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This book sounds like one I read when i was a
child (early 80's). It was a large hardback with a pale purple
cover
and featured gruesome scaninavian fairytales. It had very distinct (and
quite scary) illustrations back and white "wood block" style line
drawings at the top of the pages and full-page colour ones too. I
remember
a story about a clever cat outwitting a hideous troll, a princess
riding on the back of the 4 winds to find her missing prince and a
story
about a priest and a wolf. hope some of this rings a bell
G34 grettir the strong: Tales From Silver
Lands, the book mentioned as having similar illustrations to
the
one wanted, has woodcuts by Paul Honore. Allan French did a
retelling,
Grettir
the Strong, illustrated by Bernard Blatch and published
by Bodley Head in 1961. Robert Newman did one, also called Grettir
the
Strong,
illustrated by John Gretzer, published Crowell
1968.
There are several others that don't appear to be illustrated. I
couldn't
find any collection of Norse or northern tales illustrated by Honore
specifically.
French, Allen, The Story of Grettir
the Strong, 1908. Allen French's retelling of the Saga
of
Grettir was first published in the US in 1908. It had a colour
frontispiece,
a colour vignette of Grettir on the title page, three other colour
plates
and three black and white plates. The colour illustrations are signed
by
F.I. Bennett, and dated 1908. The black and white plates are by a
different
illustrator, and are signed CAB and dated 1908. This edition was
reprinted
several times. In later printings the colour frontispiece is also used
as the dust jacket illustration. The most recent printing I have seen
is
the twelfth printing, dated 1966. In that one the three black and white
pictures by CAB are omitted entirely (they are no longer included in
the
list of illustrations at the front of the book). The five pictures by
F.I.
Bennett are retained, but are printed as black and white drawings only,
except for the cover picture, which is in full colour on the dust
jacket,
but in black and white where it is used as the frontispiece. The
British
edition of Allen French's retelling of the Saga of
Grettir
was published in 1961, with new black and white illustrations by
Bernard
Blatch. I don't think it was ever reprinted, and it was sold mainly in
the UK.One of these could be the book your reader is looking for.
Jones, Gwyn, Scandinavian Legends
and Folk-tales, 1956, copyright. I believe this is the
book
that is most likely to be the one your reader remembers.
It is a collection of legends that included the story of Grettir the
Strong. The illustrator is Joan Kiddell-Monroe. The book is one of an
extensive
series of collections of myths, legends and folk-tales for young
readers
published by Oxford University Press in the 1950s and 1960s. All the
books
were illustrated by Joan Kiddell-Monroe, but several different writers
wrote the books.
Gustaf Tenggren, illustrator, The
Tenggren
Tell-It-Again
Book.
Parts of the description seem to
fit
so well with this one Gustaf Tenggren is Scandinavian, my copy of
this book is vibrantly illustrated, although all the drawings are in
color,
even the smaller ones (but before relocating it, I also thought the
smaller
drawings were black etchings). The main difference is that not all of
the
gruesome aspects are present. Falada is taken to a distant part of the
stables instead of having her head whacked off and displayed...BUT the
description gave me a very vivid memory of yet ANOTHER anthology. You
may
be remembering two different books, this one and the more gruesome one
that I also have a memory of. Check out this website
on Tenggren and for some other illustrators, like Kay Nielson go
to this website.
I am the person who posted the original query and want to respond
to the suggestions posted as possible solutions. To wit: Thanks for the
suggestions, but I am sorry to say that after checking out the links
you
provided, neither of the illustrators you suggested is the one I am
looking
for. Furthermore, it was definitely one book (not two that
I might have confused) and Falada was also definitely beheaded, hung on
a wall, and talking to the Goose Girl. For what it's worth, I
absolutely
loved Tenggren & Nielson's work (thanks!). I am browsing the
book website on which you had found them and think it might have been
John
Bauer (his trolls and hags look very familiar)... Here's hoping.
Everywhere I look at books I'm trying to find
answers to these stumpers!! I'm going buggy!!!! Is it possible that
your
book is one of those collections that has multiple illustrators?? Today
I came upon The Platt & Munk Treasury of Stories for Children.
It
contains
Goose
Girl
in
which
Falada's
head
is
hung
on
the
wall
and
he
speaks.
The
illustrator
of
the
story
is
Eulalie--
but
the
artwork
is
very
different
from
her
colored
work
in
the
Bumper
Book,-
rather
it
is
simple
black
and
white
line
drawings
that
may
have a hint of the art deco to
them.
Other stories had other illustrators: Lois Lenski, Tasha Tudor,
Margaret
Hoopes,George and Doris Hauman. This particular book does not have The
Pied Piper so it is probably not the one you are seeking. However,
under
the acknowledgements it is stated that Goose Girl comes from Famous
Fairy
Tales, edited by Watty Piper and illustrated by Eulalie
and
others- Copyright 1922,1928, 1933 by The Platt & Munk Co. Sure hope
this helps! Oh! Someone has stated that Famous Fairy Tales is number 95
of the Platt& Munk Star Book Children series. For those people
hunting
for series of books this may be a useful bit of information!
Illustrated by Fritz Kredel. Translated
by Mrs. E.V. Lucas, Lucy Crane and Marian Edwardes, Grimms'
Fairy
Tales. I am pretty sure this is the book you are looking
for.
I have it sitting on my shelf. There are both colorful pictures and
some
just sketches (mine are in red and white). The stories are pretty
gruesome, including a talking severed horse head named falda.
Most
of the stories include some death or dismemberment. Some other
titles,
if this helps, are: The twelve Dancing Princesses, The Three
Spinning
Fairies, King Thrushbeard.
Marie Ponsot, Translator, The Fairy
Tale Book: A Deluxe Golden Book. (1961) Recently
rereleased
in the early 2000s, I still have my orginal copy. Battered and
beaten,
with the cover all but destroyed, the illustrations are as fresh and
lovely
as the day it was given me.
Grimm Brothers, Grimm's Fairy Tales,1929.The
original
copyright
of
this
was
in
1919
by
the
Platt
&
Nourse
Co.,
Inc.,
Copyright
1929
is
Platt
&
Munk
Co.
Inc.
I
think
this
is
the
same
book
mentioned
in
the
original
query.
It
has
an
orange
cover
with
a
black
Sleeping
Beauty
illustration
and
line
drawings
throughout. The
art
deco look and the clogs are all there. The first story listed is
Rumpel-stilts-kin
and the last is Clever Grethel. These are the gory oldies for the
most part. I have no idea who the translator is. The last
page
notes that this series was published as "The Star Books for Children:
Happiness
on every page". I hope that helps.
Grimm, Jacob and Wilhelm, Hansel
and Gretel and Other Stories by the Brothers Grimm,1925.Your
description
of the illustrations reminded me of Kay Nielsen'\''s haunting style,
and
he seems to be from the right era. This collection of Grimm's Fairy
Tales
includes "The Goose Girl".
A possible is Castle of Comfort,
by
L. Atherton, illustrated by S. Findley, published London, Faber
1958, 153 pages. "Ten year old Nell has the happy knack of going into
the
past through the door leading into the flower
garden. Her home, the Castle of Comfort, then
becomes the setting for various historic scenes, and is intended, with
Nell herself and her family, to be a focus for each bye-story." (Junior
Bookshelf Mar/58 p.64) It does
seem that the historic scenes are all loosely
connected with the house, though, which this a less likely match.
G50 grandmother's garden: there is a book called
Grandmother's
Garden, by Hazel Cook Corcoran, published Parthenon
1961.
No plot description as yet, but it seems to be fairly rare and there is
no LC listing.
I started to read a book once in school called
Parsley,
Sage, Rosemary and Time (I think) about a girl in a garden to
which
something magical was about to happen related to the thyme plant when
the
teacher consificated to book and I never got to finish it.
Edward Eager, The Time Garden,
1950s. Someone suggested that your book might be Parsley Sage
Rosemary and Time, but it probably isn't--that book takes the girl
only goes back to Colonial America. In the Time Garden, though,
there are 4 kids staying with an elderly woman, and they travel back in
time to meet famous people from the past--Louise May Alcott and
possibly
Joan of Arc. It's worth looking at--paperback is still in print.
Trevor Meriol, Sun Slower, Sun Faster,
1957. "Two modern English children go back into their countries
past
and live historically significant religious periods." I'm not sure if
this
fits- might have possibilities.
Hazel Cook Corcoran,
Grandmother's Garden, 1965. This
is
a
small
book
of
poetry. I have this
book and the companion book The Garden Grows, pub. 1970. Both are signed by the author.
I am trying to find out more about the books
and author.
Bill Peet, The Pinkish Purplish Egg.
Probably this book, but I believe the griffin hatches FROM the egg.
If the griffin hatched FROM an egg this would
be The Pinkish, Purplish, Bluish Egg - Bill Peet
1963
and still in print. Maybe Could you be getting it mixed up with Horton
Hatches
an
Egg?
Kraus, Robert, Night-Lite Storybook, Windmill, 1975. A long-shot: I have two Night-Lite Calendars, both illustrated by N. M. Bodecker, which have various tiny animals (hedgehogs, rabbits, etc.) in assorted settings. The signs, lighted windows of houses, etc., in the pictures glow in the dark. Illustrations are copyright 1972 by Bodecker for Night-Lite Library, but the only book showing on a google search is Kraus's Night-Lite Storybook (and Kraus's publishing house, Windmill, was the one that issued the calendars).
I am wracking my brains over G62 ...I
absolutely
*know* those pictures - I will get back to you if and when I can find
my
copy.
My college-age children and I all agree that
the illustrations look very familiar!! I am inclined to suggest Gateway
to
Storyland by Watty Piper (late 50's edition) which
was
mine as child that I kept for my children. It's up in the
attic--I
just went to check, but it's about 130 degrees up there and I didn't
find
it immediately and had to leave!! I'll try to check later.
Ok, it cooled off and it looks like I sent in
a false lead--it is NOT A Gateway to Storyland. I
still
think I KNOW those illustrations--could you tell me a little more
info--what
are the dimensions of the book and what was time frame you first had
the
book? I looked thru all the books I have here with no luck--but
there
is a falling apart book of Mother Goose at my mom's that I'll check
next
time I'm home.
Mother Goose Nursery Rhymes.
I think we had this book as children too. Those pictures are
definately
familiar. I would try Mother Goose.
Just a suggestion! I have a book called Favorite
Nursery
Tales that is similar to what you describe. It is
smallish-
62 pages
long. It has all the stories but Three Little
Kittens- but there are some poems along the way. The book is put out by
Golden Books and the illustrations come from Little Golden Books. Mine
is a 1970 edition. There is an edition from 1963- perhaps that
resembles
your long lost book.(I have never been able to pull up your pictures to
see what they look like!)
G63a: Ghost
story turns out to be amnesia
can't remember much. I don't believe this is a Nancy Drew mystery.
Bunch of kids rent old house for summer. See lady "ghost". She turns
out
to be a girl that is being drugged and has lost her memory. She is
being
kept in this little room/cabin? After they rescue her they all go on
this
boat-her Dad's? In the beginning the kids-teenagers-go up to the attic
of this old house and find boxes with old clothes in them-this is where
the lady "ghost" got her dress that she wears to "haunt them" Sorry
it's
not much!
Sutton, Margaret,The Haunted Attic,
1932. I can't remember the entire plot of this Judy Bolton
mystery, but this might be the one.
This is not the Haunted Attic by
Margaret
Sutton.
You mistakenly classed one of my stumpers as "solved". This story
is not The Haunted Attic by Judy Bolton as somebody clearly
stated.
I have also read that story-a couple of days ago-and it is not the book
that I am looking for. Can you please put it back under "unsolved"?
Thanks!
Jean McKechnie, Penny Allen and the
Mystery
of the Haunted House, 1950.
