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C1:
Coal
I was apparently
confusing this with Astrid Lindgren's Noisy
Village books. This is a children's novel, and I think the author
is
Scandanavian. It involves a group of kids, and the naughty boy of the
group
gets a lump of coal in his stocking for Christmas. I remember the line:
"The
impossible had happened. He got a lump of coal."
Not much to go on, but maybe one of Dikken
Zwilgmeyer's books, like Four Cousins? He was
writing
in Norwegian, translated by Emilie Poulsson, and wrote about
mischievous
children.
Another possible is Afke's Ten
by Ninke van Hichtum (real name: Sjouke Troelstra-Bokma de
Boer),
translated from the Dutch by Marie Pidgeon, illustrated by Hilda van
Stockum,
published Lippincott 1936, 256 pages. It's the story of 10 children on
a Frisian island through a year. "Mother Afke, Father Marten and
their
ten children. The story begins with the appearance of a new brother and
relates the day to day adventures which make up their lives."
Apparently
as much of a classic in Holland as Little Women is here.
This is apparently quite similar to the Noisy
Village stories: The Hill House by Ragnhild
Chevalier
Williams, illustrated by Kurt Werth, published by McKay 1966, 160
pages
"based
on the author's childhood in Bergen,
Norway, has frequent changes of scene and
introduces new characters from an enormous circle of friends, relatives
and servants. The separate, often suspense-filled episodes re-create
the
fun and mischief of child play, the sharing of handed-down stories, and
the anticipated excitement of special family gatherings and national
festivals."
(Horn Book Feb/66 p.60)
This doesn't really fit, but I keep wanting to
suggest it - Kersti and Saint Nicholas, by Hilda Van
Stockum,
published
by Viking 1940 "Kersti is the seventh, last, and naughtiest
daughter
of the van Disselens, and she has a way with her. Even Saint Nicholas
and
his faithful helper Pieterbass find themselves leaving gifts for the
bad
children on the good Saint's birthday - and it's all Kersti's fault."
(Horn Book Dec/40 p.382 pub ad) It's European and involves naughty
children
and Christmas.
C1 Just verified that Lindgren Xmas at
Noisy Village is NOT it
1970? Beleive it or not,
this might have been published in Cosmopolitan magazine, when
it wasn't so sleazy. I recall that line, about the Impossible, the
thing that wasn't supposed to happend to any child, finally coming
true. There was also a segment where the children lost money to buy a
Christmas tree, and another where a rich relative sends a giant barrel
full of mud. It was rather somber in tone, ending with comments about
WW2.
C8: country
visit
Solved: Eighteen Cousins
C12:
Charlie
the yellow cat
Solved:
Charlie
C16:
Chinese
boats & rice cakes
The other book I
have a harder time remembering but it was a book
set in the orient (probably China) about an oriental boy who rides
around
in a small boat and he has some rice cakes or rice patties with him. It
was highly stylized in its illustration. All the pictures (and the
cover)
were done in almost entirely (if not entirely) green and black ink and
were extremely detailed and intricate, similar to traditional asian
painting
styles. I also think this book didn't have a lot of words. I think it
was
sort of wide and short, like an 8.5x11 sheet of paper turned on its
side.
I'm sure it doesn't help but it always smelled strongly of cheese to me
as a young boy. I now know it was the glue used in the binding (I've
smelled
it in other books).
This might be a book that I think was called Ping,
but
that
involved
a
duck
and
his
"master."
The
duck
(whose
name
is
Ping)
lived
on
the
Yangtze
river
in
a
boat
with
his
master.
One
day,
as
I
recall,
he
goes
exploring.
At
one
point
he
is
lured
by
a
naughty
little
boy
with
rice
cakes
and
is
trapped
under
a
basket.
I
think
Ping
eventually
gets
back
to
his
kindly
old
master.
The
book
was
fairly
short and written for first-graders and was in a landscape
layout.
I don't remember the colors, but I do remember the boats had exotic
looking
eyes painted on their bows.
Well now, I did think about Ping, but I'd forgotten that bit about
the rice cakes (the good master has no mention of rice
cakes!).
But this probably is a match.
Flack, Marjorie. The Story of Ping.
Illustrated
by Kurt Wiese. New paperback available for $6.
Sorry, this is not the book. I checked out a picture of the
cover on Amazon.com. The illustration style is all wrong.
The
book I'm thinking of had very monochromatic drawings, I think just
greens
and blacks and grays, drawn with thin lines like pen and ink.
Thanks
though. Keep looking.
First, relating to C-16 but not necessarily to
be posted (mostly because it wouldn't help any), I remember reading
"Ping"
as a child. Like all my other favorite childhood books, it got put in
the
"give-away" box..... :(
A possible, but no mention of rice cakes: Martin,
Patrica
Miles The Dog and the Boat Boy color illus.
by
Earl Thollander, 48 pages, Putnam, 1969 "The adventures of Chung Yong,
a boy who lives on a boat in Hong Kong's crowded harbor. Chung Yong
wants
to keep a dog he has found, but his grandmother wants a cat which will
kill the mice on the boat. ... The craggy, almost cartoon-like drawings
(in subdued shades of purple, gray, and brown) ... occasional splashes
of bright orange ..."
There's also Chinese Ink Stick
by Kurt Wiese, Doubleday 1929, which includes a little boy who
travels
with his father, a tea merchant. It's 199 pages, though, so probably
too
long. Eleanor Lattimore's Little Pear (Harcourt
1931)
falls into the river and is rescued by a man on a boat, but that's 144
pages.
Another written and illustrated by Eleanor
Frances Lattimore is Fisherman's Son, published by
Morrow,
1959, 128 pages. Small Liang is the oldest of fisherman Liang's
children,
and the only boy. Horn Book says "their daily life on a river boat
in
China is told in ten chapters with simplicity and charm. Pleasing,
clear
type and lively drawings." Size and shape of book not mentioned,
but
apparently for early readers.
Yet another, but finally short enough - Little
Fu, written and illustrated with lithographs by Raymond
Creekmore,
published Macmillan 1949, unpaginated with map, grades 1-3 "Fu has
an
eventful trip down the great Min River to Foochow where his father
sells
his cargo of tea. After an exciting day they go home in a new motor
boat
with steel sides instead of bamboo leaves. The black and white
lithographs
are excellent." (Children's Catalog 1956)
C16 chinese boat: well, the shape is right and
it's about an Asian boy and boats - Nu Dang and His Kite,
written
and
illustrated
by
Jacqueline Ayer, published Harcourt
1959,
31 pages, 10x8". "Unusual drawings with splashes of color - orange,
cerise, coral and green - give a real sense of the busy life of
Bangkok,
the river and canals lined with shops and filled with boats: the
vendors
of lotus and jasmine, curry sauce and chilies; the chick-pea-green-bean
boat; the "all kinds of fish" boat. Nu Dang's search for his kite,
which
the wind had carried away, took him far up the 'long brown river',
through
the Floating Market, into a small canal, through a herd of lazy gray
water
buffalo, past shops and a farm house until he finally turned home ..."
(HB Apr/59 p.121) There's a sample double-page spread shown,
interspersing
blocks of text with detailed line-drawings (NOT brush-style) "Out on
the
big river, he came first to a vendor of sweet cakes and colored water.
'Have you seen my kite?' But the vendor was much too busy to notice a
lost
kite. Nowhere. Not anywhere. No kite at all."
Meindert deJong, The House of Sixty Fathers,
1955. This is a novel, not a picture book, so it may not be the
right
one, but there are enough similarities that it might be worth looking
up.
There is an Asian boy on a houseboat and a scene with ducks, and the
original
cover (illustrations are by Maurice Sendak) fits the description you
gave
somewhat. Look at the library edition cover, not the paperback--both
are
still in print.
retold by Arlene Mosel, ill. Blair Lent,
Tikki
Tikki Tembo, 1968. The illustrations are in black ink
with
green blue and
goldenrod blocks of color. It is about
2 brothers, who disobey their parents and enjoy their rice cakes near a
dangerous well. When the younger brother, Chang, falls in, the
older
brother Tikki Tikki Tembo-No Sa Rembo-Chari Bari Ruchi-Pip Peri Pembo
has
no trouble finding help to get him out, but the next time they are
eating
their rice cakes near the well, and the older brother falls in, Chang
has
a hard time getting anyone to listen to him. There were''t any boats in
this one, but there was a river where their mother was washing
clothes.
I am basing my guess mainly on the mention of rice cakes and the
quality
of the pictures.
Marjorie Flack, The Story About Ping.
This really is the book you are looking for. It was my favorite as a
child
and was delighted to see it available for my sons. I, in fact, found
another
copy at a used book store which is much older and beat up that I read
to
my youngest every night. Keith Weisse is the illustrator. You might be
thinking about what the original looked like. This is Weisse's
trademark
Crayola look. Quite stunning and the "wise eyed boats" are quite
alluring.
But you'\''re wrong about the "boat boy" He wasn't naughty at all
it was his job, as "boat boy" to lure the animals to him. It is what
makes
Ping so charming, the cadance of the "beautiful yellow waters of the
Yangze
River," and the simple life of Chinese fishermen in the 1930s.
C17: Crafts
Also looking for a
childrens craft book
which had a bathing scene made out of salt dough or papier mache. There
were old fashioned bathing huts and lots of people diving into the
water.
C17 crafts: completely whistling in the dark,
but maybe The Bread Dough Craft Book, by Elyse Sommer,
illustrated
by
Giulio
Maestro,
published
Lothrop
1972,
128
pages.
"with
six slices of bread, six teaspoons of white glue and a half a teaspoon
of liquid detergent, a child can learn the basics of a centuries-old
folk
art ... how to mix, color, and work with the dough ... nearly 60 simple
projects that children can create as gifts or decorations." The
finished
projects are apparently only shown as coloured drawings, though, and
don't
sound like the complex scenes described.
C18: Carosel
Horse
Solved: A Book of
Directions
C21: Car,
out-of-date
Solved: Television Book of
Hesperus
C24: Clown,
Wardrobe,
Jousting,
Jacket
Potatoes, Brussel sprouts
I remember reading
this book in Liverpool in the early sixties.
Some of the plot elements are similar to other well-known books, but it
ain't them: family of children are visiting relative with old house,
and
sleeping in the same bed in the attic, which has the usual wardrobe. In
the middle of the night a (very spooky) clown pokes his head out of the
wardrobe and beckons to the children. This image seems to coincide with
a remembered illustration that haunted me for years. They eventually
venture
into the wardrobe which turns out to be a lift (an elevator) with
buttons
that take you to different places. One place they visit is a medieaval
jousting tournament, where they partake of hot jacket potatoes (another
illustration springs to mind). At another location they meet a
White-Knight
sort of character sitting on a Brussels carpet with all sorts of
bric-a-brac
on it, and he makes a joke about whether, if vegetables grew up through
his carpet, they would be Brussels sprouts. Hilarious if you're six,
eh?
I seem to remember that the book itself was a paperback, of the same
kind
of size and format as those students' crib books ("Cole's Notes" in
England),
and that there was a coloured illustration of a proscenium arch stage
with
curtains on the cover. I know the wardrobe is a common prop, but the
book
is neither C.S. Lewis, nor a Glass Elevator. My undying gratitude if
anyone
can identify it!
#C24: Clown, Wardrobe, etc. If
such
a book indeed exists, I want it for a friend! If he likes it, I
want
it for myself! After hours of keyword searches in all sorts of
places,
I may have a resource for you. A site called "Fantasy Finder" has
a message board called "The Board Room." Hopefully this is
one of those places where they "know it, or know who knows it," and
will
be of interest to anyone whose queries involve fantasy.
#C24--This query was also posted on the message
board of the British Fantasy Society in February 2001. As of
June,
no answers.
This query was also posted on the Alibris list.
A number of suggestions were made, but no cigar as yet.
C24---Been a while since I've read it but the
clown thing (esp the illustration) sounds a lot like Diamond in
the
Window by Jane Langton.
C24 Has customer checked Langton yet?
I can ask a friend who has a copy for sale, but I notice there are
plenty
on the Net so I wonder if someone hasn't checked already.
C24 clown wardrobe: had a look at Diamond
in the Window and there's no real correspondance - no clown
figure,
no elevator/lift in the wardrobe, no tournament, no puns. It might be
worth
looking at Erich Kastner's Thirty Fifth of May,
published
1934, reprinted 1958 and 1961, 192 pages. "If this date isn't on
your
calendar, you'll wish it were after reading what happened to Conrad. It
began at the magic door of a wardrobe, and led to the Land of Cockayne,
where fruit salad grows on trees; the the Mighty Fortress of the Past
for
a hello with Hannibal, Julius Caesar and Napoleon; and on the
Electropolis
in Topsy Turvy country, notable for its school or unsatisfactory
parents
to be trained by children! Ages 9-12." At least it starts with a
wardrobe
and looks episodic and nonsensical, but I haven't read the book so
can't
confirm more.
Hey, shall I buzz back to Junior Bookshelf for
the late 50s early 60s? My first thought is Enid Blyton,
because
the structure is reminiscent of the Faraway Tree series
...
but this is almost no help at all because she's so prolific and there
don't
seem to be any annotated bibliographies. And if it is her work, there
won't
be anything in Junior Bookshelf about it, for sure.I'm pretty sure it
isn't
E.
Nesbit because I think I've read all of hers, including the short
stories
- though the one with the little girl shut in her room who discovers
that
the wardrobe/dresser is a magic train station sounds kind of
reminiscent.
Doesn't seem like E. Nesbit to me, and
I don't think it's Edward Eager or anyone well-known, as I
posted
it on a couple of fantasy boards and not even a nibble. The only other
author I thought of was Margaret Storey, but
couldn't seem to find anything of hers pblished
prior to 1965. I hope it's identified--I'm quite intrigued by it.
I'm sorry to say I can't be any more specific.
Whenever I try to remember more detail I think I'm just making it up
from
people's suggestions! The memory of the Coles Notes size and binding
may
be a completely separate affair too. Another memory that springs
to mind, though again, it may be another book entirely, is a story
wherein
the "gateway" is the bottom of a helter-skelter. Did you ever come
across
a helter-skelter? Very old cheap funfare ride, consisting of a
lighthouse
shaped tower with a slide corkscrewing around the outside. One climbs
up
the interior stairs, takes a bristly mat and throws oneself onto the
slide.
They scared the hell out of me, and having read this story where a
little
girl (I think) continues at the bottom into the earth and ends up in
some
spooky place, I never did try it. Thanks again for your help.
I'll
be looking at the King of Kurio this weekend.
Well, still plugging away at this, though not
confident about this suggestion either: The Thirty-fifth of May,
by
Erich Kastner, illustrated by Walter Trier, published
Franklin
Watts 1961, 192 pages. "If this date isn't on your calendar, you'll
wish it were after reading what happened to Conrad. It began at the
magic
door of a wardrobe, and led to the Land of Cockayne, where fruit salad
grows on trees; the the Mighty Fortress of the Past for a hello with
Hannibal,
Julius Caesar and Napoleon; and on the Electropolis in Topsy Turvy
country,
notable for its school for unsatisfactory parents to be trained by
children!
Ages 9-12." (Horn Book Aug/61 p.302 pub ad) This is apparently a
republication,
and of course a translation, so it may have been published with various
illustrators and in more than one country.
C24 clown wardrobe: I'm wondering now if this
wasn't one of the many British children's annuals or "gift books", and
this may have been a single or continuing story in it, perhaps along
with
the helter-skelter story? That would tie in with the memorable
illustrations
and punning humour, as well as the difficulty in IDing it, as these
books
weren't reviewed and there were a lot of them. Still, we got Peter
Puffer's
Fun Book!
C24 clown wardrobe: Not a solution, but perhaps
someone looking for the same book - here's a description: "This is a
book
of children's fiction that I read in the 1950s. I am not sure when it
was
written. It concerns some children who go through an odd door in a wall
and find themselves in a magical land. Fairly common theme but
distinguishing
features are that they can go up and down between parts of this land in
a lift. The children make friends with a queen and her children who
have
been dispossessed of their kingdom - it is now in thrall to a set of 3
monsters - one is called I think the Hobbledee-something or other.
Amongst
the 'goodies' helping the queen and her family is an Elastic Dog who
can
walk miles but leave his back legs at home. A memorable monster is a
squirrel
with an eye in its tail - if it looked at you, you went blind. I would
be delighted to find this book - I used to have to check under the bed
every night to see that squirrel wasn't there, but I loved the book."
Bates, Joan Mary, The Magic Helter-Skelter.
London, Blackie 1959. This is a suggested answer NOT for the
stumper
itself, but for the related stumper mentioned with it, about a
helter-skelter.
This description is from another forum : "It is about Anne who is a
selfish
type and her punishement involves a spell in Topsy Turvey Land where
she
has to walk on her hands and is given the freedom to gorge herself on
chocolate
until she becomes sick of the sight of it. Similar aversion therapy
techniques
are applied to money, and by the time she is allowed to return home she
is transformed beyond recognition."
Sieman, Frank, The Kingdom of Punch.
(London, Eyre & Spottiswoode 1957) Yet another longshot!
"Faith
and Christopher meet an old tramp in the woods who leaves with them a
bag
containing the wooden figures of what he says are the real one and only
Punch, and Judy, and Dog Toby. Because the children show love to them,
these figures become alive with lifelike proportions and take the
children
back with them to the Kingdom of Punch that Punch might regain his
rightfl
throne and depose the tyrannical usurper who has taken his place. Here
we have the adventures of the children and their friends of the Court
of
Punch as Scara the imposter is overthrown. ... constant chatter
reminiscent
of panotomime repartee." However, there are no illustrations.
C25: Country
mouse
cleans
up
I have been
searching for a child's storybook about a mouse who
lives in the country and gets a letter that her cousin (I think) is
coming
to visit. The country mouse's house is in terrible shape, dirty,
clothes all over, dusty, dishes piled high. She doesn't know
where
to begin but all her animal friends pitch in and help her clean
house.
The moral of the story was if she kept it picked up each day, clothes
hung
up, etc., then she wouldn't find her house like that again. I can
still picture her in a red dress all nice and clean with the house all
nice and clean. This was a library picture book and no longer in
circulation. I checked with this library even went through each
book
in the children's section. Thank you very much, would love to
find
this book.
Could it be The Country Mouse and the
City
Mouse. That matches the story in that the city mouse
calls
and is coming to visit the country mouse. My sister and I had
this
on a 45 record that came with a book when we were kids. Good Luck!
I will check this out, I know that I went
through the City Mouse and the Country Mouse. I don't
remember
it being on a record although it might have been but the local library
only had the book. I use to check it out when I was about 6-7 so
that was about 1950 - 51. I did search the website for the
Country
Mouse and the City Mouse after I saw the note on the bottom of mine,
but
I didn't see any that were published that early, so I will have to keep
looking. I even went through the listing of books through the
Library
of Congress under mouse just to try to find it. Do you have any
idea
who would have written this one, maybe knowing the author might
help.
Your website is really fantastic, just reading the others and what they
were looking for also brought back some memories. I thank you for
the chance to post it and hopefully someday will locate it. It
was
such a cute story with a big moral to it, as I said in my posting I can
still see the pictures showing her dirty messy house, the cleaning up
(her
friends helping) and then the picture of her all dressed up in a clean
dress and shoes (red), looking around at her nice clean house, waiting
for her house guest. Thank you again for all your assistance.
The Country Mouse & the City Mouse
is an Aesop tale; there have been so many versions that your
best
hope is to simply stumble across the one you remember. There is a
Wonder
Book from 1947 (Phoebe Erickson, ill.) that contains this tale, Peter
Rabbit,
& Henny Penny. I've seen this one around; check for it -- maybe
you'll
be lucky.
Well, if the emphasis is on cleaning for the
visit rather than on country versus town, maybe: Van Leeuwen, Nans Spring
Cleaning
with
Mrs.
Mouse Amsterdam: Mulder & Zoon, n.d.
(ca.
1968), decorated boards, "lovely colour illustrations throughout the
book,
a real charmer"
There's also Mrs. Mouse Cleans House,
by
Alison Uttley, published Heinemann 1952 "Spring cleaning
always
means a day of bustle and excitement for the Brown Mice at the Rose and
Crown, but the day that scoundrel Rat came to help was the most
exciting
of all." No mention of a city visitor, but the date is closer.
M108 mouse wears red sounds like C25 country
mouse cleans up. The 1950ish date, special occasion/visit, the red
dress
and shoes, ...
C25 mouse cleans up and M108 mouse wears red:
Another possible is Margie Merry Mouse, written &
illustrated
by Willy Schermele (Blyton illustrator), published Clifford
series
1950, reprint Agfa 1986. A mouse in a red dress cleans house with the
help
of friends. If it's the earlier printing it's not a bad match, though I
couldn't find any mention of a visit as the reason for cleanup.
Elizabeth Upham, Little Mouse Dances.
I found this in a basic reader "More Friends and Neighbors" by Scott,
Foresman,
and Co. 1946. It's not exactly as you describe but features a
mouse
who doesn't like to clean and lets the dirt and dust pile up while she
sings and dances all day. Then she buys a new red dress and shoes
and they get dusty so she eventually cleans them up then goes ahead and
cleans up everything else in her house because she enjoys the way the
clean
clothes look. At the end she puts on her red dress, red shoes,
and
a red flower over her ear and dances in her clean house. I hope
this
is what you're looking for.
