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Q1: Quadruplets nicknamed "Frogs"'
Solved: We Four Together


Q2: Quacks
Solved: Billions of Quacks
Q3: Quaker girl loses mother/questions faith

Solved: I Take Thee, Serenity

Q4: Quack Said Joshua
Solved: 'Quack!' Said Jerusha
Q5:  Quilt scraps left by ghost,/witch/stranger

Solved: The Ghost of Windy Hill 
Q6: quilts

Solved: Eight Hands Round


Q7: quincy
Solved: All By Ourselves


Q8: Quaker vegetable hate
In this story, the child (I think it was a girl) says she hates eating vegetables.  The mother replies with something like "Thee cannot hate a vegetable."  The idea is that hatred is a very strong emotion not appropriate for general use.

Q8 Jessamyn West wrote a lot of books about Quakers.
I am  not sure but could this be one of Marguerite de Angeli's books: Thee Hannah? Skippack School? or maybe Yonie Wondernose?
Brinton Turkle, Thy Friend, Obadiah. (1982)  This may not be the right book, but Turkle wrote several picture books about Obadiah this is the only one still in print.  The stumper is not looking for a Marguerite d'Angeli book, though, unless it's Thee, Hannah, because her other books are about Amish children, not Quakers (Yonie Wondernose, etc.).



Q9: Quick, Quick Dr. Squash
Solved: Doctor Squash the Doll Doctor

Q10: Queen Anne's Lace/Mystery
Solved: Queen Anne's Lace


Q11: A quest for a namesake
Solved: The Namesake


Q12:  Queen Esther
Children's book about Queen Esther. Each character illustrated as a different animal: Queen Esther is a goat, King Ahasuerus is a dog, etc. I remember a bright blue cover with a picture of Esther (as a goat) on the front. probably published around 1980's

Kurt Mitchell, Esther: Selected Verses from the Book of Esther, 1983, copyright.  Description from Worldcat: "Contains selected verses from the Book of Esther illustrated with animal figures."



Q13: Quiet Place
I am 95% certain that's the book title...I would like to know the author and/or illustrator. The story is a small book (might be a Whitman Tiny Tot Tale printed 1969). It's about a child named Grace who is looking for a quiet place. Thanks so much...this is the most beloved book from my childhood.

Lynn Wheeling, A Quiet Place, 1969. This story was published in 1969 by Whitman, a Tiny-Tot Tale. 



Q14: Quest
Looking for "The Quest" ?  book about a modern search for the grail.  Rather like an Indiana Jones movie, the grail has been hidden for ages.  The "good guy" is following the trail. It has been covered over with gold and jewels by Jewish metalworkers...?  There is a discription of how 666 relates to 6 days without God, 6 something without something and 6 is man with out God and that is hell.  There are deserts and digging and tents and James Bond like stuff going on.  Set in modern times, but has historical accounts, but is definately a work of fiction.  I read it about 10 years ago in paperback.

Q15: Queen Ann's Lace
I am going to give you what I know about the story. It was read to me in the 50's or early 60's. It was a story about how the flower Queen Ann's Lace came to be. I do not remember very much except a witch was trying to get a girl (princess, maybe). Somehow white flowers grew up and trapped her. If  you look at the flower Queen Ann's Lace you will see a little black speck in the middle. This represents the witch amid a sea of white flowers. That is why Queen's Ann's Lace blooms with the back speck in the middle.  Every year about this time when it blooms I am reminded of this story. Please help me locate this fairy tale or folk lore story. No one seems to remember it but me.

I was told that Queen Anne gathered those black dots ..which, when you rub them in your palm, become deep red, wanted millions of those collected to dye her dress that deep color and, hence, that is how it got the name..MY parents used to work in the Catskill Mountains and my dad would take the guests of the Fallsview Hotel  (where I was married 33years ago) for a "nature walk"  around the golf course and mountains.  SInce we grew up in NYC/the Bronx, he did research to give info on these walks. THat is how I got that info.  Coincidentally, my dad is 89 now, and last weekend, I went up to the Catskills to  take care of him a bit and he doesn't remember telling that story.  I tell it to everyone and I cannot believe it was in your online newsletter. Nothing is a coincidence!!! Whew.. Thanks so much for another story ......I thought I was the only one in the world who was thinking so much about Queen Annes Lace these last few weeks.


Q16: Q about virtual reality, game, colonizing other world
Solved: Invitation to the Game



Q17: Queen of dolls
I am looking for a book about a queen of dolls who comes each night in a coach that might be drawn by mice and takes forgotten and mistreated dolls to a hospital.  It may have been written in the 30's.  It was my grandmother's book.  My mom really liked it when she was a kid and is looking for a copy of it.

Josephine Scribner Gates' 1901 book, The Book of Live Dolls, illustrated by Virginia Keep, which comes in three parts. See Solved Mysteries.
I believe the illustrations for The Book of Live Dolls were also done by Mabel Rogers - in the Better Homes and Gardens Storybook, anyway.



Q18: Quirky alphabet book
Solved: Birds in my Drawer


2007

Q19: Quack, said Jerusha
Solved: Children's Stories


Q20: Queen of Prussia
This fiction book takes place in King of Prussia, Pennsylvania or environs.  I think "Queen of Prussia" is in the title.  It is the story of a family who spends summers at the Matriarch's home, written from the view point of a young teen granddaughter.  The family is kind of odd ball, consisting of the Grandmother, her adult daughters and the grand children.  I read it over 25 years ago, maybe as long ago as the late '70's.  It was a book my mother got from some book club she subscribed to, which leads me to believe it had some importance at one time...maybe even a best seller. The author must have some connection to King of Prussia, Pennsylvania.

Chase, Joan, During the Reign of the King of Persia, 1983, copyright.  This is a long shot, but the grandmother matriarch fits.



Q21: Queen for a day
My mother-in-law is trying to find a book she read as a teenager in the late 50's early 60's  she thinks the title was Queen for a day and the book was about a boy named Sandy who had down syndrome.  That's all she can remember from it. Can you help?


2008





R2: Riding lessons
I found your website and since I am trying to find some lost books for a friend, I knew that I found the right place. I am trying to find the title for this book - all that can be remembered is as follows: This book is about a little girl whose mother dies and the girl is sent to live with her aunt who owns a riding stable. Since the aunt is sickly, the girl takes over giving riding lessons. The story takes place in either Arizona or New Mexico and also talks about a canyon. This book also had a copyright sometime around 1945. If you or anyone else can remember this book, I would appreciate hearing from you with the titles or any more specific information, since my friend would like to get these books for her daughter.

this is the best I've found so far, and it's vague. Hamlin, John H. Beloved Acres published by Century, 1925 "A capable young girl manages a California ranch, and through hard work and good judgment is able to keep it out of the hands of a designing ranch owner who tries to force her to give it up."
Another possible, a little closer - Shooting Star Farm, by Anne Molloy, illustrated by Barbara Cooney, published Houghton 1946, 231 pages. "It's having people and someone to do things with that counts," says Sabra when new neighbors appeared and Grandma rejoiced over lights in the old house. The newcomers were ready to open a riding school, a venture which affected Sabra's future in several ways. She loved horses as much as she did companionship and girls with similar tastes may follow her doings with enjoyment." (Horn Book Sep/46 p.353)
Dorothy Lyons.  The plot and characters sound like a Dorothy Lyons book, although I don't remember these exact details.  Her books are delightful and well-worth reading.


R4: Rusty
Solved: Rusty 
R16: Rich lady adopts girl who looks like her dead daughter

Solved: The Bewitching of Alison Albright

R17: Roman city rediscovered
Solved: The End of the Tunnel
R21: Rope--What's at the End?

I am looking for a book from the early 60's that is probably a Wonder Book.  It had a glossy cover and featured a dark haired little boy on the front holding a rope.  The whole book was about the little boy trying to find out "do you know what's at the end of my rope?"  He goes through several guesses, but the last page reveals that a HOUSE is at the end of his rope.  Any ideas?

R21- Teddy's Surprise (Tell-A-Tale)?
I checked into this, and "Teddy's Surprise" isn't the book I had as a child.
I just checked my copy of a book by Hegarty called The rope's end. It is NOT your book.  [It's abt a boy on a whaling ship]
Marjory Schwalje, Guess What I Have. It's a Whitman Tell-a-Tale book.  Cover is exactly as you describe with a dark haired boy pulling at a rope.


R24: Run away home
Solved: Run Away Home

R25: Rag bottom boat
My sister and I (both 45) remeber a book from our childhood. A big potion of the book was devoted to how an old sailor taught/helped some children re-build a sail-boat, including putting a canvas bottom on the hull (I think the name of the boat ended up being 'Rag Bottom".) Some where in the story there was also a boy who wasn't part of the group of children who seemed to be a loner. Can you find naything out about this book?