The Allen kids discover a girl hiding in the cabin they're living in.
She
has been drugged and has amnesia. It turns out she was kidnapped by a
man
who then drugged her and tried to convice her that he was her father.
The
kids go in search of the girl's identity and her real father. They
travel
along a river in a cabin cruiser, pursued by the kidnapper and his
gang.
In the end she's reunited with her father.
Margaret Buffie, The Dark Garden.
Probably not the book you're looking for, but enough of the details
match
that it's a possibility.
G63b:
Girl Named Lemon
All I can remember about this one is that there is girl named Lemon
in the story and another possibly named Fern. They live on a farm
and they go to the fair.That's the extent of my memory.
I don't remember a Lemon in Charlotte's Web, but
that's
what I think of when I think of Fern....
Elizabeth Enright, Thimble Summer,
circa 1939. Thimble Summer is about Garnet, who
lives
on a farm in the Depression, and her friend Citronella (which you may
be
remembering as Lemon!). It includes a visit to a fair. It was a
Newbery
winner and should be easily available.
Elizabeth Enright, Thimble Summer,1938.
Could it be Citronella, not Lemon? The other main character, named
Garnet,
has a pig, which might have led to the association with the name Fern.
SOLVED: Glen Cook, Doomstalker.
G84: Mystery of the Silent Friends
(1963, in Solved Mysteries?) The details don't quite fit, but there are
both "no-evil" monkey sculptures and very old automatic dolls on
platforms.
One wrote, one drew a picture of a chalet and one played a
harpsichord(?)
I remember begging my mother to find dolls like that. Of course, who
knows
if dolls like that were ever common even in the 19th century - and
there
I was, asking for them in the late 1970's!
Ruth Sawyer, Rollerskates,
1960s? Rollerskates is about a ten-year old girl living in an
hotel
(or possibly an apartment building) with two elderly relatives.
It
tells of her adventures over the course of a year, and all the unusual
people she be-friends. However, it is set in late 19th / early
20th
century rather than the 1960s.
Eloise at the Plaza,
children's
book
series.
M.B.
Goffstein,
Daisy Summerfield's Style.
I
just
reunited
with
this
book
myself!
I'm
pretty
sure
it's
the
same
one
you
are
looking
for.
What
I
remember
is
that
somehow
this
girl
is
supposed
to
be
going
one
place,
but
she
switches
luggage(?)
or
luggage
tags
with
a
girl
named
Daisy
Summerfield, goes to
a different place and kind of takes on a new identity. I remember
her being in nyc also, and the store with the monkeys is an art supply
store. She wants to be an artist and she buys soapstone(?) and
carving tools. She carves figures with moveable parts, and I
think in the end she ends up selling them. I also remember that
in order to have this fantasy life, she has to carefully budget the
money she had for whatever it was she was really supposed to be
doing. I can't remember the ending though!
G109 might be The Girl of the Limberlost
by Gene Stratton-Porter
Gene Stratton-Porter writes of Indiana, I think.
Cid Ricketts Sumner, Tammy
series. 1950s-60s. A possibility: Tammy Out of Time,
Tammy Tell Me True, Tammy and the Millionaire
CS Lewis, The Magicians Nephew.
Most of the things you talked about are in this story.
Lampman, Evelyn Sibley, City Under the
Back
Steps. Maybe? Not exactly
right
but: Craig and his cousin Jill have been reduced to minute size and
taken
prisoner by an ant colony in punishment for stepping on one of its
members.
Down beneath the ground they are herded, down to the city under the
back
steps, where the haughty and Queen ruled with an iron hand, each of her
subjects with a vital task to perform. Craig and Jill are put to work!
G117 Didn't the princess and Curdie
follow something like that through a tunnel? Or a wild guess Lampman
The
City Under the Back steps?
George MacDonald, The Princess and the
Goblin, 1872. I agree that
this
sounds like the story of the princess and her friend Curdie, who
followed
an invisible magic strand to escape the goblin'' underground
lair.
Loved that book!
C.S. Lewis' Narnia series includes a title called The
Silver
Chair...
This is a long shot: The Silver Crown
by Robert O'Brien. It was originally published around 1968.
Robert O'Brien, The Silver Crown,
1968. I'm guessing this one rather than The Silver Chair
by Lewis, because the latter is easier to find. "Ellen
awakens
one morning with a mysterious silver frown on the pillow beside her.
What
magic powers it possesses she has not yet discovered, but the sudden
changes
in her life are unmistakable: her house is burned down, her family has
disappeared, and a man in a dark uniform is stalking her. Can Ellen
ever
find her family? Can she use the power of the silver crown to thwart
the
powers of darkness? What diabolical force hides inside the mysterious
castle
in the woods?
I'm inclined to second the recommendation of
The
Silver Chair. I don't recall where the children are when
they get pulled into Narnia in this book, but they are sitting on a
railway
bench when their adventure starts in The Last Battle.
Sounds
as
though
the
requester
may
be
combining
these
two
titles
into
one.
c.s. lewis, the silver chair. i
agree. the book starts out with "jill pole" sobbing on a bench or
something behind the school. "eustace scrubb" finds her.
they
run away from the mean kids at school by going to narnia, half on
purpose,
half-accidental.
Charnas, Suzy McKee, The Kingdom of Kevin
Malone. This is a
contemporary
fantasy that begins in Central Park, then moves into an odd sort of
alternate
setting in which teenaged Kevin is both prince and anti-hero. Not
a perfect fit for the posted description, but close enough to be a
distinct
possibility -- and if not, there's a small chance that Charnas' other
YA
trio, a trilogy beginning with THE BRONZE KING, might be
the right answer.
Rainbow Brite. Wasn't there a big
toy merchandise collection of toy unicorns for little girls in the
1980s
and early 90s, called Rainbow Brite? Or was that just
horses?
This sure sounds like a book based on those toys.
Thanks for the suggestion, but it was
definitely
not Rainbow Brite. It was an Apple Paperback book.
Coville, Bruce, Into the Land of the
Unicorns:
the Unicorn Chronicles Book 1.
NY Apple Scholastic 1994. Right at the tail end of the possible
period,
but anyways, the right publisher and topic. "The story of a young girl
destined to save a gentle land from the dangerous, evil hunters trying
to destroy it." "Fantasy and mystery combine when Cara is forced to
flee
Earth, clutching her grandmother's amulet and carrying a message for
the
unicorn queen." There's a dragon and something called a Squijum.
Patricia
Reilly
Giff,
Polk Street School
series, '80's, approximate. Emily Arrow is in the
second grade at Polk Street school. Other characters are Sherri Dent,
Richard "Beast" Best and Matthew. Emily has a rubber unicorn, Uni,
perhaps an eraser. Uni accompanies Emily on quite a few
adventures. I don't remember much reference to rainbows, but
there is definitely a spooky book about an old house in the series, and
Emily has a falling out with her best friend, Dawn, in another
book. Probably the best known books in the series are SNAGGLE
DOODLES and THE BEAST IN MS. ROONEY's ROOM. Hope this helps.
G159 This is DEAR LOVEY HART, I AM
DESPERATE
by Ellen Conford ~from a librarian
Ellen Conford, Dear Lovey Hart, I Am
Desperate,
1975. Could it be the book Dear Lovey Hart, I am Desperate
by Ellen Conford? In Conford's book, the main female
character,
Carrie, secretly writes an advice column in her school newspaper. The
description
of the cover also seems familiar as well.
Ellen Conford. I haven't read these
in a while, so I'm not sure if some of the details fit, but Ellen
Conford
wrote Dear Lovey Hart, I Am Desperate and its sequel We
Interrupt
this
Semester
for
an
Important
Bulletin. Girl
writes
advice column for high school newspaper and tries to impress cute guy
who's
also on the newspaper staff.
This is incorrect. I have this book and the character is not a girl
who was overweight. "lovey heart" is also set on the east coast, in New
York, not California.
Beverly Cleary, The Luckiest Girl,
1950's or 60's? This may be the book that you are looking
for.
It has to do with a girl writing for her school newspaper, and it takes
place in Northern California or Oregon. It has been a long time
since
I have read it.
Suzanne Rand, Ask Annie, 1982.
This
is
one
of
the
original
"Sweet
Dreams"
paperback
teen
romance
series.
Irvin S. Cobb, Faith, Hope and Charity, 1930. Sounds very much like Faith, Hope and Charity by Irvin S. Cobb. I have this short story collected in a book called 101 Years' Entertainment: The Great Detective Stories 1841-1941, edited by Ellery Queen. I have a vague memory of this possibly having been done as a 'Twilight Zone' or similar show episode.
G162 This is a shot in the dark, but since no-one else has answered, I figured I'd try. Could it be one of the Kit Williams' books, possibly MASQUERADE? The whole book is posted online. There was a treasure hunt involved. ~from a librarian
I think I know this book, but of course author
and title currently elude me. The spy kid meets some girls who
live
in the only painted house on the island, and there is a man named
Eugene
who runs a sort of general store. The medium of exchange is
called
krinks, and the children sing a song "Earn krinks for Eugene to drink
a-drink
drink. Maybe this will trigger someone's memory that's better
than
mine.
Grattan, Madeleine, William Pene du Bois.
Jexium Island. Viking, 1957, 1st
b/w
title page and chapter designs by artist 184 pp. . Drawn from memories
of a childhood near the banks of the Garonne and inspired by tales of
the
Resistance. The heroes crack a ring of kidnappers who capture children
to work on a North Atlantic island of jexium deposits. An uneven but
memorable
book.
Trans. from the French by Peter Grattan, Jexium
Island (1957) I am so delighted to "return the favor"
someone
did for me, and identify a stumper! I am sure this is the book
you
are seeking. It has black and white illustrations by William Pene
du Bois, and is the story of Serge, who makes his way from France to
the
coast of Newfoundland to search for his kidnapped foster sister
Angele.
There he finds many children who have been captured to work on an
island
of jexium deposits.
Grattan, Madeleine, Jexium Island
(1957 approximate) Illustrated by Wiiliam Pene du Bois
Marion Conger (illus. by Eloise
Wilkin),
The
Little Golden Holiday Book, 1951. This is just a
remote
guess, depending on how definite your memories are, but your
description
reminded me of this book, which has Peter and Mary going through the
year
with the different holidays. For Thanksgiving, Mary's
grandparents
come to her house and there's a picture of her watching Mother take the
*pumpkin pies* out of the oven -- they are the color of gingerbread and
she has baked a small one herself "for Gramps". (The stove is
old-fashioned
with a big copper kettle on top.)There are several pictures in the
Christmas
section one is double-page and has Mary in front of the tree,
looking
at a creche on a small table next to the fireplace. ?? There's a short
description in the Solved Mysteries section. Hope this helps...
Wilken, Elosie, Baby's Christmas.
This sounds an awful lot like Baby's Chrsitmas by Eloise
Wilken, except I don't
think they go to Grandma's. I think all of the
Christmas activities take place at "Baby's" home. In the original
version
of this book the illustrations were absolutely gorgeous!
It's NOT Baby's First Christmas
(I just checked multiple editions of that one) but I do remember the
book.
The children are facing the creche, holding hands, with their backs to
the reader. . . I think it probably is Wilkin although it could be
Tasha
Tudor . . . I'll find it, it's around here somewhere!
It may be the Golden book Christmas in
the Country. Betty and Bob, along with their parents,
travel
to visit their grandparents in the country for Christmas. Betty
strings
popcorn and cranberies in the kitchen for the Christmas tree which Bob
chops down in the pasture. It was published (I think) in the late
1950's
the illustrations place the story around the turn of the century. The
story
ends with imagining the animals in the barn getting ready for Christmas.