C26: Crafts
I do not remember
the name or author of two childrens books that
I had when I lived in Cleveland in the late 40's or early 50's. I
may have gotten them in WV or in Cleveland. They are
oversized
books and they contained crafts using simple household items. One
had a green cover and one had a yellow cover. The covers were
hardback
and embossed. They had no paper covers.
I have 2 really old craft books. One is
McCall's
Giant Golden Make-It Book. Copyright 1953 by Simon
and Schuster, Inc., and Artists and Writers Press, Inc.The other one is
newer McCall's Golden Do-It Book. Copyright 1960
bye
the McCall Corporation and Golden Press, Inc.Both of these are crafts
made
with at home items. Perhaps one of these is what they are looking
for.
A long shot, but maybe Toys You Can MakeChicago:
Popular
Mechanics
Press,
1953,
cloth,
160
pages.
"Suggestions
and
diagrams
for
dozens,
perhaps
hundreds
of
toys
you
can
make
for
your
child.
Most
are
wooden,
this
book
being
published
before
plastic
took
over
the
toy
market.
Hence
the
toys
you
can
make
are
much
more
durable
than
anything
you
can
buy
today."
Tangley
Oaks
Education
Center,
Junior
Instructor (Books 1 & 2), 1916, copyright. Our
copies were reprinted for the 40s. They are embrossed yellow and
red not green. Lots of fun projects and readings.
C27: Christian
brothers solve mysteries
The series of
books I'm trying to recall involve two teen age
brothers
who solved mysteries, some what like the Hardy boys. However, the tales
of these brothers had some Christian underpinings. The first book I
read
in the series was sent to me free from a church organization, this
would
have been in the late 50's. Later when I was probably 11 or 12, I found
the series in the Brockton Public Library, Brockton, NY. I further
recall
that the boys lived in some very remote locale.
Don't know if thisis the
series or not, as I
don't
know when they were first published, but it could be Frank
Peretti's
Cooper
Kids Series.
This just might be the Jack Dawn
series by Joseph Coughlin. He wrote a number of titles in the
1940s
and one in the 1960s. I have a copy of Jack Dawn and the
Vanishing
Horses and it is a boys Christian mystery.
C27: Christian Brothers -- Bernard Palmer
had a series about Danny & Ron Orliss -- published
by
Moody Press that was available in the 1950s; that *might* be it
Regarding the Orlis suggestion,
I've finally seen one of these and there are some resemblances. The
book
is very Christian, with more than one conversion and a fair amount of
discussion
of Christian behaviour, and the Orlis family does live in the boonies,
at Angle Inlet, without electricity, television, etc. The title list on
the back cover mentions Ron Orlis as well as Danny,
but
there
is
no
indication
in
this
book
whether
Ron
is
an
older
or
younger
brother,
or
adopted,
or
where
he
is
the
rest
of
the
time.
I think this person might be looking for the
Danny
Orwell series--there was also a radio program that aired on
Saturday
mornings during the late 1950s featuring these boys. I hope I'm
right
about Danny's last name, but the shows (and the books) definitely had a
Christian theme.
Could this be the Sugar Creek Gang
series by Paul Hutchens? The boys in this series weren't
brothers,
but the two main characters were a boy named Bill and his best friend,
nicknamed Poetry. The other members of the group were Dragonfly, Little
Jim, Big Jim and Circus. The other details are similar to what you
describe:
Christian-oriented mysteries, at least one conversion, etc.
Palmer, Bernard, Danny Orlis and the Rocks
That Tal, 1955. Bernard
Palmer
was published through Moody Press and wrote other children's
series.
The Danny Orlis series featured Danny who lived with his parents in
Angle
Point, Minnesota together with adopted twin siblings, Ron and
Roxie.
The books are back in print and are readily available. Danny
orlis
also had an advice column in the Campus Life monthly magazine, as I
recall.
Ken Anderson, The Austin
Boys, 1943-44. It
might be the Austin Boys. Jim & Tim Austin are twin sons of a
missionary couple living on an island in the Coral Sea. There are
only 2 books about them that I am
aware of: "The Austin
Boys--Marooned," and "The Austin Boys--Adrift."
C31: Christmas
angels
Solved: An Angel's Touch
C32: Camping,
unpleasant.
NOT
High Trail!
Solved: Secret Summer
C33: Crocodile
eats
lady,
Sendak
book?
Solved: The Romper Room
Book
of Finger Plays and Action Rhymes
C35: City
girl gets a lesson
Solved: Araminta
C39: Christmas
anthology
Solved:
The Christmas Book
C41: Crispian
the
Scottie
dog
Solved: Mister Dog
C43: Ceremony
goes
(grows?)
awry
Solved: Speaker for the
Dead
C44: Crocodile
raises
duck
Solved:
Sitting Ducks
C45: Civil
War
mystery
Solved:
The Riddle at Live Oaks
C46: Christmas
book
with
Ardizzone-style
illustrations
Solved: Christmas
Secrets
C47: Christmas
tree
star
Solved:
The Santa Claus Book
C48: Cornfields
In 7th grade, we
read a story contained in a text book type
collection
of short stories. (May have been a Lippincott book, but not
sure.)
Anyway, the first story in the book was called Cornfields
I beleive, but am not sure. The first line of the story was,"There was
a girl at Cornfields, yes." I remember I loved the story, and would
love
to re-read it. I was in 7th grade in ...hmmm.. lets see...1974/5?
C48 a long shot maybe Orton, Helen FullerCloverfield
Farm
Stories NY: Lippincott, 1947 Omnibus of four books: Prince
and Rover of Cloverfield Farm, Bobby of Cloverfield Farm, Summer at
Cloverfield
Farm, and Winter at Cloverfield Farm.
C49: Chinese
boy
slurps
pond
I can't remember the name of a book I read
as a child, perhaps you can help. It was a story of a little Chinese
boy
who had a great talent of holding a whole pond of water in his
mouth.
The village people could go into the pond and gather fish and then the
little boy would spit the water back in. Then, one day the
village
people got selfish, trying to capture more fish than they needed, and
the
little boy couldn't hold the water any longer and had to spit the water
back in before the people got out. I have a 6 year old son who I would
like to share this story with, do you have any idea the name of this
book?
Looking through your listing, I came across
someone who had a similar search and you came up with the name of Five
Chinese
Brothers, however after investigating further, this is not
the book I'm thinking of. Thank you for your time.
Just wanted to say that this book does exist,
though I can't identify it yet - several years ago I saw a description
of it, and remember thinking it was a knock-off of the Chinese
Brothers
story.
Five Chinese Brothers. This
one is already listed in your solved pages.
C49 chinese boy: There are at least two other
versions of this folktale, one being Six Chinese Brothers: an
Ancient
Tale, retold and illustrated by Cheng Hou-Tien,
published
Holt 1979, 32 pages. The story is essentially the same, illustrated
with
scissor cuts in bright red and black. More recent is The Seven
Chinese
Brothers, retold by Margaret Mahy, illustrated by Jean
Tseng
and Tseng Mou-Sien, published Scholastic 1990. "The seven brothers
walk,
talk, and look alike, but each has his own special power. When the
third
brother runs afoul of the emperor and is sentenced to be beheaded, the
fourth brother, who has bones of iron, takes his place. The emperor
then
tries drowning and burning but each time a different brother foils his
scheme." The illustrations are colourful watercolours. So I
don't
think we have to be too sure that it's the Claire Huchet Bishop version
...
C49 chinese boy: the Mahy version can be ruled
out. I saw a copy at a thrift shop and the story does NOT include
swallowing
large quantities of water. Instead the emperor is afraid of the
power(s)
of what he believes to be a single man, and tries to execute him in
various
ways. Six Chinese Brothers, by Cheng Hou-tien,
is
supposed to have pretty much the same story as Five Chinese
Brothers
but different illustrations, and is probably worth checking out.
Claire Huchet Bishop, Five Chinese
Brothers.
This is DEFINITELY Five Chinese Brothers, not six, not seven. The
first brother can hold a lake in his mouth, but a village child wanders
out too far to pick up fish and drowns when the brother releases the
water.
The emperor orders him executed by beheading, so he tells the emperor
he
needs to go home to say goodbye to his family. The second brother
(who just happens to have an iron neck) is sent in his place.
When
the executioner breaks his sword on the brother's neck, the emperor
orders
him burned. So they swap in the brother who ca''t be burned and
so
on... The stories with six or seven brothers are more
about the emperor's fear of the brothers' power, and his attempts to
prevent
them from taking the throne.
C50: Christmas
angel
Katie
is
NOT so angelic...
Solved: The
Wonderful Window
C51:
Cone
people
Solved: Planet of the
Whistlers
C52: Chinese
man
and
birds
Solved:
One Bright Day
C55: Cabin
faced
west
textbook
Solved: Ventures Book
4
C56: Creepy
cover
I never had this book so didn't read it, and
have no idea of title, author, or what it's about, but was haunted by
the
cover. It portrayed three children in a boat in a swamp at
night.
One with a fishing pole had hooked a lit lantern and was drawing it out
of the water. Very scary to me as a child. Would be a
digest-sized
paperback of the kind sold at supermarket checkstands between 1967 and
1969.
not that I've ever seen the cover, but there's
Ghost
Boat, written and illustrated by Jacqueline Jackson,
published
Little, Brown 1969, 148 pages. "A mysterious boat provides four
children
with an adventure while they are vacationing at their summer cottage."
C56 Is this a possibility? Zapf,
Marjorie. The Mystery of the Great Swamp. Same as E1?
C56 creepy cover: after checking pictures on
eBay, I have to say that unfortunately the Zapf cover doesn't
match,
neither does the cover of Ghost Boat, or The
Button
Boat.
L.M. Boston, The Children of Green Knowe,
1955, reprint. Athough there is some discrepancy, THE CHILDREN OF
THE GREEN KNOW has a dark green dust jacket with a yellow drawing of a
creepy looking house. Rather than 3 children, there is an old man with
an oar and a boy in the front of the boat holding up a lit lantern.
It's
a spooky cover!
Strange Monster of Strawberry Cove,
late 1960s. The cover description sounds to me like a Scholastic
Press book I read in elementary school -- these were paperback books
peddled
in the California school system via a newsletter passed out in class.
Can't
find any record of this book in Internet searches, though there's a
(Disney?)
movie from the '80s with the same title and plot: some children try to
hunt down a sea monster that only they have seen, and it turns out to
be
a canvas superstructure disguising a smuggler's boat. The lantern
lights
the monster's eyes, or something . . . hope that's what you're looking
for! BTW the title I supplied is that of the movie. The book title was
at least similar but may not be completely identical.
More clues on #C56, Creepy Cover: It
wasn't much like the hardcover illustration for "The Button Boat" and
nothing
at all like "Mystery of the Great Swamp" or "Children of Green
Knowe."
The differences were, in those pictures the children are standing in
the
boat or getting into or out of it with faces turned away. The
picture
I'm looking for had younger/smaller children (4 to 8 rather than 10 to
12) sitting in a small boat facing towards the lantern in the water. It
was MUCH more colorful--rather than two-color with black and white,
brown
and green, or green and yellow, this had a lot of murky blue, swamp
green,
yellow glow from the lantern. The feature which struck me most
was
the particular round, protruding characteristic of the children's eyes,
giving them an eerily apprehensive appearance. The style of the
drawing,
particularly those bug eyes, is very much like that of the prolific and
popular artist Susan Perl. Whether that provides a clue I
couldn't
say, as I don't know that the illustrator was Susan Perl, or that
there'd
be any way to confirm it, such as an official Susan Perl website.
No idea who published such books, but I'm thinking not Weekly Reader or
Scholastic but some fly-by-night printer no one will have heard
of.
Might I say, I
*did* have a book illustrated by Susan Perl
which has proven EXTREMELY rare! It was a paperback of Eugene Field's
"Wynken,
Blynken and Nod and other poems" from Wonder Books. Normally,
once
I know the title and author of a favorite childhood book, it's been
relatively
easy to get copies for my sisters, but in this case my own copy is the
ONLY one I have ever SEEN--that includes not only in used bookstores
but
on eBay or any other online search. It was a big favorite and
will
go right in the glass case I've built for rare and hard-to-find titles.
Vera Cleaver, Ellen Grae,
1967. I keep thinking that this might be Ellen Raskin's original
cover for Vera Cleaver's Ellen Grae - the kids have
dropped
the lantern and are trying to get it back with the fishing pole.
But I can't find a copy of the book or an image on-line to check my
memory!
Wylly
Folke
St.
John,
Secret of Hidden
Creek, 1968, approximate. I think this might be the
book your looking for. the older version has a cover like the one
you described.
C58: Chinese
with
buffalo
and
lamp
Solved:
Water-Buffalo Children and The Dragon
Fish
C59: Cat
care
manual
Solved: Cats
C60: Children's
crusade
An interest in the Children's Crusade, A.
D. 1212, led me to compile a bibliography. I think I have 53
books
listed in six languages. They can be fiction, non-fiction,
French,
or German crusade. The interesting thing is I've only ever found
copies of four of these books. Maybe I'll send you the
bibliography,
not so much to search, but in case you just happen across any.
With
Book Search engines, I may even be able to add to it. Okay,
here's
the "stumper" part of this: One title I'm pretty sure is not on my
bibliography
of books about the Children's Crusade, A. D. 1212, is a short
story.
It was part of a longer collection, and I found it listed under the
subject
heading "Children's Crusade" in the card catalog of a library where I
used
to work. Of course, that was 25 years ago and they've no doubt
gotten
rid of the card catalog and probably the book as well. The story
concerned a priest who made it to the Holy Land with some of the
surviving
children, and came back to confront a wealthy merchant. The
priest
had information that the merchant had greatly profited through his
direct
involvement with selling the child crusaders into slavery, so the
merchant
committed suicide before the priest could reveal it. I'd
appreciate
if anyone knows what this is so I can add it to my list.
Don't know the story, but this person must
find
a copy of Crusade in Jeans by Thea Beckman. Won
awards
in the Netherlands, and is a great story of the Children's Crusades.
The Chidren's Crusade (1975?)
Remember reading this one in my local council library (Adelaide,
Australia)
in the late seventies/ early eighties. Title was definitely "The
Children's Crusade" but I can't remember the author. Used to get
this one when I'd forgotten the title of "Crusade in Jeans" (heartily
agree
with the earlier recommendation on this one, too)!
Henry Treece (75, approximate) Back again.
Internet suggests the Author may be Henry Treece? This is definitely
the
book I remember, and involves the boy (and his sister? - memory escapes
me) being rescued from slavery by his father's priest at the end, but
wouldn't
fit with the suicide part.
C62: Cookbook
with
cat
and
dog
Solved: My Learn-to-Cook
Book
C65: Chipmunks
dressing
as
humans
I am looking for books I read as a child in
the early 1950's. The characters were chipmunks dressing and
living
as people. Their home was in a marvelous, old hollowed out
tree.
I went to a small country school so the books may have been old in
1950.
The text was (I think) second, third or fourth grade level as I read
them
myself (they were not read to me). I have found possibilities on
the internet but none have enough description to help me know if I have
found the one that is in my memory.
#C65--Chipmunks dressing as humans: It's
worth having a look at The Little Mailman of Bayberry Lane,
by
Ian Munn, illustrated by Elizabeth Webbe, Rand McNally
Junior
Elf Book, 1952.
C65 It doesn't seem to me as if this book quite
matches, but here's more info: almost Little Goloden size; chipmunk
mailman
on yellow cover, putting mail in a mailbox. Inside, he makes deliveries
to different animals in human clothes.
Marjorie Torrey, Three Little Chipmunks,1947.We
searching forever for this book as well and my sister just recently
found
it and bought it - We grew up with Chuffy, Chirpy and Cheeky!!!
McElroy
and
Younge
(American
Book
Company),
Toby
Chipmunk, 1931, copyright. I read this book in a
Wisconsin one-room schoolhouse in the late forties and then tried to
find it for YEARS; I finally found one last year on ebay. Good
luck!
MCELROY,
TOBY CHIPMUNK,
1937. AN EASY READER(1ST OR 2ND GRADE) USED IN MANY RURAL SCHOOLS
IN THE 1940S - TWO CHIPMUNKS, TOBY AND HIS SISTER, WHO GO TO LIVE WITH
GRANDMOTHER CHIPMUNK IN HER HOME IN THE TRUNK OF A HOLLOW
TREE. A DARLING BOOK AND HARD TO FIND.
C66: Crystal
horse
Solved: The Crystal Horse
C67: Civil
War-era
family
story
My grandmother had a book that I loved to
read whenever I would visit her. It was probably written sometime
in the early 1900's. The story was about a little girl and her
family.
The father left to fight in the war, and the family was notified that
he
had been killed. Then suddenly he returned, and we are told that
there was an error made regarding his death notice. This is a
picture
book, and it's possible that the text of the book was written as a
poem.
I think the cover was a picture of the little girl watching the troops
march away. I also think there might have been a line in the book
the said, "He is not gone; he is just away." I would love to find
a copy of this book as it has many memories. Thanks for any help.
#C67--Civil War era family story: "He is
not gone, he is just away" has been used in a number of variations,
most
notably in a poem by Walt Whitman, who did write a lot during
and
about the Civil War era. Since the poet is
so well-known, you should have no trouble in
locating the poem. Can't say the same about the book.
C67 civil war era: perhaps Nellie's Prayer
by George R. Sims, illustrated by J. Willis Grey, published
London
& New York by Raphael Tuck 1880, unnumbered pages approx 22, with
28
monochrome illos. "The story of a little girl's prayer for her father's
safe return from war." The cover shows soldiers marching with a young
boy
running beside them, a little girl watching and a woman weeping.
However,
the soldiers are in red with tall bearskins, very English and not at
all
American Civil War.
C68: Color
lands
Solved: The Wizard of
Oz
C71: Confederate
treasure
mystery
Solved: The Secrets of
Hidden
Creek
C72: Comic
strip
Character
named
Logan
Solved: X-Man Wolverine
C73: Can't
Hear
Myself
think
Solved:
The Noisy Clock Shop
C74: Circus
Solved:
The Secret of Stone House Farm
C75: Cookbook
for
kids
Solved:
The Kids' Kitchen Takeover
C77: Cat
story
Solved:
Gypsy
C78: Crafts
projects
I am looking for a
book which is similar in size and format to
McCall's
Giant Golden Make-It Book, which features creative projects for
children--everything
from sock dolls,games and wooden toys to holiday decorations and
costumes.
I am interested in any similar titles which would have been
published
around the same general time period, probably containing color
illustrations
rather than photographs, and most likely hardbound.
C79: Checkerspot:
Uncle
Arthur?
Solved: Children's Hour
with
Uncle Arthur Book One
C80: Christian
series
twins
who
were pastor kids
Solved:
Joy Sparton of Parsonage Hill
C81: Clown
steals
another
clown's
nose!
I have a friend that has talked about a book
she had. It was about a clown who had a nose that another clown
envied
and stole! She doesn't know the name. Can you help?
Are you sure this is a children''s book?
I read a short story recently on the same theme in The Year's
Best
Fantasy & Horror (edited by Datlow & Windling I
think
it was last year's edition). It's a crazy story set in a town
populated
by clowns that does involve a missing nose (one of the main characters
is embarrassed by the fact that his nose is ill-fitting).
C82: Cat
pie
Solved: Cat and Dog
C83: Cat
doesn't
display
proper
feline behavior
Solved: The Three-Legged
Cat
C84: Candy
store
alive
at
night
This was an anthology published in the late
60s. The last story in the book concerned a candy store at night all
the
candy and pastries would come alive and have a big fight or party. I
distinctly
remember that the store owner lived upstairs, woke up from the noise
"but
she thought it was probably just a car backfiring." The book would have
been softbound, about the size of a coloring book, second-grade level
but
with few illustrations.
Big Big Story Book. I have an
anthology
of childrens stories from the 1960's called Big Big Story Book.
Mine
is
hardcover
wtih
a
picture
of
a
circus
on
the
front.
Your
requests
sounded
like
the
story
PICNIC
IN
THE
PANTRY,
although
there
is
no
store
owner
or
car
backfiring.
This
is
in
rhyming
verse
with
the
first
verse
being:
The peppermint stick and the candy bar / Sat and
dreamed in the big glass jar. We'll see the World, they cried one
day. And hand in hand they ran away.
C85: El
Cid
I recall reading a color illustration and
text book (oversized) when I was a child (1975?) that had short
renditions
of a number of heroes from history and mythology, including the last
battle
of El Cid, Horatio at the Bridge in Rome, and Gwain and the Green
Knight.
I hope to be able to locate this book for my daughter. Any help
is
appreciated.
C85 El Cid sounds like I26 stories of heroes
C85 el cid: well, Knights and Champions,
by Dorothy Heiderstadt, illustrated by George Fulton, published
Nelson 1960, 191 pages, includes stories of "twelve legendary and
historical
heroes, including St. George, Beowulf, Roland, King Arthur, Richard
Lionheart,
El Cid of Spain, and Bayard the last knight. Ages 10-14.". I
couldn't
discover the size or confirm colour illustrations, or any other
definite
characters beyond Ogier the Dane - nothing certain on Gawain or Horatio.
