the forest
and hold
on while he transforms into terrible things in her arms. He finally
transforms
into a very hot/molten rock, so she throws him in a well. May include
"midsummer."
Tam Lin. This
would be some version of the legend of Tam Lin.
It's been retold many times, so it's hard to know what your book
is exactly. If you look up Tam Lin on
Wikipedia, there is a list of books based on it--none on the list have
the word
Midsummer in it, though.
E156:
Elephant
escapes
This book is about a female elephant
(I believe named
Queenie) who escapes (I believe from the circus). People search
for her, and she's eventually
found standing in front of a billboard that has her picture on
it.
I seem to recall that she is wearing a tutu
and some sort of headdress.
The Boy Who
Stole the Elephant?
In that book, the
elephant's name is definitely Queenie. Author: Julilly H.
Kohler. Illustrator: Lee J. Ames, a Disney artist. It was turned
into a
Disney TV-movie in 1970, starring Mark Lester.
William
Johnston, Bozo and
the Hide-and-Seek Clown, early 1970s,
reprint. This is a golden
book about an
elephant named Queenie who hides by standing in front of her own
billboard. Bozo the clown goes all over
town looking for her, until he finds her.
This is definitely the book you are describing.
Not
very
helpful,
I'm
afraid,
but
I
remember
a
book
about
a
boy
who
stole
an
elephant
and
traveled
with
her,
trying
to
hide
her
from
a
cruel
owner.
I
thought
her
name
was
Queenie,
but
I
don't
remember
the title of the book or the author. I don't think it
was
The Boy Who Stole the Elephant, because that doesn't look or sound the
same.
The one clue I have to the book I remember is that I think it was
illustrated
by Lynd Ward, and that either the author or the boy's name was Robert,
but
looking online, there doesn't seem to be a title that looks right.
Still,
just in case that jogs someone else's memory...
E157:
Eating
with
ghost/devil
on
back
SOLVED: Pura Belpre, Oté
2012
E158:
Eighth-grade
grammar
textbook
with
a
humorous
twist
The 8th-grade grammar textbook we used
at Whittier School
in Haverhill, Massachusetts, in 1964-65 had a nubbly green cover. (It
wasn't
new, so it was likely published or available in the 1950s.) The shade
was akin
to Depression-era green—a dusty medium green. It was a broad book, as I
recall,
almost square, with two or more columns of text on each page. It had
distinctive humorous halftone illustrations—cartoons, you could say.
The
details of the illustrations were skillfully done in grays without
black
outlines. One that I recall exemplified the admonition to the writer to
stick
to the topic and not get carried away—it portrayed a space
traveler sticking to the mission, ignoring curious
anthropomorphized
planets who are trying to lead the traveler astray.
There were numerous
"practice" passages printed
in capitals with little or no punctuation. There might be periods, but
nothing
else. The student would have to copy them and provide proper
punctuation and
capitalization. The authors had taken care to make the passages
absorbing. There was one humorous sequence, done like a comic strip.
A bunch of cowboys are having supper. One cowboy, "Red," says to
another, "Slim, shoot me the potatoes!" Slim promptly shoots Red, to
the horror of the others. He is arrested and brought before a judge,
who
pronounces the sentence: "Life in prison—and that's not too harsh a
punishment for someone who doesn't understand the difference between a
direct
and indirect object!" I am not remembering exactly. Egads, how I miss
that book.
E159:
Exiled
to
desert
planet,
finds
earth-like
forest
with
other
exiled
children
SOLVED: Monica Hughes, The
Other
Place.
E160:
Elephants
named Momsy, Popsy and Babsy
What is the title of a children's book
from the 50s about
3 elephants in India who were put in chains? The elephants were named
Momsy,
Popsy and Babsy.
Bigham, Madge A., Sonny Elephant, illustrated by Bertha and Elmer Hader,
Little,
Brown, 1930. Story of baby Sonny
Elephant, and the rest of his family, Papsy, Mumsy, Mogul, and Rajah. Free to roam the jungles and plains at their
leisure in the beginning, Sonny and family are captured and enrolled in
"elephant school", then become performers/laborers in Daddy Siva's
traveling show.
E161:
Evil female character has "sweet
tooth" necklaces
All I remember about the book is
something about these
people/kids (maybe troll like?) that garden alot but one of them eats
too many
sweets? and something about shining teeth on necklaces and theres
definitely a
villian who I think is female. There might have been a map on the
inside cover?
E162:
Encyclopedia of Fairy Tales
I am trying to locate a book that I
had as a child in the
1950's. The book was part of a set of three books. The
books MAY
have had Encyclopedia in the the title. One book in
the set was Fairy
Tales, and another was a book of fables, I cannot
remember the
subject of the third book in the series, but it may have been a book
(encyclopedia) of poetry.
The books had gray
covers, they were 8" x 11.
The pages were printed on glossy paper. One
book had an
orange spine, one had a brown spine, and the book
of Fairy Tales, (the book that I am attempting to
locate) had
a blue spine.Although, I do not know all of the stories in the book, I
do know that Cinderella, and the Elves and the Shoemaker were two
of the
stories. The Cinderella story had beautiful pictures.
F5:
father
died
Solved: The Haunting of Julie Unger
F7: families
across the street
Solved: Robin
F8: fish
eyes and glue
Solved: Susannah at Boarding School
F13: farm
colors
Solved: The Wild Whirlwind
F17: Forest
Fires
Solved: The Forest Fire Mystery
F20: FISH
For older reeaders, it is about a girl called FISH, ,which stands
for Felicity Imogen Stanley Holmes. This might even have
been
the title of the book. She is poor and orphaned and turns out to
be an heiress and much of the book is taken up with detailed
descriptions
of her new clothes and room.
F20 fish: two really long
shots - The
Magical
Cupboard, by Jane Louise Curry, Atheneum 1976, involves
an orphan called Felicity in a dreadful 18th c. orphanage run by nasty
Parson Grout, who steals a magic wooden cupboard that lets Felicity
into
modern times. Then there's Fish, also titled A
Boy
Called Fish, by Alison Morgan, Chatto 1971 about a boy
whose
birthday, school desk, and even name belong to someone else, and the
dog
he cares for.
Eleanore Jewett, Felicity Finds a Way,
1940s/1950s. Another very long shot all I know about this book is
the title, and that it was set in post-Revolution New York, and is a
book
for young people. Almost certainly not the Alison Morgan book in
any case apart from the fact that the central character is a boy,
it does not have a similar plot.
The
Little
Countess. This is
definitely a book called "The Little Countess". I read it in the
early 60's. It's actually Fish's elder sister who
inherits the title from a distant relative and becomes the "little
countess", but the book is more about Fish - Felicity Imogen Stanley
Holmes. They were poor and are suddenly
rich! If anyone can supply the
author's name ....?
Frances
Cowen, The Little Countess,
1954.
It
was
a
good
read
for
a
young
teenage
girl
in
the
late
50s/early
60s.
Wonder
how
it
would
read
today????
F21: Fairy,
tiny
Solved: The Land of Happy Days
F22: Flowers
nod
Solved: Song At Dusk
F26: Fiona
the
beautiful
Solved: Fanona the
Beautiful
F27: Fairies
and
where
they
live
One is for a friend who remembers having a
book about fairies read to her when she was a child (around 1960). The
book described where fairies lived (in tulip petals) and their houses
in
general.
Louisa May Alcott, Flower Fables.
A collection of six original fairy tales written by the acclaimed
Louisa
May Alcott. These stories are part of a large body of fantasy fiction
the
author wrote throughout her career. Each story features adventures of
elves
and fairy sprites in fairyland and are imbued with the lushness of
Alcott's
love of the natural world. Each story is between 12 and 18 pages with
full
page illustrations.
Cicely Mary Barker, Flower Fairies
books
Cicely Mary Barker, Flower Fairies
series. A possibility.
Maybe Fairy Elves by Robin
Palmer
and
Pelagie Doane (1964)
Maybe The Adventures of Snugglepot and
Cuddlepie by May Gibb (Gibbs?) 1940's- I think there
are
newer reprints.
F28: Fairy
tale
figurines
When I was very small my eldest sister (she
was born in 1950) had a book that I loved...It had fairy tale figurines
right inside! I think it had the Wizard of Oz crew, three
bears, etc...it looked just like a book
from the outside, but when you opened it the
inside had all these little cubicles with fairy tale figurines in them.
Any idea what it was called or where I can find one?
Not the same book, but a
similar idea -
perhaps
a series? Dale Payson, Magic Castle Fairytale Book
New York, Random House 1978 8vo over 9" illustrated board covers that
open
up to reveal on the left side - paper pages for the three fairy tales
included,
which are The Golden Goose, Jack and the Beanstalk, Rumpelstiltskin,
and
Sleeping Beauty. On the right side the boards unfold again to reveal
pop-up
castle. In a separate envelope are paper cut-out characters to go along
with all the stories. Paper engineering by Ib Penick.
there was a short series of toy/books published
in the mid-late 1950s called Playbooks, of fairy tales, including the
Three
Bears (but not Wizard of Oz, which is copyright) which opened to show a
box containing little plastic figures of the characters and some props.
F28 fairy tale figurines: more on the Playbook
series - published New York, Playbook 1958, each book being approx
6x4",
with the fairy tale in a 12 page front section, and the figures in a
box/hollow
book after that. Titles
included Red Riding Hood, Goldilocks and the
Three Bears, Jack and the Beanstalk, Cinderella, Three Little Pigs, and
Hansel and Gretel "with true-to-life playfigures", slogan - "read
the
books, play with the figures".
We have this book somewhere in our family!
My nan used to have it and it was exactly as you described - the
figures
were for looking at = couldn't play with them. On the opposite
page
were little nursery rhymes stories associated with each scene. My
nan gave this book to one of my cousins so I'll email her and find out
the name and publisher! I'm looking for a copy myself!
Fairykins
Story
Book, 1962. After
much searching I think I found the book the original poster was looking
for. It was made by Marx and an image
can be seen here.
F30: Fairy
Princess
Crystal
A fairy story from well before WWII (I think): The fairy Princess
Crystal nearly loses her godmother's blessings at birth due to her
King-father's
faux pas. She sprouts wings at some point before adolescence - as do
all
fairies - and a male fairy tells her: "That's nothing. I cut mine last
night." She accidentally destroys a caterpillar's house. He takes her
prisoner
later on. She is rescued and when they seek revenge on the caterpillar,
he's discovered to have already been eaten by a bird. I think it was a
red hardcover with glossy black and white illustrations.
F31: Family
adventures
at
home
on
rainy
days
There was a series of books about a nice family that rearranged
their furniture on rainy days to pretend they were going on adventures.
A table would become a hut in a desert island, etc. It may have been
british.
This possibility The Cherrys on Indoor
Island
by Will Scott, published by Brock Books in England, 1958 "The
'happenings'
in
the
Cherrys
books
could
be
those
of
any
family
-
and
the
neighbours
join
in.
On
this
wet
day
the
house
becomes
a
desert
island
crowded
with
incidents!"
(Junior Bookshelf Jan/58 ad) Other titles include
The
Cherrys of River House (1952), The Cherrys to the Rescue
(1963), The Cherrys and Company (1953), The
Cherrys'
Mystery Holiday (1960), etc.
F32: Flying
device
Solved: Skyjets for Fliers of Tomorrow
F33: Flowers
taste
better
than
oatmeal
Solved: The Boy Who Ate Flowers
F34: Flying
bed
and
witch--not
Bedknobs and Broomsticks
Solved: Timothy and Two
Witches
F35: Flood!
An action/suspense story about a brother and
sister whose parents leave them and go to town in a wagon, and the
river
starts rising, flooding, and traps the children at the homestead on
high
ground. And wild animals from the surrounding areas come up to
take
shelter from the flood waters which are continuing to rise.
#F35--Flood!: One of Lois Lenski's
more
obscure
titles
is
"Flood Friday." Since it is
based on a true story which took place in Connecticut in 1955, it is
doubtful
there's anything about going to town in a wagon. One story set in
rural America in the past was "Our Vines Have Tender Grapes."
This
was
a
movie
around
1946,
part
of
which
dealt
with
farm
children
in
a
flood.
Another guess, but F35 could very well be An
American
Ghost by Chester Aaron. I haven't read it, but
I have seen the TV version. The plot concerns a pioneer brother and
sister
who are left alone on the family farm while their father takes their
mother
into town to have a baby. While they are gone, there is a huge flood
and
the children't home washes away down river. They still have some
animals,
and later a cougar takes up residence in/near the house.
F35 flood: a long shot, but could it be Champ,
Gallant
Collie, by Patricia Lauber, published Random
House
1960? Champ is left to guard the farm, the river floods, and a mountain
lion menaces the farm animals. No idea if
there are children at home as well, though.
F35 flood: the Chester Aaron title, An
American
Ghost, has some differences. According to a review,
the
main character is a boy alone, the story is set in the 1800s, and he is
"left in charge of a Wisconsin farm house which is swept away down the
Mississippi with him inside it. Alone? So he thought until he
discovered
a mountain lion caged in by a fallen tree at one end of the house."
(Children's
Books of the Year 74 p.61)
F36: Fairies
take
girl
to
their
leader
I remember reading several different books
and/or stories about fairies. One involved a girl who falls asleep in
the
woods and awakens to discover she is as small as the blades of grass
upon
which she slept. It seems there were fairies or elves who take her to
meet
their ruler. There were either some evil fairies along the way, OR the
fairies at first thought the girl was an evil intruder and they capture
her and take her through the small world in the earth (or fairyland,
wherever?).
Some of the other queries came sort of close to what I remembered, but
not quite (as in, close but no cigar). She eventually is returned to
her
normal size and can go home, but I think she is able to return (and
does).
They sleepi in flowers, drink dew...lots of that sort of stuff. The
only
other tidbit I'd love to know what the title of this book is, et cetera.
F36 fairies take girl: could it be Joan
in Flowerland, hardcover, by Margaret Tarrant and Lewis
Dutton,
illustrated by Margaret Tarrant, published Frederick Warne, no date, 60
pages. "Joan is a little girl who believes in fairies, and when the
gardener
tells her that the best place to find them is among the flowers, she
goes
in search of them. Tinkler the elf acts as guide and Joan makes some
wonderful
discoveries." The fairies in Annabel and Bryony (Solved List) are
military
and take prisoners at times, but the children get into fairyland
through
a flower, not by falling asleep, so it probably isn't that one.