Marcia Martin, illus. by, Waiting
for Santa Claus, 1952. A Wonder Book. This doesn't
match exactly but it's very close. Three children, Bobby, Sally,
and Baby celebrate Christmas with their parents. There's a
picture
of mother taking gingerbread cookies out of the oven and a picture of
Sally
and Baby looking at a nativity manger under the tree. They also go
shopping
for ornaments, sit on Santa's lap, and pick out a tree with
Daddy.
For Christmas Bobby gets a red scooter, Sally gets a doll and a sewing
set, and Baby gets a 'big brown Teddy bear with black shoe-button
eyes''
Grandparents come later to visit and have a big turkey dinner. At
the end the children say "Oh, we can hardly wait until next Christmas!"
sigh* This has been posted quite a while and no one has a clue?
Thanks
anyway!
Hyman, Trina Schart, How Six Found
Christmas,
1969. Okay, this is a long shot but the description of the cover
reminded me of this book. The girl is in the snowy woods and there is a
fox peeking out from behind a tree. The background is dark
green.
But the girl and the animals are searching for Christmas because they
have
never seen one so while the anxiety is there the story doesn't sound
the
same.
Andre Norton, The white jade fox. I
know this is the wrong colour, but the psychic elements and the
atmosphere
described brought this book to mind.
I am sorry to say that neither one of these is the book I am
searching
for, I really wish I could remember more about it, sometimes I think
that
something is about to surface, but is gone before it formulate's in my
mind. Thank you for trying! The Search Continues!
Severn, David, Foxy-boy,
illustrated by Lynton Lamb (US title The Wild Valley).
London,
Bodley
Head
1959.
This
may
be
a
bit
early,
however
Severn's
books
do
sometimes
have
supernatural
or
unsettling
elements
to
them.
"When
nine-year-old
Phillippa
arrived
to
spend
her
holidays
with
her
godmother
at
Lilliput
Castle,
she
was
disappointed
to
find
that
the
other
children
had
moved away, and the prospect of a long holiday with
only Kitty and Prudence as her companions was not a very exciting
thought.
The two women share of the work at Lilliput Castle between them
Kitty,
Philippa's godmother, worked outside, on the farm and in the garden,
while
Prudence enjoyed doing all the household chores, the cooking polishing
and cleaning. So Phillippa was left to amuse herself, and it was during
one of her solitary walks in Wild Valley that she first saw Foxy-boy.
Was
he a Fox or a boy? What was he doing in the Valley? And would Phillippa
ever be able to get near enough to him to find out?" Hey, this might
work
for G54 girl with wolf friend, too!
Unfortunatly, Foxy-Boy wasn't it either. If I recall
correctly,
I think the girl may have become a fox in the end, but I'm not ever 405
possitive about that. Thanks for trying!
I. M. Chilton, Nightmare, 1971, approximate. I think
this might be the book you're searching for -- I looked for it
for years too! Girl is in motorbike accident and gets sent back
in time as an old woman in a forest. She finds a fox tail, which
she wants to sell to have food for the winter. The fox (evil
spirit) starts haunting her. She travels back & forth in
time, trying to convince everyone in her 'real world' that she's not
crazy.
L.M.
CHILTON,
NIGHTMARE, September
1971, copyright. 95 page short story excellent.
Frank Herrmann, Giant Alexander series.
One of these?
G188 It may be one of the series but it is not
Herrmann
The
giant Alexander in America. He holds a little friend Timmy in
his
shirt pocket - if that helps identify the book as one of the series.
See T59 for some suggestions.
Lucy Sprague Mitchell, The Golden Book
of Nursery Tales (Silly Will),
1948.
This sure sounds like "Silly Will" by Lucy Sprague Mitchell,
except
it's a little boy, instead of a girl. But it does have the same
theme
of ungratefulness, with the trees taking back the wood from his house,
the sheep taking back their wool, the goose taking back the feathers
from
his pillow, etc. This story appears in The Golden Book of
Nursery
Tales (A Big Golden Book) published by Simon & Schuster in
1948. The illustrations are black and white, except for one full-page
color
picture of Will standing naked & shivering in front of where his
house
used to be, at night, with all the animals and the trees in the
background.
Picture is in dark tones. The story was also published in The
Here
and
Now
Story
Book
pub. by E.P. Dutton & Co.
Here are two to look up on the Solved
Mysteries page: George the Gentle Giant by Adelaide
Holl (1960) and Arnold Lobel's Giant John (Harper
&
Row,
1964).
G192 Your friend may be thinking of THE
BIGGER
GIANT:
AN
IRISH
LEGEND
retold by Nancy Green,
illustrated
by Betty Fraser, 1963, 1966. Scholastic Book Club put out a paperback
version.
It may also be worth looking at FIN M'COUL by Tomie
DePaola
but it looks like it may have been printed in 1981. If not, it may help
to know that the smaller giant is Fin M'Coul (or Finn MacCoul), his
clever
wife's name is Oonagh, and the bigger giant is Cucillin.~from a
librarian
The story is called "Fin M'Coul," and
it
appears
in
They Were Brave and Bold (Book 5 of the
Wonder
Story Books readers). This book also contains the stories Pecos
Bill,
Beowulf, The White Cat, Sinbad, The Girl Who Hunted Rabbits &
others.
Cover is dark blue, w/ Pecos Bill riding Mtn Lion on front cover, old
man
on flying tractor on back cover. Fin M'Coul also appears in Celtic
Fairy
Tales, by Joseph Jacobs. Hope this helps.
I keep thinking of Ghost Garden
by Hilda Feil, but I've never read it, so can't say for
sure.
There is a good description under "Solved Mysteries."
The book definitely isn't Ghost Garden
by Hila Feil. In the book described, the girl who
befriends
the hippy girl is very straight laced. She goes to the hippy's
house
and the girl has an enormous room which she can skate in - but she
doesn't
have her parent's love.
Konigsburg, Jennifer, Hecate, MacBeth,
William McKinley, and Me, Elizabeth.
I know that the description doesn't immediately fit, but I think this
is
the book you're thinking of.
This is not Jennifer, Hecate, MacBeth...
and Me, Elizabeth which takes place during fall and winter in a
large city, probably New York. It sounds more like The Birds of
Summer,
but in that book the children's mother is the one who is hippie-like
and
they live with her. Set in the 1980s, the novel tells the story
of
Summer Mclntyre, who lives with her mother. Oriole, and her
sevenyear-old
sister, Sparrow, in Alvarro, California. Oriole harbors romantic
visions
of getting back to nature and living the simple life, but she depends
upon
welfare to raise her family. The Mclntyres live in a wooded area in a
trailer
that they rent from their friends and neighbors, the Fishers. The
Fishers
own some greenhouses in which they grow strawberries and tomatoes to
sell
in town.
Mary Francis Shura, Maggie in the Middle
(The Seven Stone) I remember this book, the friend's room is
painted
blue with astrological signs or starts on it. She learns about
runestones
from one of the friends too.
Wylly Folk St. John, The Ghost Next Door (1981,
approximate) I remember clearly the owl with "love" in its
eyes.
The girl went to visit family and met the ghost of her half-sister who
had drowned. There was an owl figurine which her sister had made
that solved a mystery.
Rachel Field, Polly Patchwork,
ca 1928. This might be Polly Patchwork, a short story included in
The
Junior Classics Volume 6, 1958 edition. Polly is a
little girl who lives with her grandmother. They are very poor,
and
the grandmother makes Polly a dress out of an old patchwork quilt,
telling
Polly stories about family members who contributed squares to the
quilt.
When Polly wears the dress to school, the kids make fun of her, but in
a spelling bee Polly looks at one of the squares and gets help from an
ancestor in spelling Mississippi.
Hmmm ... That sounds like it should be it, but I don't think it
is. I distinctly remember "green," as in a green dress or coat.
I don't remember the title or author but the
story I'm thinking of was part of a larger book like a reader.
The
girl's family might have been Quaker or Amish or something like that
because
she says that her mother knew how to make beautiful dresses without
ruffles
or trim. Another family loses their home (a fire?) and the girl
volunteers
to give her dress away. Her family is surprised but she actually
means to give her everyday dress so she can wear her new green
one.
Her grandmother makes her fetch her new dress to give away and she
grumbles
to herself because her everyday dress should be good enough for that
other
girl. The story had a turn-of-the-century feel like a Laura
Ingalls
Wilder (although it was not the Little House series). Hope this
is
the story and gives a few more clues.
I remember reading a bioliography of Susan B.
Anthony that describe that story. It also had a story about her
working
in her father's thread mill, and seeing it as unfair that young girls
work
hard and their father would take their earnings. She had gotten
the
job after wishing on a star for something excited to do. Also
after
she gave away her new dress she actually felt happy because she didn't
need to worry about keeping her new dress prefect. It seems that
I remember the bioliography as part of a nonfiction series of varies
American
heros, Presidents, Presidents wives or mothers. Hope this help.
Monsell, Helen, Susan B. Anthony
: champion of women's rights.
This is the story that I was thinking of but I don't know if the dress
was green. The grandmother is the one who tells Susan B. Anthony
that she can't give her old dress away. The girl who receives the
new dress just had her mother die after a long illness so the mother
had
not been able to take care of the family for a long time. At the
end, Susan is happy because her old dress is comfortable and she
wouldn't
have been able to jump across the creek if she had been wearing the new
one (for fear of getting it dirty).
Carolyn Haywood, Betsy and the Circus
Make-believe daughter, 1972.
I'm not sure why this one comes to mind, but you can see a copy of it on
this website. It's about three friends, all named Matilda
(except
they have different nicknames), and I'm pretty sure one of them has
some
kind of oddball family background such as being circus performers.
That sounds so familiar... but it's not Best Loved Doll
or the others I just checked....
Barbara Chapman, Santa's Footprints,
1948. If this is the same book you people solved for me some time
ago! It sounds very similar to the short story The
Wonderful
Mistake.
Thanks for your suggestion, but I just looked
up The Wonderful Mistake, and I'm afraid that's not it.
In
the book I'm looking for, the first girl (not rich per se, just
middle-class)
is given a beautiful new doll, and invites her friends over so she can
show it off. The poor girl is somehow invited also, though I don't
think
she is liked by the others. Possibly the first girl's mother made her
invite
the poor girl? Or maybe the girl just invited her whole class and the
poor
girl tagged along? Anyway, the doll disappears, and everyone assumes
the
poor girl stole her - which she may have done, I don't recall. The doll
is later anonymously returned to its owner, but the first girl
meanwhile
gains some understanding of or sympathy for the poor girl. She decides
(perhaps with some urging from her mother or some other relative?) to
give
the poor girl one of her own dolls, and selects the new one, rather
than
an older (but well-loved) doll. She might even have dropped the doll
off
anonymously for the poor girl? The story takes place during the winter
time, at or shortly before Christmas. I seem to recall the first girl
walking
home through a light snowfall after giving away her doll. The
book
itself was fairly small, I think with a blue cloth-covered binding, and
the writing on the cover may have been in silver. It was mostly
text,
but I think there were small line drawings on the first page of each
chapter,
above the text. There may have also been some larger line drawings
scattered
throughout the text, but I don't think there were any color pictures.
(Despite
the choice of keeping the old, well-loved doll, this is not The Best
Loved
Doll, either.) I'm almost positive that the book was a single story,
not
a collection of short stories. Thanks for your help!
This seems too obvious, but
could it be Goodnight,
Moon? It's been years since my son and I read it, but
maybe?
What a wonderful tribute to Goodnight Moon, but the
words
"I love you" do not appear in the book.
Thanks for the reply but unfortunately it is not Goodnight Moon.
My
daughter
did
remember
that
on
the
page
that
said
"goodnight
mother,
I
love
you"
was
the
picture
of
a
little
girl
in
bed
telling
her
mother
goodnight.