C86: Come
Over
to
My
House
Solved: Come Over to My
House
C87: Cully
and
the
octopus
Solved: The Pirates in the
Deep Green Sea
C88: Carter
is
a
painter's
cap
Solved: Carter is a
Painter's
Cat
C89: Casey
Solved:
More than a Summer Love
C90: Cave
children
Solved:
The Stone Age Kids Discover America
C91: Cold
snap day
Solved:
Grandpa's Farm
C92: Collection
of poems, speeches, plays
Solved:
Treasury of the Familiar
C93: Child
actress in historical role
Solved:
Once in a Lifetime
C94: Catacombs
Solved:
The Tombs of Atuan
C95: Christmas
Story Book
Solved:
The Christmas Book
C96: Carroty
princess?
Solved:
Princess Carroty-Top & Timothy
Solved:
The Magic Key
C97: Collection
of stories for girls
Solved: Girls' Adventure
Stories of Long Ago
C98:
Collection
with Mr Leakey story by Haldane
Solved:
Golden treasury of Children's
Literature:
Volume 6: Unfamiliar Marvels
C99: cupola,
bees, kidnapped
Solved:
Babysitting is a Dangerous Job
C100: Camping
trip
time
travel
I am also looking
for a series of fantasy books about a group of
kids (family) who go on a camping trip and go into the past. They
go to an island were they plan a survival type (Outward Bound, as their
elderbrother went on a trip similar with out his siblings) camping trip
and find a figurine. Title might be "the bronze man", there are at
least
three books in the series. The children go back to the time of
the
Celts in one of the books.
sounds slightly like one suggested for another
stumper - The Green Bronze Mirror, by Lynne Ellison,
published
London,
Blackie
1966,
124
pages.
"Karen
is
15
years
old,
and
on
holiday
with
her
family
at
an
English
seaside
resort.
Everything
is
ordinarily
nice,
until
she
finds
an
old
bronze
mirror
buried
in
the
sand
and
looks
into
it.
Hearing
the
tramp
of
approaching
feet,
she
turns
to
face
a
company
of
what
appears
to
be
Roman
soldiers.
They
ARE
Roman
soldiers,
and
Karen
finds
herself in the Britain of almost 2000 years before her
own time. Her
adventures go on from there ... romance pervades
the story after Karen meets Kleon, a handsome slave boy." The author
was
apparently only 14 when she wrote the book.
C100 camping trip time travel: there is a short
series by Meta Mayne Reid, including The McNeills at
Rathcapple,
published Faber 1959 "combines the family story with the magic of
adventures
into the past"; Sandy and the Hollow Book, published
Faber
1961 "An exciting story of two children in Ireland who relive forgotten
episodes from past history"; and With Angus in the Forest,
published
Faber
1963
"The
story
of
a
girl
who
went
back
into
Irish
history
during
the
desparate
times
of
the
10th
century
Danish
raids,
and
found
there
an
answer
to
her
own
problems."
One
of
Elinor Lyon's
books,
The
Golden Shore, published Hodder 1957, is about cousins John and
Penelope, who jump a stream while on a picnic, and find themselves in
ancient
Greece, where they live for almost a year. There is also a short
time-travel
series by M. Pardoe, involving the MacAlister children and
their
tutor - Argle's Causeway, illustrated by L. Atkinson,
published
Routledge 1958, 244 pages "Another excursion in time granted to the
MacAlister
family who break through a 'thin spot' in the region of Lymington and
find
themselves in Norman England in the 11th century. While it is a little
difficult to believe that the children's kilts enable them to pass
without
a great deal of commment ... the historical background is extremely
thorough
..." (JB Jul/58 p.135) and Argle's Oracle, illustrated
by
Audrey Fawley, published Routledge 1959, 197 pages "The MacAllister
children
and their young schoolmaster friend Mr. Burke are forced down in the
sea
on a flight to Athens and almost immediately find a 'thin spot' where
they
break through the veil of time and begin to live in the Greece of 415
BC."
C100 camping trip: the first book in the Pardoe
series is Curtain of Mist, illustrated by Leslie
Atkinson,
published
Funk 1958, 246 pages. "Three modern children and their tutor in the
Scottish Highlands step throught the 'curtain of mist' into Celtic
Britain.
They remember that they belong in the 20th century and realize that
they
have somehow got into the wrong era. They are thrilled by their
experience
but frightened too, and anxious to get back home." (HB Feb/58 p.38)
C101: Complete
Collection
Solved:
Dean's Gift Book of Fairy Tales
C102: Children
scientific
experiment
Solved:
The House of Stairs
C103: Children
disaster
aflood
england
Solved:
Hills End
C104: Coloured
pages
Solved:
The BIG Story Book
C105:
Catholic
series with flood
Solved:
This is Our Town
C106a: Cinderella
in
verse
Solved:
Cinderella Retold in Verse
C106b: Children
and
boats
Solved:
Pirates, Ships and Sailors
C107: Cave
Exploration
I also remember
about the same time frame reading a book about a
group of kids that explored a cave. The were trapped in the cave
and had to go down the underground river to get out. It was a
great
adventure and I'd love to read it to my kids now. Thanx for your help.
This is a great service.
Possibly The Cave, US title Five
Boys
in
a
Cave, by Richard Church, published London
1950,
New York, Day 1951, 180 pages. "John Walters was visiting his uncle and
aunt when he discovered the entrance to the limestone caves near their
home. At once he decided to invite four of his friends to explore with
him. The effect that danger and fear have on the characters of the boys
- bringing out both good and bad traits - is well depicted. For readers
of twelve and over." (HB Jul/51 p.249) Not sure about an underground
river,
though.
another possibility is The Mystery of Mont
Saint-Michel, by Michel Rouze, illustrated by Peter
Spier,
published NY Holt 1955 "The story of four French boys and one girl who,
on a summer camping trip, decide to explore the famous abbey at Mont
Saint-Michel.
Eluding the guides and the regular tours they go underground by
themselves
and are soon lost in a network of passages and caves. The author
combines
vivid and realistic descriptions of the ways in which the children meet
danger - how they avoid the rising tide, provide themselves with light,
fires, food - with their interest in trying to find proof that there is
truth in the legend that here once grew the great Forest of Cokelunde.
A well-written, exciting and credible tale, translated from the French
by George Libaire." (Horn Book Dec/55 p.459) Though it's not an
underground
river but underground tides.
C107 Have sold this so can't check inside: Wallace,
Bill
Trapped in Death Cave
cover by Don Clavette Holiday House, 1984; cover art
1987. Weekly Reader Just for Boys series
Joyce Sweeney, Free Fall.
1996. This is about 4 boys who find a cave and go exploring, but
they get lost. They find an opening in the cave ceiling, but when one
boy
attempts to scale the wall, he falls and breaks his leg. They
finally
escape by swimming underwater. Lots of male bonding, kind of like
the movie "Stand By Me" but set in modern times.
C107 cave exploration: more on the Richard
Church book - "Five boys explore a Severnside cave-complex and
find
their way out along a subterranean river, after physical hazards and
re-alignments
within the group. In the sequel (Down River, 1958) they surprise crooks
taking contraband down river to a waiting ship." (Growing Point
Jan/75
p.2567) There's also one of the books suggested for C94 catacombs: Escape
into
Daylight by Geoffrey Household. "Carrie and
Mike
are kidnapped and imprisoned in a dark, damp dungeon beneath a ruined
abbey.
The only way out is through twisted passages and an underground river."
Could this be The Mystery of the Piper's
Ghost by Zillah Macdonald?? Set in Nova Scotia, the
story
involves an old gold mine with many lengthy tunnels,- it is here that
the
children get lost.
By title alone how about The Singing Cave
by Ellis Dillon-1960?? There was a book in the Trixie Belden
series
where the kids were in a cave, and there was an underground
river.
Involved some kind of endangered fish called the "ghost fish."
Don't
know if that's helpful. (Trixie Belden was a character sort of
like
Nancy Drew she and her brother were middle-class kids, and they
had
a rich friend, Honey, who lived up the road at the mansion, and Trixie
had a cute boyfriend named, I think, Jim.)
Enid Blyton, The Secret of Killimooin.
possibility...
Enid Blyton,
The Valley of
Adventure, 1950s
approximate. This third book of the Adventure
series (which also includes Castle of Adventure, Ship of..., Island
of..., Sea
of...) has all the elements that make it difficult to stop reading in
the
middle: Fast-paced action, burnt old houses, caves and secret tunnels,
treasure, and four children who try to outwit bad guys while trapped in
a
remote and lonely valley. I'm not positive, but the kids might very
well
have escaped from the Valley by boat down an underground river. I
believe they
talked about stalactites quite a bit too. The original Blyton
"Adventure" books included terrific
drawings by Stuart Tresilian which make the reader feel as if he or she
is
actually a participant in the story. They are now available as reprints
in
paperback with entirely different covers.
Enid Blyton, The River of
Adventure, 1950?,
approximate. I just checked on
the Enid Blyton
Society website for a detailed summary of "Valley of Adventure", and
the children do not escape by boat, although they DO spend time in
caves and
discuss stalactites and stalagmites! The last book in the Adventure
series,
"River of Adventure", though, DOES have a lot of boats, caves, and an
underground waterfall. Just another suggestion!
C108: Cats
v Dogs Intergalactic War
Solved: Urn Burial
C109: Computers
and
kids
Solved: Danny Dunn and the
Homework Machine
C110:
Children's
Map Book
Solved:
Authorized Autumn Charts of the Upper
Red
Canoe River Country
C111:
Christmas
Stories -Giant golden book size
Solved:
The Tall Book of Christmas
C112: crabapple
girl
plays
field
hockey
Solved:
The Hockey Girls
C113:
Circus
Baby
Solved:
Circus Baby
C114: Children's
Poetry
Book
Solved:
The Bumper Book
C115:
Children's Book about witches
Solved:
Witch Family
C116:
Child dies and enters alternate world
Solved: The Brothers
Lionheart
C117:
Christmas short stories
Solved: The Christmas Book
C118:
Candy dreams
Solved: Sweet Touch
2002
C119:
Children's Bedtime Story book
Solved: Lots of
Stories
C120:
Chinese Fairy Tales
Solved:
Chinese Fairy Tales
C121: child
possessed
by
doll
Solved:
A Candle in Her Room
C122: candy
striper
Solved: Nancy Plays Nurse
C123: CITY
NIGHTS,
CITY
LIGHTS....UPTOWN,
DOWNTOWN
I remember
checking this book out from my school library over and
over again while I was in elementary school, maybe 2nd or 3rd grade
(1977-1979)
I think the title was : City Nights, City Lights or Uptown, Downtown
or something close to it. I remember it took place in the city
and
I think the main character was a girl and she walked through the city -
I also remember a storm and the girl wearing a rain jacket and having
an
umbrella. Hope you can help me - Thank you!
Taro Yashima, Umbrella.
Could this one possibly be Umbrella? Momo receives
boots and an umbrella for her birthday and then has to wait and wait
for
it to rain. She does walk through the rain in the story, to nursery
school.
Could this be the Alice and Jerry reader
Day
In and Day Out? It has a maroon cover with a girl in summer
shorts
and light top and an umbrella in rain splashing around in puddles.
Like
most reders it consists of many different stories unrelated to one
another.
The cover and the Title somewhat matched your description!! (You can
often
find this reader on auction sites with photographs.)
C123 city lights: perhaps this one is too old,
but Paris in the Rain With Jean and Jacqueline, written
and
illustrated by Thea Bergere, published NY McGraw 1963, features
a boy and girl with a big black umbrella in city scenes. "Her full-page
illustration, using blue, grey, white and just a little red tone. The
effect
is really pleasing to the eye and consistent with the Parisian tour
mood!"
Ludwig Bemelman, Madeline.
The discription scene is very reminisent of a part in Ludwig Bemelman's
MADELINE. The copy I had was reprinted by Puffin Books in 1967. I don't
know if this is what you are looking for, there is a part where
Madeline
is exploring Paris in the rain, or perhaps she was lost from the group.
This is the first thing I though of. I hope it
helped! Afterthought:: I should have
said....It could Be or may have been ONE of the many Madeline stories.
The First or Original story was Madeline in the hospital had her
appendix
out I believe. But I recall one where she was lost or exploring Paris
in
the rain.
Seignobosc, Francoise, Jeanne-Marie in
Gay Paris. NY Scribner 1956.
Again, not an exact match. "Jeanne-Marie in her red kerchief, with
umbrella
and suitcase to match, sets off by herself to see Paris in the
springtime.
It is a children's Paris that she sees: the puppet show, the
merry-go-round,
the gay stalls along the Seine where she can choose presents for her
friends
Jean-Pierre and Patapon." (Horn Book Jun/56 p.183)
Irma Simonton Black (editor), Uptown
Downtown.
Uptown
Downtown is the title of one of the Bank
Street Unit Readers, which was a basal reader series featuring
multiracial
kids living in urban areas. It is out of print. Published by MacMillan
in
1965. Edited by Irma Simonton Black. Illustrated
by Ron Becker, Robert Quackenbush, and others. Unfortunately, I don't
remember
if there is a story about a girl in a rain storm.
C124: Christmas
Anthology
Solved:
The Santa Claus Book
C125: Christmas
dolls
anthology
Solved: Santa's
Footprints
C126:
Cow
wants to go to moon
Solved: A Rocket for a Cow
C127:
coming
of age girls book
Solved: The Unchosen
C128:
chain
recapitulates mankind's history
an ancient man
picks up a chain on a deserted beach and we follow
its progress throughout history until it ends up in a case in a museum,
wondered at by a modern man. the book came out around 1942.
I do not know if the device of the chain
is used in the book but a very popular history of the world was Henrik
van(von)Loon's History of Mankind--the 1922 winner
of
the Newbery Award.
Not a lot of help, I'm afraid, but this is NOT
the Van Loon - I've just checked my copy, nor is it his Ancient
Man - I looked at my copy of that, too!
Gregg, Pauline, The Chain of History,
1958.
the book i am looking for is fictional, so
it wouldn't be a history by van loon nor *the chain of history* (1958),
which i was able to look at. but i do appreciate the suggestions.
my mother is quite old and this is the one book she keeps talking
about.
she read it around 1941 so it had to have been published earlier than
that.
i have already checked out (all) the several fictional works at the
library
of congress that have "chain" in the title. i have also searched OCLC.
This is a selection - probably a short story
- in a high school literature anthology. I remember it very
clearly.
Check out some textbook anthologies.
I looked through the high school literature
anthologies
in the Library of Congress from the 20s and 30s without finding the
story.
More specific information would help.
C129: Car
crash
ghosts
Solved:
Ghosts of Departure Point
C130: Cooking
macaroni
for
the
king with lots of pots
Solved:
Strega Nona
C131: Childrens
Bedtime
Stories
I remember it
being a large hardback book. The illustrations were
in black and white but the cover was in color, with a blonde girl/boy
on
the front. I remember something about a "crooked sixpence?" I also
remember
a story about a cat named Spot that an old woman would yell at and say,
"scat, scat, you old street cat! Scat, scat and never come back!" There
was also a story about a pig, a woman, and a style. The woman couldn't
get her pig over the style so she asked different animals, things, etc.
to help her. One line is, "fire won't burn stick, stick don't beat dog,
dog won't bite pig, piggy won't go over the stile and I shan't get home
tonight." If you have any information on this book, please let me know.
My family has been searching for years! If anyone has a copy they want
to sell, even better! Thanks you!
Betty O'Connor, editor, Better
Homes
and Gardens Storybook, 1950. The story about the little
old
lady whose pig won't go over the stile can be found in the Better Homes
and Gardens Storybook from 1950, although I don't think any of the
other
stories described in the stumper are included in this anthology.
w/ pictures by Blanche Fisher Wright, The
Real Mother Goose, 1992. The Crooked Sixpence is in this
book (very beautifully illustrated). It goes like this: There
was a crooked man, and he walked a crooked mile/ He found a crooked
sixpence
beside a crooked stile/He bought a crooked cat, which caught a crooked
mouse/And they all lived together in a little crooked house.
This is definitely a reprint of The Real Mother Goose, because I had
another
copy of it nearly 20 years before Barnes & Noble, Inc published
this
1992 copy by arrangement with Checkerboard Press, Inc.
Unfortunately,
I don't know anything about the other two stories described.
Jessie Willcox Smith, A Child's Book of
Stories. See A116 ~ The
contributor
who suggested A Child's Book of Stories by Jessie Wilcox Smith seems to
have a book similar to mine and their book has "The Old Woman and Her
Pig,"
which sounds like it could be the third story described here.
I can identify one of your stories. "Scat, scat!
You old street cat!" comes from a story by Lucy Sprague Mitchell
called- "How Spot Found a Home". Unfortunately "Crooked
Sixpence"
is not in my book but this info may further the hunt for your treasured
book! Good Luck!
http://www.authorama.com/english-fairy-tales-6.html
C132:
Chicken
loses
toes,
is given boots
Solved: Along Came a
Dog
C133:
Cannibal town and other scary stories
Solved: Children of Noah
C134: Christmas
tree
top
cut
off
mouse
Solved:
Mr. Willoughby's Christmas Tree
C135: Curse
of
the
MacGregor's
Mansion
Solved:
The Ghosts of Austwick Manor
C136:
Cashmere
sweater
Solved:
Fifteen
C137: Child
catches
the
moon
in birdcage
This is a book
that I read as a child in the early 50's. It
was about a little boy who saw the moon out of his bed at night and
wanted
it to stay, but it always went away. He went around and asked
people
in his neighborhood how to catch the moon, and I believe they didn't
know,
but they gave him presents. Finally someone gives him a birdcage,
and he sees the moon in the cage every night before he goes to be and
is
satisfied.
James Thurber, Many Moons.
This is a pretty unlikely match, but it does have some things in
common.
It's about a princess who wants the moon, and everyone the king asks
explains
why this is impossible, until the the court jester comes up with a
solution.
Jan B. Balet, Amos and the Moon, 1948.
A wonderful book! Balet's great illustrations show an old New York's
different
immigrant shopkeepers' windows in colorful detail. It is the Chinese
laundryman
who gives Amos the birdcagto hold the moon's reflection.
C138:
Christmas
Book, 1940s or 1950s
Solved:
The Santa Claus Book
C139:
Children
Walk from FL to GA
Solved:
Long Way to Go
C140:
California girl hates raincoat
Solved: The Luckiest
Girl
C141:
Clock
adventures with Punch
Solved: The Sun,
Moon,
and Stars Clock
C142: Colonial
Girl
Drinks
Nanny
Tea
Solved: The Day Must Dawn
C143: Cat
named
Asher
Banipul
Solved: The
Wonderful
World of Aunt Tuddy
C144:
connie
and
the
curious candle
Solved: Stories
for Bedtime
C145:
choirboys
adventures, mysteries. England.
Solved: The Grange at High
Force
C146: Christmas
Cookies
Come
Alive
on
Christmas
Eve
to
Help
Decorate
Tree,
Finish
Dollhouse,
and
Assemble
Bike
My wife has been searching for a particular
childrens book, however she does not remember the title, author, or
publisher.
The basic plot involves Christmas cookies that are left out on
Christmas
Eve and come alive to help decorate the Christmas tree, finish a
dollhouse,
and assemble a bicycle. We are expecting our own little girl in the
next
few weeks and she would love to have this book to read to her daughter
at Christmas.
Bethany Roberts, Cookie
Angel, 2007. I
don't know if this is too recent but my children really enjoyed this
story
of the Christmas angel cookie that comes to life on Christmas Eve and
helps
decorate the tree, etc.
Gingerbears
Christmas.
Published by
Current in 1983??
C147: Cowboy
Poem
"A
Friend",
Presidential-sounding
author
Solved: Ode to a
Friend
2003
C148: Caresse
LeClair
book
stumper
Legend of Caresse LeClair. Book was
set in New Orleans current day. It was written about 25-30 years
ago. People come to visit a prominent family and are recounted
the
legend of Caresse LeClair, a granddaughter of Marie Laveau (a voodoo
priestess)
who was a quadroon that was bought at a quadroon ball by a man in the
family
many years earlier. A story is recounted how she was killed in a
fire. Some family members and guests go by pirogue to a voodoo
ceremony.
One woman brings traditional offerings to the voodoo gods. The
voodoo
priestess hates the woman who she feels is related to the woman who
caused
Caresse's death and plans revenge thru the voodoo ceremony. The
ceremony also has an effect on the other
guests
and family attending. At some point those people unknowingly
start
acting out the events that led to the death of Caresse. Very
mysterious.
I can't remember the author and have searched everywhere. Please help.
C138 I checked google for Caresse... and got
nothing.
When I tried Marie Laveu, there were tons. Perhaps this is of
possible
interst to customer: D'Argent, Jacques. Voodoo.
Sherbourne
Press,
c1970.
Stern, Steven L., Hex.
NY Simon & Schuster 1989. This may be too late, but the blurb
says "In the blackest night the voodoo queen strikes with magic, terror
and death!" Which sounds promising.
C149:
Children's book called "Charles"
Solved: Charles
C150: chinese
boy
with
long
name
Solved: Tikki Tikki Tembo
C151: Children
crippled
in
traffic
accidents
book about a town
for children crippled in traffic accidents. read
in the late 50's or early 60's but from 30's or 40's. fiction, not
unpleasant.