This couldn't be Robb White's Sailor in the Sun again, could it? If not, it could be another of his younger titles.
R25 rag bottom: a book about the rebuilding of a boat is The Rainbow, by Edna S. Weiss, illustrated by Don Lambo, published Nelson 1960, 143 pages. "A Massachusetts seacoast town is the background for this realistic story of a boat-builder's family and, especially, of the younger son whose love for sailing matches his father's. The rebuilding of the wrecked sloop Rainbow was undertaken as a labor of love by 10-year-old Joel's parent, but its completion was not assured until the Boy Seafarers were organized ..." (HB Aug/60 p.297) "The Rainbow, a storm-wrecked keel sloop, provides the Hubbard family with trouble, problems, and new hopes. Boys and girls 8 to 12."



R26: Robber knight
Hi, I really hope you can help me.  I'm looking for a book I always used to take out of the local library when I was young.  I think it may have been called "The Robber Knight" or "The Robber Prince".  It was about a black knight who stole strawberries at night from a strawberry field.  I think there may have been a good knight which was, of course, a white knight.  My mother and I are always remembering this book but neither of us can find it anywhere.  Can you help?

Bang, Molly, The Grey Lady and the Strawberry Snatcher, Four Winds 1983.  Not a complete match, but worth mentioning "The Grey Lady loves strawberries. But so does the Strawberry Snatcher, and unfortunately for the Grey Lady he is not far away and getting closer all the time. Past flower shops and bakeries he stalks her, silently, steadily, biding his time. He pursues her by foot along haunting red-brick paths, and then by skateboard into the mysterious depths of a swamp both beautiful and terrifying. Closer and closer he gets, and yet the Grey Lady escapes him, in fantastic and marvelously improbable ways, until, in the heart of the forest the Strawberry Snatcher discovers instead -- blackberries!"  Probably too recent is Oliver's Strawberry Patch, by Anton Kroon, Hyperion 1992. "Oliver tries to catch thief stealing strawberries from garden."
Wondriska, William, The Tomato Patch.  NY Holt 1964.  Another possible is this one, though it's tomatos and not strawberries. The story has two kingdoms, Krullerberg and Appletania. There are no gardens, and all food comes out of cans. A wise little girl cultivates a tomato patch in the forest, and a prince comes into it somewhere.
Helen Chetin, The Lady of the Strawberries, 1978.
Geoffrey Palmer and Noel Lloyd, Moonshine and Magic, 1967.  This book includes a story called "The Strawberry Thief".
Walter Kreye, illus. David McKee, The Poor Farmer and the Robber Knights.(Late 70s, approximate)  YES!! I have been trying to find a book I remembered about Robber Knights for ages.Your query reminded me about the strawberries, and that detail helped me find the title (still haven't got the book though). So even if this isn't your book, you helped me find mine!It was a Picture Puffin. I think it'\''s translated from german, and the pictures by David McKee (who did Mr Benn and Elmer) are very interesting and go round the page so they're partly upside down.The poor farmer grows strawberries but the robber knights come and eat them, trampling around and being gross. Then they fall asleep (why? can't remember! ) and the farmer does something to their armour (water? rust?) so they can't move. They wake up and lie there pulling faces. I think he frees them in the end ( with a screwdriver? oil can?) and they become good knights. Hope this is your book !



R27: Ratty and Mousie
Solved: Good Neighbors

R29: Rhyming book
Solved: the strawberry book of shapes 

R31: Reflecting surface
This book was probably written between 1962 and 1970.  The illustrations took up a significant amount of room on the page.  It was about an old man who looks into something (a box? a pool? a well?) and sees the image of a boy.  It turns out to be an image of himself as a child.  I am probably remembering only a fraction of the plot.  The illustrations of the old man were frightening and kind of expressionistic.  The whole book had a kind of eerie feel to it.  I am very curious about this book.

R31 a long shot, but how about Leon Garfield'sThe Ghost Downstairs, illustrated by Anthony Maitland, published 1972, where the solicitor's clerk Mr. Fast gives up 7 years of his life to the mysterious Mr. Fishbane,
only to find that he's lost the 7 years of his childhood, causing him to be haunted by the ghost of his young self. The illustrations are detailed b/w line and wash, mostly full-page, with one of p.57 showing Fast and his
child-ghost reflected in a shop window. Inside the window is a scale-model of St. Paul's Cathedral. Fast is a youngish man, but he looks older in this illo. On p.45 there's a picture of the old Mr. Fishbane taking the
child-ghost by the hand, both of them looking at the viewer. The ghost wears a sailor suit and wide-brimmed hat.



R36: Rings and musical instruments
Solved: The Great and Terrible Quest

R37: Reincarnation
I've been looking forever for a book that I absolutely loved when I was about 12 or 13.  It was part of a boxed set that was a gift to my mother in the 1940's.  One of the two books in the set was the poem "White Cliffs of Dover" - I've found that one.  The other book in the set (very small, slim book) was a novel about reincarnation.  Two people meet in Heaven, fall in love, and vow to find one another after they're born.  They eventually do find one another and have a romantic reunion in pre-war Europe.  I do not recall how it ends, so probably they end up back in Heaven.  But it was my favorite book as a young girl.  Any help in figuring out the author or title would be *MUCH* appreciated.

?? Dana Burnet, ?? The Pool, 1945.  I'm not at all sure this is the right story, but the description reminds me a bit of one I've read, and maybe it could be by the same author.  The publication data seem to fit.  In a compilation called A Treasury of Beauty and Romance (Marjorie Barrows, Spencer Press, 1955) is a short story called "The Pool" by Dana Burnet, which the acknowledgments say was "published by Alfred A. Knopf, Inc., copyright 1945 by Dana Burnet, copyright 1945 by Curtis  Publishing Company" (who did magazines). Then next to the title of the story, the book editor has put, "This delicate and tender love story is found in many scrapbooks.  People... have reread it at least once a year since it first appeared in magazine form."  So evidently, due to its great popularity as a magazine story, it was published by Knopf in book form?  It would definitely make a reasonable partner for "The White Cliffs of Dover", also a war story.  This one is about Richard and Nancy, who meet during WWII in England and fall in love, discussing their personal "special places" that one must return to, to find oneself (his is a trout pool). It's not reincarnation, but they talk a lot about "coming back" and "forever".  The story shifts several times from present to past and back again, but at the end it's clear that both lovers have died and found one another again.  Good luck!



R38: Reader with rabbits
Around 1966 I was given three hardcover elementary school readers from some neighboring kids a few years older then I was, so they would have been current in the late 1950s. Of those three I still have two and would like to find a copy of the third, though all I can say about it is that is had a buff gray cover with a drawing of three or four rabbits on the front. There were several illustrated stories inside, but the only one I recall had something to do with the rabbits in the snow. Since the three books were all in similar format, it may help to note that one was "The Story Road" (red cover with a kid walking down a road) and the second one was "On Cherry Street" (orange cover). Any help with finding the title of the third book would be greatly appreciated, as would information on how to get a copy - I've been puzzling over this one for years!

#R38--Reader with Rabbits:  You're definitely looking for one of the Ginn Basic Readers by Odille Ousley and David H. Russell, which were published under the same titles over the years but in various editions.  The only hint I can give you is don't bother looking at ANYTHING dated 1961 or later.  Some of the inside contents may be the same, but by then they'd switched to the bright, colorful covers so you'd never recognize it.  Stick to the drab 1940s-50s blue and gray covers and eventually you'll come across it.  Looking at Ginn Basic Readers listed on eBay may help, but there are way too many even to begin a good process of elimination unless someone wants to share tables of contents.  There are nice web pages devoted to Dick and Jane and Alice and Jerry, so when someone puts up one for these other series I hope it's posted here so we can all check it for some of our lost textbooks!
I believe you have an odd assortment of readers, not a set from one publisher! The Story Road is by John C. Winston and On Cherry Street is a Ginn Reader. (I have never heard of a Ginn Reader called Story Road.) Around Green Hills- A Betts Basic Reader- has 2 children with 2 rabbits on their laps! Also, Story Road (1940) has an orange cover with 2 rabbits on  it!! After much searching those are the only bunnies found so far!



R41: Russian brothers and sisters
I can only remember that it was a hardback book, navy blue I believe.  It was about some Russian brother and sisters and that's all I can remember. My grandmother bought it for me for Christmas and in all the moving we've done, it got lost or given away.

E. M. Almedingen, Little Katia. Seems like a possible answer to this one, as well as R42. Other books by Almedingen, e.g. "Anna", might also be possibilities. If there were animals as well as children in the book, then it could be Olga Petrovskaia's "Kids and Cubs". If it was set at the time of the Russian Revolution, it could be Stephanie Plowman's "My Kingdom for a Grave" or "Three Lives for the Czar".



R42: Russian girl Katia
Solved: In Place of Katia 

R43: Recorder (instrument) ensemble
I read this book in the mid- to late 60's, and remembered it a few years ago when my daughter started learning to play the recorder. A group of kids (siblings I think) take recorder lessons from 2 (or maybe 3) somewhat eccentric older women (the women are sisters, I think?). As a group, they play all 4 types of recorders (soprano, alto, tenor, bass(?)). Can't remember the title, nor anything more about the plot (except maybe some mishaps during a concert?)