Haldeman, Linda, The Lastborn of
Elvinwood,1978.This charming novel has enough elements in
common
with the requester'\''s stumper to be worth investigating.
English
actor Ian James follows his local vicar into a wood, discovers a tribe
of tiny faerie folk dwelling there, and is charged by Oberon to aid in
finding a bride for the last prince of Faerie -- a task which may
involve
facing down Merlin himself, and casting a spell over the infant
daughter
of a visiting American family. There are more parallels to the
poster'\''s
description than this summary may suggest, although the match isn'\''t
perfect in any event, however, Haldeman is a superb writer and the book
well worth seeking out. The date given is for the original
hardcover
edition
there was an Avon paperback issued in 1980.
Ullman, Barb
Bentler, The
Fairies of Nutfolk Wood. I'm not positive, but this sounds
like The Fairies of Nutfolk Wood. A young girl moves with her mother to
a
trailer in the woods and I think visits fairies when she falls asleep.
The
cover has a picture of a tree or tree stump made into a fairy house. At
any
rate, it's a charming story and worth checking out.
F37: Fortune
hunters
Solved: Merlin's Magic
F38: Flying
apple
Solved: The Apple
F40: Full
circle
house
Solved: The House the
Pecks
Built
F41: Future
forest
cities
It's about a boy who goes into the future and the cities are all
like parks or sunny forests, with modest amounts of people and high
technology
providing a quiet, clean environment. I think the name of the
society
began with a "T" or "Th." I think there was another type of
society
on the same planet that wasnt' doing so hot. I wish I remembered
more about it.
#F41--Future Forest Cities: Part of the
description reminds me of a chapter from E. Nesbit's The Story
of
the Amulet and part of it reminds me of Zilpha
Keatley
Snyder's Green Sky trilogy but it's probably neither one.
perhaps - A Time to Choose: a story of
suspense, by Richard Parker, published Harper 1974 151
pages.
"When Stephen Conway, aged 17, borrowed his father's car to transport
props
and costumes for his school play, he not only dented a hubcap but
caught
a glimpse of an uncanny, bright vision in the windshield. So began the
strange adventure of a youth caught between two words existing
simultaneously
on the banks of an English river: the 20th century world of
overpopulation,
traffic and pollution; and a future world of idyllic, communal living
and
skillful utilization of water and wind power. Stephen and classmate
Mary
Silver soon found themselves able to leave and enter the 'brave new
world'
but ultimately had to make a choice - to live there permanently or to
stay
in a world of indifferent or nagging parents, and school examinations."
(HB Aug/74 p.385)
F41 future forest cities: another possible is
The
Magic Meadow, by Alexander Key, published Westminster 1975
"Five
young hospital patients escape to a delightful future. Ages 10-14." (HB
Apr/75 p.196 pub ad)
F42: Flood
Friday?
Solved: Hills End
F43: Fog
Magic
Time
reversal
Solved: A Sound of
Crying
F44: Fairy
tales
I am looking for an elusive book: a very special book of classic
fairy tales that my mother would read my brother, my sister, and I. I
remember
it was hard bound with a collage of images from the collection of
classic
stories inside. The book, if I can recall properly, was heavily
illustrated,
and also trimmed in a dark blue coloring. I remember the various
stories
recounted were The Owl and The Pussy Cat, The Wood Cutter's Daughter
(featuring
a wood nymph?), I believe, and many others. I also think there
was
a story about a magical wooded place in which all objects were formed
from
candy, and another story about a little girl who must journey far to
fetch
water with a special silver bowl, or pan to help her ill mother.
I think Robin Red Breast may also have been part of this collection,
but
that memory is suspect.
Post #F44. It seems to be the same book
that I am diligently searching for. The story of the ill mother
was
about the big or little dipper. The theme of many stories were of
how things "became" like the story of spring (?)or was it the wind and
good character or values/morals. If memory serves me well,
Midas and the Golden Touch was included, and there was the story of the
little pine tree whose needles became something else. I can
almost
see the beautiful illustrations but too vaguely to describe. It
was
a favorite book to trace from! I also remember a story of
Anderson's
Red Cap. I just stumbled onto this site which is
simply
fantastic. I have been glued here all night and have decided to
move
in. : ) Back to reading the posts!
I believe it is Folk Tales Children Love...
tadaaaaa.
Good
night
now.
Safe
tomorrow
Barbara Leonie Picard. I'm guessing this
is a collection by Barbara Leonie Picard. She wroteThe Faun
and the Woodcutter's Daughter, but the other stories aren't in
the book by that name (which are all original stories by her).
However,
she did also retell a lot of fairy tales and legends as well as write
her
own, so it's quite possible she's got a collection out there that
contains
them all. A more traditional collection by someone else wouldn't
include
The
Faun and the Woodcutter's Daughter, however (which is what I'm
pretty sure the first story is).
F45: Folk
Tales
The next book I am searching for is one that I often read during
my first years in the grade school library. In retrospect, I think by
the
images, and the resurgence of folk tales during the 60s and 70s that
this
book was printed around then, but I read it in the early
80's.
It was a hardcover collection of fairy tales and folk tales. It
also
had a collage of images from the stories held within. One
smallish
image on the front always held my attention, because it was a rather
shapely
female figure composed of either melting gold, flame, or wax...I cannot
remember which one. This was a richly, beautifully illustrated book as
well. This book contained many not so main stream tales, but the
one that most fascinated me was a story about a princess, or special
girl,
who is carried off in a special net by a flock of swans who, I am not
sure
were her brothers, or just magical beings. Any help you
could
give me would be very appreciated. Thank you so much.
I don't know the name of the book, but the
story
about the swans is The
Wild
Swans by Hans Christian Andersen Maybe
adding
that title to searches would yield some results?
I am looking for the same book. The book
also has a wonderful story about a male spider trying to entice a shy
female
fly into his web. I cherished this book as a child and would also
love to find it. Thanks!!
F46: Frogs
Solved: We Four Together
F47: Fairy-Tale
Picture
Book
Series
Solved: The Maxton Series
F48: Funny
Animal
Poems
This is a children's book purchased in the early 80's. It
was a hard cover "pop-up" book. i taught my daughter how to read
poetry with that book. She loaned it to a friend and never got it
back. Please let me know where i might find another copy or
two.
THanks!!
F48 funny animal poems: I guess My
Pop-up
Funny Animal Poems, by Ronne Peltzman, published
Zokeisha
1985 would just be too obvious?
F49: Fog
leads
back
through
time
Solved: Fog Magic
F50: Frances
Imposter
Solved: Harvey's Hideout
F51: Family
of clothes-pegs
Chapter book for 6-8 year olds, line drawings. Probably UK, written
before 1970. Family went to sea.
Enid Blyton, Mary Mouse series.
Not 100% sure of this as I don't have any copies to check. They
were
small strip books with thin card covers approx 8 inches long by about 3
inches high with 2 boxed line drawings to a page with text
underneath.
The clothes pegs were often dressed in sailor uniforms & Mary Mouse
worked for them. They are very collectible now.
Possibly The Big Book of Pegman Tales
by Ella McFadyen. Plot summary: "Contains favorite
stories
with an Australian flavor from Pegman Tales and Pegman Go
Walkabout.
Carved from clothes-pins, the Pegmen become animated and go on a sea
voyage."
F52:
Fairy
who couldn't fly
Solved: The Fairy Who Wouldn't Fly
F53: Food
on trees
Solved: Patrick
F54: Fairy
Tale
Book
Solved: Dean's Gift Book of Fairy Tales
F55: Frontier
brothers'
adventures
Solved: The Great Brain
F56: Family
vacation grand canyon
Solved: Henry Reed's Journey
F57: Fairy
tale collection
Solved: Great Swedish Fairy Tales
F58: Fairy
Stories
Very whimsical with many fairies on the cover - beautiful
illustrations
One story was about a spider inviting the fly into his web. This is all
i remember. I would love to find this book as i cherished it as a
child.
Any chance this is Elves and Fairies? Check
it out.
No, I am afraid that is not the book. This book had
beautiful fairy's on the cover. I believe there is fire in the center
with
female fairies flying around it .The story about the spider inviting
the
fly into his parlour is the only story I remember. I recall it
may
have been more of a rhyming book and extremely whimsical. Thanks
for the prompt reply!!!
Howitt, Mary,The Spider and the Fly
(poem only). I don't know the exact book the poster is looking
for,
but the poem about the spider and the fly is in many collections and
can
be read
here.
Here's a possibility! Treasury of Stories
and Verse (no author or editor) Gallery Books 1989. If this
time
frame is too late- this book was originally published as Hilda
Boswell's
Treasury of Poetry, Hilda Boswell's Treasury of Children's Stories and
Hilda Boswell's Treasury of Nursery Rhymes. The first or third
may be a lead! Good luck.
This might be it! Fairies on cover and The Spider
and the Fly covers 4 pages, lavishly illustrated. Treasury of
Stories
and Verse-1989- Gallery Books. It seems to be a collection
drawing
from three earlier sources: Hilda Boswell's Treasury of Poetry,
Hilda
Boswell's Treasury of Children's Stories and Hilda
Boswell's
Treasury of Nursery Rhymes. Hope this helps!
F59a:
farmer,
yellow
Solved: McBroom's Ear
F59b: fairy
tale anthology
Solved: Dean's Mother Goose Book of Rhymes
F60: fairytale
compilation 1950-60
Solved: The Fairy Tale Book
F61: Fireflies
and girl
Solved: The Golden Name
Day
F62:
Family
of entertainers in 1800s west
Solved: Mr. Mysterious and Company
F63:
Fairytale
anthology
Solved: It Must be Magic
F64: fish
beach
suffocate
woman
Solved: Walter Fish
F65:
Fairy Tales
Solved: Storytime Treasury
2002
F66: Fairy
tales with claymation-like figures
Solved: Puppet Treasure
Books
F67: Food
Solved: Cheese, Peas and
Chocolate Pudding
F68:
Fair-haired
Celt with Sword
Solved: The Sword of
Aradel
F69:
Falconry and Genghis Khan
Solved: The Golden Hawks
of Genghis Khan
F70:
Fairytale anthology
Solved: Fairy Tales (Hadaway)
F71:
Fairy/Robin
story
Solved: The Dagger and the
Bird: A Story of Suspense
F72:
Frogs,
three
the book I am looking for I read as a child (I'm 47 now!) it was
about three frogs, one was named Percival. That's all I can remember!
F72: This is a long shot, but I'm reminded of
Walter
the Lazy Mouse(1937) by Marjorie Flack. He gets
accidentally
abandoned by his family because he's so slow to follow them at anything
they practically forget he exists. He has to fend for himself and takes
up with the creatures at a pond, including three forgetful frogs, who
inspire
him to pull himself together and stop being so lazy (so he won't wind
up
as backward as them, maybe?) He gives them names, since they have none,
and tries to be their teacher. He finds his family eventually.
If you put Percival and frog in Google you get
over 1000 items, so I decided not to take the time to see if by any
chance
it would yield the answer to F72. What other word could we add? {Of
course
it may be the Flack, but I've sold both my copies.]
FYI, the three frogs in Walter the Lazy
Mouse are Leander, Lulu, and Percy.
F73:
fiddler
Its a story which takes place in a rural
setting.
A farmer, I think, is met by a peculiar man with one cloven hoof,
justone.
This character plays a fiddle. Now I know this sounds like Charlie
Daniels
"The Devil went down to Georgia" but this was a book in the kids
section
of our neighborhood library-Schenectady N.Y. Many of our favorite books
were on Captain Kangaroo and we then got them out of the library .I
think
this was one such. The illustrations were of a Thomas Hart Benton
Americana
style, Pen&Ink. Remember?
Bill Brittain, The Wishgiver,
1983. "The Devil and ..." stories are prominent in American folklore,
however,
this description put me in mind of a fantastic story of wishes gone
awry.
The original edition of this book features b&W drawings. I
haven't
read this book in a long time, so if it doesn't work out, you might
also
want to try looking for the many variations of Bearskin.
Possibly The Devil and Daniel Webster,by
Stephen
Vincent Benet?
mean jake and the devils, 1981.
Natalie Babbitt wrote and illustrated
THE
DEVIL'S STORYBOOK and THE DEVIL'S OTHER STORYBOOK.
These are collections of short stories, but the one you're looking for
might be in them. (In any case, they're wonderful.)
F74:
First
Year in Womens' College or Boarding School.
I read this paperback (a Scholastic
paperback?)
in about 1964-1966 time period. The principal character is a
young
woman in her first year of a woman's college or boarding school.
Late in the book, she is Christmas shopping for a present for her
younger
brother and is excited about buying him a wonderful blue radio when she
suddenly realizes she just wants to buy him this extravagant gift so
that
he will think what a great sister she is and that she would do better
to
buy something for someone else--who that is or what the other gift is I
no longer remember. There is another character in the book named
Meredith (I think) whose father is a politican accused of some sort of
corruption. I've wondered for years what this book was and hope that
through
you I will be able to find it and buy it. Thanks.
I remember a book about a girl who went to
boarding
school. The main character was Lovey or Luvvy, and the book may
have
been called Lovey's Girls or Lovey and the Girls.
It
sticks
out
in
my
mind
because
I
seem
to
remember
that
the
main
character
was
not
quite
perfect,
in
fact,
there
were
sticky
issues
in
the
book.
.
. . LOVE THE SITE!
Beth Gutcheon, The New Girls,
1979. Not a match, but maybe would be satisfying to you. This one
comes a bit later, and does not have the blue radio incident, but has
many
other similarities. Here is the synopsis from HarperCanada Books: The
New
Girls is a resonant, engrossing novel about five girls
during
their formative prep-school years in the tumultuous mid-sixties. Into
their
reality of first-class trips to Europe, resort vacations, and deb
parties
enter the Vietnam War, the women's movement, and the sexual revolution.
As the old traditions collide with the new society, the girls lose
their
innocence, develop a social conscience, and discover their sexuality --
blossoming into women shaped by their turbulent times. Characters names
are: Jenny, Ann, Sally, Lisa, and Muffin
I enjoyed playing Stump the Bookseller, and
fortunately, the Bookseller won! I appreciate the information and now
know
what to look for.