She
also
remembered
that
it
was
not
a
"Golden
Book"
(it
was
smaller
in
size)
or
hard
bound
book. Any and all input is
appreciated.
Thanks.
Lynn and Mandy Wells, The Goodnight Book
(1974) The book The Goodnight book published by Tell a Tale books
in 1974 by Lynn and Mandy Wells. Starts out "Goodnight Red sun,
goodnight
stars, goodnight bus goodnight cars...
Lynn and Mandy
Wells, The Good Night Book, 1974,
copyright.I have
this book -- it too was one of my favorites as a little girl and it
took me a
long time to track down a copy. It's about a little girl getting ready
for
bed and she's saying "Good night" to everything she sees like the
sun, the things and people she can see out the window. Then she says
hello to
her bed and good night to her stuffed animals and her baby sibling then
she
says "Good night, Mother. I love you!" and a few more good nights
before she falls asleep.
Just wanted to add that I think the Green
Glassy
of the story title, which I believe was a snow globe, had inside of it
the figure of a bear. I remember being awed by the the b&w
illustration
of the bear inside the snow globe (I was 5 or 6 I think). I am
still
hoping someone remembers this story.
Mary Grannan, Just Mary Stories.
Just Mary was a radio personality in Canada. This book which has
both the skating mice and the Bear in the Glassy is a combination of
two
of her books - Just Mary and Just Mary again.
Try looking at some of Joan Aiken's
adult
novels from the 1970's - there was one that seems similar - the girl
was
a musician or music teacher and there was some kind of mystery subplot.
The Greengage Summer. I'm
not sure of the author, maybe Penelope Mortimer. I think
this
could be your book.
Greengage
Summer
is by Rumer Godden
and is definitely NOT the book you are searching for.
Flanders, Rebecca, Yesterday Comes
Tomorrow.
Harlequin 1992. I'm dubious about this one, but it's the closest
I've found so far. "It began as a simple mystery weekend. Then the
present
and the past merged, and Amelia Langston was back in 1870 on the Aury
Plantation
with Jeffrey Craig, the prime suspect in a murder. There she discovered
everything that had been missing from her life...excitement, adventure,
rapture with the man of her dreams...Jeffrey. Was this a fantasy or a
frightening
reality?"
Thank you for your help and the attempt at
a solution. I don't believe that there was a murder and it didn't
have a plantation. It was almost from a Victorian time. I
have
other details, too if it helps: There was a nutty professor in
the
book who invented things. He made a kind of washing machine and a
toilet. As the book unfolds, you learn that the professor had
also
come through the sundial. He wasn't inventing things, he was
re-inventing
things. In the story there were 2 brothers. The hero
was the black sheep of the family. When the girl had gone back in
time she knew some of the characters and the plot of the mystery
regarding
the stolen necklace. She was very suspicious of the black sheep
brother.
I really believe that the word Time was in the title. I thought
the
name was A Stitch in Time. The girl had been fired
as
a travel agent, but had received the invitation to a murder mystery
weekend
at a new B&B. She brought her best friend. Every other
guest for the weekend had a title. She was called the Mysterious
Lady. She thought that she was gypped. It turns out she was
playing herself in the mystery. I come home from teaching every
day
and I look to see if one of your readers remembers. I have faith
in your site! It'll happen. My sister is sending a couple
stumpers
your way, too.
..., Gold Heart (Guld Hjerte).
I
just
read
an
interview
with
the
director
Lars
von
Trier
who
said
that
all
of
his
movies
are
influenced
by
a
book
called
Gold Heart
-- I wonder if it's the same one? "It tells the tale of a little girl
who
lives in a lonely cabin in the woods who one day goes out into the
forest
and gives away everything she has. In the end, broke, cold, and alone
in
the woods, at what should be her deepest moment of despair, a
mysterious
power favors her with wealth and the boy she gave her sweater to
turns out to be a prince, who marries her for her kind heart."
G216 Poster may want to see a picture of a Danish
version on which a filmmaker based a movie (online
here).
Grimm, Star Money. This
should be in any full collection of Grimms fairy tales. it may be
under a different name but Star Money is the title I've seen.
Grimm, The Falling Stars,
1985. Illustrated by Eugen Sopko. A beautiful picture book
version of Star Money by Grimm.
May be out of print as I got my copy years
ago.
It is a great story for the Christmas holidays. The story of Star Money
is
used in many Waldorf schools around that time of year.
Brown, Margaret Wise, Margaret Wise Brown Storybook? 1950s? In this large Golden book of stories (the name of which I can't remember exactly, but I have it at home) is a story about a little BOY who doesn't want to take a bath. He goes outdoors to see how the cat, the pig, etc. take their baths and in the end decides to be a little boy and take a bath in the bathtub. Might be what you're thinking of.
James Thurber, The Great Quillow,
1973. perhaps...
David L. Harrison, The Book of Giant
Stories,
1970's. The book cover is green with a giant on the front.
It contains three different stories about three different giants.
I also had this book as a child in the 70's...I hope this is the one
you
are looking for!
Jessamyn West, Leafy Rivers.
Not 100% sure, but a possibility.
Late 70's. It was definitely a witch, and I think she was
trying
to be a little girl.
Anna Elizabeth Bennett, Little Witch.
I
don't remember Minikin (Minx) baking cookies, but thought I'd suggest
Little
Witch anyway. Maybe the stumper requester could look at Solved
Mysteries,
to rule it out?
I remember this book too, but unfortunately no
more details. I think you're right that the witch baked these
green
and purple cookies for Parent Night or Back-to-School Night. I
think
the rest of the parents who were there found them very unappetizing
(they
were lumpy and misshapen too). The witch might have been hiding
the
fact that she was a witch, and trying to go to school like an ordinary
girl -- that might be why she didn't ask her parents to make the
cookies,
because either they didn't know or didn't approve? I would have
read
it in the 70's.
G247 Storey, Margaret. Timothy
and
two
witches. illus by Charles W
Stewart
Dell Yearling, 1966. popular British story about children, witches, a
dragon
This book is definitely not Timothy and
Two Witches, due to the plot explanation on the Solved page.
This
book is written for an older age group, but I can't remember the
name...
:(
I bought Timothy & 2 witches -
definitely not the right book :-(
Alison Farthing, The Mystical Beast.
I
think this may be the same as "E108: Evil witches, good dragon" which
seems
very similar--right down to the blue pudding. Someone posted
there
that it was The Mythical Beast. Worth checking out, I would think.
{Young Mutants} or {Young Aliens}, 1984.
I don't remember anything about a teenage girl anthology, so this story
appears to have been printed in a book of short stories with a
different
focus. Regardless, it's there. This story is either part of Young
Mutants (possible) or Young Extraterrestrials. Contents
at
the
bottom
of
this
webpage.
Young
Extraterrestrials
cover (big). Young
Mutants
cover (big).It could also be other books in the Young
series,
but I think it's one of those two.
Series listed here, although I disagree with
the
review
content.
Brock, No Flying in the House.
This story is about a girl who feels different and finds out she's a
fairy
(she can kiss her elbow). There's a little magical dog as well.
Thanks to the people who have sent suggestions. The book definitely
isn't No Flying in the House. The story I'm thinking of is
fairly
somber. I'll try to find a copy of the Young... books. They
sound
promising.
Palmer Brown, Beyond The Paw Paw Trees,
1954. This is a long-shot but there
is
something like this in Beyond the Paw Paw Trees by Palmer Brown, from
1954.
The girl's name is Anna Lavinia, she travels on a train and is given, I
think, some kind of food by an old woman. Whether or not it's jelly
donuts,
I can't confirm right now, since my Mom has the book. Do "lavender blue
days" a cat named Strawberry and floating down to the ground with an
umbrella
after jumping off a cliff sound familiar?
Dorothy
Canfield,
Understood Betsy,
1930's, approximate. In this book, there is a chapter where Betsy
and Molly go to the fair and the people they are supposed to ride home
with leave without them. Betsy earns the money for train tickets
by running the donut booth so the girl can go to dance with her
boyfriend for an hour. When the girl comes back, she hands Betsy
a bag of donuts. "Take all you want," she says. "Momma'll
never miss 'em." Later on, the 2 little girls are riding on the
train and eating the donuts. Maybe this is your book?
Catherine Storr, Marianne Dreams. The
link has a synopsis of the story. Doesn't quite match the
description
in the stumper, but some how it feels like it might be the book being
looked
for. I read the book a while ago. Our local library no
longer
has a copy, but wasn't a movie made of it a year or two ago? Link.
Thanks for the feedback, but this book is
definitely not Marianne Dreams. I do remember Marianne
Dreams
though, as it was a TV series in England during the Seventies, and I
was
disturbed by the rocks with eyes. I also thought it silly that she drew
a lighthouse as a light source to aid their escape, instead of a
constant
source of light.
Kate Seredy, The Good Master. How
about this or The Singing Tree by Kate Seredy?
Kathryn Worth, They Loved to Laugh.
A
deluge of ripe apples is Martitia's introduction to the five fun-loving
Gardner boys when their father, Dr. David, brings the sixteen-year-old
orphan girl to the hospitable Gardner home in North Carolina.
They Loved to Laugh. This is about
a young girl, Martitia(?), who goes to live with relatives who have a
house
full of boys. Her aunt always says, "Every tub must stand on its own
bottom"
and the boys make her think she is eating dog meat.
Daringer, Helen F., Adopted Jane.
Wonderful book about an orphan who goes to stay with an older woman,
then
stays with a lively family on a farm and has to decide if she will stay
there or return to the woman.
Thank you. They loved to laugh
could indeed be a possibility and it's good to know that it's been
reprinted.
I will obtain a copy very shortly & will respond further
then.
I had considered Kate Seredy's books before, but the descriptions don't
sound right nor the Hungarian setting. I am very sure this story
takes place entirely in the USA.
Carol Brink, Caddy Woodlawn. I
wonder if this MIGHT be "Caddy Woodlawn"? Caddy herself lives on
a farm with her siblings however, some cousins from the city visit, and
there's a lot of adjustment and "growing up," including "goading" of
each
other. (As I recall, Caddy's a tomboy and the girl cousins aren't,
which
leads to problems.) The "mood" and time you described seemed
right,
so I wondered if maybe your memory had inadvertently "reversed" the
plot,
remembering the more common plot where the protagonist goes to the
cousins'
farm instead of having cousins come to hers. Since you've tried
so
many other books with no luck, I thought I'd suggest this.
Louisa M. Alcott, Eight Cousins.
A long shot -- but perhaps this is it? There is a hoard of
cousins
... the pre-teen Rose is left with her uncle, there is a great deal of
health-regaining and romping about.
Thank you for these additional tips!
I will give Adopted Jane a try and take another look at Caddie
Woodlawn and also the sequel Magical melons. I had
dismissed
"Caddie" for the very reason you stated, but one never knows how memory
can play tricks!
Lucy Maud Montgomery, Anne of Green Gables.
This is probably a long shot, as it's such a well-known book, but is
there
any chance this could be Anne of Green Gables or one of
its
sequels?
Irene Hunt, Up A Road Slowly.
This one kind of fits. The character is named Julie. She goes to live
with
her aunt after her mother dies. The book covers her life from age 7 to
age 18 or so.
Louisa May Alcott, Eight Cousins.
This is a far out in left field suggestion but it does involve hoards
of
cousins. Rose is orphaned and is sent to live with her father's
aunts
in San Francisco. She befriends her 7 boy cousins and they have
adventures
that include sailing, gardening, visiting the country, etc. She
spends
a great deal of time adjusting to her new life since she has spent most
of her life in a girls' boarding school.
Thanks for more suggestions. No, it's
not Eight Cousins or any of L.M. Montgomery's books. My
sense
is that the author is much more obscure and that's one reason I can't
pin
down this book.