Maybe - Fripsey Fun, written and illustrated by Madye Lee Chastain, published by Harcourt 1955, 198 pages. "The big Fripsey family and friend Marcy learn to play recorders for fun and find themselves on television!
Their success may seem extraordinary, but it is not incredible, and may arouse interest in making music among the little girls who like these easily read family stories." (Horn Book Oct/55 p.365) "Learning to play recorders leads the numerous Fripseys and their friends into unexpected adventures. Ages 9-12." (same Aug/55 p.301 pub.ad.)



R44: Robbers in a barn
Solved: Georgie and the Robbers

R45: Rottenest brother
Solved: The Rotten Book


R46: Rosy Nose the Polar Bear
Solved: Rosy Nose

R47: Russian fairy tales
I am trying to find a book I had as a child. It was quite large and had many beautiful illustrations. I remember the stories of the snow queen and the nutcracker were featured. The book had Russian and European tales. Can you help?

Grimm, Anderson, Dumas etc., trans. Marie Ponsot, The Snow Queen and other Tales, 1961.  Could this be The Snow Queen and Other Tales, the companion volume to the famous Golden Book of Fairy Tales,  illustrated by Adrienne Segur? Like the Golden Book, Snow Queen is quite large, about 12 by 15 inches, and has stunning coloured illustrations. It contains a variety of Russian and European tales including The Story of a Nutcracker, The Snow Queen, Baba Yaga, The Cat Who Became Lord of the Forest, Jorinda and Joringel, Winter's Promised Bride, etc. My copy was published by Golden Press in 1961.  according to the amazon.com site it's scheduled to come back into print in October 2001.



R48: Runaways
Solved: Secrets of the Shopping Mall
R49: Robot oranges

Solved: The Big Orange Thing


R50: Robots Come Alive
Solved: Andy Buckram's Tin Men

R51:  Room at the Top
Solved: Time at the Top
R52: Rescuing a princess

Solved: Book of Brownies

R53: Rat called Not-Polite
This is a fairly large and very colourful illustrated, children's book (somewhat larger than A4 paper). There are two prominent characters one was a creature who I remember had a big nose with a few hairs protruding from it, had a brownish body but a sandy-coloured tummy and was a rather short, dumpy little thing. This is no animal, so I cannot adequately describe it. I remember the book had a description about the "thing" along the lines of "___ are very soft and silky and live in blue watering cans." The second character is a rather spindly rat called Not-Polite. He wears a red berret and a red scarf. The two characters end up going to the moon via a kite. Here, the discover how the moon "waxes and wanes " firstly the moon has a huge feast, which the "thing" and Mr. Not-Polite join him. The moon and the two main characters subsquently become rather tubby, and the moon is now a full moon. Then along come these almost alien creatures (again with the prominent noses) and they tickle the moon and the two characters so that they laugh so hard they grow thing again (the moon starts to wane). I honestly cannot remember the ending to this wonderful book, and since I have forgotten the name of the title character (I had my suspicions that it might be called a Woozle, or a Wuzzle or similar), various searches on  the internet have been fruitless. PLEASE PROVE ME WRONG!!!!!!

R53 rat called not-polite: not too likely, but there's Twirlup on the Moon, by Laura Bannon, illustrated by Will Gordon, published Whitman 1964, 63 pages, which features a kangaroo rat and an odd creature called a Twirlup
who go to the moon, but via a rocketship. So not really close enough.
R53 rat not-polite: a real long shot, but there's Beyond The Rainbow, written and illustrated by R.F. Lowis, published Hutchinson c. 1960? "A Charming book about the adventures of a rat." And that's it, that's all the
information I have, couldn't even track down a record with a publication date!
R. F. Lowis, The Runaway Balloon. (1959)  This is not a solution - just something that may help. The R.F.Lowis mentioned was my teacher when I was 7 in Grimsby, England. He wrote "The Runaway Balloon" - a story with animal characters including a rat, in 1959. You may try finding his family in that location and seeing if they can take the solution further.



R54: Runaway
Solved: Charley 
R55: Red-Headed boy gets haircut

Solved: Mop Top 

R56: Runaway
Solved: Runaway's Diary 
R57: Reincarnation mystery/romance Ancient Egypt

Solved: The Curse 

R58: Rose garden treasure hunt
I first read the book in the late 50's early 60's at about the age of 10.  I suspect that the book had probably been published quite a number of years earlier.  My description of the book's plot was as follows ...  The plot commenced with a child or children examining a old rose garden which was arranged in a horseshoe shape.  It was noticed that the first letter of the names of each of the roses (as shown on a plaque beneath each bush) spelt out the first clue for a treasure hunt.  This treasure hunt then traversed a series of steps lasting many days/weeks which consumed both the book and its reader.
R59: Reading Program

Solved:  SRA Cards 

R60: Rowan - girl, runaway, lives in hedge
Solved: Charley 

R61:  Race To The Valley
I am looking for a short story that I remember from my childhood in the 1940's entitled "Race To The Valley".  It was about two boys operating a bobsled or a toboggan, a sick or injured person and a race down a snowy mountain to get medical help in the valley below.

The only book that sounds somewhat familiar to me is Treasure In The Snow.  I forget the author, but it's a Christian book that I borrowed from my
church's library when I was preteen.  It's set in Switzerland, I believe, and a young boy races down a mountain on a sled through a storm to find a
doctor in the village below to help a boy that has been injured.  The boy on the sled is responsible for the boy's injury.



R62:  Rabbit who runs away
Solved: The Country Bunny and the Little Gold Shoes 

R63: Ram Tram
This was an adventure book, perhaps intended for a young adult audience.  I received it as a gift in the early 80s or late 70s, then loaned it to a friend.  Two teenagers built a vehicle for traveling on railroad tracks, called the RamTram(?).  They travel into a madman's encampment, which I recall as a tented compound.  They see the madman playing a large organ in one end of a tent.  Dynamite or other explosives may have been involved in their escape.  That's all I can remember.  Thanks.
R64:  Round Round World

Solved: Round Round World


R65: Red Balloon
Solved: Piccoli


R66: rufus2
Solved: Rufous Redtail


R67: Rhinoceros with pillow on horn
Solved: Bertram and the Ticklish Rhinoceros


R68: Ralph of the Roundhouse series of books
Solved: Ralph of the Round House


R69: Rich Family & Poor Family
Solved:  The Fence: a Mexican Tale


R70: Receipe, children's, non-edible, fun
One page in a children's book. Drawing of a six-year-old girl in front of a mud puddle, throwing sticks and leaves into the water. Below the drawing is a receipe written like a poem. The details of the receipe are to throw flowers, leaves and sticks into the water.

R70 Do you suppose  this is it?  Winslow, Marjorie. Mud pies and other recipes. illus by Erik Blegvad.Colllier, 1961. recipes from mud and plants to serve to dolls
Silverstein *or*  Prelutsky.  R70  You give no date, but wondering if this couldn't have apperared in a poetry collection? Shel Silverstein illustrated his own, black line drawings, kind of shaky, on white. Jack Prelutsky also specializes in silly, yucky rhymes.



R71: Rosemary Rose, a friend to man
Solved: London Men and English Men


R72: rocking horse
Solved:  Dapple Gray


R73: Ruth and Rebecca or Sara
Book about two girls, I read in the 1950's.  Ruth and Rebecca or Sara or ..  Story about celebrating a jewish holiday.
Maybe in a series.

Are we sure this isn't All-of-a-Kind Family again?  That series pops up a lot and most of the chapters are titled and could "stand alone" as a single story.
The sisters in All-of-a-Kind Family are named Gertie, Sarah, Henny (Henrietta), Charlotte, and Ella.
Thanks but no it's definately not "All of a kind" as there were only two girls in the story.
Could it be What the Moon Brought, short stories about Jewish holidays with twin girls named Ruth and Debbie?



R74: Rose, dragontail
Solved:  Firerose


R75: Rich Girl
Solved: Maida's Little Shop


R76: Runaway Baby Buggy
Solved: Billy Brown: The Baby Sitter


R77: Rainy Day Kids inside
Solved: Open Your Eyes


R78:  Rainbow--child travels through rainbow lands
Solved: Once Upon a Rainbow


R79: RACOON
Solved: Five Little Raccoons


R80: Reversible Book
A book about a group of people (or toys) that go on a journey or adventure.  The most interesting thing about the book is that you could read it starting at either end.  The back half of the book would be upside down as you read from the front.  On the center page, both stories/adventures met up.

This reminds me of Ann Jonas' books, particularly Round Trip.  It's done in black and white -- a car takes a trip to the city, and when you reach the end of the book, you flip it over and you take the trip back to the country.  The illustrations take on a different perspective when you flip the book upside-down.  But since the two 'stories' don't meet in the middle of the book, I don't think this is what you're looking for.
Tops & Bottoms, '90's?  Can't remember the author but I think this was a Caldecott honor book or winner. However, the book flips up instead of turning pages left-to-right. Involves a lazy bear, I believe.