F75: Friends
go
back
in
time
Solved: The Summerhouse
F76:
Frog
Prince
Solved: Jerome
F77:
furry
troll/mystical creature finds safe warm haven underwater
A troll or other (furry? fuzzy?) mystical
or made up character finds a pond, or lake that he/she can venture into
and breathe, either by magic or a special device. In the water it is
safe
and warm and dark? I think...the book was light green, hardcover, I
believe
it was a beginning chapter book. It took more than one sitting for our
teacher to read it to us. Pictures, I believe were in green ink,
drawings,
not colored in, and not many drawings. This story was read to me
in second grade, 1992 copyright at the latest. If you have this book,
or
know a story similiar to it, please please note it for me.
There is a series of books by Don Arthur
Torgersen
about Tumble Town and it's inhabitants. One of the titles is The
Troll Who Lived in the Lake. The cover is blue/green and
shows the troll sitting in the lake with just his eyes above the water
line. Most of the illustrations are done in a green/blue
hue.
It's about a troll who is angry because a group of boys has started
fishing
in his lake and they've taken all the fish. The water has turned
slimy and the troll isn't happy living in his lake anymore.
Grandma
Troll gives him "fifty fresk frisky fish" from her lake to restock his
lake, and he returns the bikes and fishing poles that the boys
abandoned
when he scared them away. The kids promise not to take too many
fish
and not to litter, and the troll promises not to scare them
anymore.
Could this possibly be the book you're looking for??
The main character, I'd like to say was a troll, but it could have
easily been a different made-up creature though. He was pictured on the
front of the book too. (Could've been a she too). He or she has long
hair
or fur all over, and I seem to remember his name might have been
something
along the lines of Furry,Hairy, or Wuzzy or Fuzzy (yes I am aware of
the
fuzzy wuzzy books- I don't think those are the same…) This book
already
looked old when my teacher read it( early 90's). I remember it was
smaller
than a picture book- novel size I guess. There were probably only 5
drawings
in the whole book. I have a feeling this is going to be a rare story
that
not that many people know about. I'm pretty sure he was a 'nice guy' he
could've been sad too. I remember the story taking place where there is
a forest, or nature, and there might have been a gate with a key to
unlock
it that was given to the "troll" by a fairy…This gate/key/ fairy
part is the most vague info- I'm not sure if I'm remembering that part
perfectly clear. And then of course there's the part that I remember
the
best- (these are the only 2 parts I remember, my whole class loved it
when
the teacher read it though, which was odd, because usually children,
younger
ones anyway, need more pictures than what this book had to keep their
attention,
we loved that book! I remember the whole class would all yell the name
of the main character together- if only I could remember what that
was?)
ok the part I remember best- This "troll" he or she, goes underwater.
At
first he was scared, then he finds he can breathe (how this all comes
about,
I don't remember) The feeling I got each time she read it to us (I love
books) was that when the "troll" went underwater it was safe, quiet?,
dark
- I seem to oddly remember specifically that it was dark underwater- or
something black. also it was warm underwater and it's possible that the
"troll" could be a bear. my book might be very old, but sometimes good
stories get printed again, or rewritten by another author, and the
covers
of the books change all the time. This was probably an easy reader,
beginning
chapter book. It's possible that it might be a part of a collection of
stories somewhere, not too likely though. Thanks for listening to
me!
In response to The Troll Who Lived in the Lake - It's possible
that
this is my book, …I don't remember any trash or environmental
issues…but
it's possible. I guess I would have to get the book first and read it
through
to find out…I know that if I read a whole book and not just an excerpt
I would know if it was my book or not. I'll let you know, and thanks
soooo
much for taking the time out to help me with my stumper!!
2003
F78:
Father/son
bears in a kayak
Solved: Pierre Bear
F79:
First
Grade Reader Book?
Any help will be forever appreciated. What
I know....It is a First Grade Reader Book from the 20`s or 30`s. I
believe
it contains the words, "First Grade Reader" or something like that in
the
title. It is a Hardback. I think it had a Gray cover with a Sun and a
Rabbit
on the cover. It is approx. 1 to 1.5 inches thick and about 8"tall x 6"
wide. It is full of short stories with some color illustrations.
Most Important is I know for sure two of the stories were,"The Rabbit
that
caught the sun" and "Little Black Sambo" It was my Grandmothers
First
Grade Reader Book and she used to read me the stories as a child.
I have been searching for it for years!!!!
I couldn't find the specific book referenced,
but the Loganberry Most Requested
Anthologies
page lists compilations that contain the stories you're
looking
for. Folk Tales Children Love, edited by Watty
Piper,
published
by Platt & Munk in 1934, has "How Bunny Rabbit Caught the Sun," and
Eight
Nursery Tales, a 1938 title by the same editor and publisher,
has
"Little Black Sambo." The 1950 edition of Better Homes and
Gardens
Story Book, edited by Betty O'Connor, apparently has
"Little
Black Sambo" as well, though some later reprints do not.
F80: Family
Goes
on
Camping
Trip...
Solved: Camping Adventure
F81: Fish
Children
Crystal
and
Wakefield
Solved: The Adventures of Idabell and Wakefield
F82:
Father & son move to country; aid Sandra & daughter from
brainwashing
Solved: Children of the
Sones
F83: FRIAR
AND
DONKEY
IN
ITALY
Solved?: The Little World of Don Camillo
looking for a series of childrens books regarding a chubby catholic
priest, friar or brother who travelled from village to village in italy
with his donkey. the books were humorous and told of his encounters
with
the lives of the villagers. I read these books in the mid to late 50's.
I appreciate any help .
Don Camillo? Guareschi, Giovanni
Trans by Una Vincenzo Troubridge The little
world
of Don Camillo illus by
Guareschi?
Grosset & Dunlap c1950
Sorry, but this series is not the Don Camillo
one. Those books are aimed at adults, not children, and Don
Camillo
didn't ride a donkey. [I'm guessing this is from the
original
poster, but can't tell]
I made the original request and I think little
world
of
don
camillo may be correct. the "little world" phrase in
the
title lights up a few neurons...... do you have a copy in stock ?
I still think the friar on the donkey is NOT
Don Camillo. Those books were very political and mature, and not
aimed at
children, plus Don Camillo didn't ride a
donkey.
But the reader may be conflating a couple of different books.
F84: Family
series
Solved: The Happy
Hollisters
F85: Foggy
silhouettes?
This is a childrens book perhaps oversized,
perhaps not, but the whole feature of this book was it's clever use of
tracing style paper layered with perhaps acetate, and pages of strong
silhouettes
of cars and stoplights etc. as you turn the pages shapes emerge from
the
"fog" and you can determine what things are that may have been
mis-interpereted
by the foggy shapes you can't see thru the parchment. I would
love
to know the title and author of this book. It would take me back to
probably
before 5th grade @ Rockford Road Library in MN. These are the only
details
I remember about this book. I was fascinated by it, and one day it
disappeared.
F85 This might be CIRCUS IN THE MIST
by Bruno Munari. It was reissued within the last few years by
an
Italian art society/publisher (Edizioni Corraini). Just be sure to get
the English language edition! The pictures I remember best are the
cat's
eyes and the headlights. However, maybe you could inter-library loan it
through your library to make sure it's the right one. ~from a
librarian
F86: Fanciful
Irish
settlement
history
Fictional account of exploration and
settlement
of Ireland. Epic battles between Celtic peoples and supernatural forces
including banshees and leprechauns. Paperback book, 1985, Green
cover,
of course.
Kenneth Flint aka Casey Flynn, Gods of
Ireland
Vol. I & II, 1991. This
seems like a likely prospect -- Mr. Flint (aka Mr. Flynn) has also
written
a number of books about Irish mythology/history under his own name,
dating
back to the mid-eighties, so even if this doesn't pan out, you might
still
want to check out his other works. "The peaceful Nemedians have
crossed
vast seas in search of a new home. At long last they discover a lovely
green isle and decide to settle in its single beautiful valley-already,
mysteriously, equipped with huts ready for occupation." Two
books:
"Most Ancient Song" and "The Enchanted Isles" -- the third was never
released.
F87: Fairy
Tale
collection
The book I am seeking is a Children's fairy
tale collection- I owned when I was perhaps 8-10
(approximately
40 years ago). It was a large book (maybe 18" high) with gorgeous
iillusrations-
both collor and ssepia. The collection included Donkey Skin, and
a Sleeing Beuty which I think was unique since there was a coda to the
story which described the Princess's relation with her wicked
mother-in-law.
There was I think a tinder Box as well as a story about a mute girl
whose
brothers had been chaanged into swans. The illustrations are what
I loved.
Check out the Ponsot/Segur collection on the Most
Requested Anthologies page to see if that rings a bell.
Marie
Ponsot,
trans.,
Adrienne
Segur,
Illus.,
The
Golden Book of Fairy Tales,
1958, approximate. The Golden Book of
Fairy Tales is MOST definitely the book described here!
There is a 1999 reprint commonly available at a reasonable price.
F88: Fish
for
Breakfast
a woman that in the Hebrides Islands off the coast of Scotland.
She could get her breakfast out her front door because she lived right
at the beach. I read the book in the early sixties.
Lillian Beckwith, The Hills is Lonely,
1959. Just a guess. This
site
might
help.
F89: fatapoofs
and
thinifers,
and
some
fairies,
I
think
Solved: Fattypuffs and
Thinifers
F90: fairy
royalty
found
under
tree
Dear Friends, I have vague memories
of a book I read and re-read in 3rd grade (1953-4). My memory is of a
child,
probably a boy, who sits down under a tree and suddenly finds himself
in
a land of fairy royalty. As a librarian, I’ve tried to locate
this
book, but have failed.
Marian Cockrell, Shadow Castle,1945.
Long shot, but could this be Shadow Castle? It is a girl, not a
boy,
but she does go out in the woods and after a tunnel and some other
things,
meets a fairy and "travels" (through his stories) into a land of fairy
royalty.
Jane Werner, Giant Golden Book of Elves
and Fairies, 1951. Simon and
Schuster, New York. Pictures by Garth Williams. One of the stories in
this
oversize (13" x 10") anthology meets this description. Does you
remember
illustrations? This book is lavishly and beautifully illustrated.
See
Most Requested Books.
Not sure but Mistress Masham's Repose
by T.H.White?
F91: Fisherman
builds
house
for
Friends
A man (fisherman in a yellow slicker jacket
and pants?) arrives at a house and then invites his friends to come and
stay. He adds on rooms based on their sizes and personalities. The
house
at the end of the book is a fantastic mish-mash of styles. This
is
what I remember about a book we took out of the W. Hartford, CT public
library in the early 50's.
Someone sent in a solution to another stumper
that sounds vaguely reminiscent of this one, though the person who owns
the house is a woman, not a man: Mrs. Caliper's House
by Muriel Cooke and Headley & Anne Harper, illustrated by
Sherman
Cooke, NY Knopf 1943, 63 pages. "Nonsense picture story book
about
Mrs. Caliper, who was so very friendly that she invited everyone who
came
along to live in her house. Rooms were added for the farmer, the
milkmaid,
the small boy Peter, and at last for the old lighthouse keeper. Finally
rooms had to be built on top of the house, which made it possible to
expand
almost indefinitely."
F92: Family
travels
through
US
in
trailer
Solved: Trailer Tribe
F93: Finding
my
book
See F96
F94: Fat
merchant
noodles
My mother describes a children's book of her
youth in which poor little Chinese children look in a window at a fat
merchant
eating noodles. They are starving. She now calls lomein etc "fat
merchant
noodles." Any idea what the book is?
F95: Fairy
Tale
Anthology,
p.s.
When I was a child (40 years ago give or
take),
I owned a Fairy Tale anthology which had a collection of stories that
were
familiar but a bit more maturely presented and somewhat darker
than
normal. The collection included Sleeping Beauty version in
which
there was post script after the happy ever after marriage - The
Princess's
mother-in-law was very cruel to the children for example. There
was
a Donkey Skin in which her own father wanted to marry her
because
of her resemblance to her late mother. The Tinder Box was part
of the collection as was a story of a young woman whose bothers had
been
changed to swans and for whom she had to collect stinging nettles to
weave
into shirts for them to change back to men. The book was large perhaps
18" high, and the illustrations were spectacular- color and black and
white
drawings which is really why I wanted to get anther copy. Thanks for
your
help.
Just in case, I checked the Ponsot/Segur collection, but
there
are no dark post-scripts included there. At least, not in the
recent
reprint.
The Enchanted Book. I think
I have that correct book, but I am not certain it may have been
among
Hans Christian Anderson's tales. I think the stories were
compiled
by another editor. I too loved that book and repeatedly checked it out
from my local library over very many years. I would love to have
a copy in my book collection. My two favorite stories from it
were
The Twelve Swans and Dwarf Long-Nose. I hope you find your book.
Marie
Ponsot,
trans.,
Adrienne
Segur,
Illus.,
The
Golden Book of Fairy Tales,
1958, approximate. I think the original respondent was incorrect
in ruling out The
Golden Book of Fairy Tales. It is EXACTLY as described
here! The illustrations are as described and all the stories mentioned
are in this book. Sleeping Beauty DOES have a dark coda; when the
prince turned king goes off to war, his mother (an ogress by birth)
decides she wants to EAT the little grandchildren and asks the cook to
prepare them (a day apart), but is fooled by the cook with a lamb and a
goat. Then the ogress decides she wants to eat the queen and the
cook serves her a deer. One day, the ogress discovers the hidden
queen and her children alive and decides to kill them in a basin of
snakes, vipers, toads and spiders. Her son returns home and the
ogress jumps into the basin instead.
F96: Father's
Treasure
As a boy, circa mid 1950's, I had a book where
a boy was in search of his fathers treasure. It was illustrated simply
I recall and the boy went from place to place, animal to animal in
search
of his fathers treasure. He asked the cow, "Do you know where my
father's
treasure is?" The cow sent him to another animal and so on. In the end
I think he did find a pot of gold which was his father's
Treasure.
As a grandfather now, my son-in-law is serving the US Navy in Bahrain
and
I read often to his children. It would be a wonderful surprise to find
this book that has memories for me so I could read it to them in their
father's absence. PS. I found you through the NPR feature and I commend
your service whole-heartedly. Great Idea!
