Category Archives: Unsolved

188B: Sleeping Beauty, bad faerie, marble-like wings

The only things I can remember from the fairytale book, were that the illustrations were amazing! But I can’t seem to find it through my searching. The specific illustrations I can remember were Cinderella, where the men were made from lizards, the horse were mice, or it might have been the other way round. I think there were other animals or maybe insects used too but I can’t remember. I remember that the men kind of looked like the animals they were transformed from, and the horses too. The dress was huge and ruffled and I remember her hair was huge too, like Marie Antoinette style. And I just remember the intricate details and lots of use of colour. Also, if I remember right I think it was a silk slipper not a glass slipper.

And my favourite and most memorable was the sleeping beauty illustrations. I remember being totally fascinated with the wings of the faeries, they are the most beautiful illustrations of wings I have ever seen. The bad faerie’s wings were kind of marbled, with lots of different colours, kind of like how petrol or oil on water looks if that makes sense? Or like the marbled colours of a bubble. I also think the good faeries wings might have been marbled like that too, but with lighter or softer colours maybe?

I had this book in the early 90’s but it could possibly have been older than that. I don’t remember the book cover or what other stories were in this book. But I do believe one of the stories was called something like ‘The tramp and his nail soup’ Which was a story about a tramp who convinces some woman to let him stay at her house for the night with the promise to make the most delicious soup she’s ever tasted from this nail he has in his pocket. He ends up tricking her by saying stuff like “this would be even better if you had some carrots?” Etc until he has lots of ingredients in the soup to make it delicious. However I am slightly nervous that, that story may have been from another fairytale book, so don’t necessarily rely on that info.

The illustrations are similar in style to Edmund Dulac or Arthur Rackham, but actually I think they’re a lot better.

It could also be possible that different stories are illustrated by different artists.

I’ve been trying to find it for years to no avail. I have just had a daughter and I desperately want to get this book for her. Please, please, PLEASE help!

188A: Children’s creepy poetry collection

The book is very large in size (dimensions). It is a children’s poetry collection that a friend of mine received as a gift and read when we were kids in the late 70’s and early 80’s, although at least a few of the poems were actually written long before. All of the poems were pretty creepy, and there were ink drawn(?) illustrations.

One poem in the collection was ‘Die Geschichte vom Daumenlutscher’ (The Story of the Thumb-Sucker) by Heinrich Hoffmann, although I don’t know if one of those exact titles were used in this collection. The title ‘Snip Snip’ may have been used. Apparently that poem has gone by a few similar sounding titles through the years? It was about a man in a top hat who showed up with scissors coming for a boy who sucked his thumb. Another poem in the collection was Antigonish (I Met a Man Who Wasn’t There) by Hughes Mearns, and again, I don’t know which title was actually used in this collection. A line from that poem was something like “As I was walking up the stair I met a man who wasn’t there. He wasn’t there again today. I wish I wish he’d go away.” The last poem I remember from the collection was about a father who gave his daughter a bath in gasoline because she was mean. (Yikes!)

I would love to find this book and buy it for my friend. Good luck!

187I: Lost bird looking for his family

I’m looking for a picture book about a lost bird looking for his family. The book has lots of voice bubbles to show the bird speaking a language that none of the other animals understand. At the end, the character finds someone who understands him. I believe it was published within the last 5 years. It’s similar to Cuckoo by Fiona Roberton, Beegu by Alexis Deacon, and Little Owl Lost by Chris Haughton.

187H: Boy in plane crashes in Canada lake 1950’s

I read a small boy’s novel in 1950’s about a boy travelling to see his father on a Cessna? (or other small plane) which crashes in a Canadian lake. He befriends an otter (from memory) which catches fish for him, has some adventures and eventually escapes the situation. I have forgotten most of the details but think that he dove down into plane to recover things and had a run-in with a bear. Best thing I can recall is the front cover drawing of the young boy sitting on the lakeside with the otter beside him.

It is definitely not “Hatchet” by Paulsen which appears to be a very similar plot published much later in 1987. I have not read this book but assume it is not a reprint of the original book I am recalling.

187G: BURNING TOE BURIED IN TOBACCO TIN

This is a children’s book that was read to us in class during the mid-1970s, and I think it was more contemporary. It was humorous tales of mountain life. I believe it was from the perspective of a young boy. It is a collection of humorous short stories. In one of them, one of the characters gets his toe gets lopped off by an axe. The toe is buried in a tobacco tin. The amputee is tormented by burning sensation where the toe used to be. He believes it is burning because the tobacco is irritating the severed toe, so the boy has to find the tin, rinse the tobacco off. They do, and coincidentally (?) his pain is relieved.

187C: Shinkin, Shinkin, I am granny Shinkin

I’ m looking for a young adult novel set in Wales (or possibly Cornwall), published in the 1940s or early to mid 1950s (based on my age when reading it). I recall a Customs (Revenue) Officer who was trying to stop smuggling, some accusations of witchcraft involving an old woman who was named Granny Shinkin (or something like that) and, at one point, a massive civil disobedience action where many women all dressed up the same and chanted the words in the stumper title to keep the Customs Officer from arresting the old woman.

187A: “Ghost”

This was a paperback book that I read in the late 1970’s. I believe the story took place in the 1960’s or 1970’s. The cover of the paperback was white and a teenage girl’s face was looking out a window that had lacy curtains and I believe the curtains had daisies or flowers on the bottom of them. The picture on the cover had a sort of lacy dream look to it. The title of the book was “Ghost” or “Ghosts”, I do not know who the author was. Despite the title of the book, it had nothing to do with ghosts, the supernatural, or hauntings. It was a story of a teenage girl’s coming of age with her first high school boyfriend. The girl’s mother does die of pneumonia in the story, but again that is not the main storyline. In one part of the book the girl and her father go put to eat at a diner and the father kills a cockroach that crawls across the table with his thumb (Yuck!). Towards the end of the book the girl decides to stay overnight with her boyfriend and he gives her what is described as a “shy new bridegroom smile”.

186F: children’s magic spells book

It might have been either a Scholastic or Weekly Reader children’s book, from either the late ‘60s or early ‘70s; but I might have just stumbled onto it in a random store.
I think it was a small, thin, hardcover book with a primarily medium-blue cover.
I think it had a relatively simple title, like Magic Spells and Potions, or something like that, but I can’t remember.

What I do remember clearly is my favorite spell in the book, which involved going into the forest and finding fern “seeds” with which to acquire the power of invisibility.