R81: Rags
Solved: Make Room For Rags

R82:Run Away Home
Solved: Run Away Home


R83: Robin Hood, glossy green cover
Solved: The Merry Adventures of Robin Hood


R84: Rabbits overcoming prejudice
A white rabbit who is prejudiced against brown rabbits is hit by a car. The doctor who saves his life is a brown rabbit.


R85: rowboat short story
looking for a short story from a grade school reader. A poor father takes his daughter out in a rowboat in a harbour intending to drown her to save her from the fate of growing up in poverty in the evil port city. He looks at the sky and decides not to.


R86: red hair, twins
Solved: Kissed by Magic
I remember very little about the book i need help finding.  I do remember that the guy is the assisstant for the girl.  The girl has been burned by a bad marriage to a tennis pro I think.  The man is wealthy. He tricks her into going away for the weekend on a "business" trip to acquire  some business that he owns. I do remember that all the women in his family have red hair. In the end they are married and she is pregnant he tells her she is carrying twins and they will have red hair and what they want to be named. Help!!!!!

Kay Hooper, Kissed by Magic, 1983. "Rebel Sinclair's new assistant Donovan Knight knows her so well it's ALMOST like he's reading her mind."  Published as Loveswept I think, this was reprinted in 2004 in an anthology called Enchanted.   Donovan has a large, quirky family of mostly redheaded psychics.


R87: Railroad locomotive dream
Solved: The Wonderful Locomotive


R88: Rutabaga
A friend of mine remembers a book (she thinks it was a "Golden Book" ) that had a character named Rutabaga. I don't think it's the "Rootabaga Stories," because she said there was an actual character named Rutabaga and I'm not sure there is one in the Rootabaga Stories (I've never read them).  Can you help?

I wrote this stumper and have more information to provide. My friend said that she thinks this was a golden book or a similar format. It was about rutabagas more so than an actual character she thinks. She can't really remember much more than that. Any help is appreciated!
Is it possible that this might be a Margaret Wise Brown book? There are two books, The Little Farmer, and Two Little Gardeners, which I cannot find summaries for -- does anyone know if either of these books might be about growing rutabagas?
Book was printed in the 1940's early 1950's (in Golden Book format if not an actual Golden Book) telling the story of a family or farmer or children planting rutabagas, growing them, eating them.
Two Little Gardeners doesn't have anything to do with rutabagas.  It simply tells the story of two gardeners as they plant a garden and watch it grow throughout the year.



R89: Rabbit and a cable car
1978-1980.  It is a children's chapter book.  About a small town a full size rabbit (human size) and it rides the cable car.
R90: Richard Scarry

Solved: What do people do all day?


R91: Racehorse story from horse's viewpoint
Solved: Old Bones: The Wonder Horse


R92: Red Adair Canadian hunter
I grew up in England in the 1950’s and remember reading a hardcover book that in think originally belonged to my father and so was from the 1920’s or 30’s and published in England. It was a book about the adventures of hunters and trappers in the wilds of Canada. I think there was a main character whose name was Adair or perhaps Red Adair. Can anybody recognize the book from this brief description?

I am writing only to comment on the name of Red Adair.  Red Adair was a famous fighter of oil well fires in the U.S.
Charles G D Roberts, or Ernest Thompson Seton.  Might be worth checking these authors
Grey Owl.  Another possible author-this is a follow up to my suggestion yesterday re Charles G D Roberts and Ernest Thompson Seton.  The thing is, an awful lot of Canadian fiction at that time dealt with trappers, hunters, frontier life, and animals! 



R93: Rainy day walk in new zoris
Solved: A Pair of Red Clogs


R94: Redwood naturalist
Solved: Redwood Pioneer


R95: Rocking horse becomes real at night
Solved: Merrylegs the Rocking Pony


R96: Rufflehead/Russian folk tale
Solved: The Richest Sparrow in the World


R97: Rocking horse becomes real at night
Solved: Dapple Gray


R98: Red headed twins
Solved: Under the Mountain


R99: Russian girl, boarding school, Decembrist Revolution
Solved: Masha


R100: Reasonable Rabbit
Solved: The Boss of the Barnyard and Other Barnyard Stories


R101: red, white and green torches
as a child I read a book but don't know the title or author. it was in the 70's about children using torches with coloured lenses as codes which they used to warn each other about someone i think it was men,coming to get them as they hid in houses or old buildings, not sure but i think it was in set in england and about post war but could be wrong.

Michael de Larrabeiti, The Borribiles



R102: Russian emigre autobiography Siberia exile
The book is written in the first person and is the actual account  of an individual's experience in Eastern Siberia along the  Chinese and Mongolian border.  The time of his adventures coincide with the Bolshevik Revolution which exiled him.  The author was one of the privileged classes under the Csars but I don't recall if he was titled or just a member of the gentry.  In the foreword or first chapter, the author attests to the absolute truthfulness of his account, since some of it, especially the Mongolian mysticism, is astounding.  The events probably took place 1910- 1925, and the book written in the 1930's when the author lived in Europe, perhaps France or Switzerland.

This isn't poster's book, but while searching, may want to read Peter Dickinson's Skeleton-in Waiting, a mystery which has a plot about someone who has written just such a book. Second in his books about a fictional British Royal family. (Based on premise that the real Prince Albert Victor does not die, so his fiance Mary marries him as scheduled rather than his brother the future George V.) As all of Dickinson's books, a wonderful read. Forst one is King and Joker.



R103:  Red and Pink Ribbons
Solved: The Funny Guy


R104: Revolutionary War Girl
Story of a young woman in the Revolutionary war, who manages somehow to be part of many major parts of the war, from Philadelphia/Trenton (and maybe Valley Forge) to Battle of Yorktown. George Washington is in the book, and a handsome young soldier (of course). I think this is a classic story about the war; title is probably the heroine's name.

Elswyth Thane, Dawn's Early Light, 1938.  It's been decades since I read Thane's seven-book Williamsburg series, but maybe this is what you're looking for.
By name only- Jenny Lee, Patriot by Anne Emery-1964.?? Maybe?
Gwen Bristow, Celia Garth, 1959, approximate.  I thought of this old favorite, but it was set in Charleston.



R105: room house windows walls
Solved: House Without Windows and Eepersip's Life There


R106: Red haired sisters
Solved: Eric's Girls


R107: Runaway girl
Solved: Charley


R108:  Red-haired princess on cover
My mother remembers this pre-World War I book (she was born in 1911), that was a book of fairy tales. She guesses it may have been Grimms. This edition had a princess with flowing red hair, like a Botticelli painting she says.  It sounds like an art-nouveau, Beardsley-esque illustration, when the hair was all like that.

Could this be an Oz book, perhaps Ozma of Oz?  The John R. Neill illustrations were very like the description.



R109:  Rusty, space traveller
Solved: Rusty's Space Ship


R110:  Romance novel
Solved: The Wolf and the Dove


R111: Runaway dog that eats too many biscuits at bakery
Solved: Benjy's Dog House


R112: Rosemunde
I am looking for a romance novel that I read in hight school, between 1979-1981 titled either Rosemunde or Rosamunde. Just leave Pilcher out of the search, she has nothing to do with this. It's a historical romance novel, the cheesy kind that high school girls love to dream about. I read it in 1980 and it's titled either Rosamund, Rosamunde or such. It's about a beautiful young woman who is kidnapped by the bad guy who secretly is an heir to an estate and they fall in love even though they are enemies.  I wish I had more, but if I did I could find this myself. Good luck, Jim.

Well, it's NOT Rosamund by Julia Murray (Hale, 1978).  That Regency plot involves twin brother and sister robbing coaches, and Sir Hugh, the man who their father hopes will marry Rosamund - even efter he's one of their robbery victims.  Possibly - Rosamunda by Marjory Hall (Dell, 1974) - couldn't find and description of that one.
Rosemary Rogers, Sweet Savage Love. Perhaps it is by Rosemary Rogers.  She wrote a series of love books about Steve and Ginnie, who are enemies, but fall in love. Other books are Dark Fires, Lost Love, Last Love, and a newer book called Savage Desire.



R113: Rosa
Solved: Rosa-Too-Little


R114: Russian Women Flee to FortRoss
Solved: Another Place Another Spring


R115: Rhinoceros
this book was probably written in the late 60's or early 70's. All that I remember is that it was a pretty dark (content and somewhat art) and at one point involved a rhinoceros. Like someone was walking in the dark and the next thing they knew they were in a pen (maybe with a concrete wall at a zoo) with the rhino. I also recall a castle or big house and maybe cobblestones. I sometimes think of frankenstein's monster when I recall this book. There may have been a doctor or scientist involved and maybe electrodes or vacuum tubes.

R116: Riddle game, rose trellis
Solved: The Big Joke Game


R117: Rabbit runs away from home
No longer solved as Morris's Disappearing Bag
This is a long shot.. ! I'm looking for a children's book about a rabbit who has lots of brothers and sisters who irritate her, so she runs away from home. The only detail in the book I can remember is that one little brother (whose name may have been Tommy) does something to her lipstick. And it doesn't have anything to do with Easter bunnies.  :)  I read it when I was 4 or 5, so I'm guessing it wasn't a chapter book or anything!