F96 (and F93?) Adda M. Sharp and
Epsie
Young, Gordo and the Hidden Treasure, 1955. I
was
just looking over this at my parents' house at Christmas I loved
this book. A boy _raccoon_ travels in search of the "golden
treasure"
his father had, I think, told his family of (presumably the father had
died, I don't remember). He asks lots of animals if they know
where
he can find the treasure (I think he may even say it's his "father's
treasure")
I don't recall if there was a cow, but I don't think so. It takes
place in the Southwest, crossing over into Mexico, apparently. I
remember the sometimes colorful illustrations of pinatas, a bell tower,
a ringtail, a kangaroo rat, a boat and market filled with flowers,
maybe
a beggar . . . In the end Gordo happens upon a cornfield, and it
turns out that ears of corn were the "golden treasure" of his father.
F97: Fox
family
moves,
Dad
puts
a
fox
on
new
mailbox
I remember a story, it was either a book or a story within a
collection
of short stories, about a family. I think their last name was Fox
because they moved to a new house and the father made a fax (I think he
carved it out of wood and painted it red) to display on their new
mailbox.
I remember agreeing with the kid(s) in the story that this was a very
clever
thing to do! I really enjoyed that reading experience and would
love
to have the book again (it hasn't turned up anywhere among my family's
book).
F98: Fuzzys
Solved: The Original Warm Fuzzy Tale
F99: FLIBBERTY
GIB(B)ET
Solved: Flibbity Jibbit
F100: five
chinese
brothers
Solved: The Five Chinese Brothers
F101: fairies,
irridescent
bubbles
or
globes
1946-1952. A picture book, large and very beautiful. Fairies
in woodland gatherings have bubbles or balls that are irridescent they
also have brightly colored pieces of cloth. My memories of this date
before
I could read, so I have no knowledge of the plot, but I don't think
there
was much of one.
David Cory, The Magic Soap Bubble,
1922. I'm not certain this is the book that you are looking for
because
I haven't had time to finish reading it. However, there are
fairies
and elves, etc., in the story. It's about a boy who is taken to a
magic land in a soap bubble. Published by Grosset & Dunlap.
1946 -1952. Sorry, can't
name book but F101 and F144 I think both of these might be
looking for the same thing. F101, the book was large with a
smooth illustrated board with a white background, illustrated on the
back cover as well? inside had fairies sliding down water slides
made from narrow leaves fed from raindrops above? Were the
coloured cloths bits of spiders webs coloured by sky and sunlight? No
story as I recall, just pictures - if there was any text it was minimal
and in the full page illustrations. Also fairies riding in a cart
pulled by ?ants?
F102: Fairy
tale
journey
Solved: The Farthest-Away
Mountain
F103: Fairy
Tales
Series of bookes, at least 4 in the series, with black binding,
size approximately 5"x8"x1", lovely ink drawings often colored,
illuminated-like
text at the start of each story, very lengthy versions of classic
fairly
tales, originally published before 1942. I think one of the books
had a paiting of two young women with long flowing hair petting a bear.
I don't know anything about the books in
question,
but the illustration sounds like it could be from "Snow White and
Rose
Red." Perhaps this detail may jog someone else's memory.
Andrew Lang. Andrew Lang wrote
around
20 fairy books such as The Red Fairy Book, The Violet Fairy
Book,
The Blue Fairy Book, The Orange Fairy Book... you get the
idea.
They were fairy tales and the covers are along the lines of what's
described,
though I don't recall the exact one mentioned. Some of them are in
print
but others are not.
F104: Fish
named
Isabelle
and
Wakefield
Solved: The Adventures of Idabell and
Wakefield
F105: Flying
Machines
Solved: Flying Machine Boys series
F106: Flying
people
living
in
trees
Solved: Green Sky Trilogy
F107: fish
family
adventures
Solved: The Big Joke
F108: frog
toad
Solved: Frog and Toad are Friends
F109: For
Peter,
to
think
is
to
do
The childrens book I am looking for has the line in it "For Peter,
to think is to do." The book is a juvenile book and geared to
fourth(?)
grade or so. Published before 1955(?). The book as I
remember it is about an inch thick and 8 1/2 inches by 5 inches.
It is color illustrated as I recall and I think the cover was
brown.
The illustrations had a lot of orange in them. Thank you for
helping
me find this book...one thing I am sure of it has the line "For Peter
to
think is to do."
--Additional info--
It is the story of a boy (Peter) who lived in the city and always
wanted a garden. His family and he moved to the suburbs or the
country
and his mother said now he could have his garden. And as soon as
she said that Peter planted his garden. Revision on what I
thought
the size was: Now I am not sure how thick the book was, it might have
been
an inch or as thin as a "golden book." Cover was brown (?) and
the
story had colored illustrations. I am sure on the line "For
Peter,
to think is to do."
Jenny Seed, Peter the Gardener. An
'Antelope' book. I haven't read it since I was a child, and can't
remember
if it contains the phrase you mention. However, I think it is of about
the right reading level and it is about a boy called Peter who
has
a garden.
F109 I just read some of Yates A place
for Peter and decided it is NOT that one.
Well, Peter the Gardener wasn't
published till 1966. I found another possibility, though: Peter
and
Penny
plant
a
garden by Gertrude Dubois, published
1936,
210 pp. and illustrated. I found this description. Maybe it
will help jog your memory or rule it out. "Dark green cloth
w/orange
spade/leaf design/lettering, flower Illus endp, TP vignette, &
small
illustrations throughout text, which is organized by month, starting
w/September,
index. A story format for a garden for pre-teens." If this isn't
it, though, don't give up - it's just harder to find older books as
they
don't have good descriptions and keywords in the library databases
(yet).
F110: Fred
the
Bed
Solved: Johnny and His
Wonderful
Bed
F111: Flood
mystery
Solved: Mystery in the Flooded Museum
F112: fish
children
visit
castle
Solved: The Adventures of Idabell and
Wakefield
F113: family
detective
series
Solved: The Saturdays
F114:
feminist
book about a girl named Cress
Solved: That Crazy April
F115: Fairy
Stories
Solved: The Children's Hour
F116:
Funny
Girl--not Fanny Brice
Solved: The Funny Guy
F117:
Fisherman
finds baby inside fish
I remember a beautifully illustrated fairy tale in the 1950's of
a childless fisherman and his wife. One day he comes home with a
fish. (The fish may have spoken to him.) When he cuts the
fish
open, they find a beautiful baby girl.
I remember this story-believe it was Japanese?
the baby is a girl who turns out to be a princess? Can't remember the
title,
sorry!
There's a similar Japanese tale
about a fairy princess found in a bamboo stalk. The famous Momotaro
story is about a fisherman who catches a giant peach with a child in
it, but here it's a boy.
F118:
First
grade reader circa 1930- Sun is Up
I've been hoping for years to find my mother's first grade reader
used in Manchester NH around 1930. I have the the
first
few lines as she used to recite it to me. It was illustrated in
turquoise
& orange ala Howard Johnson's. Can anyone identify it so I
can
try to get her a copy? The sun is up, the sun is up. / Little
boy, little girl, the sun is up. / Who can wake the little boy? / I can
said the rooster. / "Cock-a-doodle-do" said the rooster. / But
the
little boy did not wake up.
I do not have the book to check for you but
your
memory of the turquoise and orange illustrations ( HoJo's color scheme)
make me think of the Elson-Gray Readers that were used
in
the 1930's! Put out by Scott Foresman, they were the precursor to the
Dick
and Jane (New Basic Readers) series.You might want to locate Book
One in the series! Good Luck- Oh! Another set of books to check out-Child
Library
Series, companion to the Elson-Gray set- same coloring-
extends the lessons and vocab of the Basal reader. Locate Book One in
this
series as well. Hopefully one of these "seeds" will bear fruit!
F119: Fantasy
Trees
Little
People
Solved: Green Sky Trilogy
F120: Forest
waterway
Solved: Where the Brook Begins
F121: fish
necklaces
Solved: Firebrat
F122: Farmer
Friendly
Little
Dog
Trumpet
Solved: Trumpet
F124: fishing
story
really
about
teasing
Solved: Simon's Hook: A
Story
About Teases and Put-Downs
F125: friendly
witch
"catalog"
Solved: The Witch's Catalog
F126: Fuzzy
polkadotted
dragon
stumper
Solved: A Dragon for Danny
Dennis
F127: Fortunately,
Unfortunately
Solved: Fortunately
F128: Fantasy
-
girl
going
over
bridge
Solved: Loretta Mason Potts
F129: Family
vacation
to
Florida
in
Apartment
complex
Solved: No Children, No Pets
F130:
Fancy
and Mercy
Fancy and Mercy or Mercy and Fancy,
1950.
The book was about two kittens -- Fancy was the "bad" kitten and
Mercy was the "good" kitten.
F132:
Fairy
Tale collection
Solved: The Tall Book of
Make-Believe
F133:
Five
and Dime
Solved: Little China Pig
F134:
Fantasy
gamers trapped by dungeon master
Solved: Sleeping Dragon
F135:
Five
Leaf
Clover
in
Fairy
tale
Solved: Fairy Tales
of France
F136:
Fairytales
book--Princess Atop Glass Mountain
Solved: Yellow Fairy Book
F137:
Fairy
Tales
This is possibly a Whitman Publishing
book.
It is a collection of fairy tales, listed in order here: The
Shoemaker
and the Elves, Jack and the Beanstalk, Rapunzel, The Golden Bird,
The Three Little Pigs, Childe Rowland, The Widow's Son, The Princess
Who
Lived on a Glass Hill, The White Snake, The Ass, The Table and The
Stick,
Red Riding Hood, Hansel and Gretel, The Sea Maiden, Puss in Boots,
Beauty
and the Beast, Farmer's Tom and the Leprechaun, The Six Swans, The
Sorcerer's
Apprentice, Snow White, The Emperor's New Clothes, and Tom
Thumb.
The cover of the book has been missing for years, but it seems to me it
was similar to the "What A Jolly Street, 365 Bedtime Stories" book,
which
leads me to believe it was published by Whitman. It is
illustrated
with line drawings for each story and is 224 pages long.
Fairy Tales, 1950s. This
is
the title of the book, and I would love to have a copy if it's
available.
It was published by Whitman in 1950 and has a glossy hard cover with
some
of the characters from the stories on it, most prominently Puss in
Boots
and a castle in the background.
I have a Whitman book called The Magic
Realm of Fairy Tales with copyright dates ranging from
1944-1968.While
it has some of your stories- not all are present-- However at the back
of the book they list some of their other offerings. There is one
called
Favorite
Stories- a collection of the best-loved tales of childhood,
illustrated
by Don Bolognese, Betty Fraser, Kelly Oechsli. Maybe this one is worth
checking out!
F138:
Fairy
Princess flies with little cat
Solved: No Flying in the
House
F139:
Florida
hurricane redeems outsider family
Solved: No Children, No
Pets
F140:
family
with house that grows
Solved: The House the
Pecks
Built
F141:
Fairy
tale collection, 1930's or 40's
Help! I am trying to locate the first book m father ever
remembers
reading. He read it in the early 1940's so it was printed then or in
the
30's. It is a classic fairy tale collection, oversized green
cloth
hardbound book. The cover has a scroll-like gold border running
around
the front cover, and the title is a gold script running the length of
the
spine (not block letters). There are about 15 to 20 stories, so
it
is not a very thick book, and the ones he can remember are "the one
with
the tower and hair"- Rapunzel :) and maybe Hansel and Gretel. He
also remembers it to be more text than pictures, but the illustrations
were colored and the font possibly oversized.
F142:
fingernail
moon
When I was little I was taken to see a play in New York. In
it a pioneer family's two ? children were kidnapped? saved? by some
Native
Americans. They were to think of their mother when they saw the
fingernail
moon....
F143:
Figurines
that come to life
Solved: No Flying in the House
F144:
Fairies
I'm searching for a book that, unfortunately,
I remember very little about. I had it sometime during the 1950's (I
was
born in 1946). The book was about the size of a Golden Book, but
I'm not sure if it was indeed a Golden. There were fairies that I
remember were pictured sitting on leaves with flowers for hats.
That's
about all I remember. I get warm fuzzies when I think about the
book.
You'd think I could remember more. Thank you.
Anderson, Hans Christian, Thumbelina,
1953. This is a Little Golden Book illustrated by Gustaf
Tenggren.
I haven't been able to locate my copy to confirm this, but my memory is
that the Tenggren depictions of the little flower people at the end of
the book (one of whom, the king, Thumbelina ends up marrying) had them
sporting fairy-like wings and wearing little upside-down flowers on
their
heads. I bet this is the book the requester recalls.
Hi, Harriett.....This is F144 e-mailing you
with a bit more info about the book I'm longing to find. I'm
remembering
that the little fairies were sitting by a tree with a door in it.
WALLACE, IVY, POOKIE.
I wonder if it might be this old favourite about a bunny named Pookie.
There are certainly lots of fairies in the story and there is an
illustration
of a tree trunk opening into a little room. It has recently been
republished
after years out of print.
BARKER, CICELY MARY, FLOWER FAIRIES.COULD
IT BE ONE OF THE MANY BOOKS IN THE FLOWER FAIRIES SERIES? THE
ILLUSTRATIONS
ARE EXQUISITE. MANY OF THE BOOKS ARE COLLECTIONS OF POEMS BUT I
THINK
SOME OF THEM ARE STORIES. THEY HAVE BEEN AROUND FOR MANY MANY
YEARS.
Sorry, can't name book but F101
and F144 I think both of these might be looking for the same thing.
F145:
Fairy
Tales with Turnip story
Solved: Fairy Tale Treasury
F146:
fox
hunted
by
rural
family
Solved: Haunt Fox
F147:
Fireside
Concert
Hi, I would be very grateful for any help in finding a book that
I have been searching for 20 years! The book is for my mum who
cherished
it when she was a child. She doesn’t know the title of the book but has
given be a good description. She owned it in the 50’s so that
gives
an idea of the date. It was annual sized and contained stories and
poems.
Hear is her description of the stories: Fireside concert.
The fire, copper kettle and all the fireside equipment come to life and
have a concert after the humans have gone to bed. Little gray bear.