What about Jennie Lindquist's books: The
Golden
Name
Day,
The
Little
Silver
House,
and The
Crystal
Tree? Maybe too young, but have the feel that you're looking
for.
Nine-year-old Nancy is sent to live with her Swedish grandparents for a
year. I wanted flowered wallpaper and a sewing basket for years after
reading
these books.
Elizabeth Witheridge, Never Younger,
Jeannie,
1963.
Wow! It's great to have so many possibilities
and to re-read and get acquainted with some excellent books. I am
working my way through all your suggestions. Unfortunately, I
know
now that my long lost book is not either of the Caddie books,
which
are simply wonderful stories. In fact, I am wondering if my
unknown
writer writes as well as some of these others. I think my adult
self
may be alot more critical of a very sentimental, sweet, and even
overwrought
story which I suspect I am looking for. It may also be written even
earlier
than I think - two reasons why I am doubtful about Up a road slowly
which is next in line. Thank you again to everyone, and I will
continue
to keep you posted.
Jean Webster, Daddy Long Legs.
This is a total long shot. Only part of this book takes place on a
farm.
The protagonist's name is Judy & she is an orphan. She did wear
gingham
uniforms in the orphanage... She is older when she is on the farm-- she
is sent to college by a mysterious benefactor. The book is epistolary,
very sweet & wholesome. Something about your description triggered
thoughts of this book. As I said-- a long shot. But a good read anyway!
No, it's not Daddy Long Legs although
it was a fun read - skimmed through the online version and want to come
back to it later. I'm still waiting for more of your suggestions to
arrive
in concrete form as ordered books. Alas, need to be reading nothing but
school books before too very long, so all this enjoyable detective work
will have to be put on hold for awhile!
Never younger, Jeannie just arrived
today. There is nothing familiar about the look of it, but just
in
skimming through the text it certainly has the "right feel", as does Up
a
road
slowly. I have now also had a chance to glance through
the Lindquist books - yes, they look too young & the stories don't
fit what I remember, but am sure they are a delightful read. Like a
number
of other readers/contributors to this site, I am beginning to wonder if
my memory hasn't juxtaposed two (or more?) books, so still not solved
with
the books to date. This is a truly remarkable service you offer,
Harriett,
and I thank everyone for their interest & patience.
Alice Lunt, Eileen of Redstone Farm,
1964.
Probably not it, because this one takes place in Scotland or England,
but
otherwise it sounds similar.
Thank you for continuing to take an interest
in my archived post! I will order a copy of Eileen of
Redstone
Farm - you just never know... although you'd think I'd be able to
remember
this title since my name is also Eileen! I have enjoyed reading these
books
with a similar theme. I did read They loved to laugh and
thought
it was a moving and well-written book, with a very similar feel to what
I'm looking for, but alas not the one. Of that I am very sure.
Frances Salomon Murphy, Runaway Alice.
This
could be it - Alice is an orphan who goes to live on a farm as a foster
child.
Mabel Betsy Hill, Along Comes Judy Jo.
(1943) Has the gingham and berries feel, but not sure if it's
really
a farm story or not. Might be worth a try...
This isn't by any chance Bluebonnets for
Lucinda, is it? Written by Frances Clark Sayers and
first
published in 1934 with illustrations by Helen Sewell. That is long out
of print. One chapter was reprinted in pre-1966 Childcraft, the one
where
Lucinda's been told to stay away from the foul-tempered geese, but she
finds that if she plays her music box the geese become interested in
the
music and calm down.
Once again, I do appreciate more suggestions
for my post. It still haunts me and I fear my memories are just
too
vague. "Runaway Alice" and "Along comes Judy Jo"
are
charming books but not the one. "Bluebonnets for Lucinda" is not
it either.
Gates, Doris, The Elderberry Bush.
(1967) Could you be looking for The Elderberry Bush
by Doris Gates? I am not sure what this book is about,
but
I have the dimmest memory of gingham and/or berries. Good luck!
Thank you again but it's not "Eileen of
Redstone Farm", although you're right - it's similar, but the
setting
is wrong. It's not "The elderberry bush" either, published
too late. I know I didn't read it any later than 1966. I think I
need to be hypnotised for this one! The name Pat, Patsy, or Patty
seems to ring a faint bell also. She may have been one of the
cousins
and Julie or Judy was the heroine or vice versa.
Rita Ritchie, Ice Falcon. This
sounds very much like the sort of book Ritchie wrote - it's not The
Golden
Hawks
of
Genghis
Khan, so Ice Falcon may
be
a possibility, although I can't recall anything about it specifically.
G256. This book may be the one: Knox,
Esther Melbourne Swift flies the falcon; a
story of the first Crusade. illus by Ruth
King
E M Hale 1939 England - 11th
century
Gareth and his sister Margaret [Meg] and some helpers spend many months
with scarcely any provisions travelling from England to Jerusalem
searching
for their father, a Crusader. The pet falcon with them was a big help.
I'm the original poster and it's neither
Ritchies'
ICE
FALCON, which I own and is set wholly in the north, nor the other
which
was only printed once, AFAICT, in 1939. The book I'm trying to
find
was *new* in approx 1970-72. THe school library copy was brand
new
with no dust jacket but a picture of the falconer on the cover
holding
his white falcon. He was in the Holy Land for most of the book,
IIRC
(which I may not). Don't remember any family members being
involved,
either. Just the falconer. And a bit where he explained
'falco
greenlandicus' to a Saracen.
S F Welty, Knight's
ransom, 1951.
Young Vahl
Thorfinnsson, falconer to the son of the Duke of Burgandy accompanies
Crusader's to Turkey on Crusade Expedition. To release the noble
knights
from bondage, he fights pirates & icebergs to obtain 11 Greenland
falcons
for the Sultan of Turkey.
G258 I don't know which collection the person
is thinking of, but the poem could be James Whitcomb Riley's "Little
Orphant
Annie" also published as "The Gobble-uns'll Git
You
Ef You Don't Watch Out!".
Don't know the book, but the part about the
goblins
sounds like James Whitcomb Riley's poem Little Orphant
Annie
("An'
the Gobble-uns'll git you Ef you Don't Watch Out!").
James Whitcomb Riley (1849-1916), Little
Orphant Annie, 1900. I think this
is what you are looking for. It is a poem, and the refrain repeats the
line "An' the Gobble-uns'll git you Ef you don't watch out." It tells
what
happened to children who didn't behave. For example, "Wunst they wuz a
little boy who wouldn't say his prayers...". You can find the poem here
http://eir.library.utoronto.ca/rpo/display/poem1703.html Sometimes you
see it as LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE, and with the spelling corrected and not
in dialect.
James Whitcomb Riley, Little Orphant
Annie.
This
sounds like the refrain to Little Orphant Annie: "An' the Gobble-uns'll
git you / Ef you / Don't / Watch / Out!" The poem is online
here.
I
have
no
idea
which
anthologies
it's
in,
but
this
should
help
a
little.
Jane Werner (ed), The Big Golden
Book of Poetry,1947.I betcha it's this one. I was looking for
this
same book, now that I have a two-year-old. I remember the James
Whitcomb
Riley poem (Little Orphant Annie). The artwork on that page used to
scare
the bejeebers out of me. I liked There Once Was a Puffin, especially.
See
here
and search for Werne.
James Stephens, The Crock of Gold,
1920s. "Meehawl MacMurrachu's old skinny cat kills a robin
redbreast
on the roof one day, forging the first link in a long, peculiar chain
of
events. For the robin redbreast is the particular bird of the
Leprecauns
of Gort na Gloca Mora, and the Leprecauns retaliate by stealing Meehawl
MacMurrachu's wife's washing-board, and Meehawl asks the Philosopher
who
lives in the center of the pine wood called Coilla Doraca for advice in
locating the washboard...and the chain leads on and on, up to Angus Og
himself and to the country of the gods. Unique and inimitable, this is
one of the great tales of our century." Could this be it? It's a great
book - well worth a read anyway!
I don't know the book, but the story reminds
me of the folk tale The King's Highway. A king builds a
new
road, and decides to have a contest to see who can travel the road the
best. The contestants complain that there's a pile of rocks in the road
finally one weary traveller comes carrying a box of gold that was
hidden
under the rocks. He wins, of course, because "he who travels best is
the
one who smooths the way for others."
Margot Benary-Isbert, The Ark. Definitely the book.
Piet Worm, Three Little Horses At The King's Palace. This book is extra-tall, features three girls and three ponies, one of each with red/brown hair, blond/white hair, and black hair. There is a circus man with a mustache in this book, but no whale-shaped submarine or land with balloons. However, there was a prequel to this book called Three Little Horses and that might have those things.
Otto Whittaker, The true story of the tooth fairy (and why brides wear engagement rings), 1968. "Because a little boy and girl share their humble supper with a beggar, they become the tooth fairies responsible for the money left whenever a child loses a tooth and for the diamond engagement rings brides wear."
Marlys Millhiser, The Mirror,
1978. This might be it a similar query was posted on anothr
forum.
Marlys Milheiser, The Mirror
Marlys Millhiser, The Mirror, 1978.
The night before her wedding, Shay Garrett and her grandmother, Brandy
switch bodies, sending Shay back to 1900.
I hate to disagree with the solution to this
stumper, but I know The Mirror well (I even have an
autographed
copy!), and while the plot of the stumper is close to The Mirror,
there are several signifigant differences between the two, and I do not
believe that this stumper is solved. The daughter and the grandmother
switch
places in the stumper story AND in The Mirror, but those
are the only two things the two books have in common. Here is what
happens
in The Mirror. First, the name of the two women who
switch
places are Shay and Brandy. Shay is the modern girl, just about to be
married
to a guy named Mark, and she switches places with her grandmother,
Brandy,
the old fashioned girl, on the eve of her wedding. Second, the
grandmother,
Brandy, was never raped. The Mirror is very clear on the fact that
Brandy
was a virgin when she was married. (The doctor comes to examine her on
her wedding night, because, by that time, Brady now has Shay's soul,
and
Shay is a bit dizzy and faint. In comes the doctor, who states very
cleary
that she is a virgin, and that her new groom has nothing to worry
about.)
Brandy (who is really Shay), marries Corwin, a Welsh miner, who is
killed
in a mining accident. Then Brandy/Shay marries a man (who is one part
of
a pair of twins) and she gives birth to a daughter named Rachel, who
turns
out to be Shay's mother. Shay never returns to the present day, and
Brandy
never returns to the 1900's. Shay is a modern girl with modern ideas
living
in the 1900's but she is not a black sheep, nor an outcast. Brandy, in
the modern time, adjusts to living there, and ends up marrying Mark,
the
man Shay was originally going to marry. And that is the plot of The
Mirror! If the original stumper stongly remembers a rape and an
attempted abortion, a black sheep issue, and a return of the charactesr
to the right year, then perhaps the stumper is asking about a different
story than The Mirror.
Are you sure that the Mirror isn't
the story? In the story I remember (but didn't remember the title
of), the grandmother Brandy wasn't raped, but Shay was pregnant when
the
switch was made, so Brandy had to go through the pregnancy. Penny
was the baby Shay had with the miner. From her 'future' she knew the
baby
wouldn't live to adulthood, so she tried to avoid getting pregnant
(with
a copper penny). The baby was sickly and died after a few
weeks.
Shay wasn't sickly then, but later had TB for years.
The Mirror (possibly). Your
description of the book definitely sounds like the plot of The
Mirror
to me, but the orignal stumper didn't. I had forgotten about the baby
Penny,
who died early on. It could be that the orignal stumper had remembered
the baby being born of rape, even though she wasn't. Maybe the original
stumper can shed some light!
Help! I'm a Prisoner in the Library!
Just
a
guess
-
it's
been
years
since
I
read
it.