Felecia Bond, Poinsettia
.  Poinsettia is a pig, not a rabbit.  But she has a lot of brothers and sisters and wishes there was more room in her house
Gay, Zhenya    Small one. Viking,  Junior Literary Guild, 1968.  rabbits; runaways; separation from parents - juvenile fiction
This is NOT Small One by Z. Gay.  In that story, Small One was frightened by a noise out of the safety of the bushes where his mother left him and his brothers and sisters.  He then gets lost and spends the rest of the book looking for his mother.  No lipstick in this story.
R117 Google has 144,000 entries under rabbit lipstick!
How about Morris's Disappearing Bag by Rosemary Wells.  On Christmas morning, Morris's brother Victor gets a hockey outfit. Morris's sister Rose gets a beauty kit. Morris's other sister Betty gets a chemistry set. And Morris gets a teddy bear. His siblings all tell him he's too little to play with their gifts. Then Morris finds one last present under the tree (a disappearing bag) and discovers just the diversion he needs to keep the others busy--while he enjoys their toys!  One picture shows him trying out the lipstick.
R117 Wells, Rosemary.  Morris's disappearing bag; a Christmas story.  Dell, 1975.  rabbits; Christmas; youngest child; sharing.
Susan Pearson, Molly Moves Out.  The second query under Morris' Disappearing Bag on the Solved M page probably isn't seeking Morris.  The answer is more likely to be Molly Moves Out by Susan Pearson.  Although there is makeup in Morris, Molly has a little brother who gets in her lipstick (and paints his face), and she is the one who runs away to live elsewhere in Molly Moves Out.


R118: rapunzel, rumplestiltskin, and frog prince
I am trying to find a children's book from the 70s that contained 3 stories, rapunzel, rumplestiltskin, and the frog prince.  It had gorgeous illustrations.  I think the book size was approx 8 x 10.  Thank you.

R119: Robin caretakers and the bird ball
Solved: The Tune is in The Tree


R120: Rosie choosing a religion
Solved: A Year in the Life of Rosie Bernard


R121: Runaway boy adopted by homeless man
I read this children's book in 1961 when I was 10.  The story starts with a young boy who gets caught swearing by his babysitter.  When the babysitter threatens to wash his mouth out with soap the boy runs away and is adopted by a homeless man whose real son died in a tragic accident and is in denial.  The homeless man thinks the runaway boy is his dead son and takes him to live in the woods with his friends.  They go berry picking and live off the land for a while until the homeless man realizes that the kid is not his son and returns him home.  The boys father is so gratefuol that he immediately hires the homeless man to be his handyman/ auto mechanic.

R122: Rocket Ship, Barber Chair, Children's book
 I am looking for a children's book that I am guessing was published in sometime in the mid 1950's - mid 1960's about a boy and his friends (or possibly his brother) who build a rocketship to the moon.  I do not remember the title or author at all, however the one notable thing I do remember is the boys in this story were whiz-kid inventors and at one point build two adjustable-height barber chairs that are able to pump up out of the roof of their house and up hundreds of feet in the air.   There were black-and-white illustrations of this feat, as well as of the spacecraft which they later build, the supplies they bring, etc.  There may have been more than one book written about these characters, but I am not sure about that.   Thank you very much, until I came across your website I had no idea how I was going to start to research this.

Jay Williams, Danny Dunn and the Anti-Gravity Paint, 1964.  This sounds like it could be the Danny Dunn series, about a boy inventor and his friends. Maybe Danny Dunn and the Anti-Gravity Paint, there is a spaceship built in that one.
R122 Total shot in the dark, but could this be THE MARVELOUS INVENTIONS OF ALVIN FERNALD by Clifford Hicks? The book was published in 1960 and republished frequently. There are other books about Alvin, his friend Shoey and Alvin's pesky little sister. However, I can't say if the inventions match. Another possibility is the Mad Scientists Club books (www.madscientistsclub.com)~from a librarian.
William Pene duBois (author and illustrator), The Twenty-One Balloons, 1947.  If you're sure about the rocket ship to the moon, then this can't be the book, but page 109 has an illustration of a brother and sister who design and build adjustable height twin beds that can be raised through skylights on the roof or lowered through their bedroom floor into the bathroom below.
Thanks everyone for your replies, I'll begin to research these suggestions.  Someone locally also suggested that this may be one of Eleanor Cameron's Mushroom Planet books, which are suprisingly hard to find, but I will research that also.   I am not 100% sure about the rocket's destination, but there definitely was space travel involved...thanks again
HRL:  several of the Eleanor Cameron books have been reprinted and are easy to get.  See Most Requested.
Thanks again to all - I would say this is 50% solved - especially for mentioning The Twenty-One Balloons, I do recall reading that as a youngster many years ago.  Perhaps my memory did combine 2 books - I did grow up in the 60's after all...but I still recall a book about children constructing a rocketship - the book had wonderful detailed descriptions of their food supplies, etc.  Thanks again to all.
Robert Heinlein, Rocket Ship Galileo. How about checking the Heinlein juveniles? Rocket Ship Galileo is certainly about 3 whiz kids building their own moon rocket. The barber chair scene is not there, but if you mixed up two books, this could be the other one. Here is a weblink to information about many of his juvenile books here



R123: red childrens story books
1960-65, childrens.  They were hard cover red books and we had 2 volumes  I don't know if more volumes were available.  I think they were adventure-type stories that Middle Elementary students would like, but not related to the little golden book stories as far as I know. There may have been golden lettering on the front cover and I think the volumes were about 2 - 3 inches thick.  One story I fell in love with was about wild horses in a canyon in the "Old West".  I think a white stallion was the "main character".  There were a few color pictures in each book, color paintings on glossy paper, I think.  One of the pictures was of a herd of wild horses in the canyon.  We possibly had them around 1960-65?  the books were 81/2 by 11 or a little smaller than that. thank you

Marjorie Barrows, ed., The Children's Hour, 1953.  The 1953 edition, at least, was red with gold lettering, although the volumes were smaller than the submitter remembers, and my edition has no glossy multi-colored illustrations.  Volume 14 includes "Wild-Horse Roundup" by Gladys Frances Lewis.  My information is from the Vol. 16 Index.  I haven't seen Volume 14.
I think Children's Hour definitely fits the bill! Volume 14 Favorite Animal Stories has a number of horst stories worth checking out!!



R124: rose between worlds
My stumper involves a book that I read for our school librarian in the early 1980's.  (She had me read a bunch of old books that hadn't been checked out in years to determine if we should keep them.)  The book that I am looking for is about a girl who is somehow transported into another world.  She receives cruel treatment from a woman in power.  She befriends a boy/man who is somehow connected to the woman in power. I think the girl travels between the two worlds multiple times. She is drawn back to the other world by the man/boy despite the unpleasant treatment she receives.  Time doesn't operate at the same "speed" from world to world. The last time she goes back to her own world, she finds that her family has changed (father dead perhaps).  The family moves away.  The girl goes back to the old house and she finds a rose on the mantel that is a sign from the man/boy that she loved in the other world.    The key scene in my mind is the one towards the end of the book when she finds the rose.  I don't know if it means that she will be reunited with the man/boy or if it signals the end of their relationship.

I believe I read this book in the early to mid 1970s. I think the boy/man was named Kit and the girl went back in time by going into a closet or mirror or something. I have always wondered the name and author of the book!



R125: raccoon rescue
There was a book that I had either in the late 1970's or early '80's about a woman who took in injured and abandoned wild animals (raccoons, squirrels, etc) and nursed them back to health.  The book was non fiction and was geared toward preteenaged readers.

Harriet Weaver, Frosty: A Racoon to Remember, 1973.  This sound like it could be "Frosty: A Racoon to Remember."  I don't remember the book to well - just that a forest ranger rescued a racoon, and there were stories about her and the racoon. I think it was non-fiction, and the reading level sounds about right, as does the time frame.  Could this be it?
era zistel, orphan, a raccoon.  even if this is not the book/author you are looking for, it is worth checking out all era zistel's books - including The Good Year  and The Gentle People. She wrote non-fiction and fiction, for adults and children. Setting is in the Catskills, New York.
R125 Looking at a good paperback of Tucker's book, I believe it isn't quite right. It is about healthy raccoon [no other critters] who captivates a female park ranger and all the visitors to the California park.



R126: refugee boat
This is a children's novel, about a group of people fleeing their homeland (because of war?) on a small refugee type boat. We saw a young boy's perspective, he has a friend who is a girl, and there is a particular scene where he shares his last piece of gum with her even though it makes them both really thirsty and they have water rationing. There is also a chapter where another larger boat appears in the water and all the women on board have to hide under the deck. One man hides coins in his shoes which are taken off him, another man is thrown overboard to drown and the large ship takes his wife. i think the title is like 500 or 500 miles or kilometres or something like that. The book what read to me at school in Australia 1993. i think it had a blue cover with a picture of a boat on it and red lettering for the title. the only thing i could find was 'boy overboard' by Morris Gleitzman and it's not that book.