A
boy has a little gray bear and is bought a big brown bear. The
little
bear gets pushed to the back of the toy cupboard. He decides to
run
away but the other toys help him. They get the boy to realize
what
he has done and they all become good friends. Poems. The storm.
Sometimes
on winters nights when winters shine cozy and warm, says the wind with
a sigh as it wraps on the pain, won't you please let mea in from the
storm.
{I can't remember the rest} The land of nod. So
off
we go to the land of nod, down winding lullaby lane, with nightlight
fairies
for company, till morning comes again. The teapot song. Neat
and
round and brown am I, merry little fellow, patchwork cozy on my head.
Red
green and yellow. Gather round the table now draw the curtains tight,
firesides
the place for me on a winters night. {That’s all of that one}
There
were other poems and stories about mice, a girl who lost a red
shoe.
Elves and fairies, on the inside of the cover and I think a picture of
the fireside concert on the front. In fact I have just had a
thought.
Maybe the title of the book was Fireside concert. My ultimate aim is to
obtain a copy of this book but if anybody recognizes the description
from
there personal collection I would really appreciate any info you can
give,
title, date etc. Thank you.
These are just guesses since I don't have
copies
of the books to check the stories/poems you mentioned-- Fireside
Fairy Tales: profusely illustrated: a popular and interesting
collection
from all sources / Chicago: Donohue, Henneberry & Co, ?1890-1899 /
Illustrations and engravings by H Tuck, Kate Greenaway, Harrison Weir,
Lizzie Lawson, E Sears, Richard Samual Marriot, Thomas Cobb.
Notes:
fairy tales, stories, and poems. Fireside Stories. Veronica
S
Hutchinson, ill. Lois Lenski/ Putnam, 1927 / Minton,
Balch & Co., 1927 {Lois Lenski has a very distinctive style -
just check the internet for examples of her illustrations and you
should
be able to rule this book out if the illustrations don't jog your mom's
memory}
F148:
Folk
or Fairy Tales
Solved: Once Long Ago:
Folk
and Fairy Tales of the World
F149:
Faberge
Eggs in Upstate New York
SOLVED: Sold!,
F150:
Fencing
School
Sword
Father
Duel
Solved: A Man of Peace
F151:
Fat
Phil,
Seminole
Maurice
and
Murderous
B.
Sutcliff
Solved: Arthur the Kid
F152:
Family
Adventures
Solved: The Tuckers
series
F153:
Forest
Fire drives animals to new home under Tree
It's a beautifully illustrated children's story from the 50's or
very early 60's of a group of small forest animals driven out of their
homes by a forest fire. They each save what they can but realize they
must
cooperate if they are to survive while they rebuild. The roots of a
partially
undercut tree provide the framework for a communal living space that at
first is meant to be temporary. By the end of the story they decide
that
sharing the space and the work is nicer for everyone. The protagonist
is
a mouse or a possum or something like that, who, in helping rescue some
of the babies, has no time to rescue any of her own stuff and has
difficulty
seeing that being the organizer of their little band has as much value
as the contributions of food and tools that others are able to offer. I
don't remember the cover but I remember an illustration from after they
have built up the spaces in the roots and the little doors and windows
all over under the tree. I think the name of the story is either
"The Friendship Tree" or Under the Friendship Tree".
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. I don't remember
the raft or the map but the rest sounds the same.
Harriet Weed Hubbell, The Friendship Tree,
1962. I haven't read this book and can't find an online synopsis,
but the title and date certainly match. Published by T. Nelson,
217
pages. I hope it's the book you're looking for!
Sorry, it is not Hubbell's The Friendship Tree I remember
it as a fairly large book, maybe 9x12 with about 40 pages or so.
Colored
pictures to the edges of the pages and about 6 - 10 lines of text on
each
page. I have found three authors using the title but they are all
novels,
not children's books. Thank you so much for trying to help. From the
lack
of recognition, I'm afraid this might be a lost cause even with someone
else on this list looking for the same book.
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.
I am the original poster and it is highly
possible that this is from a Canadian publisher as my mother was
Canadian
and brought this book with her when the family moved to the
States.
Hey, that's three whole people who remember this book!
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.
Friendship Valley is definitely
the book being sought! A group of small animals (badger,
woodchuck,
racoon family, squirrel, hedgehog, and frog) escape a forest fire by
floating
downstream on a raft. They rescue a kitten and establish a new
home
at the base of a large pine tree. Dorinda the squirrel loses all
of her belongings by helping the racoons save their babies. When
the key to their storehouse is lost at the bottom of the lake,
Meedlepoo
the frog, who is too small to do much work, saves the day, leading the
badger to conclude "that the smallest one among us is just as needed as
the biggest one." With profuse illustrations in black and white
and
in color, this is a wonderful book.
F154:
fantasy
story grade school
Solved: The Amazing
Vacation
F155:
French
school girl's affair
Solved: A Matter of
Feeling
F156:
Four
friends
Solved: Seniors series
F157:
Fox
Thinking back the illustrations remind me of Breugel
paintings.
The story had to do with woodsmen and winter, a fox who was thrown into
a pot of boiling water! Since this is all I remember I confess that my
obsession to find this books seems a bit silly. But I think about it
often.
Tales of Brer
Rabbit (NOT the title). I
don't
know
if
this
helps,
but
I
remember
a
book
full
of
"Brer
Rabbit"
stories,
an
in
one
story, he
convinces "Grinny-Granny Wolf" that she can be rejuvenated by jumping
in a pot of boiling water. Then he uses her skin as a disguise, I
think, and
feeds her to someone. Sounds gruesome, but this wasn't one of the new
cleaned-up/politically correct collections of stories :)
F158:
Fairy
Tale
Solved: Storytime Treasury
F159:
Felicia
Solved: Felicia
F160:
Fairy
Tales, Oversized Hardback, Beautiful Illustrations
Solved: Storytime Treasury
F161:
Flying
Trunk
Solved: The Flying Trunk
F162:
fiddler
Solved: The Road to
Raffydiddle
F163:
Fair
Minou
Solved: Forest of
Lilacs
F164:
Found
Journal
I am searching for a book I read as a child
somewhere around 1954 or 55. The story was about a little girl whose
parents
were relocated. The bought a very old two story house. The girl was
very
unhappy as she did not want to move. One day she found a journal
written
by another little girl who had lived in the house many years
before.After
reading the journal she was much happier in the house. I do not
remember
the book's name or the author but I hope someone can help me. I have
been
pondering over this book for some time.
Norma Kassirer, Magic Elizabeth.
Could this be it? Sally is sent to live with her Aunt Sarah while her
parents
are away. She find a diary written by another Sally who lived in the
house
when it was new ( in the Victorian era) and talks about her doll,
Elizabeth
who she thinks is magic.The modern Sally is somehow tranported back to
the Victorian Sally's time and lives the episodes out of the
diary.
Eventually this leads the modern Sally to find the doll , Elizabeth, in
the present.
Elisabeth Lansing, Lulu's Window.
I think you are looking for Lulu's Window. Young girl has to move
to a new town and new house with her father who is a minister.
She
doesn't want to move, and is treated meanly by other girls in the town
who are unhappy that she has replaced "Lulu" the little girl who
previously
lived in the house. She finds Lulu's diary, and eventually Lulu's
secret room and makes friends with the local girls.
2005
F165:
Fantasy
Island
Solved: Last of the Really
Great Whangdoodles
F166:
fantasy
book of kids and jade
I have been trying to find a series of books
I read in the late 1970's early 1980's (I know I was around 6-8
grade).
They were kept in the sci-fi/fantasy young adult reading section at our
library. They were about kids who time traveled with the help of
jade-I remember that jade was very important (I got some from my
grandparents
that year because of these books). I know there were a bunch of
books
and that the kids moved through time or place to find other kids, but
that
is all I can remember, besides loving the books. I have kids now
I want to share these with, but I can't remember any more about the
books
than what I have written. I hope you can help.
O'Dea, Marjory, Of Jade and Amber Caves,
Heinemann 1974. I'm actually suggesting 2 books: Six Days
Between
a Second is the first, published 1969, but the title of the
sequel
sounds closer to what's being sought. The blurb for the first "Would
you
recognize a basilisk if you saw one? And what would you do if you
discovered
that a tribe of them had come to live in your district and was
threatening
to poison the water supply? The place is Canberra, where the Collard
children
are faced with the problem of saving the city from extinction. With the
help of other creatures - unicorns, fabulous bees and dolphins and,
best
of all, Burleigh the Gryphon, they ... but read about it for yourself!"
The second says "But much has changed ... the children are a few years
older (and perhaps shrewder) and the fabulous animsls they meet have
their
worries too. There could be something wrong with their fantasy world,
which
older children and adults will realise is not so far removed frou their
own contemporary Australian one." The list of characters includes the
Collard
children: David, Barbara, Genevieve and Peter, Dryads (named Semolina
and
Vermicelli), Ermines (Tirian, Miniver, Regis), Unicorns (Bucephalas and
Onegar), Dolphins, Basilisks and Bees. The endpapers of the second book
have memorable spectrum-tinted maps.
F167:
Figurine
comes to life, Felicia?
Solved: No Flying in the
House
F168:
Frispy
Solved: Fripsey Summer
F169:
Fear
of mother
The book I've been searching for, for quite some time, was a hard
cover text, about 100 pages long. It contained vivid full-length
illustrations, and the only one I can remember is of the two
characters,
brother and sister, dancing in their bedroom (possibly to a record
player).
They were wearing bell-bottomed pants, and the book seemed to be
published
in the 60s, maybe the early 70s. Talking with my older brother,
he
too, had strong memories of this book, and he added that it was about
two
children who were afraid of their mother, who would go on supernatural
adventures to escape from their home. He remembers one picture of
the two kids flying through a mountain, and he says the end of the book
resolved the childrens' fear of their mother. He thought it was a
moralistic story, but he says it was possibly intended for an older
audience,
due to its extensive narrative. The only other detail he
remembered
was a picture of the children holding action figure dolls, and
play-fighting
with each other through the dolls. He says the book contained
social-political
undertones, and may have been some kind of social commentary. I'm sure
these descriptions are vague and silly, but I appreciate your giving me
the opportunity to post a search. Good luck, and I'll continue my
own search as well.
F170:
FERNANDA
Solved: Tomas Takes
Charge
F171:
Four
sisters with red hair
Solved: Spring Comes Riding
F172:
fairytale
collection thick detailed illustrations
In the 1970s my grandfather from San Francisco gave us a new fairy
tale book that looked expensive. It was very thick like the old
catalogs.
It had a hard cover with a detailed and realistic greenery vine and
different
characters from the stories partially hidden in the leaves on the cover
and/or in the inner covers. There were aproximately 40-50 stories
that included classics like "Cinderella" and "The Shoemaker and the
Elves"
and lesser known fairy tales like "Snow White and Rose Red", "Jorinda
and
Joringal", and "The Snow Queen". The stories were classified in the
Table
of Contents but I do not know how. There were many illustrations
that were close-up, detailed, and realistic. I have come across
different
versions of a "Snow White and Rose Red". This one was about 2
kind
sisters who were sent on a series of errands and continued to run into
a grouchy troll-like man who was in trouble and needed help of some
kind.
One of the times he had gotten his beard caught in a fish
line(illustration).
Though he was cross and never said thankyou the sisters continued to be
kind to him. In the end was a bear who, I think, had had a spell
cast on him.
Sounded like it might be the Segur/Ponsot Fairy Tale book,
but
I
don't
think
it
has
all
the
stories
you
mention.
Check
out
the
Anthology
Finder to see if there are any other possibilities there.
World's Best Fairy Tales.
Reader's Digest published this 800+ page fairy tale book in 1967, 1970
& 1977. (Beginning in 1977 it also appeared as 2 volumes.)
While
the cover doesn't really match the description of the vines and people
hiding, all the stories you mentioned are in this book. I don't
know
what the endpapers look like. I found lots of copies for sale
online,
so you shouldn't have any trouble finding a picture of the cover to
compare
to your memory. Here's a complete contents list from the 1967
edition.
It should be the same as the later editions. Contents: Pied Piper
of Hamelin -- Snow White and Rose Red -- It's perfectly true! -- Tom
Thumb
-- Nightingale -- Chicken Little -- Frog Prince -- Cinderella --
Princess
and the pea -- Ali Baba and the forty thieves -- Golden goose -- Why
the
sea is salt -- Ugly duckling -- Jack and the beanstalk -- Two frogs --
Snow queen -- Six sillies -- Hedgehog and the rabbit -- Thumbelina --
Sorcerer's
apprentice -- Red riding hood -- Little mermaid -- Five wise words --
Goose-girl
-- Beauty and the beast -- Town mouse and the country mouse -- Snow
White
and the seven drawfs -- Tinderbox -- Little fir tree -- Bronze ring --
Three billy goats gruff -- Boy who kept a secret -- Magic kettle --
Jorinda
and Joringel -- Puss in boots -- Emperors' new clothes -- Billy Beg and
his bull -- Little one eye, little two eyes and little three eyes --
Red
shoes -- Steadfast tin soldier -- Snegourka, the snow maiden -- Three
little
pigs -- Shoemaker and the elves -- Doctor knows it all -- Six swans --
Dick Whittington and his cat -- Rapunzel -- Aladdin and the wonderful
lamp
-- Three bears -- Rumpelstiltzkin -- Golden-headed fish -- Hansel and
Gretel
-- Brave little tailor -- Gingerbread man -- Horned goat -- Seven
Simons
-- Little match-girl -- East of the sun and west of the moon --
Musicians
of Bremen -- Blue beard -- Princess on the glass hill -- Half-chick --
Sleeping beauty -- Magic carpet -- Jack the giant killer -- Twelve
dancing
princesses -- Little Claus and big Claus -- Colony of cats -- Sindbad
the
sailor.
Various, Twice upon a Time. I've
been looking for a book that my mom read to me and it was also like
school
tectbook size and it was beaut iful! it had a nice cover and really
nice
illustrations. i thought i had found it because i remembered the cat
from
"puss in boots" somewhere in the cover, but sadly it wasn'\''t it.
but yes a recognized the cover you described and i think it's Twice
upon a
time.