C152: Childs
book
about
a
Zebra named Stripy (or Stripie)
Solved: Stripey, a Little
Zebra
C153: Cakeville
Cakes
Solved: Our Story Book
C154:
Cowboy
Bob
Solved:
Grandpa's Farm
C155: clipper
ships;
East
India
Company
This is a book
about a family living in Boston ( I think) that owned
a shipping company at the end of the days of clipper ship importing for
India and the East Indies. All I remember is that there was a son
who was much older than his younger sister. He went on the trips
and once he brought back a miniature croquet set for his sister.
I think the book might have been a mystery.
Might be worth checking some of Leonard
Wibberly's
(Mouse That Roared) historical fiction- like his Treegate
series.
Jerry West (pseudonym), The Happy
Hollisters and the Old Clipper Ship. This came to mind
because
the Happy Hollisters books are mysteries (in the same sense that the
Bobbsey
Twins books are mysteries!) and it's only time I've ever seen "clipper
ship" in a book's title.
Before 1950, approximate. So glad to see
this request -- I have been looking for this same book for ages!
I read it in 1956, and it was not new then. The girl in the book
is quite sickly, and she worships her big brother, the captain of the
clipper
ship. The title might be the name of the ship . . . but I
remain
stumped! Good luck!
Chastain, Madye Lee, Dark Treasure(1954)
Found it! I too have been looking for this book forever! It's New
York, not Boston, and Cousin Andy, not Lissa's brother -- but he
definitely
brings her the mini-croquet set, and it is a mystery. How lovely
to finally own this favorite book of my childhood!
C156: Carillon
chapter
book
with
line drawings
Solved: The Mysterious
Disapparance
of Leon (I mean Noel)
C157: "ComputerLand"
super
computer
store
going
backrupt
Solved: Once Upon a Time
in ComputerLand
C158: Curley
Haired
Hen
Solved: The Curly Haired
Hen
C159: Cat
Story
Solved: The Ghost of
Opalina
or Nine Lives
C160: Crooked
Man
Solved:
The Tall Book of Make-Believe
C161: Claude
Young children's
book (or story) from mid- to late nineteen fifties,
about "Claude, the mouse with the kinky tail".
C162: casket-sword-mystery
Solved: The Caket and the
Sword
C163: civilization
organizes
again
after
virus
Solved: Earth Abides
C164: castle-headed
boy
This book features
a castle-headed boy with smaller people living
on/in the castle which is his head. Beautiful artwork. No
clue
as to title or author. Thanks for any help with this.
C164 Ruth Plumly Thompson, Kabumpo
in
Oz, 1922. A longshot, but there is an incident in this
book in which the Nome
King grows to a tremendous size and makes off
with Ozma's palace on his head. The illustrations are by John R.
Neill.
Jane Langton, The Swing in the Summerhouse,
1967. Again, a bit of a longshot, but in "The Swing in the
Summerhouse"
there is a chapter called "The Man Castle" where Eddy finds himself
inside
his body as if inside a castle and must go up toward his head and
awaken
his senses.
David Weisner, Free Fall,
1988. Was it a wordless picture book? Boy falls asleep reading
and
dreams of flying, almost
MCEscher-esque bizarre juxtapositions and
connections.
Brilliant illustrator also won Caldecott not too many years back for TUESDAY
(also wordless) Anyway, the castle part tugs at me...
C165:
Changeling
stolen by fairies for housework
Solved:
Red Feather
C166: Country
boy
in
"Dick
and Jane" moves to city and wins baseball game
I think it was a
story in one of the "Dick and Jane" readers from
the 1950's (at least, that's when we read them!). It's about a boy from
the country who moves to the city and is ridiculed by the other kids
for
being a country bumpkin. Then one day he wins the big baseball game and
he's a hero. Hope this rings a bell with someone! Thanks for your help.
C167: Carolee
Carouthers,
had
no
sisters or brothers
Solved: The Tale of
Corally
Crothers
C168: Cinderella
in
verse
Solved:
Cinderella Retold in Verse
C169: Car
(Lazy)
Nearly
Scrapped
I recall a book
about a car that was very slow and lazy (I think
they kept painting it different colors, giving it different jobs; it
might
have been a taxi at one point, painted yellow, obviously.)
Finally
they're going to scrap it, and there's a creepy illustration at the
auto
graveyard, all the cars with their engines exposed and rusting, and the
little car freaks out so much that when given one last chance to run it
RUNS! And they paint it red and it goes to work for the fire
department.
Leila Berg, Fire Engine by
Mistake.
I think it might be this, or Berg's other book, The Little Car.
The Little Car (Puffin, 1974): "Eleven brief
episodes
record the adventures of the Little Car and the Driver who understands
every noise it makes."
C170: Christmas
tree
top
Solved:
Mr. Willowby's Christmas Tree
C171: Catholic
School
Reader
Solved:
Faith and Freedom Readers
C172: carillon,
hidden
valley
Solved:
The Whisper of Glocken
C173:
Children
in another realm
Solved:
The Tower of Geburah
C174: Child's
book
on
art
Solved:
Famous Paintings: An Introduction to Art
for Young People
C175: Crocodiles
drawn
to
look
like
Russian
People
1920s or
1930s. A picture book, black and white
drawings.
Pictures I remember are that the crocodile men wear spats, the women
wear
kerchiefs, there is a picture of them flying down to the Nile River (on
a carpet?) , and a picture of them with a samovar. That's
all
I remember..
Kornei Chukovsky, Crocodile
C176: Cinderella/Rumplestilskin
I am looking for a
picture book published probably in the years
1950-1954. It was the stories of Cinderella and Rumplestilskin together
in one book. I remember it beig a large (8 1/2"X11") vertical book. It
was not a thick book. I am sorry that I don't remembber the exact
title.
In the Cinderella story I remember the illustrations in that there were
3 balls that she attend on subsequent nights. Each night Cinderella
wore
a gown more beautiful than the last, one of which was silvery like the
moon and another was gold like the sun. It was probably a mass
market
book and may have been an import. I have searcehd the net myself and
had
no luck, so for 2 bucks I'll let you give it a try. I am a
children's
book author/illustrator myself, and this book was very meaningful to me
as a child. I hope you have better luck than I have.
I can't tell you what edition to look for, or
even precisely which fairy tale to look for (there are a number which
employ
the three dresses, among them being "Donkeyskin" or the Grimm version
of
"Allerleirauh (the Many Furred Creature)" but I can tell you you're not
going to figure it out looking under Cinderella. I'd widen your
base
to look at some fairy tale anthologies if I were you.
This book does not match in all particulars BUT..
Princess
Furball by Charlotte Huck, matches the other details
so
well! The three balls, the three gorgeous gowns (superior illustrations
with unusual textures by Anita Lobel) Great version of Cinderella!! I
just
had to toss that out there.
The description of the three gowns of Cinderella
sounds like The Fairy Tale Book by Adrienne Segur
(1958) under the Solved items.
[Actually,
that's illustrated by Segur; adapted and compiled by Marie
Ponsot.
See also the Back in Print page.]
I am thinking of a series of book I had as a
child. there were about 15 of them and every book had 2 fairy tales in
them, I
remember they were tall and did not fit in my
lap. The pictures were wonderful and I remember that Cinderella had 3
dresses
because that was the only time I had seen that version of it.One as
bright
as the moon, one as golden as the sun and I believe the first one was
red.They
were from Mc Calls. I believe the one with Cinderella had a pink cover.
The other stories were just as wonderful. Bluebeard, 5 Peas in a
Pod,Rapuzel,Hansel
and Gretel etc.
C177: Cardboard
box
played
with
until
it
falls
apart
Solved:
Christina Katerina and the Box
C178: Children's
Poetry
Book
I am looking for a
children's poetry book. It includes the
poem 'Raggedy Man' and the poem 'New Shoes'. It has poems by
Hilaire
Belloc and Robert Louis Stevenson. There are illustrations for
many
but not all of the poems. Some of the illustrations are of bugs
that
look a bit like Paul Klee artwork. I think the illustrations are
not all by the same person. The Owl and the Pussycat is included
and may be on the cover as a rather ornate illustration. The book
is approximately 81/2 by 11". It was read to me as a child in the
1960s.
Be sure you look
at the books on the Most
Requested
Antholgies
page to see if any look familiar.
#C178--Children's Poetry Book: Could be
one of the poetry volumes of Childcraft, 1954 edition
with
orange and blue cover, reprinted 1961 with red and white cover.
Jane Werner (ed.), The Big Golden
Book of Poetry, 1965. If "New Shoes" is actually
"Choosing
Shoes" ( About buying new shoes) then this book fits in all particulars
except Paul Klee artwork-but then again I am not exactly sure what Paul
Klee bugs look like! Check out this
book
at this site!
C179: Clockmaker
Solved: The Cuckoo Clock
C180: Chester
/
Aunt
Maude
/
cat
/
Solved:
That's Not Chester!
C181: Civil
War
Reenactor
Solved:
Meet John Trow
C182: champion
diver
It was about a
high school diving team. It was the diving
championship.
the one guy started playing this wierd word game with the other guy
just
to keep him relaxed. It was something like "you left a little dirt on
the
whiffle (or some madeup word) I'll go clean it up for you. He didn't
realize
that by playing this game and not focusing on his own performance, he
outperformed
everyone and won the championship.
Chris Crutcher, Stotan!,
'90's. This is a YA novel about a swim team. Don't remember
anything
about the word game...
This has to be much older than the 90s.
I remember reading this story in either elementary school or junior
high
and I graduated from high school over (Gasp!) 30 years ago. For
some
reason, I associate the story with the author of Follow My Leader.
Did
he
write
for
textbooks
or
school
readers?
HRL: Probably just means the book was available through Scholastic
Book Services, as I know Follow My Leader was.
Eric Berger (editor), For Boys Only,
Scholastic 1964. Any chance this was a short story and not a
novel?
This Scholastic anthology is from the right time and includes a story
called
High
Diver, by John Ashworth. Stories include - The Adventure at the
Toll
Bridge by Howard Pease, A Good Clean-Cut American Boy by Harlan Ware,
First
Command by Eugene Burdick, The Slip-Over Sweater by Jesse Stuart,
Caesar's
Wife's Ear by Phyllis Bottome, Sally by Isaac Asimov, Open Sesame by
Ray
Harris, The Torn Invititation by Norman Katkov, High Diver by John
Ashworth,
As the Eagle Kills by Hal G. Evarts, Alone in Shark Waters by John
Kruse,
and the Rookie Pitcher by John McClellen.
Franklin M. Reck, The Diving Fool
RECK, FRANKLIN M. The Diving Fool, (Short Story) (in) The
American
Boy Anthology, ed. Franklin M. Reck, Thomas Y. New York: Crowell
Company
1951 Also found in: The Arrow Book of Sports Stories and in
several reading/literature textbooks of the 60's and 70's
Franklin Reck, The Diving Fool. Just
to confirm that yes, this has got to be the short story ?The Diving
Fool?!
The new diving team member who?s absolutely a natural (and has great
technique
too) lets nerves derail his performance when the pressure?s on. The
first-person
narrator, a generous-spirited old team member who recruited him (i.e.,
doesn?t mind if this new guy is better, if it helps the team ? in fact
is simply happy to watch such a brilliant performer) jollies him along
and gets him ?in the zone?, as we?d say nowadays, in a crucial swim
meet
(the fate of the powers-that-be granting the money for a new pool, etc.
etc... the pressure was indeed on). The new guy had bombed somewhat in
his first meet a few weeks earlier. The nice old team member (whom the
coach keeps saying is good, but not performing up to his full
potential)
does indeed psych his new fellow team member up (again, terminology not
used back then!) by playing the ?iggle? game they?d goofed around with
in practices, as described by the OP. (It was decades later that I
realized
they were modifying the word ?eagle?!) Anyway, what worked for the
scared
new kid worked for the other! By gosh if the old kid wasn?t the one who
came in first, and the new kid second, so they won handily. I even
remember
exactly the closing dialogue: The old kid says bewilderedly, stunned at
his own success: ?I... I did what you wanted, Coach. I... I talked him
into it...? The coach interrupted him: ?You talked yourself into
it, you diving fool!? (Wish all of us ever experiencing stage fright
always
had such a compatriot to talk us into the right frame of mind! In
fact...
hmmm... really getting too long-winded here -- feel free to edit!! -- I
was reminded once again of this story yesterday when someone was kind
enough
to call me a "singing fool". My sight-reading abilities, for instance,
are really, really good. Sometimes I let nerves get in the way of the
production
of beautiful vocal tone, however! If I get "in the zone" though, I'\''m
all right. I want a companion on hand at all times like the old team
member
in this story!)
C183: camel
demanding
service
from
Bertram
Solved:
Bertram and the Camel
C184: Colonial
History
Solved:
Little Maid series
C185: Children's
song
book
from
1950s
Solved:
My Picture Book of Songs
C186: Colorful
creatures
along
a
river
Solved:
Barbapappa's Ark
C187: Cat
Solved: The Cat
Club,
or, the Life and Times of Jenny Linksy
C188: circus
dog
can
get
bigger and smaller
Solved: Little Peewee, or,
Now Open the Box
C189: Conformity
mistaken
for
equality
-
everyone
must
be
the
same
Solved: Harrison Burgeron
C190: catholic
children's
reader
Catholic reader, 1960s, focused on a
family, featuring twins, one of whom was named Claire. One of the
children tried to wash their shirt using a bluing agent, and the shirt
turned blue. There were stories of saints and legends as well,
including
a story about a saintly visitor who magically kept the flour bin full
during
the winter.
C191: Children's
Stories
(Includes
Snip
The
Tailor)
Searching for book of children's stories/fairy
tales my parents gave me about 1956?? About 6" x 9" and 1"
thick.
Whitish cover with some illustrations, hardbound. The only story I
clearly
remember is "Snip The Tailor" (although that might not be the exact
title).
Great sentimental value; thanks for anyone's help!! Note: Fairy
Tales
by Katharine Gibson (1950) listed in this site's "anthologies" which
includes
"The Brave Little Tailor" might be it but I've got no way to confirm.
I couldn't find Snip the Tailor
as part of an anthology, but I did find it as an individual book.
It's by Miriam Blanton Huber (Nisbet, 1952). And I found
Snip
the Tailor: a play for boys by Vincent Bedford (S.
French,
Ltd. 1930). Sorry, don't think this is what you're looking for.
I found a reference to Snip the Tailor
in Index To Fairy Tales, Myths, and Legends - 2nd
Supplement,
but I don't think it's the book you're looking for since it appears to
be a school reader. You can find the story in After The
Sun
Sets (Miriam Blanton Huber, F.S. Salisbury, & Mabel
O'Donnell
= ed. and comp., c1938, Row, Peterson & Co.) Note:
Wonder-story
books reading foundation series.
Saw "Snip the Tailor" in a children's
reader today- After the Sun Sets- ( A Wonder Story Book)
I believe these books were supplementary readers to go along with The
Alice
and
Jerry
Readers. A good number of other tales were
included
in the reader.
C192: cougar,
ill
girl,
christmas
play
Solved: The Tuckers: The
Cottage Holiday
C193: children's
book
families
and
animal
Solved: Everyday Story Book
C194: children,
old
victorian
house
and
elderly
people
and
ginseng
Solved: Gone-Away Lake
C195: Children's
adventure
series/cockatoo
named
Kiki
Solved: Adventure series
C196: Child
digs
through
back
yard to China
I am doing this
search for a friend. All she told me was what
I included in the subject line... a child digs through his back yard
and
ends up in China. Thanks!
Byrd Baylor, The Chinese Bug,
1968. Could this be it? "Using a broken hoe and an old
kitchen
spoon, a little boy who lives in the city is determined to dig his way
to China in the small dirt plot behind the neighborhood grocery store.
He decided he might even learn to speak Chinese, at least a few useful
words like CHOCOLATE MILK and PEANUT BUTTER AND JELLY. -- in the very
center
of the hole was a small glistening bug -- fluttering and bright.".
Illustrated
by Beatrice Darwin.
C196 Could this be the same as D114 Lifton's
Taka-Chan,
the dog that digs thru?
Wilbur, Richard, Digging for China,
1970. This picture book poem has illustrations by William Pene du
Bois. Doubleday, 1970. I also vaguely remember a very small
picture book about digging to China with illustrations (and possibly
the
writing as well) by Joan Walsh Anglund. Hope this helps.
C197: Cave
family
Solved:
The Cave Twins
C198: Chicago
Fire
Solved: Young and Fair
C199: CAN'T
REMEMBER
TITLE
OF
MYSTERY WITH FEMALE KILLER
Solved: Until Proven Guilty
C200: Castle
reappears
every
100
years
Solved: Shadow Castle
C201: Corncob
doll
Solved: Miss Hickory
C202: carpenter,
saw,
"zing,
zing,
zing"
The Little Carpenter?
Lenski?
1930s? My Dad was born in 1932. He fondly remembers his
favourite
book about a little carpenter and the line something like "zing zing
zing
went the saw." I have searched and inquired w/o success.
A little earlier than the 1930's, but...The
Little
Carpenter by ?? (Samuel Raynor, 1849). Series: New
and true books for the young, no. 4. Also anthologized in New
And
True
Stories
For
Children:
with
100
pictures.
C203: Colonial
Georgetown
Time
Travellers
Two children (possibly brother and sister)
about 8-10 years old, who live in the Georgetown section of Washington,
DC (probably in the late 1940s or early 1950s) wander into a shop in a
Colonial-era building "under" the (newly constructed or under
construction)
Whitehurst Freeway and find themselves in Colonial Georgetown about the
time of or during the Revolutionary War. The story concerns their
efforts to adjust to life in that earlier century and to get back to
their
own time. At the time I read this book, in the mid- to
late-1950s,
I lived in antoher part of Washington DC...
C204: caveman
kids
sewn
into
fur-skins
Solved:
The Cave Twins
C205:
Chinese
folk story collection
Chinese Folk Tales
or Anthology of Chinese Folk Tales ??,
1960s.
I'm looking for a collection of 13 or 14 Chinese folk tales or
stories.
I have sketchy memories of one story involving and old woman who takes
in a freezing bird of some kind and the bird becomes a beautiful young
girl who stays and is told she is the old woman's daughter.
Another
story involves an old man and woman and their young grandson.
When
asked by the boy what they are most afraid of, they discuss many scary
things, but by far the thing they fear the most is a "leak". The
grandson assumes a "leak" is a horrible monster, but is actually a leak
in the roof that would damage their home. The cover was brown or
gold and it was illustrated with simple pen and ink drawings. Any
help with this one would be greatly appreciated.
Here
is
a
link
for
Chinese
Folk
Tales.
I checked the links suggested for Chinese Fairy
tales/folktales.
None of the books listed were the book I am looking for. I may
have
purchased it through a school book fair?? I'm just not
sure.
Please keep looking, thank you.
Not a solution, but could it be an anthology
of Japanese fairy tales, rather than Chinese? The first story
described
sounds like the Japanese story The Crane Maiden, about
an
old woman who takes in a crane during a winter storm, the bird turns
into
a beautiful girl, and the woman raises her as her daughter.
This is definitely an anthology of Japanese folk
tales that you are looking for, not Chinese. The first story is
The
Crane Maiden, by Miyoko Mitsutani. The second
story
is the basis for The Terrible Eek, retold by Patricia
Compton. (On a rainy night, a man tells his son that the
things
he most fears are a thief, a wolf, and a "terrible leak." He is
overheard
by both a thief who happens to be on the roof and a nearby wolf. The
thief
falls onto the wolf and each believes the other to be the "terrible
eek."
Terrified, they bolt and frighten several other animals with their
misheard
story about the "terrible eek," leaving the family safe in their home.)
The date for Compton's retelling (1991) is too late for the anthology
that
you are looking for, but it sounds like basically the same story.
C206:
Christopher
Chameleon
I have been going
CRAZY trying to find a book which contains a
story/rhyme
about Christopher Chameleon. As I recal it went something like
"Christopher
Chameleon was a quite contrary chap...". I probably read it in a First
Grade reader in 1969/70. Please, please help me save my sanity.
C207:
Cinderella
Fatfoot
The book I am
looking for I bought in London, either at Harrods
or Hatchers in the 80's, and the title was something like ...."How
England
Won the War", or How Great Britain Won the Great War" or "How We Won
the
Big War." It was about a Kangaroo named "Cinderella
Fatfoot."
I remember that her part in helping win the war had something to do
with
her stomping her big foot on some seasaw type thing that propelled
someone
out of the fort or prison or forest ???????? I must tell you that
in later part of the 90's I went around to many bookstores in London
and
described this book, and no one had a clue as to what I was talking
about!!
Good Luck and thank you.
William Pène Du Bois, The
forbidden
forest, 1978. A lot of the
details
are different than the book described, but it's the only thing that
came
up in my database search of kangaroos and wars! "There were three
heroes on the British cruiser Barkham when it docked in Syndey,
Australia.
They were known throughout the world as the "Stoppers of the Great
War".
They are Buckingham bulldog dog, Spider Max (a man), and the mysterious
Lady Adelaide Kangaroo. Lady Adelaide, a boxing kangaroo, helps
to
defeat the German army, thus becoming a heroine of the Great War."