Wartski, Maureen Crane, A boat to nowhere, 1980.  Philadelphia: Westminster Press.  Tells the story of a grandfather and his two granchildren Mai and Lok.  Along with runaway Kien, they leave their remote country village and sail on an open boat on the South China Sea.  They are aiming for Thailand but are refused permission to enter when they arrive.  After taking refuge on Outcast Island, they endure more hardship and the grandfather passes away.  They set out to sea again and are eventually rescued by an American freighter.  There is a sequel called A long way from home. 



R127: Robots battle the forces of Satan short story
Solved: The Battle


R128: Russian girl learns ballet
Solved: Katrinka, the Story of a Russian Child

R129: Rabbit stuck on desert island, finally escapes
Solved: The Adventures of Benjamin Pink


R130: Ringdinkydoo
I'm looking for a (young) kid's book I read in the late 70s or early 80s. I don't recall much about the book, except that there were several animals off on an adventure in a boat called the Ringdinkydoo. The lines that stick in my head still are: "I am the captain, you are the crew! Sailing the waves on the Ringdinkydoo!" Unfortunately, searching for Ringdinkydoo hasn't turned up anything for me. Thanks for your help

?Edward Lear.  I'm not sure about this, but from your description it sounds like it could be one of Edward Lear's poems. Hope this helps.
I looked up Lear's work and I don't think it's the right solution. The book I recall was a children's picture book with lots of colors - not the line drawings like Lear produced.



R131: Reflections
girl who is obsessed with reflection, very pretty, watches herself in storefront windows, mirrors, had dark hair.  I remember reading this in the 1970s possibly as part of monthly books I received from book club. Illustrations were pastel colors-- I remember pinks and the girl had short dark hair

Elizabeth Enright, The Saturdays.  Don't know about the illustrations/pinks, but there is one part of The Saturdays where one of the girls is out by herself, and she watches her reflection in store windows and hopes people are thinking things like "who is that beautiful girl with the mysterious smile"?
I remember this book. The girl had short hair and looked a little like Twiggy. She spent so much time looking at her reflection, she fell down (a manhole?)
and was all bandaged up.
Mary Poppins had such a fetish, but it wasn't the focus of the story.



R132: Russian-American marriage
About 30 years ago I read a book about America in the late 1800's, involving Russian immigrants and American pioneers.  One of the Russian immigrants was named Karl, and he fell in love with an American girl.  The girl also was attracted to an American boy, that her family really wanted her to marry.  However, almost against her will, she fell in love with Karl.  Her father was prejudiced and would not accept the marriage.

R133: Red Feather
Message: Red Feather early 1940's about a changling, a girl named rosemary, and faeries.

Fisher, Marjorie, Red Feather, 1950.  illus by Davine.  subject headings: fairies and kings and rulers
the red feather someone "solved" is incorrect.  it was 1940's or 30's and not about kings and rulers. my mom, who is searching for the book, is a librarian and she said there are a few books with the same title but she has been unable to find the correct one. note, she is retired and never used modern searching software.
Fischer, Marjorie, Red Feather, 1937.  This is in the solved file with the following description:   In Fischer's story, mortals are indeed prized for their housekeeping abilities, and so the Queen of Fairyland wants a mortal maid.  The changeling is made, alas, a little too perfect in every detail, and when interrupted in the swap the fairies can not tell for sure which baby is human and which fairy.  Was the human or the fairy whisked away to work in Fairyland? In which world does Rosemary and in which does Lisa belong?   The Queen does, indeed, inspect for cleanliness by running a white-gloved hand over surfaces she is outraged to find gold dust.  I believe this really is the book you are looking for - everything seems to match.
Marjorie Fischer, Red Feather This is definitely it. I just read the book last year.



R134: Red brick anthology
Solved: Book Trails


R135: Red-haired boys gang
There is a children's book where children go to this world/land where there are no adults.  There is also a gang of red-haired boys.  I want to say that it was from the 1970's or 1980's, but I'm not sure.  Does anyone know the title of this book? Thank you!

Philip Pullman, The Subtle Knife.  I think when Lyra goes to Cittagazze there are only children left and they have red hair.  I don't have a copy on me to check.  This book was probably published a little later than the poster has indicated.
The mystery of the “Red-haired” gang of boys has not been solved yet, but I appreciate the speedy guess.  The Subtle Knife is too recent of a book and it was not a YA book. Thank you and I look forward to solving the mystery.
Nelson, O.T., Girl Who Owned a City, 1975.  A real long-shot of a guess -- might this be O.T. Nelson's The Girl Who Owned a City? The lack of adults and the presence of gangs definitely fit (the young protagonist, Lisa, is striving to survive & rebuild society in a post-apocalyptic world in which plague has killed all adults, with marauding gangs but one of her challenges) but I don't remember the book well enough to say whether red-hair plays any part whatsover.
Stanley Kiesel, Skinny Malinky Leads the War for Kidness.  (1980, approximate)  Skinny Malinky leads a group of kids to fight Mr. Foreclosure who is trying to put all the kids into a machine that will make them well-behaved and nice (remove all the "kidness").  His only adult helper is Ida, the cafeteria lady.  I think Mr. Foreclosure turns out to be an ant.
Pierre Berton, Secret World of Og, 1996, llustrated by Patsy Berton.   This might be a long shot, but the group of children in this book are all red-headed, though not all boys.  They travel to the land of Og, filled with small people (not "adult" sized), in search of their baby brother Pollywog.  All the children's names start with P.  It was a TV special in the 80s.



R136: Roly-Poly Policeman
Basically, it's an illustrated story about this little dog in the neighborhood who is always going into the butcher's shop & stealing strings of hot dogs or sausages & a fat policeman with a billy stick & on foot who is always trying to capture the dog. That's all I can remember.

There's a fat policeman in the Raggedy Ann and Andy series....
Margaret Wise Brown, The Little Fat Policeman, 1950.  I'm not sure this is right.  It is a Little Golden Book that was illustrated by the Provensens (the same team that did The Color Kittens).  I think the book contains more than one "story."  I never had the original book but had a Golden Book antology that had a couple of them.  I remember one about an elderly woman who drove too fast because she was always singing "Shine little glow worm, glimmer, glimmer" to herself, and another where the fat little policeman saved someone who was swimming.  I don't remember this story, but the description of the policeman is consistent with the Provensen illustrations.
R136: Probably The Great Big Happy Book by Caroline and Judith Horowitz, illustrated by Margery Deckinger, published in 1947. Here's a description from BookSleuth: "Some characters in it included the Roly-poly policeman, and a poem about a little old lady and a little old man. One of the lines was "he combed his hair with the back of a chair and played ping-pong with a polar bear." There was also one about a little lady who kept shrinking. Illustrations show a little woman in a purple dress, sitting in a chair. In each drawing, the woman is smaller and the chair begins to look huge. It may have come from England. It's probably from the 1920's or 30's." 



R137: Robinson Crusoe's grandson
Looking for a teen book written (published) in 1896 about a cabin boy who is shipwrecked with a man who says he is the grandson of Robinson Crusoe. They have to do everything exactly like the grandfather did -- it is a great book and I am looking for the name and the author. Name was something like Robinson Crusoe Revisted. I think the author's first name was James.

R138: Rules and Things Number 29
Solved: Bud, Not Buddy


R139: Rockets, fly, boy, space, sky
Solved: Rick Brant:  Rocket Jumper


R140: Rags Tags Wags & Obadiah
 Rags, Tags, Wags, and Obadiah are 4 puppies in a Golden Book I read and read as a child in the mid to late 60s. They are drawn in the manner of The Poky Little Puppy, but with clothing.  (This NOT Lillian Obligato's work in 4 Little Puppies, NOR the black-and-white photo book published by Schachman in the 1950s)  I'm going slowly mad trying to locate it - please help! Thanks.

Frees, Harry Whittier, Four Little Puppies, 1935.  another of Frees photo books originally published by Rand Mcnally in 1935, republished by Shackman in 1983.
Anon  Four little puppies.  Wags, Tags, Rags, and Obadiah, puppies photographed in clothes raking the lawn, reading books and newspapers, etc. - presumably by Harry Frees.   Merrimack Publishing Corp [reprint of antique edition] c1983
Thank you for the info, however the book I am seeking is ILLUSTRATED, and not a photo book.
Ruth Dixon, Four Little Puppies, 1957.  Have you looked at the Rand McNalley Elf Book, Four Little Puppies by Ruth Dixon?  Yes, this book does used photographs of the puppies, but they are COLOR photographs, and in my opinion, really look more like illustrations than photos. I've seen two different covers on this book - the first is yellow, with pictures of just the four dog's heads against a yellow background, wearing hats. (A blue cap, like an engineer, a straw farmer's hat, a green top hat w/ red hatband, and a red hat w/ a green band.) These are four separate pictures, one of each dog, not one picture of all four dogs together. Honestly, if I just saw the cover, I'd swear that the pictures were drawn/painted, and not photographed.  I've seen this one listed online as a Famous Elf Book, Elf Book #8335, and Tip-Top Elf Book #8597.  There is also at least one other cover. This one is pink, and shows a single picture of the four puppies standing side by side on a grey floor. (One puppy is in a blue pointed cap, purple shirt, and green pants. Another is in a green/red top hat, red jacket, red & yellow striped shirt, and blue pants. One is in a yellow pointed cap, yellow striped shirt, green pants, and red suspenders, and the last is in a red cap, blue shirt, and red pants.) Again, the puppies on the cover look more like illustrations than photos. Harry Frees is credited as being the photographer in these books, but these are NOT black and white pictures, so maybe his b&w photos were hand colored and/or retouched for these editions? That might explain why you remember the book as being illustrated, instead of photographic?  It's at least worth a look - maybe one of those covers will look familar to you.