Jane
Carruth, The Giant All-Color Book of
Fairy Tales, 1971. I
KNOW
this is the right book, because I have been looking for it for so long,
myself! The green illustrated cover is
lush and features a giant in front of a tree, vines, and fairy tales
characters
in the vines. The vine theme continues
on the beginning title pages, and each story is illustrated by a
different
artist. The subtitle is "50
Best-loved Stories," which is the part I remembered best, and threw me
off
the trail for so long. You can see it here:
http://www.librarything.com/work/2647288'
F173:
fingers
Solved: The Gingerbread
Shop:
A Story from Mary Poppins
F174:
French
Fairy Tales
Solved: The Golden Phoenix and Other
French-Canadian
Fairy Tales
F175:
Fairy
Godmothers
I'm looking for than name of a Fairy Tale. It is about a girl
(princess?) who, when she is born is given gifts by three fairy
godmothers:
Happiness, beauty and sorrow. The mother does not want her child
to be said, so she hides the vial of sadness. The girl grows up
happy
and beautiful, but something is missing in her life. After she is
grown, she finds the vial of sorrow, drinks it and is very sad.
Later
however, she is much happier, having known sorrow.
F176:
Frontier
life
Solved: Singing Wheels
F177:
Flocked
bunny changes colors
Solved: The White Bunny
and
His Magic Nose
F178:
favorite
book
I read this book in 94 or 95. It is
a historical romance book. I thought Brenda Joyce wrote it but I
checked all her books and can't find it. It was my favorite book,
unfortunatey I borrowed it and gave it back to this book club group I
belonged
to then. The only part I remembr is when ...."she was on a horse
and they were riding with his troops up the side of a cliff by a
river.
And to escape she slid off her horse into the river and he jumped
in after her....." I really did love the book even though that is
all I remember. Crazy, huh??? This is a tough stumper
F179:
Flower
Fairy Alphabet
I acquired this book through one of the book
clubs in 1985, available through schools such as Scholastic, Troll, or
Trumpet. It was a large book with a hard back like the "Big
Golden
Books". It had beautiful, imaginiative scenes of fairies in
shimmery
dresses, each representing a flower and a letter of the alphabet.
Text, as I remember it, was limited. Perhaps the title had the
word
"Garden" in it. Is this enough to scout it out? I would
love
to have it again. I have no idea of the author/illustrator.
Pure serendipity that I found your website! What a find, hope you
can solve this mystery! Thanks!
Manson, Beverlie, Fairies' Alphabet Book,
Doubleday, 1982. "An illustrated alphabetical introduction to
fairy
folk." If you're not talking about Cicily Mary Barker's
famous
flower fairies, and I don't remember any of them being in a bigger
format,
then this is a possibility. The description says it's 29 cm long,
which is about right, and Doubleday has book clubs though I'm not sure
if they're affiliated with any of the clubs that sell in the schools.
F179 Just some possible leads: FAIRIES'
ALPABET
BOOK by Beverlie Manson; A FLOWER FAIRY
ALPHABET
by Cicely Mary Barker ~from a librarian
Cecily Mary Barker, Flower Fairy Alphabet.
Barker produced several illustrated books of fairies in costumes that
rather
cleverly mimicked different flowers. She was English, and I
believe
she is much better known in the UK. I loved this book as a kid, and can
even still recite some of the poems from the facing pages opposite the
illustrations.
Barker, Cicely Mary, A flower fairy
alphabet,
1985. Blackie (London) published an issue of A flower fairy
alphabet
in 1985.
F180:
Fairy
Tale Book
Solved: Dean's Gift Book
of Fairy Tales
F181:
Feelings
series
Solved: Feelings.... Children's Press
F182:
Fairy
Story book with photographs of puppet/dolls
Solved: A Puppet Treasure Book of Nursery Tales
F183:Farmer
Solved: Gwendolyn the Miracle Hen
F184:
Frogs
Going to School
Solved: Froggy Goes to
School
F185:
Florida
town of mystics exposed
Solved: Spirit Town
F186:
fantasy
sci-fi childrens book
Solved: A Wrinkle in Time
F187:
Fairy
Ball
Solved: Shadow Castle
F188:
Fairy
tale compilation
I read this book of fairy tales growing up in the late 1960s. It
was my mother's book, so I believe it may have been from the 1940s or
earlier.
There were lots of unusual stories that I have not seen in any other
fairy
tale book, such as "The Lad Who Visited The North Wind", "How The Sea
Became
Salt", "Snow White and Rose Red", and "The Selfish Giant", as well as
many
of the more common fairy tales. The book was maybe about 6" x 9" and
had
a blue-green or brownish cover. I think I remember it having a small
embossed
illustration on the cover, and several black and white illustrations
throughout
the book. I read from the book to my sisters almost every night, and
would
love to read it to my children now.
Folk Tales, 1900's , John S
Swift
Co. I found a book that had 3 of your four stories, as well as
several
unusual titles. Are you sure The Selfish Giant was in your
book?
If so, this isn't the one you're looking for. Contents: This
is
the house that Jack built -- The old woman and her pig -- The story of
the three little pigs -- Scrapefoot -- The three bears -- Johnny-cake
--
Henny-Penny -- Lazy Jack -- Mr. Vinegar -- Jack and the beanstalk --
The
history of Tom Thumb -- Whittington and his cat -- How Jack went to
seek
his fortune -- The Hobyahs -- Mr. Miacca -- The three wishes --
Teeny-tiny
-- Cinderella -- Beauty and the beast -- Puss-in-boots -- Toads and
diamonds
-- Drakesbill -- The twelve months -- The elves and the shoemaker --
Bremen
town musicians -- The fisherman and his wife -- Sleeping beauty --
Hansel
and Gretel -- The frog prince -- Snow-White and Rose-Red -- Little one
eye, little two eyes, and little three eyes -- The golden goose --
Snow-White
-- Mother Hulda -- The queen bee -- The wolf and the seven kids --
Rumpelstiltskin
-- The blue light -- Thumbling -- Billy goats gruff -- The pancake --
The
doll in the grass -- The lad who went to the north wind -- The sheep
and
the pig who set up housekeeping -- The princess on the glass hill --
Why
the bear is stumpy-tailed -- Why the sea is salt -- Boots and his
brothers
-- East of the sun and west of the moon -- The straw ox -- The flying
ship
-- The turnip -- Fulfilled (A legend of Christmas Eve) -- The mirror of
Matsuyama -- The tongue-cut sparrow -- The little half-chick.
Unfortunately, "Folk Tales" does not seen to be the book I am
looking
for.
Andrew Lang, The Blue Fairy Book.
I immediately thought of this book when I read your post. There are
many
unusual fairy tales found in this plus some more adult versions of some
familiar ones like Sleeping Beauty. I found a site with a list
of
the titles that I'll try to paste here: The Bronze Ring,
Prince
Hyacinth and the Dear Little Princess, East of the Sun and West of the
Moon, The Yellow Dwarf, Little Red Riding Hood, The Sleeping Beauty in
the Wood, Cinderella, or the Little Glass Slipper, Aladdin and the
Wonderful
Lamp, The Tale of a Youth Who Set Out to Learn what Fear Was,
Rumpelstiltzkin,
Beauty and the Beast,The Master-Maid, Why the Sea is Salt, The Master
Cat
or Puss in Boots, Felicia and the Pot of Pinks, The White Cat, The
Water-Lily.
The Gold-Spinners, The Terrible Head, The Story of Pretty Goldilocks,
The
History of Whittington, The Wonderful Sheep, Little Thumb, The Forty
Thieves,
Hansel and Grettel, Snow-White and Rose-Red, The Goose-Girl, Toads and
Diamonds, Prince Darling, Blue Beard, Trusty John, The Brave Little
Tailor,
A Voyage to Lilliput, The Princess on the Glass Hill, The Story of
Prince
Ahmed and the Fairy Paribanou, The History of Jack the Giant-Killer,
The
Black Bull of Norroway, The Red Etin. The Selfish Giant isn't
listed but I'm sure this is what you are remembering. The original
books
had the most beautiful illustrations, woodcuts I believe. There is a
whole
series,
The Red Fairy Book, The Orange Fairy Book, The Lilac Fairy
Book, etc. so the one missing story may be in one of them. My
library
had about 6 or 7 in the series and I absolutely loved them. I hope this
is what you are looking for.
F189:
Five
people shipwrecked on island
Solved: Danger Rock
F190:
fly/boy
killed, becomes bones
The 20 Scariest Stories Ever?, 1960s/70s. This book consisted
of a collection of short stories with bizarre themes. The most
memorable
story was about a boy who started doing magic. Soon he could fly
or levitate. He changed into a fly in front of his sister or
friend.
The boy/fly was big and scary. Either the cat saw it and jumped
on
it or his sister swatted it. The corpse of the dead fly/boy
became
a pile of bones and blood. This book was oversized and had a
paisley
cover and was in my local library in Michigan during the late 70s/early
80s. The story has haunted both me an my brother for years.
Any help would be great!
Hitchcock (ed) ?????? Don't have
any for-sure answer on this, but I would be looking at the various
"Alfred
Hitchcock" story collections if I were you. There were AH's tales
of mystery, AH scary stories, etc. They were bound as oversize
hardcovers
and aimed at juvenile audiences, but had many scary moments. I
definitely
remember that story (oh, by the way, it WAS the cat, not the
sister...and
I seem to recall the presence of another child...friend maybe?) and it
unsettled me, also.
Wish I had more info hope this helps a bit.
F191:
frontier
adventures, kentucky/ohio
Solved: Young Trailers series
F192:
Fairy
Tale Book
Solved: Five Fairy
Tales
F193:
Foster
homes for safety during WWII
Solved: All The Children
Were Sent Away
F194:
Foster
Kids Brought To Island families off N/E US Coast
Solved: Star Island Boy
F195:
Farmer
Brown or Jones
I'm searching for a book my grandmother read
to me as a child. I think it was a little golden or tell-a-tale
book
from the 60s, maybe called Barnyard?. It was about a farmer who
awoke
grumbling that nothing ever happened around this place(the farm). He
sets
out to do his chores and is greeted by many new baby animals. The
book ends with him dancing a jig. My grandmother recently passes
away, and I'd love to find a copy of this book to share with my
children.
Thank you so much for your help.
Watson, Jane Werner, Jolly Barnyard,
Golden, 1950.
F195 It is not Bedford, Annie Norton.The
jolly
barnyard. illus by Tibor Gergely
Little Golden #67, 1950. The farmer starts out giving each
animal something special since it is his birthday. It is also not
Gale,
Leah. The animals of Farmer Jones. illus by
Richard
Scarry [earlier editions illus by Rudolf Freund]. Golden 00-52 no
copyright
or publication date given. eating time for farm animals &
humans
- It starts w the amimals calling for Farmer J to come and feed
them
F196:
Family
wedding
Solved: Wedding in the
Family
F197:
Fish
A children's book: A little boy gets into
a boat that drifts out to sea and is caught in a storm. Fish rescue him
and take him to an underwater cavern filled with treasure, then take
him
back home where he participates in a festival parade. Story ends with
mother
serving him fish for dinner.
F198a:
fox
in a box
Solved: Cinnabar, the One
O'clock Fox
F198b:
Flourescent
blue cover with apple
Solved: The Apple
F199:
Futuristic
family home
I read a book about a family of four: the parents and their two
children, a girl and a boy. They live in a futuristic house or a
space capsule??? They do not leave the house, the kids go to school
inside
the house. When they had to visit their grandparents, they had to
watch a hologram of their grandparents or something like that.
The
daughter is a teenaged girl and she is bored with this kind of
life.
One day she looked around the house for a way out, she knew there had
to
be a way in and out of their house. Finally, she found an escape
and off she went. From this point on, it’s all about her
adventures
outside the house. The world outside her house seems to be
dilapidated
but she found some people. She met a man, and I believe she fell
in love with him. They lived in a dilapidated house, but she
wasn’t
used to the environment so she got sick...in the end she had to go back
home. I read this book in 1991 but I don’t know how old the book was
when
I read it, I don’t know the title and the author either. I only
read
this book once. It seems like this book is for pre-teens or
teenagers.
I remember the book being thin and yellow, regular pocket book size...I
mean, the same size as those Sweet Valley High books, about the same
thickness
as well. It is not illustrated inside. The outside is
yellow
graphics, I don’t remember there being any pictures of faces on the
outside
cover, just futuristic yellow graphics.
Angela Carter, Heroes and Villains.
I've
only skimmed Heroes and Villains (many years ago), but
the
plotline described here rings a bell. There's a synopsis here.
A Very Private Life. Could
it be A Very Private Life? The plot sounds pretty
accurate,
about a girl called Uncumber who leaves her home... thingie and finds
the
outside world, and I remember that the cover was yellow as well.
Vonda N. Mcintyre. Rather a long shot,
but this reminds me of a short story/novella by Vonda Mcintyre.
I
unfortunately
can't
recall
the
title,
but
it
had
a
similar
plot.
It
was
fairly
dark
though...the
teenage
daughter
was
sent
out
deliberately
to
become
the
mistress
of
the
(wealthy)
man she met. He gave her
pretty clothes and jewels and I think a pet bird, but when she gets
sick
(as all the shanty town residents eventually do because of radiation)
she
goes home again. I got the impression it was set in the same
world
as McIntyre's Dreamsnake, but inside the domed cities
instead
of outside on the plains.
F200:
Fletcher
1980's or 1990's. It was a boring day on the farm and the
main character [a pig ?] named Fletcher got all the animals to go with
him on an adventure , taking the farm truck, I think they
pretended
that they were on a pirate ship and they crashed the truck and they all
fell in a mud puddle and the story ends saying that it was just another
boring day on the farm.
Nope, it's not Devlin's How Fletcher Was Hatched.
Oxenbury, Helen, Pig Tale,
1973. Yes, I know this is older than the requester posted, and it
doesn't have any character named Fletcher in it, but please look at it
anyway. The similarities are such that perhaps your poster is
remembering
it and another book they had. Hope it helps.