C208:
Child
giant isn't growing and rescues village from monster
Solved: Dooly and the
Snortsnoot
C209: children
paper
dolls
author
P-W
Solved:
The Jennifer Wish
C210: Cave
man
banished
from
tribe
Solved: Fire Hunter
C211: Childern's
Projects
A book on fairly improbable boy's engneering
projects was published in the 20's or 30's. It was an oversized book
and
about two inches thick. A couple of the projects inside were, 1. how to
build an army tank with working treads etc. the kid would sit inside
and
was able to move it on its treads. 2. An overhead cable car where a
child
would sit in a car suspended from a horizonal rope and move the cable
car
with a hand crank. Most of the projects were well beyound a boy's
skills
but they sure looked neat. The title may have had something to do with
"a boy's projects" or "projects for boys" orsome such. My copy was
destoyed
by a flood and I would love to find another copy.
Alfred P. Morgan, Boys' Book of Science
and Construction. Another
possibility
is N.B. Stout: Boys' Book of Mechanical Models, 1921.
H.H. Windsor, editor,
The Boy Mechanic
Book 3, 1919. This is a series of books (I have 1, 2,
&
3 - may be more printed) published by Popular Mechanics Press
(Chicago).
They consist of articles with diagrams for building all kinds of
things.
Book 3 is subtitled "800 Things For Boys To Do" and has instructions
for
an aerial cableway, miniature tank, motor car, parcel delivery bicycle,
etc. Hope this helps - just discovered your wonderful site tonight!
C212: Collection
of
Stories
Solved: Better Homes and
Gardens Story Book
C213: Cookbook,
International
Vegetarian
Solved: Golden Temple
Vegetarian
Cookbook
C214: crocodile,
poss.
legendary
bird
children's; abt.40
years old; crocodile, poss. legendary bird;
pictures
striking geometric, jewel-like colors
Tomie de Paola, Bill and Pete. A
possibility.
Picture
books
about a crocodile and his bird friend who
claims
to be his
'toothbrush'.
C214 I thought it might be this, but when I look
at it, it doesn't seem to have the geometrical artwork that I think I
have
seen on a smaller book around here. This is picture-book size, with
bold
illustrations throughout. Kissin, Rita. Zic-Zac, the
crocodile
bird; a good neighbor story from the Nile.
Messner,
1942, Junior Literary Guild. Another title I find on the Net is:
Pickford,
Susan B. Zic-Zac and the Crocodile
C215: Cheetah
time
travels
and
protects young King Tut
Solved:
Tomorrow's Sphinx
C216: Crippled
Girl
Skates
on
New Years to Pirate Ship
This takes place
in a European Village - 1700's? A crippled
girl wishes she could join the village New Year's Eve festivities where
everyone wears costumes and skates on the canals. Some carry
poles
with branches of lanterns. She gets her wish along with a
beautiful
green velvet skating outfit and a white muff that shholds to her cheek
to hide her identity from her friends. She skates farther and
farther
out, and comes upon an icebound pirate ship. She oards the ship
and
meets the pirate - Jean de Brulot (if I can remember this why can't I
recall
the title?!) The pirate shows her rooms full of treasures - pearls,
jewels
and gold. In one room a pair of twins sleep with a crystal ball
on
their shoulders. He breathes on them and they wake and show
pictures
in the crystal ball. She departs and asks if she can come again
next
year. de Brulot tells her she must choose -- she can either walk
again -- or only skate once a year, and return each New Year's
Eve.
She chooses to walk, and does, but come New Year's she skates out to
where
the ship was to find that it is of course - not there. The ice
begins
cracking under her skates and she hurries home. I loved the delicious
dilemma
of having to choose between ordinary all the time, or very
special
only once. I have since experienced such choices, and each time i
do, it reminds me of this book. Who knows? perhaps I am destined to
read
this book only once! Thanks for your interest and assistance!
Levy,
Madeleine, The Enchanted Eve, Howell
Soskin, 1945. This
has
got
to
be
it!
Plot
description:
"A
story
about
a
little
girl
living
near
Elewyt,
Belgium
in
what
looks
to
be
the
late
18th
century
whose
legs
have
been
crippled by
an
illness. She is the daughter of a painter and often goes with him while
he
paints watching the nature around her. She is beautiful in spirit and
everyone
loves her. One day a musician comes to entertain the children. After he
finishes he talks to her and finds she cannot walk. He tells her he is
actually
a magician and can grant her 1 day a year to walk. She chooses St
Sylvain's
Eve as it is a day for an ice-skating carnaval and she would love to
skate. The
rest of the story is about what amazing sight she sees in a great
sailing ship
and the that miracle happens to her after St. Sylvains Eve and what she
gives
up to be able to walk again."
C217: China
story
Solved:
The Five Chinese Brothers
C218: cat
disguises
as
dog
This is a
children's book and involves a cat (whose name may be
Alex) who disguises himself as a dog to fit into his new
neighborhood.
That's all I know about it. I'll look for it on your listings as, "cat
disguises as dog,"
Griffith, Helen, Alex and the Cat, 1982.
Just a possibility - but Alex (the dog) thinks that being a cat is
preferable
to being a dog. The life of a cat does not require as much as
that
which is expected of a dog.
C219:
Children's
book of how stories
Solved: Folk Tales
Children
Love
C220: Chicken
chased
by
Wolf
Solved:
Rosie's Walk
C221: Callahan
Girls
-
Sisters,
one named Peggy
Solved: The Callahan Girls
C222: Christina
and
the
Fairies
Solved: Christine's Fairy
Friends
C223: Caterpillar
tractor
I was delighted to hear the report this
morning
on NPR about Bookstumpers. I have been looking for a book
that
I read in grade school in about 1950. Yes, I am now 65, but
have never forgotten that story, though the title eludes me. The
story is about an adolescent and his somewhat older friend who find a
Caterpillar
D-2 crawler tractor nearly submerged and abandoned in a mountain
lake.
They get it out, repair it, find a used Traxcavator attachment, build a
trailer, beef up a clunker old car by installing a second transmission
for added pulling power, and then the young man uses the equipment to
make
money for his college education. I was fascinated by the
marvelous
ingenuity of those men, and how they were able to resurrect old stuff
that
many now would consider merely junk. I thought the title was
"Caterpillar",
but have checked that out at several libraries with no results, so the
title must be different. Can you or your readers help me find
this
book? I have told my children the story many times, but would
love
to be able to read it to my grandchildren. Thank You!
Meader, Stephen, Bulldozer,
1951. I think this is it. I remember the part where the hero(es?)
got hold of the bulldozer attachment for the tractor.
Meader,
Stephen,
Bulldozer, 1951, copyright. It is
definitely Meader's Bulldozer. I am a librarian
in New Jersey and we have a collection of Meader books.
C224: Classroom
tied
with
string
The book was a single-author collection of
adventures of a boy in small-town U.S. I read it in the mid- to
late
70s. The one episode I can recall involved the boy and his
friends
tying everyone and everything in their classroom into a giant web of
string.
I believe the teacher came back and told them they would have the time
off or outside, but now had to get out of their predicament with the
time
instead. (I know the description sounds like Homer Price, but it
isn't -- or at least it's not in either _Homer Price_ or _Centerburg
Tales_.)
Merritt Parmalee Allen,
Mudhen.
It is a long shot, but it is the only book of boy stories featuring one
character that I know. The Mudhen played a lot of tricks, too.
Robert Newton Peck, Soup series.
Just a possibility - I can't identify the episode, but I've only read
one
or two of the books.
Could this be an episode in one of Robert
Newton Peck's Soup books? I know there's a chapter in
Soup where he ties people up with rope, including his Aunt Carrie,
which
earns him a thrashing. The episode described sounds like
something
Soup would do.
Jamie Gilson, 13 Ways to Sink a
Sub. I seem to remember the incident with string occurring in
this
book, where 4th-grader Hobie Hanson and his friends try to make their
substitute
teacher cry. Gilson wrote several books about Hobie and his
school
friends.
C225:
Collection
of fairy tales
Solved: Let's Pretend
C226:
Chapter
Book
Solved: Five Little
Peppers
and How They Grew
C227:
Cat
that talks backwards
Solved: Half Magic
C228:
Children's
Collection?
Solved: Better Homes and
Garden Story Book
C229: Children
visit
heraldic
land
This one is REALLY obscure! I read the book
as a small child and it was old then - I think it dates to the 1920s or
30s. The title may be 'The Griffin' or 'The Gryphon'. Some children go
to a magic country inhabited by heraldic animals. Their guide is
the griffin/gryphon. The ultimate enemy is the cockatrice.
Somewhere
in this story was also a very 'alternative' family whose small children
were called Battle, Murder and Sudden Death. You can see why I
remember
it!
C229 It's not Stockton The griffin and
the
minor canon
gerald durrell, the talking parcel
Gerald Durrell, The Talking Parcel, 1974. I too
am almost sure this book is Gerald
Durrell's The Talking Parcel. Although it was published
in 1974. There are fire breathing Cockatrices and a
Gryphon. Three cousins called Peter Penelope and Simon journey to
the land of Mythologia where flowers never die and there are four
sunsets a day.
C230: Children
turn
into
crows
Solved: Magic in the Park
C231: Civil
War
Young
Romance
Come the
Spring/Let the Spring Come, 1960s. The plot was a
girl during the American Civil War who went to a spring or creek one
day
and saw a young soldier. He asked her for something to eat.
Over the next four years of the war, he comes in and out of her
life.
The reader is never sure which army the boy is in. It is a very
nice,
gentle young adult historical romance.
I think you have
the title correct. Try this: Henry
Schindall.
LET
THE SPRING COME. Appleton-Century-Crofts, 1953. Dramatic
Novel
of Virginia and Kentucky in Revolutionary Days- poignant
love
story, fast-moving story of adventure, intrigue and a fearful battle
against
odds, and an inspiring story of hope and courage- story of human beings
in time of turmoil and stress- . It's hard to find; but I did
find a nice first edition copy available for $80. Let me know if
you want it...
You answered my query (C231) , but I think you chose the wrong
book.
The book by Henry Schindall takes place in the Revolutionary War, and
the
book I am interested in takes place in the American Civil War. I
contacted a bookseller who has the book for sale and he said it
definitely
takes place during the Revolutionary war. I specifically remember
that the period is the 1860's because the guy never tells the girl what
side he is fighting on. The book takes place over the 4 years of
the Civil War. The Revolutionary War lasted 8 years.
John Lawson, The Spring Rider. This
sounds like a wonderful out of print book from Harper & Row, in
which
the
mysterious soldier may or may not be Abraham
Lincoln. There's a young girl and, I believe, her brother.
C232: Conan
Solved:
The Incredible Tide
C233: Crow
Looking for a
story my brother used to love when he was in the 1st
or 2nd grade. It was a story about a Crow. I think he
caused
mischief. It started out with "Caw Caw". Then the crow did
somehting else and the text was "Caw Caw More More". Then another
even happened and it read "Caw Caw More More Beep Beep". You get
the idea. As for time frame, we read this in the mid 1970's but I
think the book was older then (library book), so maybe from the
1940's-1970's.
Thanks for any help!
C234:
Chess
A novel for teens
about a group of kids and playing chess.
This was writeen in the late 50s or early 60s and has a chess-type
title
(eg. Black Queen).
C235:
Christmas
story about Brownie/Grandpa Elf
Ok, this is a
story about Santa who is trying to get ready for
christmas
Eve and his elves are helping him. I remember Brownie elf Grandpa
elf, who wore glasses and fell asleep on a shelf. I remember Mrs.
Claus made cookies and I think they fed the reindeer in the barn.
Some of the elves spilled paint on the floor. this is NOT the one
that rhymes, there was this book that we had first in the early 80's
and
then we moved and my mom bought another version that rhymes and we
hated
that one! please let me know if you know anything about this
book.
thanks!
I am the
original stumper requester- the book has an elf that
they
call a brownie (apparantly brownies and elves are the same thing) and
one
is grandpa and he falls asleep on a shelf, another loses his glasses,
Mrs.
Claus bakes cookies for the elves, they feed the reindeer and on
brownie
spill red paint. this book is so important to me and my
mother.
neither of us can remember the name, but it wonderfully and colorfully
illustrated. thanks!
Sparkie with George
Hinke illus.,
Jolly Old Santa Claus, 1961. This sound an awful lot like
Jolly
Old Santa Claus published by Ideal in the early 1960's.
There
are a couple of things that don't match. No Brownie.
Gran'pa
Elf just won't wear his glasses. Everything else matches.
The
illustrations are vibrant busy oil paintings by Geo. Hinke. At
the
end Santa returns to find that their cat has had kittens.
Sparkie , Jolly Old Santa Claus,
1961. I wrote in that I believed this to be Jolly Old Santa
Claus,
but that one thing I could not find was an elf named Brownie.
When
I said that I was going by the 1990's reprint, which said it had the
original
story and all the original illustrations! Still I had a sneaking
suspicion
that it was revised because I vaguely remembered some things such as
the
spilled paint and the elves going to bed which were not there!
Well,
I found my brother's 1961 copy and lo and behold it has been much
revised.
Nearly all the elves have been renamed, except Grampa. And in the
original the elves are all called brownie there is Brownie Jingle
who spills the paint, Brownie Grampa who is always forgetting his
glasses,
Lazy brownine who hides high on top of a shelf so as not to have to
work
and there is and section where the brownies help Mrs. Claus in the
kitchen
with making cookies and when the work is all done she serves them
cookies.
What I can not find is anyone sleeping on a shelf, but like I
said
Lazy Brownie is on a shelf and looks like he is snoozing! If this
is the book beware of the reprint! It is not the same (but still
very charming). There are sections missing and some new ones added.
Mauri Kunnas, Santa Claus
and His Elves,1981.This
sounds
quite
a
bit
like
a
book
that
I
just
recently
refound
for
my
son
who
was
born
in
1981,
so
the
right
time
frame.
There
is
a
lot
going
on
in
the
pictures
including
pretty
much
every
thing
you
mentioned.
I
think it was
originally written in Finnish.
C236:
castle
is there
Solved:
Tom's Tower
C237:
chimney,
potato famine, underground, time travel
Solved: The Mine of Lost
Days
C238:
Colors-
Red Blue Yellow
Solved:
Open Your
Eyes
C239:
Chinese
water buffalo - Dabitse (sp?)
Solved:
Dabbitse
C240:
Cat
Painter in Paris
by Huxley or Maugham?, late 1940s.
The storyline is about a youmg man living in Paris after the war who
paints
pictures of "moggies" (cats) to make a living, but knows he has
"greater"
works of art in him if only he had the means to make them. His
girlfriend
goes out with an older man to help make ends meet and the story unfolds
around this scenario. I have read everything I can find by Aldous
Huxley
and also be Somerset Maugham as the style of the writing had a rather
dry,
disparaging style characteristic of their work and era. However I am
coming
to the conclusion it may be by a more obscure author or could even be a
short story in a collection.
The genre is
defintielty not in the children's section! It's
definitely
adult fiction I am starting to think it's probably in an anthology of
short
stories.
This has some similarities to the short story
"The Unknown Masterpiece" by Honore de Balzac, but I don't
think
anyone paints cats. In Balzac's story, a young painter persuades
his beautiful girlfriend to pose for an older man, a painter who has
gone
mad over a masterpiece he has been working on. It's a great story
and the poster would probably enjoy it.
C241:
"Charlie"
- Prisoner of War
Solved:
The Man in the Box
C242:
Cuban
Missile Crisis
Solved:
Mystery of the Secret Message
C243:
Creatures
with hats design trap against invasion
I am looking for a
children's picture book which would have been
in print by the late 70s/early 80s. The community of creatures each
wore
hats, including the king. The community was afraid of an invasion and
built
an elaborate trap as protection. Two of the characters' names resemble
Quantimodius and Pointus (?). The book may have incorporated basic
physics
concepts.
Here are some
more details: The trap that the people designed was
a large hemisphere suspended from a pulley. I think the people wore
pointy
hats and rode horses.
C244:
Cats
with paintbrushes
I am looking for a
book, probably about 45 years old, that was about
4 cats with paintbrushes, who painted in pastel colours.
Could this be Color Kittens,
the
Little Golden book?
Margaret Wise Brown, The Color Kittens
Margaret Wise Brown, The Color Kittens,
ca. 1950. This does sound like The Color Kittens, except that
there
were only two of them (Hush and Brush), and I don't recall the colors
as
being pastels, necessarily. (As I recall the story, Brush and
Hush
were trying to create green paint, and came up with pink and orange
before
they finally got the recipe right. They then fell asleep and had
dreams about some other colors before waking up, getting pouncy, and
spilling
over all of their buckets, thus creating all the colors in the
world.)
The original illustrations were by the Provensens I've seen a
more
recent edition with redone pictures, but if the contributor is thinking
of a book published 45 years ago (and assuming that The Color Kittens
is
the correct book), then the memory the contributor has must be of the
Provensens'
illustrations.
C245:
Cars
with faces
Solved:
Modern Story Book
C246:
children
have time travel machine
Solved:
Time Machine to
the
Rescue
C247:
Children's
dragon story
I'm looking for a
book my Nanny used to read mewhen i was little
probably 1984ish though i don't think the book was new. It was about a
young bot dragon meeting the girl (dragon) of his dreams. The pictures
were colour and cartoon like, cover was maybe yellow. It all rhymed but
i can't remember the story too well. The only quote i have is..."Eye's
like diamonds, teeth like pearls. Oh how he wished that he could touch
her, talk to her he didn't dare" Any help in finding this story would
be
great. Thanks.
Myers, Dragon Takes A Wife. There
was an early edition of this book that might be what you are looking
for.
I totally remember that quote, also had the book
in question. There was more than one in the series but the character
(boy
dragon) was called dennis the dragon and at least one of the books was
named dennis the dragon. I think the first one was about
him going off to school. they had brilliant illustrations!
C248:
Christmas-
Old Fashioned Santa on Cover
Solved:
A Child's Christmas Cookbook
C249:
Christmas
Tannenbaum
Christmas story
about a tannenbaum wanting fancier decorations than
needles...tried using coins, and crystals which broke
Henry Van Dyke, Foolish Fir Tree.
This sounds like the story of the foolish fir tree who wished for
leaves
of gold, glass
and lettuce. See
this website.
Thanks for taking the time to send in this suggestion. The
gist of the tree story is the same, but the book we're trying to find
was
prose. Any other thoughts would be appreciated.
Bailey Carolyn, short story in collection
- little fir tree? I have clipping from an old book.
I tell my own version of this story. The tree is not a Christmas
tree, however, just a fir tree in the forest. It wants to have
pretty
leaves instead of ugly needles. Then when given a chance to wish,
it tries for something even better than the broadleaf trees. It
gets
crystals and the wind destroys them, gold leaves and a man picks
them.
Then the tree decides to go with the original idea of green broad
leaves,
but a goat eats them. Finally the tree realizes that it is best
to
be happy with one's self.
Rose Dobbs, Once Upon a Time Story Book,
1958 Random
House, copyright.The
story in the collection is entitled The Pine Tree and is the same
referred to
by Caroline Bailey. This version is not a Christmas tree by a pine tree
in the
forest that wishes for gold leaves, then glass, then green leaves and
is
finally happy with the original green needles.
C250:
chipmunks
living in roots of big old tree
Solved:
Chip Chip
C251:
Cassandra
Solved:
Hobby Horse Hill
C252:
Children
at War
Book must have been first publihed in 1938
to 1942. A young boy wishes for a set of toy solders, toy cannons, etc.
to fight a backyard model war with his friend next door. His father
buys
such toys and the armies are arrayed across the yard elaborately. The
cannons
fire actual minature shells such that their hands are wounded from this
"war".
C253:
Choose
the ending
Solved:
Choose Your Own Adventure
C254:
Corliss
Archer and Poindexter
Solved:
Meet Corliss Archer
C255:
Cats,
Castles, Clouds
I'm looking for a children's story that i
read whenI was in elementary school, from the school library. The book
must have been published prior to 1980, as I was in first grade in
1980,
but it could have come out a few years into school? It wasn't too long,
and it was a fantasy story about a cat, and or cats that lived in a
castle
in the clouds. That's all I really remember, but I really enjoyed it
and
can't seem to find anything about this book doing Internet searches.
Hope
you can help. Thanks
Ursula K LeGuin, Catwings
series ???
Boegehold, In the Castle of Cats?
C256:
Can't
Remember
The story, which may be fictional, concerns
itself with a WW2 incident..Three or four soldiers, I believe,French
are
trapped by a bombardment, in a German food bunker on the Maginot(sp)
line.
Totally cut off, but with ample food and wine, and a large supply of
candles,
they try to make the best of a desperate situation. They are not
discovered for several years, and the candles had run out long
before.
Two or three suvive, but are half blind, fithy and disorienated. Its
agripping
story, but for the life of me, I can,t remember the title or
author.
Can you help?
Jean Paul Clebert, The Blockhouse,
1958 in English, 1955 in French. What must be the same book
was asked about a few years ago on another of my lists; it
eventually
drew this response (note that a movie was also made from the
book):
"The Blockhouse" (1973), directed by Clive Rees, starring Peter
Sellers, Charles Aznavour, Jeremy Kemp, Peter
Vaughan, Nicholas Jones, et al. Maltin summary: "Dismal, downbeat
story of laborers trapped in underground bunker when the Allies
land
at Normandy on D-Day." And OCLC yields this: 1955 novel by
Jean Paul Clebert, "Le Blockhaus" -- English edition 1958.