Catherine Woolley, Chris in Trouble,
1968. This could be Woolley's second
book
about Cathy Leonard's little sister Chris. One day, she and a
friend
go inside her school when they're not supposed to and accidentally
leave
their dolls in a classroom. They're locked in the school and have
to climb out a window to get out. Later, when Chris tries to
retrieve
the dolls without being seen, she tries to avoid the school's janitor.
Catherine Woolley, Chris in Trouble,1968.Could
the
book
be
Catherine
Woolley's
Chris in Trouble (part
of
her Cathy Leonard series)? Nine year-old Chris gets into
difficult
situations one weekend such as sneaking into her school with a friend
and
then accidentally leaving their dolls behind. There's a janitor
they
try to avoid. And Chris has to avoid him again when she tries to
retrieve the dolls undetected.
G274:
Green
boy with wings
I saw a book at a bookstore about a decade
ago. On the cover was a girl with brown shoulder length hair, dressed
in
white clothes and holding a white orb in both her hands. She was
standing
on a giant leaf which was floating in water and being pulled by a green
boy with dragon or faerie wings, and long black hair. The back of the
book
said that the girl was a princess and I think the boy was her pet, I'm
not sure. There was also a sequel or a prequel to that book, which
showed
the boy flying in the air, and bellow them you could see the princess
girl
and a guy in armor next to her, and both of them were looking up at
him.
I hope that's enough to go on.
Norton, Andrew, Flight in Yiktor.
The "girl with orb" book is Flight in Yiktor, and the
"boy
flying while others watch" is probably Dare to Go A-Hunting.
Andre Norton, Flight in Yiktor,
1986. The cover is as described, and it is one book in a series,
but the plot is a little different: the girl is a sorceress and the
green
boy is a former slave she has rescued.
I'm not sure which book you have.... But here's a bio and bibliography for Bessie Pease Gutmann.
Zenna Henderson, The People.
Just finished reading the G281 stumper and have to say this sounds a
lot
like "The People" stories (I read them as short stories but I think
they
were all gathered into a book) by Zenna Henderson. I read
them a LONG time ago, 1960s, I think, so date does not fit, but
everything
else does. A race of people with various powers must evict their
planet and they crash-land on earth and are scattered. The
stories
follow the experiences of the various alien characters and their
encounters
with the people of Earth. Written in a style that is both highly
realistic
and beautifully sensitive. Don't remember the character who can
see
connections between people, though. There was a boy who was
learning
how to fly who fell in love with an Earht girl, there was a baby named
Lala by its finders, there were many others. Even if this is not
the solution, I consider this series as one of the best science fiction
series of all time and definitely worth any reader's attention.
Orson Scott Card, The Memory of Earth.
A possibility: the first book of the Homecoming series.
One
of the girls in the book (Luet?)sees connections between people, and
the
characters have to leave the city of Basilica. (and, eventually, the
planet)
Other characters are called Nafai, Wetchik, Shedemei.
Zenna Henderson, Pilgramage/ The People
Stories, 1967 - 1987.
This would be my first recommendation. When one of the People
comes
of age, their natural "talent", or "gift", such as healing, sensing
metals,
"lifting" (flying) becomes apparent. The people must leave their
disintegrating
planet, and the ties between mother and daughter, and husband and
wife figure strongly in the decisions made for the evacuation. The
grandmother
in particular senses the ties between the women in her family, and how
they change when her grandaughter realizes her love for a young man is
as strong a tie as the love of her birth family. This is a compilation
of short stories previously published in other sources. The complete People
collection is published as Ingathering: The complete People
stories
of Zenna Henderson.
Zenna Henderson, The People - No Different
Flesh. The name of the short
story in the series that deals with the evacuation of the home planet
is
called "Deluge," originally published in 1963.
I think this is not a People
story.
I've read Ingathering (all the People stories, including
unpublished ones), and there's nothing about being able to "see
connections
between" people. Possibly part of the reason it sounds like Henderson
is
that the first People story is about a woman who discovers she is a
"Sorter"
-- she can see *into* people, into their deepest psychological
processes.
(In later stories, we find Sorters can rearrange and erase people's
memories,
too.) My guess is that the Orson Scott Card book is it. Thanks
for
having this service!
Orson Scott Card, Homecoming.
This is the book you're looking for. There's a series of six
books,
but it's in "Homecoming" that she can see connections. Gold
strands
for some, silver for others. Still available in paperback.
I always remember that description. :)
I'm wondering if this could
be one of Janice
May
Udry's books? I believe her books were read on Captain Kangaroo
a lot. I'm not sure which one it is, however. At first I thought it was
Let's
Be Enemies, but that's not it.
You may want to look at the books by Phyllis
Krasilovsky, as well. Hope it helps.
I still haven't found this book----more
memories of book
the main character would alway try to do things but did it wrong...her
friend
always did it right...thus the jealousy
Lois Duncan, I Know What You Did Last
Summer,1973.
Possibly? Julie, her boyfriend, and 2 friends hit a boy on a bike while
driving back from a picnic and later find out he died. Julie wasn't
driving,
they were in a normal car and Julie doesn't work at a flower shop, but
the person who stalks the friends a year later figures out who she was
by asking at the flower shop where she ordered yellow roses for the
boy's
funeral and sent them without a name. Her boyfriend was in the car with
her and thus knows all about it, but he leaves town soon after and
doesn't
come back until a year later, and at the end they decide together that
they need to come clean about the hit-and-run.
Lois Duncan, I know what you did last
summer.
There is a similar situation in this book but there are four people
involved
in the hit-and-run that kills a boy on his bicycle. Julie and her three
friends take a vow of secrecy but she receives a mysterious message
saying
"I know what you did last summer." Suddenly all four of them
become
targets of revenge.
Hope Dahle Jordan, Haunted Summer,
1969. I am absolutely positive the book you are looking for is Haunted
Summer by Hope Dahle Jordan. Rilla Martin is a teenage
girl
who is working a summer job delivering flowers to save money for
college.
On a rainy night she hits something and it turns out to be a boy on his
bike. She takes him to the hospital and runs away and they think she is
a boy. She feels guilty all summer and tells her boyfriend. He
eventually
convinces her to go to the police. The boy does not die.
Lynne Reid Banks, Fairy Rebel,
1988. The fairy gets the colors mixed and has to do an emergency
fix to make sure the baby doesn't have blue hair. Later there is
trouble
with the Fairy Queen who had forbidden contact with humans.
Lynne Reid Banks, the Fairy Rebel,
1985. My daughter and I believe this is the book. The name
of the fairy is Tiki and she helps Jan have a baby. This makes
the
queen fairy very angry.
Lynne Reid Banks, The Fairy Rebel.
Your description about the fairy using her power to create a child for
a human sounds a lot like this book. The fairy is punished by the (bad)
fairy queen for helping a human. I don't think there's anything about
the
human woman knowing the fairy as a child. We do, however, get to see
the
child the fairy creates for the woman grow up to about the age of 10. I
read this book in the early 90's in upper elementary school.
Scott O'Dell, The Island of the Blue
Dolphins,
1961. The pencil stub is out, but this Newberry winner is the
best
girl Crusoe tale ever, based on the true story of a Native American
girl
who managed to survive alone on an island off the Californian coast for
18 years. Magic! Some images which may help: as her people are
being
evacuated from the island, she dives off the boat and swims back to be
with her brother - who dies shortly afterward; she makes a
beautiful
dress of green-black cormorant feathers; she tames a feral,
wolflike
dog (and then his son) who keeps her company and helps her hunt. There
was a spate of wonderful lone child survivor stories I read growing up
in the 60s and 70s... others include Call It Courage by Armstrong
Sperry, My Side of the Mountain and Julie of
the
Wolves by Jean Craighead George... great stuff!
Monique Peyrouton de Ladebat, The Village
That Slept, 1965 (American
ed.). Could this be The Village That Slept?
The
girl is not alone -- there is a boy and also a baby, all victims of a
plane
crash in the Pyrenees. They find shelter in a recently deserted
village,
and eventually find a dog, cow, sheep, and chickens too. Their
names
(which at first they don't remember) are Lydia and Franz. They
are
ingenious at surviving, and after a year or two are found and rescued.
Mazer,
Island Keeper, 1982,
copyright. Not sure if this is it, but plot is similar to your
search.
Brink,
Carol
Ryrie,
Baby Island. Re G294, this is quite a long shot,
because the most
important detail, the fact that your heroine is alone, doesn't match,
but
several other things do. Could you maybe be thinking of "Baby
Island" by Carol Ryrie Brink? In this book, 12 year old Mary and
her
10 year old sister Jean are stranded on a deserted island with four
babies
under the age of 2 after the ship on which they were passengers begins
to
sink. While drifting in a lifeboat, Jean's disorganized pockets
turn up a
stubby pencil, among other odds and ends, and the girls discover a good
supply
of canned food in the lifeboat, including canned milk, which they feed
to the
youngest baby, Jonah. When they run aground on the island, they
find
things to eat like bananas, coconuts, crabs and clams. They build
a
teepee out of the lifeboat's sail, and ingeniously construct other
things like
a pram that they can pull the babies around in, and even make dishes
out of
coconut shells (think Giligan's Island minus the idiocy). Jean
starts
writing letters to their
Aunt Emma by putting them in the empty food cans and letting them float away. They discover a hermit named Mr. Peterkin living in a hut, which he somewhat reluctantly shares with them after a storm destroys the teepee. They are eventually rescued by their father and the fathers of the babies. This little gem was originally written in 1937, and was reprinted by Scholastic Book Services in 1965, which is when I found it. As I said, this is a long shot, but the pencil stub, the hut, the very few things and the ingenuity all match. Good luck with your search!
Joan Aiken, A Necklace of Raindrops, 1968. Could it be a story from the collection A Necklace of Raindrops? It has the silouette illustrations, but it's a series of short stories...with children in magical situations.
Elizabeth Hamilton Friermood, Circus Sequins,
circa
1968.
A
real
longshot!
From
what
I
remember,
the
girl
in
this
book
has
flaming
red
hair,
which
people
make
fun
of.
She's
good
with
horses,
and
somehow
ends
up
in
a
circus
as
a
bareback
rider,
where
she
makes
a
green
dress
which
shows
off her red hair and everyone
thinks she's beautiful. At the end of the summer, she has to
decide
if she should stay with the circus or go back to the country and marry
her boyfriend, who had supported her through all the teasing.
Maybe
worth a try, anyway!
Thanks for the suggestion, but I know that's not it. The
fabric
for the dress was the same color as a leaf the girl found (I think) and
was intended to match her hair, so it's some variety of brown/reddish
brown.
Definitely not green. And I think the girl is of the 10-14 year
old
range, not marriage material. Thanks for helping.
I've been looking for this book for years i remember the girl with red hair freckles plays in the woods with her friend, barefoot has her first period talks with a southern accent written in the 60's or 70's.
C.S. Adler, Goodbye Pink Pig. Worth
a shot- the girl has an unhappy home life and imagines adventures with
her animal figurines.
Cynthia Voight, Izzy Willy-Nilly,
1986. This is probably not the book, but there are some
similarities.
The girl was in a drunk-driving accident, and had to have one of her
legs
amputated at the knee. Have a look online and see if this is the book.
Babbis Friis, Kristy's courage,
1965. Translation of a Norwegian book (Kjersti) and published by
Harcourt, Brace & World in the US. A little girl has problems
adjusting to school life after an automobile accidnt disfigures her and
causes her to have a speech impediment
I checked out those two books and neither of them are the
book.
I also remembered a few days ago that the girl was a cheerleader before
her accident.