Hans
Wilhelm,
Pirates Ahoy!,
1987, copyright. This Parents Magazine Press selection is the
delightful book described here. Fletcher (yes, a pig), on a slow
morning on the farm finds an old wagon that the animals pretend is a
pirate ship. They crash it into an apple tree and spy a bus
coming down the road. They commandeer it, all get ice cream but
decide it isn't fast enough. SO, they find a fire engine. They
come to a circus, so they climb up the firetruck's ladder and fall into
the tent, where they stage their own circus. But they decide they
still need a ship, so they find an airplane. They do a few loops
(turning green and looking ill), then crash into a mud puddle, right
back on the farm, where they get bored again. The illustrations
are adorable; I love the bored animals lazing around (one pig standing
on his nose on the fence)!!
F201:
Fairy
tale stories, Mother goose rhymes and aesop's fables...
The book has a red cover. It had incredible images and it was quite
thick and heavy. On the inside cover it had green and white stripes and
in the middle there was a green castle. The stories I remember were
Little
red riding hood, sleeping beauty and maybe rapunzel? It also had
different
sections, one filled with mother goose rhymes including Little miss
muffet.
I also believe it had "Little boy Blue" rhyme. The aesop's fable
section
had the ant and the grasshopper and the tortoise and the hare. That's
all
I can remember....
F202:
Freda,
Prince, Bear, Wind
This was a reader or maybe a separate book 60+yrs ago.
Remembered
as: A prince who had been turned into a bear was found by Freda
in
a cave. Freda rides on the wind to find help so she can marry and
become a princess. Thanks
possible east of the sun and west of
the
moon? the bear lives in a castle though, but the girl
does
ride on the wind.
asbjornsen and moe, The White Bear King
Valemon. This sounds
something
like a Norwegian fairy story which is best known in the version
published
by the 19th century collectors Asbjørnsen and Moe, who are
Norway's
parallel to the Brothers Grimm. In their version the bear is a prince
who
has been bewitched, and can be a prince only for part of each day.
After
some failed attempts with her older sisters, he gets the youngest
princess
in a kingdom to go with him, but is separated from her. She undertakes
journeys to try to get back with him and is eventually successful, so
the
curse is overcome. This story has a lot of overlaps with the story
known
as
East of the Sun and West of the Moon which another reader
suggests that one was also published by Asbjørnsen and
Moe.
Both stories include many element which can be found in many folk
tales,
fairy tales and legends from many cultures, however. But
Asbjørnsen
and Moe do not give their princesses the name Frida in either case.
Huber, Salisbury, O-Donnell, After the
Sun Sets, 1938,1953,1962. I
think that in this version of East o' the Sun, West o' the Moon the
heroine
has the name Freda. (I've been doing an exhaustive search for the 1938
version - I think that's the one my grandmother handed down. Can't find
that version, so I can't verify for sure.)
F203:
Finding
love
Solved: Girl of the
Limberlost
F204:
Forgotten
Ones
Solved: The Unchosen
F205:
ferris
wheel explosion
Solved: Three Minutes to
Midnight
F206:
Fern
the fox
Something about Fern the fox.... fern
the
fox
was
a
secondary
character
in
a
little
golden
book.
minnie
mouse
may
have
been
the
primary
character.
they
might
have
been
going
to
a
party
together.
F207:
Farm
animals do the work
This is a picture book I read in the late
50s or early 60s. In it, a farmer becomes sick and can't do the
farmwork,
so the animals (unbeknownst to him) pitch in to keep the farm going
until
he gets well.
Margery Bianco, The Good Friends,
1934, copyright. Could this be The Good Friends by
Margery Bianco. It is a chapter book but has many illustrations.
The animals all have personalities and are helped by a girl named Mary.
They hide from a Humane Society officer and the horses hire themselves
out to earn food.
Hi: I happened to be looking for
the same book as F207. I don't think you found the right book. The book
this individual is talking about was published in England I believe. (I
was a child living there when I read it.) I read it in the early 60s.
It was a smaller picture book, probaby 6 by 9 inches. It was brown. I
think the drawings were in brown ink. The publisher published a number
of children's books along this same model. It's a very sweet
story about a group of somewhat lame older animals that all pitch in.
The horse digs the hole, the pig picks up the plant gently. They all
get worn out and sore. I am sure it's out of print. Well, just thought
I'd flesh it out for whoever submitted the request.
F208:
followed
by the 4th of July
Solved: Arm in Arm
F209:
Family
camps on island
Solved: The Invisible
Island
F210:
Fairytales
I have a "Book Stumper" question. It
concerns a large, thick, hardcover collection of Fairytales that my
father
purchased for me while overseas in Germany in the early 1980's.
(Ranging
from 1980-1985). It had a light-blue/robin's-egg-blue background,
and I believe the title was in purple? (maybe?) and was italicized,
with
a sort of fancy typeset. It was written in English, and
colorfully
illustrated, containing all of the classic and well-known fairytales,
and
others not so well known. It was at least 1 full inch thick,
page-wise,
and was large, I'm guesstimating from my memory, about 9x12, give or
take.
I believe that the word(s) "Fairytale(s)" may have been in the title,
but
I'm not completely sure. That is all the information that I can
recall.
I hope it will be enough to ring a bell. Thanks SO much - what a
cool service!
F211:
Fruitless
search for fairytales
I have been in a fruitless search for a fairy
tale book from my early youth (born 1948) that I think started with
Cinderella.
The illustrations were wonderful, the characters had tall pointy hats
and
I recall a dress that was gold and white fur. Rumpelstiltskin was also
one of the stories. I don't think there were a lot of other stories
included
in the book and I have no recollection of the cover (I think it was
torn
off from us looking at it so much!)It might have been more of a picture
type story book. I would be thrilled if they "mystery book" could be
found...thanks
so much!
Nila Mack, Let's Pretend,
1948. This sounds like Let's Pretend again! See
the
Solved Mysteries for more info. The book starts with Cinderella, and
includes
The Leprechaun, Childe Roland, Princess Moonbeam, and Rumpelstiltskin.
F212:
francis-like
child babysits for little brother: mayhem ensues
Solved: Waddy and His
Brother
F213:
farm
animals
Solved: Our Animal Friends
at Maple Hill Farm
F214:
fairy
in a bike basket
i ahve been thinking about this book i read and read when i was
a child but i do not have alot of info about it that i can
remember.
all i can picture is that it was about a girl who had a fairy? little
person?
elf? that she kept in a bicycle basket, and she made a home for it
there
with fairy size furniture. it was her best friend.i am not sure, it's
been
20 years, but i am interested in having a copy if it can be
found.
thanks
Rumer Godden (author), Adrienne
Adams
(illustrator),
The
Fairy Doll, 1956. I don't own a copy of this out of print
book, and I can't find a detailed online synopsis, but I think that
this
may be the one you're looking for. Here's what I remember.
Elizabeth
is the youngest child in her family. She is clumsy, easily
distracted,
uncertain, and is still riding a tricycle because she can't balance on
a bicycle. When a Christmas presentation to an elderly relative
goes
awry (Elizabeth drops the gift and it shatters), she is given the Fairy
Doll from the top of the tree. She makes the doll a home and the
doll gives her the confidence she needs to succeed at various
endeavors.
This story was reprinted in 1984 in the book Four Dolls
by
Rumer
Godden (illustrated by Pauline Baynes). It was also
reprinted
in 1998 with illustrations by Penny Ives. If the
illustrations
are important to you, you'll probably want the original version.
Godden, Rumer, Fairy Doll
Rumer Godden. I had this story
in a collection of four stories about dolls by Rumer Godden. I don't
remember
what the story was called, but two of the other stories in the book were
Impunity Jane and The Story of Holly and Ivy. I
think
it might have been called something like The Fairy Doll.
I think the doll is actually a Christmas ornament and I think she
belonged
to the little girl's grandmother. The little girl is the youngest in
her
family and feels she isn't good at anything. She is also clumsy and her
siblings pick on her about this. She makes the doll/fairy a house in
her
bicycle basket and uses various natural things (acorns, dandelions,
etc)
to furnish the house. I was given this book in England in the late
80's.
It was paperback with a red cover, possibly a Penguin book. Hope this
helps.
Rumer Godden, The Fairy Doll.
Might be this one- a little girl is given the fairy doll off the top of
the Christmas tree. She plays with it and makes a little home for
it. It gives her confidence to learn how to rider her bike and
become
more independent.
Rumer Godden, The Fairy Doll.
Elizabeth is the youngest of four and feels like she can't do anything
(like riding her bike or getting her schoolwork right), until she
starts
taking care of the Fairy Doll and gains some confidence. She does
make her a house in her bicycle basket.
Rumer Godden, Fairy Doll.
I'm pretty sure this is it. Elizabeth is the youngest in her family.
She's
also the clumsiest and least confident of her cruel siblings. Then
she's
given the Fairy Doll from the Christmas Tree. As she cares for the
doll,
creating a miniature world, she gains confidence (and learns to ride
her
bike).
F215:
football
uniform tree
I hope that you can find this book about a child who finds parts
of a football uniform hanging in a tree, each time some job is
completed.
The last surprise is a football. Read in the 1950s.
Kohler
(Children's
Press), Football
Trees,
1947, copyright.
F216:
fairy
tales
Fairytale Book, large with Red Hardcover, I think it had a stamped
impression of the rabbit from Alice in Wonderland on the cover and had
to be over 300 pages or more. It's first story was of Robin Hood,
and contained other rare fairy tales such as longshanks, girth and
Keen,
the blue bird, the water babies. It had mostly black and white
illustrations
and looked as if it could be from the 50's.
F217:
fox
boy
Solved: Pure Magic
F218:
furniture
store
Solved: From the Mixed Up
Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler
F219:
farm
animals
Solved: Our Animal Friends
at Maple Hill Farm
F220:
Felicia,
music box, island
Children's book published in the late 1960's, early 1970's.
I remember it was a hardcover, with a turquoise cover and the front
featured
the heads of two blonde girls. One was wearing a ponytail. There was a
girl named Felicia in the story. It was about an island that had a very
bad storm in the past and I think a little girl died. The other little
girl years later found her music box in the sand and it had a key in
it.
The music box was rusty. I think the modern day girl was haunted by the
story of the other little girl who had died.
Eleanor Frances Lattimore, Fair Bay. I
used to have this book and I recall the dustjacket as being just as
described
here. The storyline fits, too.
F221:
forest
friends
Solved: Old Mother West Wind
F222:
flying
humanoid creatures licking mud sculptures??
Solved: Earthborn
F223:
fog
and magician
Solved: Dr. Merlin's Magic Shop
2006
F224:
Fairy
Tales (Anthology)
Solved: The World's Best Fairy Tales
F225:
Fishy
ate it
A book of funny poetry I read in the early-mid
70s. The cover was mostly yellow. I remember one of the poems in which
a little boy is looking for his missing link - he asks "Have you seen
my
missing link?" and it ends with, "I think a fishy ate it."
F226:
Fairy
swings on flower
Solved: A
Fairy to Stay
F227:
Fox
and Fox-shaped balloon
Solved: Tom Fox and the
Apple
Pie
F228:
Frog
and Socrates
Looking for a book I read in the 70's about
a boy who becomes friends with a frog or a toad, their relationship
goes
on for years, the boy grows up and goes to college where there is a
computer
named Socrates. Seems to me the boy had to come to terms with
what
he believed and why. I checked this out of my church library
though
I don't remember it having a Christian theme - but of course, there is
a lot I've forgotten about the book!
F229:
Flying
Ship that fits in a pocket
Solved: The Ship that Flew
F230:
Fairy
Tales
Solved: My Giant Story Book
F231:
F73
continued
To take the query in F73 a step further (regarding the stange man
in the woods with the hoof), I remember that the man was not a farmer,
but a soldier perhaps, and that the cover was red and had a drawing of
just the soldier on it. The stranger (devil) in the woods had a
hoof
and a cloak, the trees where the devilish character lived were grouped
in a circle in a clearing. It was an illustrated childrens book
that
I can remember reading in the early 80s. I also remeber that
neither
the title nor the text had the word "devil" in it.....and I beleive the
title was a simple one, perhaps "the Stranger?" The reader was
supposed
to figure out that the Stanger was the devil.
F232:
Feather,
pick it up, put in pocket
The book I am looking for, to the best of my childhood knowledge,
was a collection of poems, and maybe short-short stories, with
illustrations
for children. It may have been a children's lit book. I am
positive it contained the "I scream you scream we all scream for ice
cream"
poem, and a poem about a feather (I thought this may have been part of
the title, but could be wrong). The poem went if (or when) you
see
(or find)a feather, a pretty white feather, a soft and tickly feather,
pick it up, put it in your pocket, and then followed by what the
feather
meant, either it was a message from abird, or it meant remember me
always.
I thought if I even knew where the poem came from I could go from
there,
but have exhausted all research options. I know it was read to me
circa 1978-9. Thanks!
I landed at this web page
because I too am
looking
for the same poem about a feather. As I recall it went something
like "If you find a little feather, a pretty white feather, a soft and
tickley feather, pick it up and put it in your pocket. A feather
is a letter from a bird that says think of me, remember me always or at
least until the little feather is gone"...or something like that.
And I do think it was in a childrens lit book because I was in college
at Cal State Long Beach at the time and the book belonged to a friend
at
school. This was in 1966.
lee bennett
hopkins, zoo! a book of poems, 1971,
copyright.The poem
is by beatrice schenk de regniers and is in zoo!a book of poems, but
that book
does not contain the ice cream poem. i hope this helps some.
F233:
Friendship
Stone or Rock
Solved: The Magic Friend Maker
F234:
faith
in god
This thick hard-cover book had stories on one page, and pictures
relating to the stories on the other page, circa 1958. This is
the
one I remember: A picture of four boys and thre girls, each
carrying
a candle with bright flames. The oldest girl was cupping the
flame
of her candle, because it was about to go out. The story tells of
how the candle light represents out faith in God, and that the older
girl'
faith was weakening.
Allan Jahsmann, Little Visits With God.
(1959)
Sounds like it could be
this.
There was also a second book called 'More Little Visits With God'.
Described
as 'devotions for families with small children', each one-page story
had
an illustration and suggestions for parents and children to discuss the
moral of each story.
F235:
Faries/elves
Before 1940. As a child in New York I found a little book
with stories and beautiful illustrations of faries and elves. It
contained
about 10 short stories. Some of the stories discribed how they made
their
clothing out of the flower petals and lived among the plant leaves. I
loved
the book and upon moving out west the book was lost. Please can someone
help me. Thank you.