C257:
compendium
of children's stories, poems etc
Solved:
The Illustrated Treasury
of Children's Literature
C258:
Children's
Short Story Book From 80's
This children's short story book was produced
in the 80's, appropriate for older children, black & white
illustrations,
oversized softcover, I think; one is about a boy who finds a pair of
boots
on a street corner, when he puts them on he starts running and he can't
stop. Another story is about a boy who always lies, he says his parents
work for the circus, none of his classmates believe him, then he
disappears
from school and the teacher tells the children that the boy had to join
his family back with the circus. Another story is about a boy who is
skiing
on a mountain and goes down faster than he should and he hears the
mountain
say that he should slow down but it's too late and he gets in an
accident.
Another story is about a girl who is delivering papers in storm and she
gets sucked down in the drain pipe and is holding onto the edge to save
herself. Also one about a girl who is swimming in the ocean and a
shark comes up behind her and bumps the backs of her legs, but then
swims
away. It makes a point about how a shark will attack some people
but not others.
C259:
Chimp
with a smile his mother loved
Book of short stories about animals, late
50's. Possibly British. Very sad endings, and one story ends
with
either mother chimp or baby chimp dying, and the baby gives his mother
the smile she loves.
C260:
Caterpillar
changes into butterfly just in time!!
Possibly late 50's/early 60's. A
caterpillar
(a secondary character) is in a chrysalis (I think)...Has to warn his
friends
about some impending danger, turns into a butterfly "just in time" and
is able to make the journey. (I think the main characters were
children.)
I'm pretty sure this is one of the Cosgrove
"Serendipity"
books
- not sure which one, but sounds very, very familiar.
C260 is not Cosgrove's The dream tree
which is about a caterpillar wishing it knew what it would be like to
be
a butterfly - no friends in danger. It is not the Chubby Board
Book
The
Caterpillar who turned into a butterfly.
Beverly Nichols, The
Mountain of Magic. This
is
the
third
book
of
the
series,preceded
by
'\''The
tree
that
Sat
Down'\''
and
'\''The
Stream
that
Stood
Still'\''
A wicked witch gets all the animals in
a cave,
and prepares to break open a dam and drown them all. A caterpilar that
was
scared of becoming a butterfly hatches out, and flies furiously to warn
them. I
think he dies of exhaustion.
C261:
Clubhouse
picture book kids paint newspapers
Solved: The Curious
Clubhouse
2004
C262:
Cat
from ancient Egypt is immortal
Novel about a cat given to a young boy by
an old man. Old man says the cat (whose name is Ka) has been
alive
since ancient Egyptian times and can't die because he drank
mummification
fluid. I keep thinking the book was called "The Cat Who Wouldn't
Die" or "The 2,000 Year Old Cat," but searches turn up nothing. I
read it when I was about 10, so this would have been about 1983; I
don't
know how old the book was at that time, though. I can't remember
much about the plot, but I think the boy played baseball and upon being
given the cat his luck improved. In the end, I think the cat
disappears,
and it is implied the Egyptian gods came and collected him.
julia jarman, the time travelling cat
and
the egyptian goddess. this
book
features a cat called Ka and is easily available.
The
Jarman book looks iffy to me as a
solution, per a listing on the "Ancient
Egypt in Fiction" Web bibliography. Three problems: the
dates
don't match (poster's book was read in 1983, but Jarman's book was
apparently
published in 1992) the origin stories for Jarman's cat and the
poster's
don't quite seem to match and the endings don't quite match (note
that Jarman's book is part of a series).
William
MacKellar,
The Cat That Never Died,
1976,
copyright.
On
your
SOLVED
MYSTERIES
-
T
page,
I
believe
you
have
incorrectly
identified
"The
Time
Travelling
Cat
and
the
Egyptian
Goddess"
by
Julia
Jarman
as
the
solution
to
this
stumper.
This
is
*not*
the
book
described
in
the
original
query.
For
one
thing,
the
publication
date
is
far
too
late.
I
believe
that
the
correct
solution
is
"The
Cat
That
Never
Died"
by
William
MacKellar, published in 1976.
Description: Mystery tale of a black cat that wandered into an Egyptian
tomb and lived for 3000 years. Young Jeff Considine tries to
uncover
the truth about this legend.
This stumper has been unsolved (as
of April 2009) due to popular demand. It seems we assumed the
first suggestion was correct, but too soon. Sorry!
C263:
Christmas
Mittens
Solved:
The Tall Book of Christmas
C264:
colors
and sunshine
Solved: Frederick
C265:
chinese
silver slipper buckle
Solved:
Rootabaga Stories
C266:
CAT
IN FABRIC MILL
Solved: Factory Kitty
C267:
city
kids help paint an apartment
o.k...we had this
book in the 70's...vivdly illustrated book and
i think the story was about some inner city kids getting together and
helping
to repaint an elderly womans apartment?? the illustrations included a
lion
and a sun with a face in it...if anyone can help i will be forever in
your
debt!! my sisters and i have been looking for this book since the 80's
and now we have a new generation to read it to! peace...
i guess i
should add...the illustrations were of the paintings
the
kids did on the walls of the apartment building, super rich colors of
animals
and landscapes....
i'm the poster of c267 and i had a question... i've been reading
through your pages of books to see if anything sounds familliar to jog
my memory for the name of the book i'm looking for, and I ran across
the
book No Children, No Pets... do you happen to know if this was
an
illustrated book or not? I told my sister the name and she said that
sounded
familliar, but we may be confusing our information?? We both really
only
remember the pictures in this book, so we have little other reference
to
go by... Thank you so much for your help.
As far as I can tell, it's a juvenile novel with some b&w
drawings.
Here's another description: New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1957. Hard
Cover. Weekly Reader. Nice black and white illustrations. A
classic
kid's story of a family who inherits an apartment house in Palm Glade,
Florida and the strange tenants and hurricanes that they have to deal
with.
o.k. thanks...its not the book i'm looking for if its just black
and white illustrations...But again many thank yous for any attempt at
finding this book for me!
o.k. talked to my dad, he says that it had to be new around
1969-1975,
it was larger scale, hard-backed, but not alot of pages...he seems to
think
the title was something like "Mrs. Hopkins Apartment" or something of
that
nature...but he also said that he could easily be wrong...does this
ring
a bell with anyone out there?? peace...
I wonder if M248 & C267 refer to the same
book?
yes, i'm pretty sure the other post is by another curious family
member...the quest continues!!
hi i'm the poster of C267...but was wondering if possibly C261 was
looking for the same book? I'm still in search of this colorful thing
and
actually have found pictures of a wall painted with the same
illustrations
in the book i'm trying to find,,,but still no title....
anyone...anyone???
thanks again for your help..
C261 was just solved as Leonard Shortall's
The
Curious Clubhouse, 1967. I don't think yours is the same...
i'm the original poster of C267...and i am still on the prowl for
this book i had as a kid...after asking more family about it...some
seem
to recall it being called something like "mrs. (something or others)
boarding
house" or "mrs. something or others apartment building"...and only
around
30 pages...if this helps or rings a bell with anyone, i would love to
know!! updated: but now i have an image that may ring
someones bell! i'm the poster of C267 and when we were kids and had
this
elusive book, my dad took one of the illustrations from it and painted
it on my
wall...well i found a picture of that wall painting and was hoping
maybe
someone would recognize it! crossing fingers~~
C268:
collection
of poems by schoolchildren in Texas
the book I'm
searching for is a collection of poems by
schoolchildren
in Texas published between 1935-1937. My aunt who recently passed away
wrote a poem as a child that was published in that book and she had a
copy
of it but it got lost while my mother was settling the estate. My
mother
wants very much to replace it but can remember very little, only that
the
title was simply something like "Poems of Schoolchildren of Texas" she
thinks and the publication date I mentioned and that the cover was just
a plain dull green. I have already searched using this info at
biblio.com,
abebooks, and several others with no success. Thanks for any
suggestions
you can make.
Blount, Iva M., Poems of Texas,
1936. Was your aunt from San Antonio? If so, this may be
the
book you're looking for:
Published in San Antonio by The Board of
Education.
"Reproduced from type-written copy./ "This is a collection chosen and
selected
by pupils in the Edgar Allen Poe Junior School under the guidance ...
of
Mrs. Iva M. Blount ..." Foreword." There is a copy in the Univ.
of
Texas at Austin library - check your local library to see if you can
get
it through interlibrary loan.
I did check with UT Austin library research. They say my aunt's
poem is not listed in this book so I guess it isn't the book I'm
looking
for. But thank you for your trouble. I appreciate it.
Some more long shot possibilities, found in the
WorldCat database: But for a light original
verse
/ Poetry Club (Thomas Jefferson High School, San Antonio,
Tex.)
The Sigmund Press, 1935. If crickets hear :
original
verse / Poetry Club (Thomas Jefferson High School, San Antonio,
Tex.)
1936 Patriotic moments, a second book of verse by the
Bellerophon
quill club of the Booker T. Washington high school, Dallas,
Texas.
by Brewer, John Mason, 1896-1975. Booker T. Washington High
School
(Dallas, Tex.). Bellerophon Quill Club. 1936 Youth in verse :
an
anthology
of
poems
by
high
school
students.
North
Texas
State
Teachers
College,
Denton,
Tex.
1938
Youth in verse :
an
anthology
of
poems
by
high
school
students,
volume
II
/ North
Texas State Teachers College. Denton, Tex. 1939
Bound typescript complilation of poems by
students
of the Demonstration School of the North Texas State Teachers College./
Foreword by Lillian Walker. edited by Georgia Rae Glover.
C269:
Caterpillar
Board Book (not Eric Carle's)
Solved: The Little Green
Caterpillar
C270:
Childrens
cat book; illustrated with embroidery
Solved: Tell me Cat
C271:
Crocodile
Tears / Lion
Solved: Hubert's
Hair-Raising
Adventure
C272:
collection
of short children's stories
Many, many years ago (mid 80's) a big box
of books was lost during a move. In it was one of my favorite
collections
of children's short stories. For some reason lately I've really been
wanting
to reread those stories and have been unable to find another copy of
that
book. Mainly because my faulty memory has lost the title of said book
over
the years. At this point I can only remember the synopsizes of
two
of the stories... So, has anyone read the following two
stories?
And do you remember the name of a book that they were both in? #1
A tale of a dragon who loves ice cream but can't eat any because it
always
puts his fire out. Kids help him try out different flavors and a
friendly
ice cream man comes up with "hot" ice cream flavors just for the
dragon.
The dragon gets to have his ice cream and fire breath too.
#2 A dragon is captured by a small
village
and the villagers feed it nothing but bread and cream. The dragon,
while
enjoying the bread and cream, seems to shrink in size. His scales fall
off leaving soft fur behind. He becomes the first cat and the reader is
gently admonished to never feed a cat raw meat lest he become a dragon
again.
Check the Solved
Mysteries pages for BIG Story Book (Malvina
C.
Vogel, 1978) and Giants & Witches, and a Dragon or
Two
(Phyllis
R Fenner, 1943).
Govindan, Santhini, The ice-cream dragon
and other stories. Harper
Collins
1993. This may be too late a date, but I'm sending it because of
the title. "Have you ever met .. a real Fire Breathing Little Dragon
with
a weakness for ice-cream? And Balban the Lion who hiccups .. and the
Tooth
Fairy who .. If not, you can meet them now as they inhabit the magical
world of this book."
The first story doesn't ring any bells, but the
second sound exactly like one of the stories in E. Nesbit's 'The
Last
of
the
Dragons
and
some
others'
C273:
Christmas
Stories from the 50's
My mom is looking for a book that was very
special to her as a child. It's a collecion of different Christmas
stories.
It's a hardback book with yellow cover, appx. 8 1/2 x 11. It was
probably
published in the 50's. There are color illustrations throughout. The
story
that she remembers is of a little girl that has gotten lost because the
falling snow has covered up her footsteps. The picture in this story is
of this little girl looking down a long street of homes with Christmas
lights. My mom assumes the whole book is of Christmas stories because
this
is a Christmas story. I know there aren't too many details and
appreciate
any thoughts you might have. She's been looking for this for years and
is sure she won't find it for lack of info. about it. It would be a
great
gift for me to give her. Thank you ALL!!
Smith, Dorothy Hall (ed.), Tall
Book
of Christmas, NY Harper 1954. It may be this one (on the
solved list), if the story of The First Christmas Tree is a bit garbled
- in that one the woodcutter father gets lost in the snow, and is
guided
home by Christmas lights on trees. It has colour illos and a peach(?)
background
to the cover illo. However, it could also be The Santa Claus Book, if
the
recollection is of the story Susie's Christmas Star, with the little
girl
following her own footsteps in the snow along a street. That one is
Golden
Books, 1952, and also on the Solved list.
Christmas Ideals. This book
sounds very much like one of the Christmas Ideals. I was a child in the
50s, and read my grandmother's. She bought them every year. They are
now
softcover magazine format, but they used to be hard cover. Some
booksellers
specialize in them They would have color as we well as line and
monochrome
illustartions, stories and poems. They repeat a lot, so the individual
story could be repeated later.
C274:
children
with witch fighting dead evil Viking warlord
Solved: The Giant Under
the
Snow
C275:
Cave
Boy River Village
Solved: Journey Outside
C276:
Candy
Man
Solved: The Candy
Man and Other Verses
C277:
collection
of fairy tales
Solved: Fairy Tales
C278:
City
is turned topsy-turvy
City is turned topsy-turvy when a mischievous
boy(?) creature(?) changes signs, etc. Big, full-page, colorful, busy
street
scenes. Published early 1960s. This is all I remember!
Mr. Pine's
Mixed-Up Signs features a similar idea: Mr.
Pine makes new signs for the town, but he can't find his glasses, so he
puts them up randomly all over the city, to comic effect. Now
back
in print. See the Leonard Kessler
page.
You suggested that the solution to my query might be Mr. Pine's
Mixed-up Signs, but Kessler's illustrations didn't look familiar at
all. The book format, as I remember, was bigger than an easy reader
with
full-page spreads and much brighter, less sketchy illustrations than
were
pictured in the "Purple House" book. So, unless the illustrations were
very different in the "Signs" book, this isn't it. But, thanks anyway!
Eastman, P.D. (Philip D.), Sam and
the Firefly, 1958. Could this be it? I hesitate to
mention this book because it is an easy reader (so it isn't "bigger
than
an easy reader") and the illustrations are in four colors (turquoise,
yellow,
black and white) and may therefore not be "colorful" enough. The
plot: Sam the owl befriends Gus the firefly, who can make shapes in the
air by keeping his light on and flying about rapidly. Sam teaches
Gus to make words that look like neon signs. After a short period
of innocent fun, the mischievous firefly uses his newfound talent to
crash
cars, confuse airplanes, and cause a stampede towards the local movie
theater
(he writes the words "COME IN! FREE SHOW" over the marquee) and
away
from a local restaurant (he writes the word "COLD" over an ad for hot
dogs).
The angry cook catches Gus in a jar and begins to drive the firefly out
of town. His truck stalls on a railroad track just as a train
approaches.
Sam the owl smashes the jar and liberates Gus, who prevents a collision
by writing "STOP" in front of the oncoming train. All is forgiven
and the two friends depart.
Arnold, Tedd, The Signmaker's Assistant,
1992. If you're absolutely sure that the book is from the 1960s,
this can't be it, but it meets all the other criteria. This book
is larger than an easy reader and full of big, colorful street
scenes.
Norman, a young boy who cleans brushes at the signmaker's shop, decides
to make a few signs of his own when the signmaker isn't around to
supervise.
Norman has a great deal of fun at the townspeople's expense, but
realizes
he has erred when they become angry and tear down every sign in the
town,
old as well as new. Chaos ensues and the townspeople chase the
signmaker
into the woods. Norman apologizes and peace and order are
restored.
Even if this isn't the book you're looking for, it's a worthwhile read,
so check it out!
No, it's definitely not SAM AND THE
FIREFLY.
Actually a particular sign I remember is more like a big billboard and
something on it - a picture or phrase- is defaced (in a humorous way).
Possibly traffic signs are changed as well. Very colorful pics, busy
and
funny - sorry I can't remember more. I remember the cover was
salmon-colored,
but I think that was just a library binding - now why can I remember
that
detail, but not more important ones? Frustrating. Thanks for the guess.
Lipkind, William, illustrated by Nicolas
Mordvinoff, Perry the Imp. NY Harcourt 1956. Kind
of
a longshot, but the date is right. "The comic adventures of Perry the
imp
who came up from the sea, full of mischief, shouting "Landfolk, look
out!"
Turning the city of Dopple into another Venice made him a
celebrity
taking care of the Dopplers' clocks had a different result. It is all
fantastic
nonsense, carried out with perfect harmony in the good read-aloud text
and the details and atmosphere of striking color illustrations. The
double-spread
scene showing the Dopplers enjoying their new canals will occupy a
small
child a long time." (Horn Book Oct/56 p.346)
James Flora, Great Green Turkey
Creek Monster, 1965. In this story the whole town is turned
topsy-turvy
great green hooligan vine town, a really fun book
C279:
clever
suitor filled a room w/candlelight to marry a princess
I'm trying to find the title to this story
I read maybe 15 years ago in a book of fables. I can't remember if I
read
it in an older book or one that was modern. The story is basically
about
a king who has a beautiful daughter, rather than chose a husband for
her.
He sends out a chalenge to any man who might try. His chalenge is to
fill
a particular room in his castle completely. Many try but all but one
fails.
A young man enters the room with only a candle and flame, he sets the
candle
in the middle of the room and lights it, the light fills every corner
of
the room and he wins the hand of the princess. Any help is much
appreciated.
C280:
Cavegirl
found
Solved: The Faraway Lurs
C281:
Changeling
/ Witchling ??
I read this book
when I was young, eleven or twelve maybe, 1970s.
I may very well be getting two books mixed up together. The one I'm
thinking
of involves a brother and sister and perhaps a friend of theirs. The
older
brother calls the younger sister Luci, but it's short for Luciana or
something
similar. I remember a point in the story where Luci has to hide under a
bush from the danger. I cannot remember what that danger was however.
And
all three, the brother, the sister, and the friend are running from it.
At one point they go to the friend's house which is all dilapidated and
rundown I think. Please help!
Zilpha Keatley Snyder, The Changeling.
I could be wrong, but I know I read this book back in the 70's. I
don't, however, remember the plot.
Snyder, Zilpha Keatley, The Changeling,
illustrated by Anton Raible. NY Atheneum 1970. This does
sound
like part of the answer (but only part) - the main characters are two
young
girls, Martha Abbott and Ivy Carson, but Ivy's young sister does play a
part, and there is a memorable picture of a dark-haired girl crouched
under
a bush. The Carson home is large and dilapidated - the girls also
explore
the ruins of a burnt-out house. However I don't recall anyone called
Luci
or fleeing from a danger. The other book that comes to mind is The
Other
One, by Josephine Lee (alt. title Joy is
Not
Herself), published Knight 1974. In that one a very ordinary
English
family has one different daughter, called Melusine, who seems to have
witchy
powers and can ill-wish people. At one point the children hide behind a
hedge while a girl who let Melusine's guinea pig die is bucked off her
horse. The house they live in in the country is rather old and
dilapidated.
At the end of the book they seek the vicar's help in driving the evil
spirit
from Melusine through a night of prayer, and after that she is called
by
her middle name, which is Joy.
Boston (last name), The Children
of Green Knowe, 1960s. I think this may be the book you
are
looking for. The first in the series of the Green Knowe books.
Greaves, Margaret, The Dagger and the Bird,
HarperCollins 1975, copyright. I wonder if this could be The
Dagger
and
the
Bird? Two children, Luke and Bridget (shortened
to Biddie) search for their younger brother who's been stolen by
fairies.
If the poster has reversed the names in memory, but remembered that one
name was shortened, it could fit.
C282:
Cat
and Princess find gift
Solved:
The Secret Cat
C283:
Camp
Solved: Sal Fisher
at Girl Scout Camp
C284:
Cinderella
holding a white kitten
Solved: My Book of
Cinderella
C285:
Cloud
animals, blond boy (Dondi?)
Solved: Deegie and
the Fairy Princess
C286:
Christmas
Card
Solved: A Christmas Card
C287:
Carousel
horse
Solved: Penny and the
White
Horse
C288:
Carlo
saves girl
Carlo, a collie,
sees a girl run into the street and into the path
of an oncoming car. He pulls the girl to safety, but the car hits
him. Carlo has a broken hind leg. Fortunately, Carlo
recovers.
Could be a story in the Elson-Gray or Scott Foresman primers, no later
than 1941. Carlo also appears in another story in the 1936
Elson-Gray
First Reader ("Carlo and the Big Bird").
C289:
Cranberry
Bog Mystery
Solved: Holly River Secret
C290:
Cashmere
sweaters and storm cellars
Solved:
Kathy
C291:
Cody
of the Ozarks
Solved:
This Boy Cody
C292:
Childcraft
poem
Solved:
Childcraft
C293:
Cat
and dog in wordless picture book
Solved: Pssst! Doggie--
C294:
Cold,
not gold, in cave
Solved: Ghost Town Treasure
C295:
Child/angel
child/angel that grants a wish to
shoemaker/cobbler
who shows kindness
Red Boots for Christmas / The Cobbler's
Gift. If it's a Christmas story, it's one that has been
told
in many versions. The Lutheran church put out a book and video
called
Red
Boots for Christmas. It's also been called The
Cobbler's
Gift. The cobbler in these stories doesn't always show
kindness,
though, until the end in Red Boots for Christmas, he is a bitter,
selfish
man. He is visited by an angel who says that God will be visiting
him he goes around cleaning up, making a special meal and trying to
find
a gift for God in the meantime, assorted poor people come to his door
and
are either helped or not helped, depending on the version. In the
end, he is upset because God didn't come then God or the angel speaks
to
him and says that the needy people coming to the door represented God,
and that was the point.