Barbara Conklin, I Believe In You,
1984. This could be the book that you are describing. Some parts
don't match, the girl's brother isn't bothered by her accident and she
wasn't a cheerleader. I can't remember for sure how she had the
accident
but in this book the girl's name is Penny Snow and she injured her hip
and leg. She used to be a great swimmer. She's afraid to exercise in
any
way now because she used to be great at all kinds of sports and now she
would be average or less. She goes out to Oregon to help her
grandfather
move
to a rest home, meets a boy who teaches her how to believe in herself
and
how to run. She competes in 6 mile race at the end. It's #67 in the
teen
romance series Sweet Dreams. Hope this helps.
Could this be a nonfiction book? I remember
a true story - very inspiring - of a young girl named Kristie or
Christy
or Kristy (!) who was hit by a car while walking or running. I
vividly
remember she was knocked out of her shoes. The books told of her
rehab, and relearning all the basics of living. I'll do some
sleuthing
and see if I can find it. I think the title was just the girl's
name.
Funny! I just got off the phone with my mother
and she said it WAS a non fiction book, but she couldn't remember the
name
either. Thanks!
Barbara Miller, Kathy, 1980.
The Millers were a typical American family until the day a speeding car
left 13-year-old Kathy critically injured, in a coma from which the
doctors
said she might never recover! How Kathy won back her health, gave her
family
the gift of faith, and ran in an international marathon less than six
months
later.
Collins, Joan, Katy,
1982. This book tells the story of actor Joan Collins daughter
Katy,
who is injured in a bike accident and deals with her
rehabilitation.
I remember reading it when I was about 10 or 11 near the time of
publication.
Albert G. Miller, The Pop-Up Tournament of Magic,1968.
Alfred Hitchcock (nominal editor), Alfred
Hitchcock's
Haunted
Houseful, 1961. The first story
described
is "The Water Ghost of Harrowby Hall" by John Kendrick Bangs.
This
has been anthologized many times, but the only appearance of it in a
Hitchcock
anthology is in HAUNTED HOUSEFUL. I think the second story listed
may be "Let's Haunt a House" by Manly Wade Wellman, which is the first
story in the anthology. It also contains one Sherlock Holmes
story
-- "The Red-Headed League." The cover as described isn't the
cover
I'm familiar with, but there may have been other editions.
Alfred Hitchcock's Haunted House,
early 60s. Hi, I may have the solution to the G308 stumper.
Title may be Alfred Hitchcock's Haunted House. I
was
a little hesitant to submit this as a solution because although the
stumper's
description of the book's date, size, number of stories, etc., all fit,
the description of the cover does not. My cover had a very scary
illustration of Alfred Hitchcock's face coming out of the door of a
obviously
haunted house. The cover art frightened me more than any of the
stories!
Don't recall many of them but one that comes to mind is about some
children
convinced that a woman- perhaps an aunt, perhaps a nanny- whose name
was
"Wasywich" or similar, is a witch. A black and white illustration
to that story showed a thin woman with piercing eyes accompanied by
some
children. I am not sure but the Sherlock Holmes story called "The
Red-Headed
League" may have also been included in that book.
Robert A. Heimlein, Menace From Earth. Many of the details sound like the novella/long short story "The Menace From Earth." Others sound like details from other Heinlein YA stories and novels. These have been fequently anthologised.
Lyn Cook, Pegeen
and the pilgrim,
1957. How about this one? I also vaguely remember a blue cover on
the original. It was reprinted by Tundra Books in 2002. Here's a
synopsis from their website: Twelve-year-old Pegeen lives in the
sleepy town of Stratford. Money is tight since her father’s death, and
she must help her mother run a boardinghouse. She even has to share a
room
with old Mrs. Leonard. Pegeen’s dreams of becoming an actress seem
hopeless.
Then an extraordinary thing happens – a Shakespearean festival is
planned
for Stratford. As the festival develops, so does Pegeen. She learns a
great
deal about Shakespeare, the boarders at home, and her circle of
friends,
including the mysterious pilgrim, Mr. Brimblecombe
Betty Cavanna, Stars in Her Eyes,
mid-1950s. Girl was named Magda...her Dad hosted a TV show in NYC
and she wanted to be in the business. Worked as a waitress on
Cape
Cod around the summer stock areas
Helen Dore Boylston, Carol plays summer
stock, 1940s. Maybe one of
Helen
Dore Boylston's series of 4 Carol books? US titles are - Carol
goes
backstage,
Carol
plays
summer
stock,
Carol
on
Broadway
and
Carol
on
tour.
UK titles are - Carol goes on the stage, Carol in
repertory,
Carol comes to Broadway, Carol on tour. I think they all
have dustjackets with one colour surround and picture of Carol in the
middle
- can't remember which, if any, is blue. Although these are '40s not
'60s,
they were reprinted fairly often and I am sure would have been around
in
the '60s. Carol does quite a lot of growing up over the 4 books, and
there
is a romantic interest.
Janet Lambert, Up Goes the Curtain,
1946. Maybe? This is one of the Penny Parrish books. She
spends
part of it working in summer stock, and then gets to be in a Broadway
show,
where she meets Josh MacDonald, the stage manager.
Betty Cavanna, Two's Company,
1951. I think this book may be Betty Cavanna's Two's
Company,
in which the heroine does summer theatre in Williamsburg Virginia.
Marjory Hall, Straw Hat Summer,
1957. Could this be Straw Hat Summer by Marjory
Hall? Gail becomes interested in the theater when a summer theater
group rents her family's barn to put on plays. Our copy has a picture
cover
with Gail standing and looking at the barn/theater.
Wow! You've already given me so many great ideas, and I'm off to
investigate. Straw Hat Summer sounds very familiar, and
led
me (through a mistyped google search) to the 1957 title Straw Hat
Theater
by Mickey Klar Marks...I'm also going to track down Summer Stock
Romance
(aka Polly's Summer Stock) by Elizabeth Wesley (Adeline
McElfresh).
There are more possibilities than I'd anticipated!
Virginia Hughes, Peggy Lane
series. I think this is a long shot, but there is a series of
Peggy
Lane books - Peggy Find the Theater, Peggy Plays Off Broadway,
and
others
that
I
can't
recall,
but
one
of
them
is
about
summer
stock.
Rosamond
DuJardin,
Showboat Summer,
1955, copyright. This is about twin girls, not just one girl, but
could it be this? From the description: "A summer vacation aboard the
Harwood College Showboat was an exciting prospect for Pam and Penny,
the twins of Double Feature. To Penny, it meant being with Mike who had
a job on the tugboat that pushed the old Regina from town to town along
the Ohio River. To Pam it meant a chance to act, and perhaps a leading
role in one of the gala showboat performances."
Tiffany,
One Summer in Stock,
1947, copyright. Here's another possiblity (I have this in my
little bookstore, but haven't read it.) Main character is Nan,
and it appears to be a typical late teen romance novel of the
1940s-1950s.
Eleanor
Shaler, Gaunt's Daughter,1957,
approximate. Could it
be Gaunt's Daughter? The girl's
mother, a theater actor, dies and to avoid moving in with her mother's
Quaker relatives, she gets a summer stock job.
Turns out her estranged famous father is going to be there too.
At the end she has a family emergency with
the Quaker family and gives up her father and the play to go to the
hospital.
Witch's Sister by Phyllis
Reynolds
Naylor, maybe? "Lynn's growing conviction that her sister is
learning
witchcraft from a neighbor reaches its peak when Lynn, her sister, and
brother are left for a weekend in the neighbor's charge." I never read
it, but ever since I heard a few details mentioned on the TV show Big
Blue
Marble, it's stuck with me.
It's not Witches Sister. That book is too new. The book I'm
looking for is from the early '70's.
I haven't read The Witch's Sister
by Phyllis Reynolds Naylor, but it was written in 1975, so it's
certainly worth examining. It was reissued in paperback editions
in 1993 and 2002, which may be why you think it's too new a book to be
the one you're searching for.
I don't think it's Witch's Sister,
either. There's only one real witch in that book: Mrs.
Tuggle,
although, she's trying to get Lynn's sister to become a witch as
well.
No forest scene either.
G312 How abt this prequel to Witch's sister?
I
just
cataloged
it
yesterday:
Naylor, Phyllis Reynolds. Witch
water. illus by Gail Owens. Atheneum, 1977.
Lynn
is afraid her friend “Mouse” will be made into a witch by Mrs.
Tuggle
- juvenile fiction by an award-winning author
Is the poster really sure it's Witch Water
or any in Naylor's series? It's been a long time since I
read
those books, but I read them repeatedly way back when, and I don't
remember
any friendly witches (or, again, any real witch other than Mrs. Tuggle)
or any broomstick riding. Mrs. Tuggle's thing seemed to be more
about
control over people than about broomsticks.
Thanks for all the suggestions! I checked
all the books by Naylor, and none of them are the one I'm looking for.
I believe the cover showed a night scene of the sky, with a big moon,
and
a witch flying on a broom. It was also a pretty short story.
Patricia Coombs, Dorrie and.....
Could the girl actually have been a witch herself? Then it might be one
of the Dorrie books by Patricia Coombs.
Chew, Ruth , The Wednesday Witch.
Could it be one of the Witch books written by Ruth Chew? The
scene
you describe sounds familiar to me. I read many of her books in
the
late 70's-early 80's and they were quick and easy to read. The cover
for
the Wednesday Witch also seems similar to your description - except the
witch is on a vacuum cleaner instead of a broom.
I checked both of the above books- neither
one is the one I'm looking for. I think the cover may have had more
then
one witch flying on a broom.
Adrienne Adams, The Halloween Party,1974.Is
there
any
chance
at
all
the
main
character
was
a
little
boy
named
Faraday
(kind
of
an
androgynous
name)?
Your
description
made
me
think
of
The
Halloween
Party,
and
A
Woggle
of
Witches,
both
by
Adrienne
Adams.
The
cover
shows
a
witch
on
a
broomstick,
flying
across
the moon with
gremlin
children behind her.
Rosemary Sutcliff, Mark of the Horse
Lord
& Warrior Scarlet. This
is a long shot, but the description reminds me a little of Sutcliff's
Mark
of the Horse Lord. It's about a gladiator who impersonates the
prince
of a British tribe and dies in the end (not wrapped in cloak though,
and
I don't remember if he was a net-and-trident fighter). Warrior
Scarlet
is not about gladiators, but involves a red cloak (I think) and is by
the
same author.
While The Mark of the Horse Lord
is about Phaedrus, a gladiator in Roman Britain who impersonates the
lord
of a northern tribe and nobly dies for "his" people, it was published
in
1965, twenty years too late for the stumper requester. Warrior
Scarlet was written in 1958 and is also unlikely to be the book
sought, particularly since there's no gladiator in it. Warrior
Scarlet
is about Drem, a disabled boy (withered arm) who has
to
kill a wolf in order to attain manhood and the right to wear the
warrior's
scarlet of his Bronze Age tribe.
I'm sorry I don't have the answer, but I can
tell you that the book you're looking for is probably not The
Crimson
Cloak by Lois Montross (1924), which is a volume of
poetry.
It is also unlikely to be The Red Cape by Rachel M.
Varble
(1928), which is described online as the story of "A little girl [who]
is taken into a peasant's home."
Might be Janet Lunn's
Double
Spell.
It was originally published as Twin Spell.
Lunn, Janet, Double Spell.
(1968) also published as Twin Spell. This features twins, ghosts
and dolls, however the twins are named Jane and Elizabeth and they buy
the doll rather than find it under a tree. Strangely attracted to
an antique doll, twelve-year-old twins buy the toy and soon find
themselves
haunted by powerful and tragic memories of ancestral twins who had also
been owners of the doll
Lunn, Janet, Twin Spell.
(1968) I think this is it. See the "Solved Mysteries".