R141: rose growing out of man's ear
Solved: A Rose for Mr. Bloom


R142: Reading book with short stories
This was a school reader that I inherited from the school where my dad worked. The school must have been purging all their 1940s-era books when I was a child in the 1970s! The book was maybe a thrid-grade level reader. It was hardback with a blue cloth cover, definitely a late 1940s book, with beautiful illustrations, maybe an inch or inch-an-a-half thick. The book had fifteen or twenty short stories. One of the stories I remember from the reader involved a girl going to her grandparents' farm and riding the huge workhorses. Another story was about a girl who made Valentine sugar cookies for each of her classmates, with their names piped on top...she was distraught because she didn't have money to buy fancy paper Valentines, but the kids loved their special cookies. I've been dying to find this book for years and years!

More Friends and Neighbors.  This doesn't fit the description exactly but may be worth looking into- More Friends and Neighbors is a school reader published by Scott, Foresman, and Company.  My copy is from 1946-47.  Among many other stories it includes 'The Surprise Valentines' by Ethel M. Legg.  In this story Betty's paper valentines are ruined when snow blows in the window the night before Valentine's day.  Her mother helps her make valentine heart cookies for her class and she brings them in after lunch.  She wants to put her friends names on them but her mother says it doesn't matter and there's one for everyone in the room.  Her friends love the cookies and say they are the 'best valentines of all'.  The book does also include some stories about children riding an old farm horse called 'Sleepy Sam'.  Some other memorable stories include 'The First Woodpecker' about a woman turning into a woodpecker, 'Mrs. Goose Forgets' by Miriam Potter, 'The Rabbit who wanted Wings' by Carolyn Bailey.  I hope this is your book.
Mildred Lawrence, Valentines for America, Anya is a immigrant to the united states and does not find out about Valentines Day until it is too late to buy fancy paper. Wanting very badly to fit in she makes Valentines out of cookies and writes each childs name in white icing. Her classmates, of course, enjoy the yummy "valentines". And the teacher asks Anya to tell her parents "...how glad we are to have such fine new Americans in our country" To which the girl replies, "Oh thank you, please.", after which Anya is afraid the class will laugh, but everyone is just too busy eating their valentines to notice the misuse of Enlgish that she had been teased for prior.
 I haven't heard of the other tale. Good luck finding your reader.



R143: Raccoon eating manners
Illustrated book about a raccoon who has to learn to chew with his mouth closed.  I think he eats pancakes in the story.  I had this book as a child in the late 70's or early 80's.

R144: Running away from home
Looking for a child’s picture book I read in the mid 70s. Possibly about a boy running away from home to live in the wild. (not Where the Wild Things Are)  Picture I remember was of a giant tree with various levels of a tree house supported throughout it, and a cave and campfire nearby.  Sorry about the lack of info (but if I had more details it wouldn’t be a “stumper” would it?)

Jean Craighead George, My Side of the Mountain, 2001, reprint.  Could My Side of the Mountain be the book? Here is a review: "Every kid thinks about running away at one point or another  few get farther than the end of the block. Young Sam Gribley gets to the end of the block and keeps going--all the way to the Catskill Mountains of upstate New York. There he sets up house in a huge hollowed-out tree, with a falcon and a weasel for companions and his wits as his tool for survival. In a spellbinding, touching, funny account, Sam learns to live off the land, and grows up a little in the process. Blizzards, hunters, loneliness, and fear all battle to drive Sam back to city life. But his desire for freedom, independence, and adventure is stronger. No reader will be immune to the compulsion to go right out and start whittling fishhooks and befriending raccoons."
R144: Andrew Henry's Meadow? See Solved Mysteries.



R145: Rhino with glasses
Solved: Rupert the Rhinoceros


R146: Rosemary is for Rememberance; Ghost story
Solved: The Phantom Carousel and Other Ghostly Tales

R147: Reform school boys find River Styx
This one's been driving me nuts for years.  I read this book as a kid, probably in the early to mid 1980's.  It was the story of a group of boys who are brought to a reform school.  They find a tunnel or cavern of some sort, and end up going on an adventure.  In the tunnel, they find a river they refer to as Styx.  I remember small details, like the fact that one of the boys tried to hide some money in some drums he was bringing to the school, but both the money and drums were confiscated.  The boys hid contraband on the roof of their cabin (before the underground adventure) and accessed it via one of the windows.  The hardcover edition of the book was primarily warm (red, orange) colors, and I seem to remember it featuring the boys in some sort of all-terrain vehicle.  Any ideas?

Dan Simmons, The River Styx Runs Upstream, 1982.  I googled the keywords and came up with this, don't know whether it's right or not, but the synopsis was something like, "A young boy's mother dies and the father decided to ressurect her" Look it up and see what you think!
Definitely not Dan Simmons. The River Styx Runs Upstream : a boy tells of his mother's resurrection, and the aftermath.
I don't know the book sought, but I do know the Dan Simmons story suggested and can verify that the Simmons story is not that book.



R148: Raking leaves protest
a public school library book in the 1970's. It was about a man who hated racking his leaves in the fall so he cut all of his trees down.  Then he realized what a mistake he had made.  In the spring his land was wet, muddy, and yucky. In the summer his house was too hot.  I believe he replanted tree at the end.

Ernst, Kathryn, Mr. Tamarin's Trees, 1976.  Mr. Tamarin comes to regret his vengeance on the trees for shedding their leaves all over his beautiful lawn.



R149: Rhoda gets stung by bee
Solved: Stanley & Rhoda


R150: Red Balloon -ish
I am looking for a children's book that was read to me in the early 80's. It was real pictures, NOT illustrations, and had a feel like "The Red Balloon". I have some semi-vague memories, but I know there were kids (I feel like a white boy and a black girl, who had an afro, and they wore very late 70's early 80's clothes....bellbottoms, etc.). They ate a HUGE bowl of ice cream, and there was a HUGE circle lollipop, as big as their heads. I think it melted, and it might have been on the roof of an apt. building, in a big city like New York. I can't find this anywhere, and these are all of the details I know. Please help! I think what makes it stand out was that it was photographs, not illustrations. Thanks!!!

I think the book you're talking about may just be called Colors.  I don't think it had any words.  I used to "read" it to my kids in the 80s, but it was old then...


R151: Royal boy stops assasination
I'm looking for a book I read in grammar school, between 5th and 8th grade (I graduated 8th grade in '72). I don't remember the title nor the author so I'm hoping someone can recall from the following description. I'm thinking the story may have been a couple decades old by the time I read it so somewhere between '30's & '60's maybe? It had a black cloth cover and I think there may have been some kind pattern all worn away. I believe the title had the word "Black" in it. The story starts out where a young boy is living on a farm with a family in medieval England. He believes the man is his uncle and his parents died when he was young. One day a man (a Lord or a Lord's man) comes to the farm and it comes to light that the boy is in some way related to royalty and possibly an heir. The man he believed was his uncle had taken him in to protect him. The boy is taken to a castle to be trained for his station in life. He's actually being used as some type of pawn but he's initially unaware of it. During his wanderings in the castle, the boy finds a secret passage and explores the castle and hides out because he is unhappy and lonely. I think he eventually makes friends with a kitchen boy/girl...not sure. During his explorations, he overhears a plot to assassinate the king (?) and he tries to find a way to save the day. I also remember something about a tower or a secret tower. Because it's been close to 40 years since I read the story, a lot of the particulars are lost in my mind but I remember loving the story, the boy was a hero. There was no magic or wizards in this story. If anyone has an inkling to the name of this book, I would be eternally grateful. The name, "The Secret Passage" keeps rolling around in my head but I've not been able to turn anything up on the Internet. I now have a grandchild with one on the way and have collected other books from my youth that made a lasting impression. This is the last of them.