Additional Story details: The story is of a child/angel who
arrives in a small town and asks a wealthy shopkeeper and his wife for
some food and they send him away. He then asks a poor
shoemaker/cobbler
and he asks the child/angel to join him for dinner and shares his
humble
dinner with him. He then offers the "child" a place to sleep (a
straw
mat) and then a breakfast. The "child" thanks him for his
kindness
and tells the cobbler that whatever he does that day he will be
successful
at and do all day long. When the cobbler arrives at his shop he
begins
to repair the shoes and proceeds to do so all day long, making a lot of
money. The greedy shopkeepers see this and ask him how this has
come
to be, so the cobbler tells them of the "childs" "wish". The wife
tells the husband to find the "child" so that they can benefit the same
way. The husband finds the "child" and takes him in for the
evening
providing him with a wonderful dinner, a feather bed to sleep in and a
wonderful breakfast. As the "child" leaves he tells them the same
as the cobbler. So the shopkeepers rush to their store and clean
out cabinets and drawers to hold all the money tey're going to make.
Instead,
all they do is empty boxes all day and they make no money. I saw this
story
in a small book, like a Golden Book in the early seventies, but I don't
know who the author was or the name of the story. I have looked
for
it for quite some time.
C296:
Charmed
Circle
Solved: Katie Rose
series
C297:
Candy
land with two kids
A boy and a girl (sister and brother?) are
transported to a land made all of candy. This was my mother's
book
as a child. She was born in 1931. I read it in the
50's.
It was a thick novel, maybe 150-200 pages, with a tan colored cloth
binding
and a color reproduction plate on the front cover. Color reproduction
plates
of paintings illustrate the story throughout. Maybe 15-20 of these.
I actually have three suggestions for this
one.
The first is the 1928 book Candy Land, which was a part
of
the Little Color Classics series and had a number of color plates of
illustrations.
No author was listed for it, but the illustrator was Hildegard.
It
was about a little girl named Betty and her friend Brunny (who was a
bear,
not a boy) and how they visited a land made of candy. The second
suggestion is Candy Country by Louisa May Alcott
(who,
of course, wrote "Little Women"). It was published in 1900 and
has
a similar story (a girl named Lily visits a fantasy land of candy), but
I do not know if it was ever published with color illustrations.
Finally, there is In Wink-a-Way Land by Eugene Field,
published
in
1930
-
it
definitely
had
color
illustrations
and
a
picture
of
children
picking
candy
from
a
field
on
the
cover,
but
I
do
not
really
know
the
story.
Hope
one
of
these
is
what
you
are
looking
for.
Baum, Frank, Magical Monarch of Mo.
Sounds like it could be a chapter out of the Magical Monarch of
Mo,
written before 1930s. In one chapter one of the princes is
banished
to an island made entirely of candy.
I have a few suggestions for you since they were
offered to me as solutions to my stumper.
1. A trip to Lazibonia, by HM Denneborg
aka Heinrich-Maria Denneborg, translanted by Anne Rogers, illustrated
by
Horst Lemke, published in London by Kaye and Ward Ltd, 1971
2. Adventures of Calico Cotton, Helen
Lawrence
Backman, drawings by Joyce Langelier
published by Rolton House, Inc., 1967
3. How about Hansel & Gretel, Dot &
Tot from the Oz Books, or the Nutcracker and the Mouse King?'
C298:
Candy
Solved: The Sweet Touch
C299:
Collection
of short stories
Solved:
Through Golden
Windows
C300:
consequences
of electing wrong president
Uninformed
electorate puts personable, attractive, but incompetent
president in office. Democracy suffers. This is all I remember
about
a book I reported on for a history class in my senior year of high
school
(I graduated in 1950). My history teacher was very pleased with
my
selection of this book.
Except for the dates, plot sound similar to
those
in Eugene Burdicks The 480 and Ninth Wave. (He also
wrote
Fail-Safe
and
The
Ugly American.)
Not sure, but I think that might be today's
newspaper
(Nov 3rd, 2004)
Probably Sinclair Lewis' IT CAN'T HAPPEN
HERE (1936)? If not-- Two long shots, both obscure:
PRESIDENT
RANDOLPH AS I KNEW HIM by John Francis Goldsmith (1935)
and PRESIDENT JOHN SMITH by Frederick Upham Adams
(1897, but reprinted a few times since then). I think President
Smith
turns out to be a good president (the book is sometimes cited in
bibliographies
of utopian fiction), though. I don't know anything about the
Goldsmith
book beyond the title and fact that it's set some twenty years in what
in 1935 was the future.
C301:
clock
in grandfather's house
Solved:
The Cat in Grandfather's House
C302:
child
abuse
Solved: Like the Lion's
Tooth
C303:
cat
saves car from snowstorm
Solved: Elephi, the Cat
with
the High IQ
C304:
children's
ghost story collection
Solved: Ghosts and More
Ghosts
C305:
collection
of short stories
Solved:
The Anything Box
C306:
cats
cradle
Solved: Cat's Cradle,
Owl's
Eyes
C307:
Cross
on Canyon Wall
Solved:
Ghost Town Treasure
C308:
Christmas
time, black and white illustration
Solved:
The Christmas
Kitten
C309:
childrens
poetry, owl, wynken
This was a
paperback book I had when I was little (circa
1974).
It was childrens poems, and the cover was maybe blue and soft and
pastelly.
I know it contained Wynken blynken and Nod, the owl and the pussycat,
the
gingham dog, maybe Mr. Nobody. Each page had pictures, and I
remember
an owl and a pussycat dancing, kids sailing in a shoe, and bits of
gingham
flying around. Maybe a spoon and fork dancing? Not sure
about
that one. The pictures might have been black and white, but the cover I
think was mostly blue. Hey, I've seen you guys do tougher ones
than
this!! There was also a poem about a puffin or something, some
sort
of little penguin looking thing, and in the picture, he seemed kinda
sad
and lonely. Also, the cover had a very motherly feel to it, like
a mother putting a baby to sleep or something. It actually may
have
been bedtime poetry, now that I think of it.
Have you looked
through the Anthology
Finder to see if anything looks familiar? Check out the Big
Golden
Book
of
Poetry....
Puffin poem: I don't know which collection
you had, but you can find the puffin poem here
(scroll down a ways).
I had a book of poems by Eugene Field
(I think) that included Winken, Blinken and Nod and the
Gingham
Dog and the Calico cat. I remember the dog and cat got in a
fight
and there were bits of fabric all around when they finished fighting.
This
might be it..
If the collection included The Owl and the
Pussycat, it would not have been a book of poems by Field,
since
that one is by Edward Lear. The Gingham Dog and the
Calico
Cat is properly called The Duel, and it has been included
in
many collections of childrens' poetry.
C310:
Christmas
Horror Short Stories for children/teenagers
This was a book
that i owned about 10 years ago so i guess it was
published around then, i can't remember the title or the editor but it
was a book of short stories by different authors, all with a christmas
theme and all horror stories. For example on one story a boy burns down
his house by tipping over the xmas tree and kills his parents, who he
hates,
and in another a girl spends xmas in a squat and discovers a skeleton
behind
a wall. There was also a story in which two children hate their
stepsister
and at xmas they get coal in their stockings while she gets presents,
and
one where a girl's house burns down and her mother dies in the fire,
which
involved a painting of a sunset. Basically it's about a lot of people
having
a really terrible christmas! Any help with the title etc. would be much
appreciated!
Here are some possibilities - who knew there
were
so many Christmas horror books out there?? And I'm thinking the
first
books may all be the same book with different titles. -Mysterious
Christmas tales : horror stories for the festive season.
(Scholastic,
1999, 1993) "Includes stories by Gillian Cross, Susan Price and Robert
Swindells". -Chilling Christmas tales (Scholastic, 1993,
1992) -Haunting Christmas tales : horror stories for the festive
season / Joan Aiken / Nine stories of Chritmas past and
present, mysterious, scary things have a way of happening, whether the
people in them have been naughty or nice. "Jingle bells / Tessa
Krailing
-- The woodman's enigma / Garry Kilworth -- The weeping maid / Robert
Swindells
-- The investigators / David Belbin -- The cracked smile / Anthony
Masters
-- The other room / Jill Bennett -- The chime child / Ian Strachan --
Crespian
and Clairan / Joan Aiken -- Across the fields / Susan Price."
These
look like adult titles: -Chillers for Christmas / Richard
Dalby -Shivers for Christmas / Richard
Dalby -Mistletoe & mayhem : horrific tales for the
holidays / Richard Dalby
Scott Corbett (author), Mircea Vasiliu
(illustrator),
The
Big Joke Game (1972) I've
read
this, and it is definitely the book the stumper requester is looking
for!
I don't have it in front of me, but here is what I remember.
Ozzie
is a fun-loving boy who irritates the adults around him with his
incessant
jokes, riddles and pranks, and his obsession with board games.
When
he gets into serious trouble at school, his parents think about sending
him to a military academy, and Ozzie decides to run away. While
climbing
down the trellis outside his window, he falls into The Big Joke Game, a
life-size board game that he must win in order to return to
earth.
With his "guardian devil" Bub at his side, Ozzie has many strange
experiences
and gains a degree of maturity before the book concludes. Fun and
interesting without being preachy or heavy-handed. See the Solved
Mysteries "B" page for more information.
C311:
China
dog
Solved: No Flying
in the House
C312:
Children
on the Oregon Trail
Solved:
Children of the
Covered
Wagon
C313:
Crosspatch
the Friendly Lion
Solved: Crosspatch
C314:
Colonial
Boy
Solved: The Star-Spangled
Banner
C315:
Christmas
Chipmunks
Solved: The Biggest, Most
Beautiful Christmas Tree
C316:
Christmas
Polar Bears
Solved: The Christmas Book
(Jaques)
2005
C317:
Children
waiting for Christmas
Solved: Christmas is Coming
C318:
Catskill
Mountains with Ginsing
When I was in fourth grade ('79-80) my teacher
read a book to us. The main characters were two teenage boys, the
book was set in the Catskill Mountains of NY and Ginsing root some how
played a part in the story. I think that there was also a cabin
that
was supposed to be haunted, screaming or noise coming from it,
but
which turned out to have a simple explination like a bird - maybe
a loon or woodpecker? It seems the book may have been set in the
50's. It was a hardcover book but I do not remember a dust jacket
of any sort.
Could it be any of these? Evers, Alf, The
deer-jackers. illus by Lewis Parker. Macmillan,
1965.
George,
Jean Craighead. On the far side of the mountain.
Puffin,
c1990.
I
did
just
read
more
than
I
should
have
of
this
one:
A
teen
age
boy,
Sam
Gridley,
a
teenager
from
NYC
spends
a
yr
really
really
living
on
the
land.
He
used
a
lot
of
wild
plants,
but
ginseng
was
not
one
of
them
and
there
wasn't
really
any
mystery
cabin
in
this
one,
and
not
2
teenagers,
tho
he
did
have
visitors.
Also
by
George,
Jean
Craighead,
The moon of the owls. Crowell
c1967
My book is not any of the Jean Craighead
George
books, as she is one of my favorite authors (I probably should have
mentioned
that in the original email). Its also not The Deer-jackers.
I
also
remember
that
the
money
that
could
be
earned
from
the
Ginsing
somehow
solved
a
problem-maybe
in
keeping
the
land
that
the
cabin
was
on.
Eda & Richard Crist, The secret of
Turkeyfoot Mountain. I
remember
it well. I don't own a copy at this moment, so I can't give copyright
date.
The story of two boys who seek a the lost cabin of a "Sang Hunter"
(wild
Ginseng hunter) and the treasure of fine roots he left behind. The book
features the lyrics of a mountain ballas about the Sang Hunter's ghost
"...in his long black coat/Laughin' through the wilderness."
Irene
Hunt,
No Promises in the Wind.
I
don't
know
if
these
will
be
right,
but
two
books
came
to
mind,
although
both
seem
a
little
advanced
for
fourth
grade.
No
Promises in the Wind (Irene Hunt) is about 2 brothers
from Chicago during the depression, who run away and survive on thier
own. Where the
Lilies Bloom has several brothers and sisters living and surving
on thier own by gathering herbs to sell, particularly Ginseng, they
however live in the Appalachians not the Catskills. Don't know if these
will help, Good Luck.
C319:
Christmas
story
Solved: A Little Cowboy's
Christmas
C320:
Cats,
Spaceship, and a Genie bottle?
Book probably from
the 1960's or 70's. I can't remember much
about the story, but the pictures were very vivid - even
psychedelic.
What I can remember: space theme, flying saucer (to perhaps Mars), Cats
(perhaps with multiple heads), a Genie bottle (with a cat inside),
Robots
(perhaps the robot had mutliple heads?) and something about a very
small
box. Perhaps the story was about getting the cat back in the
Genie
bottle. Sounds strange...but it was a very good book.
Please
help!
Ted Key, The Cat from Outer Space.
Maybe this is it? I seem to recall it involves a cat named Jake
who
comes from outer space. Don't remember the robots, though.
C320 I checked Space cat goes to Mars,
but
I
don't
think
it
is
any
of
that
series
by
Todd Ruthven.
C321:
Cathy
on the Oregon Trail
Solved: Cathy and Carl of
the Covered Wagon
C322:
Cotic
the seal
Solved:
Kotick the White Seal
C323:
Chess
Oak Tree
Solved: The Chestry Oak
C324:
Covered
wagon to California
This book was a
diary of a young girl who traveled in a covered
wagon to California. She had a brother with a horse named Scout, and at
the end of the book, her brother was prepared to shoot Scout for food
because
the oxen were more valuable. He shot into the air, and was heard by a
rescue
party who came from California. The rescue party brought oranges. I
believe
the diary she was given at the beginning of the story was blue leather
with gold trim. I read this story in the mid 1970s.
George R. Stewart, To
California by Covered Wagon, 1954. This
could
be
it
--
it
is
by
Random
House
Books
for
Young
Readers,
for
approx
ages
10-12.
Reprinted
as
"Pioneers
Go
West"
in
1984.
From
the
viewpoint
of
a
boy
named
Moses,
though.
C325:
cat
with peg leg
Solved:
King and the Princess
C326:
Chinese
man paints Easter eggs
Solved: The Whiskers of Ho
Ho
C327:
Carole
and Penny
Solved: Penny Parrish
series
C328:
Chinaberry
Tree Mystery
Chinaberry Tree
Mystery or The Mystery of the Chinaberry Tree My
mom read this when she was in grade school, would have been the 1940s
or
1950s. They moved before she was able to finish it; I sure would love
to
find it for her!
C329:
Cat
with glasses
Title
unknown. Only fact known: The cat wore glasses - and
this fact is important to the conclusion of this children's
story.
If this rings any bells, please let us know. Thanks.
Lasson, Robert, Orange Oliver: the
kitten
who wore glasses, Young Readers
Press,
1957. Just a guess.
C330:
Car
changes color
Solved: The Speedy Little
Taxi
C331:
Child
at toy store picks a stuffed animal with button face
Solved: Corduroy
C332:
City
friends build country house
Solved: Hans and Peter
C333:
Cosmo-
time traveler at mill
Solved: The Shadow Guests
C334:
Children
playing in a life sized board game
Solved: The Big Joke Game
C335:
Crafts
Book 1960s
Solved: McCall's
Giant
Make-It Book
C336:
Caliban
Solved: The Witches' Bridge
C337:
Canadian
Crafts book
Your website is the best. Now I'm
looking
for another book, given to me as a gift in the mid-1960s by friends of
my family who visited from Canada. It was a small format craft book
with
dustjacket. I don't remember the projects, but the idea was you
could
use things commonly found at home. Near the front of the book it said
to
"Have your Mummy help you". I remember the use of "Mummy" rather
than "Mommy" but don't remember any other details.
Sorry, no ideas about the specific craft book,
but I might point out that Canadians (where I live anyway) usually
spell
Mommy with an o, not a u. So maybe your book was a British import?
I think you may be right, this book must have
been a British import.
C338:
Christian
redemptions
Solved: Living
Hope Library Series
C339:
City
vacation
A book I read in the 1950's about a little
black girl who goes to the city to spend time with, I think, her
grandmother.
I don't know if it has an illustration or if I just imagined a picture
of the little girl sitting on the stoop of a building.
Eva Knox Evans, Araminta.
1930s
Good guess, but the little girl is visiting her grandmother in the
city, not the country.
This sounds like a story I read in
grade school, that was in one of our readers. I remember "Aquí
está mi
nieta" - here is my granddaughter. I remember the little girl walking
through the city. I don''t remember the author or title, but I'll keep
looking!
C340:
Cars
(or trucks) bump together
My brother has been looking for a book that
he remembers from his childhood in the late 1940's or early 1950's. It
was a Golden Book and had the following sentence in it: "The red truck
(or maybe car) and the blue truck (again, maybe car) bump together and
that was an accident and that's too bad."
There are a few Golden Books featuring
Cars/Trucks:
Try Cars #251, c1956, Author: Kathryn Jackson. Cars
and
Trucks #366,c1969, no author, Illus.Richard Scarry.
Also
check
the
Little Golden Book Collector's Identification &
Price
Guide which should be in the library reference section. It
shows
the front cover of all their books. I hope this helps.
C341:
Crustaceans
Undersea Crabs Underwater Kingdom
The children's illustrated fiction hardbound
book I seek might have had the words "Crustaceans Undersea Crabs
Underwater
Kingdom" in the title--possibly, but not for certain. The book had to
do
with a guest being shown around an undersea "kingdom" or court.
There
were crabs (maybe even fiddler crabs) in the story, and when the guest
was shown around, I believe the guestroom had seaweed silk pillows
(gold-green)
to sit on. In fact, I think it was some sort of custom that one
was
required to sit on these pillows! The slim, approximately 12" x
12"
storybook was purchased around 1954, and was lavishly illustrated in
color.
The size wasn't huge, but it was a hardback "trade" book. The book was
written for children who already knew how to read, and was not a
learn-to-read,
nor adolescent book, so it was for elementary school children, I
think.
The book wasn't a version of "The Little Mermaid," I don't think. Nor
was
it the retelling of a a classic. Basically, the plot had to
do with being introduced to a crab culture or crab society, and there
may
have been a crab king or some such hierarchy. The protagonist
felt
like a stranger in a strange land. The book took place only
underwater,
and was fiction, not science. I think it must have been one of
those
books written to sell in bookstores--a slim, entertaining volume and
not
a series of adventures. The book must have been published in the
early 1950s, as my mother bought the book for me around 1954 at Levy's
Department Store, Savannah, Georgia, in their Mezzanine book
department.
Levy's has now become the library for the Savannah College of Art and
Design
(SCAD), so I am afraid the store's inventory records are likely
unavailable--but
I guess it wouldn't hurt for me to call the school and ask!
From what I
have learned about the book I seek, at least I was
able
to input that info on another stumper that describes the exact plot of
the book I am searching. Unfortunately, the book I found was British,
with
fussy illustrations and too recently published. The book I need
about
an undersea tour was likely American, published in 1953 or 1954, with
illustrations
that were more heavy black outlines and bold colors within.
I was able to find Priscilla and the Prawn on the Internet,
look
at its illustrations, and was able to determine it was not the book,
but
I did relate that book info to stumper # L 136, a quest for something
that
sounded identical. Won't give up on my book, and am
desperate!
Thanks for your site!
Hewson, Isabel Manning, Land of the Lost,
1945. Could it be this one, from the Solved list? The time is
right,
and there is an undersea kingdom, though I don't know whether it is
only
for crustaceans.
Re stumper C341, someone has posted a response, but the suggested
book, "The Land of the Lost" by Hewson (1945) is not the book, as that
book deals with fresh water, originates above ground, and the book I am
seeking takes place completely in the ocean, with marine animals
(shrimp
families, crab families, etc.). I remember that each marine animal
family
had its special color silk pillow on which to sit. ...
although
I do want to note how appreciative I am for the reply.
C342:
ck
wallace
book my teacher read aloud to the class in
third grade (about 22 years ago) All I remember is a group of sibllings
(although possibly friends)--at least two guys and a girl--being
transported
to some alternate land (or maybe just time when magic worked) and
undergoing
some adventure/quest. I remember it as being dark comapred to
other
children's books I had been exposed to at the time. I think there
was "Tower" in the title and I vividly remember a passage in the book
where
they are transported to another place and end up coming up from
underground
and it was described as "swimming" through the earth.
C.S. Lewis, The
Silver Chair.
Eustace Scrubb and Jill Pole are transported to Narnia where they must
rescue Prince Caspian, who is under a spell and being held prisoner in
a land deep underground. Not sure if this is the one -- they don't
"swim
through the earth" per se, but that phrase reminded me of the mayhemic
scene in which they are trying to race to the surface.
The "CK Wallace" (which reminds me of Charles
Wallace) and the three kids travelling makes me wonder if this could be
A
Wrinkle In Time by L'Engle. It's possible the scene
described
is when the kids go to the 2-dimensional world?