Lunn
Janet, Twin Spell, 2003,
reprint. I am really certain that the doll
and twin part of this stumper refers to Janet Lunn's Twin Spell, reprinted
later as Double Spell. It is a haunting
book about twins Jane and Elizabeth who live in Ontario Canada and find
a doll
in an antique store which inexplicably seems to belong to them.
After they move into their Aunt Alice's
mysterious old house, they begin finding themselves sharing the past
experiences of two other twins, Anne and Melissa, who were their
ancestors and
lived in the house (which was smaller and did not have new additions
built on
it then) many years before. They also
have visions of a frightening girl named Hester who seemed to hate the
earlier
twins. In the end they solve the mystery
and discover that Anne had died in a fire (in a room they now use as an
attic)
that had been accidentally started by her cousin Hester, and that it is
the
ghost of Hester who is haunting the house.
They discover this just in time for Elizabeth to save Jane, who is
trapped in the attic with the ghost. I
think the original stumper may have mixed up the plots of two different
books
by Janet Lunn. She also wrote one
entitled The Root Cellar in which the main character is a girl named
Rose, who
finds an old root cellar in the ground which leads her to ghostly
experiences
with a long ago family on the farm where she is staying.
Kathryn Jackson (author), Richard Scarry
(illustrator),
The
Strange Pitcher. (1955)
Possibly
this one? A little boy receives a strange pottery pitcher from
his
grandmother who lives in Italy. The pitcher is made of pottery,
"with
odd-looking leaves on it, the colors of fruit, and fruit that was the
color
of leaves." The little boy doesn't like it, but his mother says
it
matches with their dishes, and uses it to serve orange juice, milk,
chocolate
milk, or lemonade at their meals. "Day after day, the little boy
poured good-tasting things from the pitcher, and by and by, it didn't
look
strange any more." Finally, he writes to his grandmother thanking
her for the beautiful pitcher. This story can be found on page 11
of The Golden Book of 365 Stories: A Story for Every Day of the Year (A
Big Golden Book). It is the story for January 6th. Please
note
that this book has been reprinted numerous times with at least three
different
titles and covers. The two other titles I've seen are: The
Bedtime
Book of 365 Stories: A Story for Every Day of the Year OR Richard
Scarry's
A Story A Day: 365 Stories and Rhymes. Unfortunately, the pitcher
isn't green (though it does have green on it), and while it is a gift,
the boy doesn't receive it for his birthday. Also, none of the
covers
I've seen for this book are brown or green---I've seen blue or white
covers
with pictures of animals or children on them. So you may be
looking
for a different story in a different book---or your memories may have
faded
over time.
The more recent versions of The Golden
Book of 365 Stories: A Story for Every Day of the Year may not
be exactly what you remember. Here's an online description:
"Reissued
after many years, this beautiful collection offers a year's worth of
original
stories and poems, including new selections for Hanukkah, Martin Luther
King Day, and Kwanzaa." Unfortunately, I can't figure out exactly
when the changes were made! I can tell you that the edition I
have
(from 1969) does contain "The Strange Pitcher" but I can't vouch for
any
edition later than that.
There is a page that sounds a lot like this in
the book about the Yami of Yawn, with the main character Wide-awake
Jake.
Might this be it?
Thanks for the response, unfortunately "Wide-Awake Jake"
(c. 1974) cannot be it, because I owned this book pre-1963. My
book
may have been an anthology. I have already checked the "Little
Brown
Bear" books.
G324:
Girl's
planet has almost no metal
Solved: This Star Shall
Abide
This might help a little: SRA Reading
Series
cards/booklets were once organized by color (I remember from the 1960s.)
SRA Reading Laboratory. You
are after the SRA Reading laboratory - there were several editions of
these
- I'm not sure which one you are after. We had different boxes of
stories for different grade levels. they're still being made by
McGraw-Hill.
Ghost Cat. i read a book
called ghost cat that seems kind of like the one you described the one
girl from the futer goes through her garden and finds a girl from the
pasti
dont remember much else about it but i think it was from a color coded
series of some sort hope that helps
G329:
Goat
family goes to carnival, littlest gets kidnapped
It's a book about a goat family who go to
a carnival/amusement park, and the baby goat gets kidnapped while
there.
(By other animails other than goats I think). I belive it was
published
in the mid to late 70's? It's written in comic book/storyboard
format
and the older sister is on a ferris wheel when her sister gets
kidnapped
and she loses her ice cream. Thanks for offering this service!
Watson, Nancy Dingman, The birthday goat. (1974) The Goat family enjoys its outing to the Carnival until Baby Souci goat is kidnapped
Could this be one of the Star Ka'at
books by Andre Norton? They were published in the
70s.
I don't remember much of the storyline, but the cats talked and were
actually
aliens. They met a boy and girl on Earth, who helped them either
fit in or get home. (My sister actually read the books, I think I just
skimmed them.) The cover of one of them had a girl imerging from
a wall. the illustrations were grey and misty-looking. Might be
worth
checking out, anyway.
Judith Goldberger, Looking Glass Factor.
(1979) This book is in the solved mysteries section. I read it a
couple of years ago after reading the description when another reader
was
looking for it. I am sure this is what you are looking for.
It is available at ABE and through interlibrary loan.
G332:
Girl
wins geography(?) test to earn trip
Solved: Patsy's Best Summer
The description reminded me of a Ruth M. Arther book, but I couldn't find a title to match. Does that author sound familiar to the original poster?
Nicola Smee, The
Tusk Fairy.
(1994) Not sure if this is your book, but your description made
me
think of this one. It was one of my daughter's favorites when she
was little. The elephant isn't polka dotted, though. But the girl
is often wearing polka dot pants. The grandma crocheted the
elephant
as a birth present for the girl, and it did everything the girl did -
including
learn to use the potty. One day something dreadful happened to
the
elephant, but the grandma was able to fix it up. Great Book! Even
if it's not the one you're looking for!
Astrid
Lindgren, Bill Bergson, Master
Detective, 1946,
copyright.This is
from one of the Bill Bergson series of books, I don't know which one.
Two
groups of friends, the White Roses and the Red Roses, "war" over
possession of a stone which they alternately hide. Other titles are
Bill
Bergson Lives Dangerously, and Bill Bergson and the White Rose Rescue.
G335:
Girls
school adventures in 1915
Solved: Luvvy and the Girls
Betty Sue Cummings, Hew Against the Grain,1977.This book is about a young girl named Mathilda. It's set during the Civil War. Mathilda's family is divided by the war. She is attacked and raped by a neighbor during the last year of the war. Mathilda kills her attacker and learns to heal with the help of her grandfather.
Cora Annett, The Dog Who Thought He Was
A Boy. (1965) Ralph the dog
wanted to be a boy, so the family let him. The son finally got
sick
of not having a pet and told the dog that he was a dog. Maybe the
father's name was George? The dog did wear clothes, go to school,
etc.
Nope, nobody in Arnett is named George.
I just read the whole book.
Phyllis Rowand, George Goes To Town,
1958.
I
dont
think
he
wears
clothes,
but
the
dog's
name
is
George,
and
the
book
is
from
the
correct
time
frame.
Might
be
worth
investigating,
anyway. Phyllis Rowand also wrote an earlier book about
him,
simply titled "George" (c. 1956)
Ottenheimer Press, My Giant Story Book.
(1971)
I'm pretty sure this is the book. It is on the solved pages
already
(it was my original stumper!) and all the stories are there plus the
Cinderella
has the big flowers on her pink dress at the ball. Only thing
different
is the cover but the book I received when I ordered was a completely
different
cover than I had. Hope this is it. Worth checking out.
Thank you, but I don't think it's "My Giant Story Book". It
looks like that one had Little Red Riding Hood in it, but the book I am
looking for did not. Thank you anyway.
G342:
Girl
becomes jealous of exchange student
Hard back book from the sixties, but think
it was set in the fifties. Illustrations were Trixie
Beldenish.
Story is about a teen and her family who sponsor an international
exchange
student from Spain or Mexico. At first she's excited because she
thinks of how she and her exchange student friend will be like
sisters.
But she becomes jealous of the girl's exotic beauty, sweet nature, and
popularity. The sponsoring girl has to learn a few
lessons
about her true nature.
Francine Lewis, Polly French and
The Surprising Stranger,1956. My copy of this book is a Whitman
glossy edition with illustration that look Trixie Beldenish.
Polly
French's family host an exchange student from Peru. Her name is
Lita
Barrios. She is older than Polly but in the same grade because of
the language difference. Lita fits in well and Polly is jealous
of
her.
G343:
Girl
candles ocean Japanese
A Girl who lives by the ocean and lights
candles.
My memory is that some how she is not free and has some connection with
Japan. Not sure if set in Japan or by a Japanese Author. Childrens book
read to us in the 1960s in Australia. Would love to get a hold of this
book.
Girl's clothes walk away - I've never
read
this one, but the description of the book The House That Had
Enough
by
P.
E. King (1986) says: "Tired of being mistreated, Anne's
furniture,
clothes, and house decide to leave until she promises to take better
care
of them."
I wonder if the person is thinking of one of Sheila Moon's books? It's not KNEE-DEEP IN THUNDER, but there were a couple others feature a girl who seems to be Native American in a strange world on a quest with animal friends. I think the girl in all of them was named Maris. I read them in the late 70s, which is the right time frame for the OP.
Florence Taylor, Growing Pains. This one is probably it, with various life lessons and illustrations by Lucile Patterson Marsh.
Joan Aiken, The Shadow Guests, 1980. This could be The Shadow Guests, by Joan Aiken. The main character's name is Cosmo, and he is sent to England to live with a cousin who teaches at a university. I remember that he was visited by spirits from the past, and there's a dark family secret too.
G357: Sounds like the short Greek myth of
Dryope,
who picks flowers off a tree, which bleeds (it's a nymph) and Dryope is
punished by being turned into a tree herself - but not before she has
the
chance to tell her family to warn her baby never to vandalize plants.
It probably was a version of that myth, I don't remember a baby
and I swear someone cut her after she turned into a tree, but it was
probably
just the version I read (someone taking liberties or something).
Because
I'm pretty sure it was a myth, or maybe it was a fairy tale?
Lutie A. McCorkle-(Sheldon Basic Reading), The Little Cook- (Story Caravan), 1957. Oh,think I can help you with this one. It was my reader too and I looked forever on the internet trying to find it until I stumbled on it by accident. The story is The Little Cook about a girl who has to stay home while her family goes to George Washington's Parade. She ends up unknowingly serving him breakfast on his way there. And He tells her to tell her family that she met him before they did. There are many other wonderful stories in this book that perhaps your teacher may have also read to you so it's worth checking out the Story Caravan.
William Papas, Tasso, 1966.
This is definitely Tasso by William
Papas. I bought my copy a few years ago, having remembered it being
read to me during library time at school, in Australia, back in the
late
70s.
Byars, Betsy, Rama, the Gypsy Cat,
c. 1966, reprinted by Scholastic
This could be The Mystery of the Green
Cat by Phyllis Whitney (1957). I read the Scholastic
edition
during the 1960s. It was always one of my favorite books!
It
is definitely set in San Francisco. The names of the children involved
were Andy, Adrian, Jill, and Carol. If you think this
could
be the book, then you should check the official Phyllis
A. Whitney website for the full plot description.
I wonder if you're combining two different books
by Catherine Woolley Ginnie and the Cooking Contest and
Ginnie
and the Mystery Cat. Ginnie and the Mystery Cat
has friends Ginnie and Geneva in Europe, traveling with their
families.
There's a statue of a cat with gold hoop earrings that they're carrying
around that people keep trying to steal. No cakes or San
Francisco
though. In Ginnie and the Cooking Contest, there's
a bake-off that Ginnie's participating in that has a chocolate cake and
grating chocolate. I think the contest is in San Francisco, but
I'm
not sure. No cat though. Both these books came out in the
1960s.
Good luck!