Howard Pyle, Otto of the Silver Hand.  Could this be your book?  It is a very old story (originally 1888, I think) and it has many of the elements you describe.  There is a searchable full-text copy of it online if you Google it.
Thank you for your input but it's not the same story. This was definitely an English boy in medieval England. Also, the writing style was not as old fashioned....it seems to me to be somewhere from the '20s through 50's. But I do thank you for your time in trying to solve this.
Geoffrey Trease.  Just a possibility -- maybe one of Trease's historical novels?  They were written in the right time period.
Barbara Willard, A Sprig of Broom. (1971)  This is a longshot, but I read the beginning of this novel a few years ago and recall the protaganist being a boy (named Richard?) who is being transported from the place he grew up to a castle, and it's clear from the narrative voice that something unpleasant is going on -- I think he turns out to be an illegitimate relative of the royal family and he is being used in a plot against them.  Since I didn't read very far into the book I can't be sure if any other details match, but thought I'd suggest it.
Joan Aiken, Black Hearts in Battersea. (1964)  This kind of sounds like a blend of the plots in the books from Joan Aiken's "Wolves Chronicles." "Black Hearts in Battersea" is where the foundling Simon goes to London to attend art school and ends up discovering and foiling a plot to overthrow King James and get rid of the Duke and Duchess of Battersea.
I'm sorry. I can't help you with the title or author - but assuming that you know the school, have you thought of e-mailing the Administration?  They DO keep records - and sometimes for incredible periods of time.  May be worth a try.  Lots of luck.
Norton, Andre, The Prince Commands. This is a close match to your plot, although the boy starts out in an isolated house, not a farm.  A threatening insurgent leader is named Black Stefan, which may account for your recollection of "Black."'



R152: Regeneration of the planet
Solved: The Missing Persons League

R153: Rhyming bear cheerful stories collection
Compilation of cheerful stories about a bear and his daily interactions, everything was in rhyme I believe -- events and conversations -- with colorful illustrations throughout, dark red binding, about 10" by 12" format, not a huge number of pages in all.  Possibly one of a series.

Possibly the Jessie Bear series by Nancy Carlstrom?  Jesse Bear, What Will You Wear? (Jesse Bear, what will you wear, what will you wear in the morning?  I'll wear my pants, my pants that dance, pants that dance in the morning)  Also:  Better not get wet, Jesse Bear / How do you say it today, Jesse Bear?  /  What a scare, Jesse Bear! / It's about time, Jesse Bear, and other rhymes / Let's count it out, Jesse Bear / Guess who's coming, Jesse Bear / Where is Christmas, Jesse Bear? / Happy birthday, Jesse Bear! / Climb the family tree, Jesse Bear!
Could these be the Jesse Bear books by Nancy White Carlstrom? As far as I remember they are all written in rhyme. Titles include - Guess Who's Coming, Jesse Bear and Jesse Bear, What Will You Wear?
Upham, Elizabeth, Little Brown Bear series. (1950's, approximate)  I have a copy of "Little Brown Bear Goes to School," which is dark red and about the size the requester is searching for.  There are cheerful short stories about Little Brown Bear, who often (but not always) speaks in rhyme, although the stories themselves are not in rhyme.  "A riddle and a rhyme, I'm just in time," is an example of his rhyming speech.  I'm not sure how many books are in the series.


R154: Roman Empire, dancing girl, British Grandmother
I am looking for a young adult novel which was published before 1973. It is about a young woman/girl living during the Roman Empire and is employed in a dancing troop.  I remember that she had blond hair (which she had inherited from her British grandmother) which the woman who ran the troop made her cover with a black wig.  I remember that they are on ships in the Mediterranean and that there is drama and romance but little more.  Any leads?  thanks so much!

Bryher (?).  Many of her books are set during the time of the Roman Empire.


R155: Roman conquest of Britain
I am looking for a young adult novel written before 1973.  It takes place right after the defeat of British king Caradoc (used in book) or Cymbelian (alt name) and depects his family's journy  to Rome to be paraded in a triumph. They settle there and convert to Christianity. The daughter marries a Roman, I think.  Any leads?  Thank you.

R155 the subject headings I have on a book that I have sold make me  think it could possibly be Hill, Marjorie Yourd. The secret of Avalon
Maxine Shore, Captive princess.  Told from the perspective of Caractacus's daughter Gladys who takes the name Claudia.
Bryher (?).  Many of her books are set during the time of the Roman Empire.


R156: Red fairy tale anthology
Solved: Around the World Fairy Tales



R157: Running Deer
Solved: Running Deer

R158: Rubies found in a mountain by a pool by children
Children find rubies buried in a mountain by a pool in the woods. I remember a poem in the book written by a man who originally found the rubies but didn't dig them up, about a woman he loved: "One dark rose more lovely than all the ruby fire buried in the mountain by the pool of lost desire." I believe one of the children was very interested in rocks and had a thing about garnets and tourmalines.

It's Mystery Back of the Mountain by Mary Childs Jane, 1960. In one chapter, a sandwich is made out of mustard and marshmallow.


R159: Runaway bear
I'm looking for a book the I owned as a child, but have since lost in the moving. It was about a bear who was always running away, but was always found. The book came with a small stuffed bear, (about 5-6" tall)  that fit in the front of the books cover. The illustrations matched the stuffed toy. It was from the mid 70's. I remember it being a small book. Any help in finding this would be greatly appreciated.
R160: Rocking horse

Published before 1978.  Story about a father or grandfather making a rocking horse for a small boy  the mane and tail of the rocking horse are made of real horse hair  drawings were in bright, dark colors of blue, green, red, brown.  Hard cover. Large book. Reading age 6-8.



R161: Replica dollhouse
This was a children's book I read repeatedly in the late 1960's but could have dated from earlier. A boy and girl (i believe they were brother and sister) move in to an old mansion. I recall that they weren't too happy about it and were bored. There was an black housekeeper. The house had a few mysteries. One was that the housekeeper's son had come home from war (WWII? Possibly Vietnam) and disappeared. The children were playing/exploring the house one day and found a dollhouse that was an exact replica of the house that they were living in. Later on in the story, they discovered a secret trap door in the bottom of the closet inside the dollhouse. They checked the closet in the real house and sure enough, it also had a trap door--and when it was opened, they found the remains of the missing Joe at the bottom of the stairs, he'd apparently fallen.  I know it's not a lot to go on, but I loved that mystery and would love to find another copy. Thank you!

Florence Hightower, Ghost of Follonsbee's Folly. (1958)  You are getting two books confused.  Another Scholastic mystery(I can't remember the title.) has the children find the dead pirate in the basement.  The one you're remembering has the son still be alive and living in the woods, although he does sneak up to the basement at times.
Florence Hightower, The Ghost of Follonsbee's Folly We just finished this book in one of my reading groups, so I'm pretty sure of the identification.
Betty Ren Wright, The Dollhouse Murders. (1983) Is it possible you might have read the book a little bit later, like maybe the early 1980's?  Because if not for the date, this one sounds like it could be the one you're looking for. Twelve-year-old Amy finds an unusual dollhouse in the attic of her grandparents' house. Not only is the dollhouse an exact reproduction of her grandparents' home, but it is also filled with dolls who seem to represent her extended family--dolls that seem to have the ability to move about at will. Amy is soon convinced that the dolls are trying to tell her something and before too long she has uncovered a long-held family secret--that her grandparents were murdered and that her Aunt Claire's then-fiancee was considered a prime suspect in the crime. With the help of her younger sister, who although brain-damaged is very capable, Amy sets out to solve the mystery.
Ghost of Follonsbee's Folly by Florence Hightower, published in 1958.
THanks, but neither of these two proposals is correct. The son was NOT a pirate, nor were there any woods involved. The son's name was Joe. I read this book dozens of times, I'm very sure of the story facts. It was def. NOT in the 1980's. I was in elementary school from 1965-1971.



R162: rainbow missing girl searches
In this book a rainbow is missing or color is missing and a little girl finds the colors one at a time so that each page reveals an individual color as she opens doors in her house and at the end  the whole rainbow is revealed.  I used to take this book to school with me approx. 1974 to 1983?

Harry Coe Verr, Rainbow Brite and the Color Thieves, 1984, approximately.  Your description reminds me of the Rainbow Brite cartoon, where the world is gray and living things are turned to stone. Rainbow Brite rescues the Color Kids and restores color to the world. This book is similar to that cartoon.
Rainbow Brite was suggested but it definately wasn't a rainbow brite book : (  thanks for the suggestion though



R163: Rabbitville
I remember a book about rabbits from my early childhood.  It was likely published in the 1920s-30s-40s.  I believe the first lines are, "Father Rabbit Lived in Rabbitville.  Mother Rabbit lived in Rabbitville," and so on -- there are one or two rabbit children.  They are riding on a streetcar.  There's something in it about a pie and the moon.  Sorry I can't remember more, but I was probably about 4 years old.  (I was born in 1951.)

Serle, Emma, In Rabbitville, 1930.  Also - What They Say In Rabbitville (1935).  These are longer books, over 100 pgs., so if your book was a picture book, these aren't the ones you're looking for.



R164: Runaways w/ green/red codes
I read this book in the late 70s, most likely a scholastic book for teenagers.  It was about a girl and boy (not brother and sister...they didn't live together) who planned to run away.  I think the girl lived with an aunt or something, but the woman didn't like the boy, so the kids had a code to signal to meet somewhere...the boy would call pretending to have a wrong number.  If he asked for something with green in the name she would sneak out to meet him.  If it was red, she would know it wasn't safe or he couldn't make it.  They used names like the City Greenhouse or Mr. Redmond.  They plotted their escape and