Elizabeth Gordon, Loraine and the
Little
People (series). (1930's)
Possibly
one of the books in Elizabeth Gordon's "Loraine and the Little People"
series? These books were originally published in the 1910's, but
were re-issued by Rand McNalley in the 1930's. Titles include "Loraine
and the Little People" (illus. by Penny Ross), "Loraine and the Little
People of Spring" (illus. by Ella Dolbear Lee), "Loraine and the Little
People of Summer" and "Loraine and the Little People of the Ocean"
(both
illus. by James McCracken). These beautifully illustrated books
feature
short stories about a young girl named Loraine and her tiny fairy
friends.
"Loraine and the Little People of Summer" contains seven stories,
including
one called "The Flower Gown Maker" - perhaps this is the one you are
looking
for? The other stories in this book are "Queen O'Weeds", "The Moss
Carpet
Weaver", "The Shaker of Seeds", "Queen of Loving Thoughts", "The
Commodore",
and "The Master Colorist."
F236:
Futuristic
Swamp and Serpent
I
remember there was a set of these children's Science Fiction stories in
my school library. THis would have been around 1983 or
something.
I believe there was a set of 5 or so, in a continuing story, but I can
only remember 2 of them, one with some clarity (the drawing) and the
other
only vaguely. The books themselves were small and fairly thin
(like
30 pages maybe?) the book dimensions were around 7 inches square.
The one I remember had a very green cover, showing an image of a
long-grass
swamp. THere was a serpent coming out of the water threatening
two
people (maybe a man and a woman, not sure) That is really all I
remember.
There might have been a futuristic city in the background.
Anyway,
the drawing is as I remember it. THe other book had a red themed cover,
and it showed a futuristic city I think, involving robots. The
paintings
themselves were very striking, and well done... in fact, it was those
images
that drew me to the set. I do not remember if I read any or not,
and now wish that I had a chance again. I hope you find them!
CS Lewis, The Silver Chair. (1898-1963)
Two english children undergo hair raising adventures as they go on a
search
and rescue mission for the missing prince Rilian, who is held captive
in
the underground kindom of the emerald witch. Depending on which
print
you had, the cover illustration may have had a picture of the witch who
turned into a brilliant green serpent and threatened the two children.
Also, the second book you are thinking of could be another of the
series
The Chronicles of Narnia, such as The Last Battle
Unfortunately, that solution that was offered is most certainly
NOT the answer to my query. I know the Silver Chair story
well, and the book I was looking for is not a second world Fantasy
story..
it is a straight forward Science Fiction story, as I stated... there
were
robots and blasters and all the rest.. Futuristic City, space ships,
etc,
etc etc... And the serpent was coming out of a long grass
swamp...
very important to the picture! As per my description, the books
were
short (30 pages maybe), not anywhere as long as even the shortest
Narnia
book.
F237:
Finds
faeries through gate in wall
Hi! I am looking for a children's book, probably published
in the early 60's. 6-9 year old probably. Kid goes thru a
"gate"
in a wall or hedge. finds fairies on the other side. sounds
like the Secret Garden but isn't. was my favorite book in about
3rd
and 4th grade. was in the book list on either Weekly Reader or
Junior
Scholastic. have been looking for years and can't find!
F238:
Family
blizzard Christmas
I read a book as an elementary student in the late 70's - early
80's which featured a family around Christmas trapped at home due to a
blizzard or snow storm. They were forced to make homemade gifts
rather
than shop. I distinctly remember them making gifts for the birds
in the back yard as well. I believe there was young girl
wearing
a red coat on the cover with a sled although I could be mistaken. It
was
a chapter book.
Carolyn Haywood, Snowbound with Betsy.
Definitely the one. It's on the Solved Mysteries page as well.
Haywood, Carolyn, Snowbound with Betsy.
(1962) The most popular of Haywood's umpteem novels is Snowbound with
Betsy.
Betsy, Star and their parents have unexpected guests just before
Christmas,
when a mother and her two children are stranded in town during a
blizzard
and Betsy's parents take them in. The story kept me so enthralled
the first time I read the book that I distinctly remember lying on the
living room couch with the book in front of me.
F239:
Fog
causes sin
I read a book around 1990. Can not recall the title nor
author.
. hence my sending you this. I remember two scenes quite vividly.
1-A young boy was lying in bed and a fog surrounded him and he suddenly
felt the urge to gratify himself. He then sought other young
women
to engage in sexual acts with. 2-there was a mansion on a hill and
several
of the townspeople went there to engage in huge orgies. The
clergy
was involved in these orgies, and several acts of incest also took
place
at the mansion. 3-there was a man (Seth I think) and his wife that were
very grounded in religion and the main character (Seth. . .I think
that's
his name) began the crusade to get his wife and himself out of the town
before they too were affected by the fog that caused sin. One
part
of the book describes a scene where the main character and presumably
Satan
are talking and it begins to rain. The main character then
realizes
that it is not rain, but urine. That is all I can remember of the
book. It was paperback, so I'm sure that it had several different
covers. I know it is not a lot to go on, but I keep thinking
about
this book and quite frankly. .not knowing the title is driving me
bananas! *lol* Any help you could lend would be very
valuable
to me. I would also like to purchase a hardcover copy of this
book.
Thanks.
Richard Laymon, Sounds like it could be
one of richard Laymon books, horror genre for adults and young
adults.
Quite full on but not my cuppa tea. OR it could be The Fog
by Frank Herbert.
F240:
Flip
book ballerina
I am looking for a book my sister and I had
in the 60s or 70s. It was a flip book with a little ballerina going
through
her moves. The cover was primarily yellow . That is about all I
remember.
Thankyou, I hope you can help me find this.
F241:
Fairy
family fairy tales book
Solved: Shadow Castle
F242:
Female
exchange student in Scottish Highlands
Solved: My Heart's in the
Highlands
F243:
Fairy
tale book with little men in background
I really don’t have a lot to give you to work
with. The book I am looking for is a children’s fairy tale
book.
It wasn’t very big (maybe 15 – 30 pages?), and I remember reading it
sometime
in the early to mid 1980’s. I think the book was a collection of
stories about Trolls (but it could have been about Giants). One
of
the stories in the book was the Three Billy Goats Gruff (hence, the
Trolls).
The thing I remember most about the book is the illustrations. It
had big, full page, full color illustrations. These illustrations
were very intricate, and I would spend hours looking at the hidden
detail
in the illustrations. The thing that stands out most in my mind
about
the illustrations were the “characters” in the background. There
were these little gnome-type men through out the pictures, rarely (if
ever)
interacting with the main subjects of the story. They had little
houses carved into their natural and man made surroundings (like the
side
of a cliff or in the nooks and crannies of a “man sized” town).
These
little men also had these little bird-like creatures, sometimes as
draft
animals, hitched to little carts, but usually just hanging
around.
Sorry, but that is all I have, and even these memories are hazy (I was
a small child when I first read this book). Thank you for your
help.
George Jonsen, Author, John O'Brien
Illustrator,
Favorite
Tales of Monsters and Troll. One
of
my
all
time
favorite
picture
books.
I
recognized
it
instantly
because
of
the
excellent
John
O'Brien
illustrations.
It
contains
the
Three
Billy
Goats
Gruff,
a
story
about
a
man
who uses a pet bear to scare
trolls,
and a tale of the youngest woodcutter's son who squeezes cheese to
outwit
a troll. The illustrations are full of tiny Bosch-like details of
little
creatures who inhabit the hair and clothing of the main characters. The
illustrator also produced a coloring book of fantastic creatures that
you
might want to check out!
F244:
Ferris
wheel
Solved: A Night in Funland
and Other Stories
F245:
Florida,
rattlesnakes, snake hunting
This is a book from my youth in the late
1960's.
It is about a boy and his semi-catonic father living in a swamp in
Florida.
The boy collects snakes to sell to help support his father. The boy
meets
up with some professional snake hunters and learns how to catch
rattlesnakes.
One of the rattlesnakes almost bites the son, but the father is jarred
from his state and saves the boy. The boy is glad to have father back.
Mel Ellis, Ironhead,
1968. The title is the name of an alligator that is part of the book as
well as snake collecting and large rattlesnakes. Originally published
by
Holt, Rinehart, and Winston. Reprint in paperback in the 1970's.'
F246:
Family
takes road trip, camps by roadside
Family takes roadtrip, camps by roadside:
In the '70s I read a story in a Reader's Digest Condensed Book about a
family who packs up for a roadtrip. There's lots of bickering, and I
believe
I remember the kids don't want to go. Something happens and the family
end up camped right off the side of the road. That's of course illegal
and the officials try to make them leave, but they won't. They become
sort
of a celebrity family since they're right there by the road and are
bucking
the system. By the end of the story they all end up learning to get
along
and enjoy each other more, plus they make new friends. A very cute and
fun PG story.
Stephanie Tolan (author),
The Great
Skinner Getaway, (1980). This could be The Great Skinner
Getaway
or The Great Skinner Homestead. In the first one, the Skinner
kids'
father comes home with a huge camper/motorhome and announces the family
is going to travel across the US. The four kids are not happy
about
it, and their mother isn't too thrilled with the idea either. The motor
home breaks down in the middle of nowhere and the family has to figure
out what to do. Because they have to work together, they become
closer.
In the second title, the Skinners have decided to spend some time
(maybe
just the summer, maybe a year?) in the broken-down mobile home and the
kids detail the humor of it while wanting to get back to
civilization.
There are two other books about the Skinners: The Great Skinner
Enterprise
and The Great Skinner Strike. (I''m not giving a great description, but
I do think these are the books in question!)
Richard Powell (author), Pioneer,
Go Home. I think this must be the book you are looking for -
the
details fit, and if this isn't it, then RD must have put out 2 very,
very
similar stories right around the same time!
F247:
Fly-by-Night
Solved: Humpty Dumpty Holiday Stories
F248:
Fairy
Tales
I am looking for a book I read in the late 60's or early 70's.
It is a large book, hard cover book of Fairy Tales. The cover was
blue and the stories I remember were The 3 Bears, Puss 'n Boots, The
Little
Match Girl, and Little Red Riding Hood. What distinquished this
book
was that the art on the cover was a hologram of Cinderella and the
illustrations
in the book were posed puppets. I would LOVE to find this book or
at least the title. I hope I don't stump you.
F248: Possibly the fairy tale board book
series
by Oscar Weigle and illustrated by T. Izawa and S. Hijikata.
(Not
all
include
Weigle's
name.)
They
began
before
1970
and
ran
for
years.
The
different
titles
sometimes
include
the
phrase
A Living Story
Book or some variation of Puppet Book. Two
stories
I remember - with the original "sad" endings -were The Little
Match
Girl and The Red Shoes. If there are other
authors
of fairy tale board book series done with puppet photos and holograms,
please do tell - I'd like to track them down too.
Shiba Productions, The Fairy Tale Treasury
In Living Color.
(1966)
Blue cover with hologram of Cinderella getting out of her pumpkin
coach.
Fourteen stories as follows: Cinderella, The Three Little Pigs, Little
Red Riding Hood, Tom Thumb, Sleeping Beauty, The Ugly Duckling, The
Golden
Goose, Aladdin and his Wonderful Lamp, Goldilocks and the Three Bears,
The Little Match Girl, Pinocchio, Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, Puss
in Boots, and Hansel and Gretel. Beautifully illustrated with the
charming
puppets of Tadasu Izawa and Shigemi Hijikata. A rare and expensive book.
F249:
Family
stuck in a car during a snowstorm
Solved: The Snowstorm
Jenny
Never Forgot
F250:
Foster
Family
Solved: Heads, I Win
F251:
Family
lost, survives in desert
I'm looking for a story that was probably written in the 1960's
or 1970's. It may have been in a school reader. The style of the story
and artwork may have been similar to "Run Away Home." A family
(Mom,
Pop, 2 boys, and possibly a girl) is traveling around the U.S.
They
are driving through the Southwest desert, possibly Death Valley, when
the
car breaks down. To survive, they cut strips of pulp from inside
cactus, and suck/chew them for moisture. They use the car's
hubcaps
to trap dew, and I think they may have tried eating color
crayons.
Someone in the family had to walk across the desert to find help. I
don't
remember if it was the father, or if he was somehow hurt, and it was
one
of the boys? He had to walk at night, because it was too hot during the
daytime. Any suggestions are appreciated. Thanks!
Elizabeth Coatsworth, Runaway
Home,
1942. Check Solved Mysteries.
I'm sorry to say, Runaway Home by
Elizabeth
Coatsworth is definitely NOT the book that I'm looking for. I have a
copy
of that book, and while the Harding family's car does break down in the
desert, they are only stranded for a few hours before help
arrives.
There is no lengthy survival ordeal of several days, nothing about
sucking
moisture from strips of cactus, collecting dew, eating crayons, or one
of the boys making the long walk to get help. As I said, I think
the style of the book and/or illustrations may have been similar to
that
of Runaway Home. The setting may have been slightly more
recent
- 1950's or 1960's possibly. Thank you for your help.
Reader's Digest. in 1993,
at seventh grade overnight camp, I read this story from a photocopy
(bedtime
story) - it was a Drama in Real Life article from Reader's
Digest.
On the WWW, I found one mention in a blog from someone else who
remembers
it, but it doesn't look as if RD has put up old stuff.
I too remember this story, and as other person
mentioned, I also believe it was a Readers Digest "Drama
in Real Life" story. I remember that they were taking about which
crayon colors tasted best when they were eating them.
I remember a "collecting dew on hubcabs"
storyline
and would've read it in the 60s... a scholastic book maybe?
Evan Wylie, Ordeal in the
Desert, November
1959. This was
published in Reader's Digest and reprinted in one of those "Drama in
Real Life" paperbacks. Someone
mentioned in in their blog here: http://astoriedcareer.com/2008/03/where-it-all-began-for-me.html,
which is all the details I've been able to find about it, but it was
originally in the November 1959 issue of Reader's Digest.
Date: 1960,
approximate. This was
definitely a Readers'
Digest story.
My
wife
and
I
both
remember
it
vividly.
I'm
pretty
certain
it
was
Death
Valley,
and
the people used the crayons as
lipstick.
I'm pretty sure also that the hubcap episode may also have been about
their
having t