C.S. Lewis, The Chronicles of Narnia.
Digory and Polly become friends when he moves in with his uncle a
maigcian
who has magical rings that transport the children into and enchanted
world.
They enter this world through a pool in the woods and encounter a land
of eternal winter. This is the first book of seven entitled The
Magician's
Nephew. The more popular second book is The
Lion, The Witch and the Wardrobe which has four children who
live
in Digory's home many years later. Their adventures start by
entering
the land of Narnia by stepping through the back of the wardrobe.
Madeleine L'Engle, A Wrinkle in Time,
1962. This sounds like A Wrinkle in Time, although
others will know better. Two siblings -- Meg and her brother
Charles
Wallace -- and a boy from Meg's school travel through a wrinkle in time
to try to rescue Meg's father. No tower in the title, but there's
a lot of talk in the book of "tesseracts." Also, it's not clear
what
the "ck wallace" as the heading for the request denotes, but if the
contributor
recalls that one of the characters had a similar name, s/he is probably
remembering Charles Wallace.
Madeleine L'Engle, A Wrinkle in Time,
1962. It's unclear why the title of this stumper is "ck wallace",
but if the stumper requester thinks this could be the name of a
character,
the book sought could be A Wrinkle in Time.
Charles
Wallace Murry, his sister Meg, and her schoolmate Calvin O'Keefe are
transported
through a tesseract to the planet Camazotz, where they hope to rescue
Meg's
father. As for the "swimming through the earth" passage the
stumper
requester remembers---this description of the end of Meg's first
tesseract
trip is from page 58: "And this feeling of moving with the eath was
somewhat
like the feeling of being in the ocean, out in the ocean beyond this
rising
and falling of the breakers, lying on the moving water, pulsing gently
with the swells, and feeling the gentle, inexorable tug of the moon."
the book I was looking for definately wasn't
a
wrinkle in time, I've read that whole series repeatedly and other
than
it having children in it, there aren't any parallels to the book I am
seeking.
Alan Garner, Elidor,
'60s?? This description reminds me of elements of Garner's Elidor,
and
of
another
of
his
books
(where
there's
a
substantial
underground
section,
although
I
don't
recall
any
"swimming")
called
The Weirdstone of
Brisingamen.
Joy Chant, Red Moon and Black Mountain
This might possibly be the one.
Margaret Jean Anderson, In the Keep of
Time. (1977) maybe _in the
keep
of time_ by margaret jean anderson? even though i reread it
recently
I don't remember it well, but it's a fairly dark YA novel about 4
siblings
who are exploring an ancient scottish tower and end up first back in
time
(during the battle of flodden, I think?), and then in the future.
from 1977. I don't specifically remember the 'swimming through
earth'
but that sounds very familiar.
John White, The Tower of
Geburah, 1978. This
might be The Tower of
Geburah by John
White.
I'm not sure about the swimming through the earth part, because
it's been many years since I've read it and I don't own a copy to
check, but I think the rest of the description fits.
C343:
Children
enter magical land with a knife
Solved: The Amazing
Vacation
C344:
Cuban
grandmother
What I am looking for is a YA book probably
published in the 60s (possibly 50s) about a teen girl who is sent to
visit
her Cuban grandmother (as I recall). She suffers from major culture
shock
and homesickness, her girl cousin sneers at her and Americans in
general,
characterizing them as the type of people who put white sauce on all
their
food. There is some kind of political activity involving a friend of
the
cousins (hint of a love interest, though as it's YA it's all very
innocent),
who is participating in some kind of clandestine (revolutionary?)
activity.
Some danger of him being found out near the end, where heroine who is
not
supposed to know about any of this somehow gets involved and either
helps
him get away or helps protect him from exposure. The heroine's name
MIGHT
be Jennifer. I thought this might be a Betty Cavanna, but haven't been
able to find any indication that it really is.
Marjorie Vetter, Journey for Jennifer,
1954. This is a guess - here's the
only
description I could find: Jennifer could feel her face stiffen as she
watched
Steve say good-by to the others. Didn'\''t their dates on board the
ship
to Havana mean anything to him? Wasn"t he going to miss her at all when
she was in the hill country?
C345:
Caribbean
island
Solved: The Cay
C346:
carousel
horses come to life and return to wood under blackthorn trees in a full
moon
I hope you can
help I've been looking for this book for years! The
carousel/merry-go-round is about to be torn down and destroyed, the
carousel
horses don't want to be destroyed and are brought to life (I can't
remember
how or who by!) however they are told that if real life gets too much
they
can return to their wooden form by going to sleep under
blackthorn/hawthorn
trees on the night of a full moon. It is quite a sad novel although it
is meant for children. I remember that one horse returns to wood but is
found by a farmer who turns it into a rocking horse for his children
and
the horse is happy again. It is not a picture book and I suppose it
must
have been written in the late 60's to late 80's. Any help you can give
would be hugely appreciated.
No
answer
yet,
but
this
stumper
sounds
similar
to
stumper
T207.
C347:
coyote
can't capture pairie dog that pops from hole to ho
Solved:
Peter Picket Pin
C348:
children
turn into birds eat nuts man into tree
Solved: Magic in the Park
C349:
Candy's
sail
to
independence
Solved: Sea Sprite
C350:
Children's
machinery book - 1930s
Solved: Number 9 - The
Little
Fire Engine
C351:
Concertina
and toothache stories
I am looking for a
book I had as a kid in the late 70s-80s. It may
have been published by a publisher like Scholastic. It was about
a little girl who lived with her grandfather and got into mischeif.
Someone
played the concertina, either the girl or the grandfather. I beleive
the
title included the name of the girl. Also there were small
illustrations
inside the book at the beginnings of each story/chapter. One story was
about the concertina, one was about a toothache. The book was regular
paperback
sized. Not quality paperback.
C351 You can't believe how many Google entries
have concertina and toothache in them I gave up halfway thru.
C352:
Chinese
girl eats watermelon seeds
I read this book
in the late 1950s or early 1960s. I remember
that I enjoyed the book -- it was not a big book -- and that the little
girl ate watermelon seeds as a treat. There may have been some
reference
to peach blossoms.
Have you tried any of Eleanor Frances
Lattimore's
(1904-1986) books? She was born in China, spent her early years
there,
and that's reflected in a number of her children's books, which she
also
illustrated.
Lattimore, Eleanor F., Little Pear, 1931.
A
possibility--Little Pear has two sisters.
The story was definitely centered around a
young girl so I do not believe that the correct answer is LITTLE PEAR
although
I will read the book to see.
Jade Snow Wong, Fifth Chinese Daughter.
Not
sure, but it sounds similar.
Thomas Handforth, Mei Li, 1938.
This reminded me of a story in one of the Through Golden Windows
books. A little Chinese girl has adventures at a New Year's
fair.
I didn't see a reference to watermelon seeds, but they could have been
in the original book.
C353:
Cat
and dog have series of adventures
Solved: The Adventures of
Brownie and Puff
C354:
Children's
Land
Solved: The Children's
Blue
Bird
C355:
Charley
Solved:
The Girl Who Ran Away / Charley
C356:
Christmas
story about a family of mice
christmas story
about a mouse family. Had it on a record in
the early 1980's, but I think it was a read-along book with a record,
but
I cannot remember the book so I may be wrong about that. Story
took
place the day/night before christmas. The mice lived in the house
of a human family and they had to collect things that they needed for
christmas.
I mostly can only remember sound effects (sound of wind, cookies being
made,etc.) Not sure if this is the right site for this type of
query,
but I am hitting dead ends everywhere else.
Walt Disney, 'Twas the Night Before Christmas,
1976,
copyright.
This
description
reminded
me
of
a
television
animation
'Twas
the Night Before Christmas (1974, Rankin/Bass). A
soundtrack record of this cartoon was released by Walt Disney in
1976. The website
http://www.vinylencore.com/Religious-Misc-database.htm sells a copy of
that Disneyland record (complete story and original soundtrack,
narrated by Joel Grey). Also, maybe just listening to the
soundtrack of the cartoon on DVD would help determine if this is the
record remembered from the early 1980's.
Kathleen Daly, Christmas
Joys, 1980. At
Christmastime,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Mouse
take
their
new
baby,
Chris
Mouse,
around
the
house
and
town
to
show
him
the
joys
of
Christmas. They see a snowman, a
creche, and the wreath on the front door, and then go in the house to
watch tbe
people there bake cookies, decorate the tree, wrap presents, write
cards,
listen to carollers, etc., and explain it all to Chris. Next morning
Santa has
come and left gifts for both mouse and people families.
This has been reprinted several times since
1980 I have often read it to my preK
class. It is a Rand McNally Junior Elf
book.
C357:
Civil
War belle
Solved: Jane Hope
C358:
cat
drinks beer
Adult mystery, I
read in late 1960's, woman goes in search of her
younger sister, takes her beer-drinking cat along. She raised her
sister and threw her a wedding when she married. Woman gets
pleurisy
and has to be taped up and she's in pain while searching. I
remember
this because I had to look up pleurisy. When she finally finds
the
sister, it turns out that the sister is the 'bad guy.'
C359:
Children
solve puzzles to save missing parents
Solved: The Diamond in the
Window
C360:
Children
Underwater Cave Treasure
Searching for a
book that has to do with children (not sure how
many) that go exploring (perhaps in a little boat) and discover an
entrance
that they have to swim underwater through and come up in a cave where
there
is treasure. Sorry it is sketchy, but it is actually a book that my
sister
remembers that I want to surprise her with so can't get more details.
HELP
ME!
Patricia Lauber, Adventure
at
Black
Rock
Cave? Synopsis: A
young
boy and girl see lights at night on an offshore island, row out to the
island and discover a cave, and eventually, during a storm, solve the
question
of what is going on out there.
Kahn, James, The Goonies,
1985. There was a novelization published of The Goonies,
based
upon
the
1985
Steven
Spielberg
film.
Is
that
what
you're
thinking
of?
Hello again. I'm afraid that it is not The Goonies or Black
Rock
Cave. I actually bought Black Rock Cave a couple of
years
ago, but it was a cave that was entered from above and not under the
water.
My sister also mentioned that she thought someone in the book was
perhaps
from Scotland or it took place in Scotland. And she had a vague memory
that it was from someone with 3 names (like Robert Louis Stevenson
perhaps).
Elizabeth Heppner, Palace Under the Sea.
Probably not it, but just in case...about Tracy, an American boy in
Turkey
(military family) and his Turkish friends who discover treasure (and an
underwater palace) lost ages ago in an earthquake. Tracy is a diver,
and
does swim up into the palace.
Susan Cooper, Over Sea, Under Stone,
1970-1980. Could it be this book? Three children, Barnaby
and
his older sister (I think her name is Jane) and brother, hunt for the
Grail
of King Arthur in an undersea cave at the bottom of a cliff in
Cornwall,
in England, with the help of their Uncle Merry (Merriman Lyon).
Again, I'm afraid that Palace Under the Sea is not the
correct
book. I got some more details out of my sister and it definately
took place in Scotland and there were 4 children (or young adults,
possibly)
in it (at least 2 are girls). It was in a book that had 2 stories
by the same author. At least two of the children in it are
actually
from Scotland and it takes place in the late 1800's or early 1900's.
I'll
let you know if I get more information and thanks, again.
susan cooper, over sea, under stone,
1965. three kids, simon, jane, and barney, find a map that
eventually
leads them to a search for an underwater cave (though they finally
reach
it at low tide, when they can just wade in). inside, they find a goblet
that's thought to be the holy grail. it's set in cornwall.
No, I'm afraid this isn't the one either, although it was the
closest
so far. It was definately a cave that they had to swim underwater
and into. Thanks again though for trying.
Enid
Blyton, The Valley of
Adventure or The River of Adventure,1955. This third book of the
Adventure series (which also includes Castle of Adventure, Ship of...,
Island
of..., Sea of...) has all the elements that make it difficult to stop
reading in
the middle: Fast-paced action, burnt old houses, caves and secret
tunnels,
treasure, and four children who try to outwit bad guys while trapped in
a
remote and lonely valley. They find a cave with a treasure in it. Not
sure
about swimming underwater to it. I believe they talked about
stalactites and
stalagmites in the caves quite a bit too. This is now available as a
reprint in
paperback with an entirely new cover. ALSO, perhaps more likely, is
another of Blyton'\''s
"Adventure" books called "River of Adventure". The same
kids travel along a river to where it narrows and becomes a
fast-flowing gorge.
The boat is swept by the river towards a roaring cataract — a "gigantic
underground waterfall" as Jack describes it — and the children are
terrified of being dashed to pieces. Luckily, they manage to swing the
boat
sideways into a cavern in the cliff, saving all their lives. The
children follow tunnels leading out of the
cavern and stumble eventually upon the underground remains of a
magnificent
temple dating from about seven thousand years ago. The temple was
erected in
honour of a goddess, and kings and noblemen brought treasures there for
generations. Many items have perished but the glorious treasures that
remain
include gold statues, bowls, combs, jewellery, ornaments and daggers.
Could
this be it?
C361:
Channel
Island youth fiction mystery
"Return to
Alderney" or "Amaral", 1955-65. This novel was
used in English curriculum, gr. 6 or 7 in Ontario, Canada.
Protagonist
was female. Another important character was an elderly fisherman
named "Trawler McGee". The mystery takes place on one of the
Channel
Islands and involves a dangerous ocean journey by the young girl.
Much of the action takes place at night. The book was taught at
the
same time as "Flight into Danger" and is comparable in level of
difficulty
and age of intended audience. I've always regretted not keeping
this
book and suffering the wrath of the English teacher.
Just a thought, but the description sounds
like
something Ruth Arthur may have written. I can't find a
title
that matches though...
C362:
Choices
made by children
Solved: Diamond in the
Window
C363:
children
visit tropical island
Solved: Magic Island
C364:
Cinderella
novel retelling
Solved: Glass Slipper
C365:
Cookbook
Hi, I'm looking for a copy of a cookbook that
my aunt had. I do not know the name. It is very old. The
cover
on it is black, and it had a construction paper feel to it. It was red
plastic spiral bound. The book had recipes and seems like it also
contained
home maker tips and help. Any help would be greatly
appreciated.
Thanks!
Cuould this be Taming of the candy
Monster?
A cookbook somkewheat geared towards kids??
C366:
Caterpillar
searches for success
Solved: Hope for the
Flowers
C367:
cat
drinks beer
Adult mystery, I
read in late 1960's, woman goes in search of her
younger sister, takes her beer-drinking cat along. She raised her
sister and threw her a wedding when she married. Woman gets
pleurisy
and has to be taped up and she's in pain while searching. I
remember
this because I had to look up pleurisy. When she finally finds
the
sister, it turns out that the sister is the 'bad guy.'
C368:
Chicken
hut
1970 -1976?
My father bought this book for me. It was about
a young man (Russian?) possibly going out in the world to seek his
fortune.
I remember a house on chicken legs (not Baba Yaga). And I vaguely
remember
peas. Possibly a flying ship? Sorry this is so vague!
there are various versions, The Fool of
the World and the Flying Ship, circa 1968. This might be
right. I don't have a copy in front of me to check out the
chicken
legs or peas for sure, but the book is about the youngest son in the
family
(a fool)who sets out to bring the czar the flying ship that the czar
desires
and win the hand of the princess in return. There are various
reteller/illustrators
of this book, and I'm not sure how much the details vary from book to
book,
but that is just a basic synopsis.
This is a bit of a long shot, but all the stories
the poster mentions show up in Old Peter's Russian Tales
by Arthur Ransome. It's a set of stories told by an old
forester,
not a single story about a prince, however.
C369:
Childcraft
excerpt
This is a story
from my childhood, printed in our Childcraft books.
It may be an excerpt from a longer book. It was about sisters living in
NYC around the turn of the century. They had to stay neat & clean,
and watched other kids roller skating from their window. They became
ill
& the doctor told their parents to allow them to get outside and
skate.
They ended up tearing their dresses, etc. but were much happier.
This is "The family who never had roller
skates"
by Hildegard Woodward, and it appeared in volume 4 of the old,
pre-1966
Childcraft
books (the orange ones), in the volume titled Animal friends and
adventures,
under the section "Wheels, wings, and real things." The sisters are the
little Pettingills. Ms. Woodward was an author and illustrator who won
a few Caldecott medals. She is probably most famous for The
Wonderful
Story Of How You Were Born. Apparently the little Pettingills
and
their perplexing predicament originally appeared in a book about
families
who had never had... a washing machine, an automobile, a clock, and
other
modern conveniences.
C370:
Claudia
Solved: Claudia
C371:
Children
waving good morning & good night
Solved: Oh,
What a Beautiful Day
C372:
"the
christmas book" semi historical not narrative
this was probably in the eighties, a large
8x11 or so paperback book that read like a reference book on
christmas,
but all the entries were humorous, like the elves hibernate all winter
and when they are woken up(very carefully)the fingernails are 3 feet
long
and they have green gunk on their teeth that is actually precious metal
filled and other north pole creatures collect it. the back few pages
were
filled with the sources the author used like"the american society of
dentists".
this book told all about how the reindeer fly and where mr. and mrs.
claus
came from and such. i believe it was titled "the christmas book" with a
mostly white cover. it was a favorite of mine and appealed to my
technical
nature then and now.
Alden Perkes, The Santa Claus Book.
1982. "Presents information about Santa Claus and his associates,
including how he gets all those toys into the bag
where Mrs. Claus comes from and why
Santa lives so long." Also has a section on the elves hibernating.
Alden Perkes, The Santa Claus Book,
1982. Thanks, this is going to allow me to pass on a wonderfull
book
to my children.
C373:
Christmas
children's stories
It's a beautiful collection of Christmas
stories
(fiction) for children. I know one in particular was "The Little
Match Girl". There were no color illustrations, only ink.
The
book itself was approximately 7" wide, 9" long, and 1 1/2" thick, early
1960s. It was paper-covered hardcover finish was a bit shiny. The
front cover had a very colorful face and chest of a smiling
Santa.
He resembled the Santa used for the Coca-Cola ads - very nostalgic.
There
were about 8 or 10 stories.
Whitman Publishing, The Christmas Book,
1954.
Here's
a
website that shows the book [broken link].
I'm
sure this is right I have it at home--and so does one of my
coworkers!
Very happy memories of this one.
The Happy Christmas Story Book,
1961. This book matches the description and was published by the
Ideals Publishing Co.
The Christmas Book, published by
Whitman in 1954, has the glossy Santa cover you remember, but many more
than 8 or 10 stories, there are probably 40 stories and a few classic
poems
as well. The version of "The Little Match Girl" in this book is
quite
abbreviated.
C374:
Cornwall
orphans
SOLVED: Stella Weaver, A Poppy in the Corn
C375:
Cat
on a gray stone wall
children's book from 1950s (not a Golden book)
Art in bright (water?) colors with a cat on gray stone wall, bright
pink
flowers. I remember this library book as one of the first books I
could read alone so words would have to be simple, repetitive.
Can't
remember the color of the cat -- but I remember that gray wall and the
bright pink flowers. Was in print in 1965 at the latest as I read
it before I started first grade that year.
Linda Hayward, The
Curious Little Kitten.
Is there any chance that this is The Curious Little Kitten?
The
kitten
is
in
the
back
yard,
and
first
goes
over
the
fence
on
one
side,
to
find
a
dog,
then
over
the
other
fence,
to
find
a
goldfish
pond,
(which
she
falls
into)
and
then
jumps
over
the
grey
stone
wall
to
find
another
little
kitten.
Lots
of
repetition,
bright
illustrations,
and
my
kids
loved
this
one,
so
it
might
be
it.
Interpreting
Condition
Grades
|
Cook,
Bernadine. The Curious Little Kitten.
illus by Remy Charlip. Katonah, NY: Scholarship
Books,
1956. 1st paperback printing. Oblong paperback, rubbed,
lightly
creased; names on endpaper & fly; pages good [YQ1999] $9 |
|
The Curious Little Kitten is not the book. The book was
definitely
an adult cat, not a kitten. Also not Jenny the Cat books by
Averill.
Have wondered whether it could be a Claire Turlay Newberry book, but
can't
find a list of the plots of those books.
1950's, approximate. story I remember is
about 3 kittens who always run and hide when called to get their ears
washed.
The gray kitty always hides by the stone wall, and the yellow one in
the
buttercups, and the third in the black-eyed susans. One day
they mix up the hiding places and Mama cat catches them. Does
this
ring any bells? I don't remember the title of the book.
Jane Thayer, The Outside Cat, 1957. I know the person making the
request
remembered a cat on a gray wall, but could it possibly be a cat on a
gray roof?
Much else about this book matches. I found this book used long ago and
my son
made me read it to him every day. It is illustrated by Feodor
Rojankovsky , and
the illustrations are on of the best things about the book.
C376:
Classic
fairy tale book
i'm looking for a classic fairy tale book
i had as a child. i was born in 1968 so im guessing the book was
published in the 60's or 70's possibly earlier. it was a green
hardcover
book, the inside of the front cover and back cover had an ivy or viney
look. it had at least 12 tales so the book was at least 150 pages
+. i remember one of hansel and gretels color illustrations;
hansel
was in a bird like cage, also i don't remember which fable it was but
there
was a picture of a young man next to a tree and on the other side of
the
tree was a witch looking lady with a really long,long nose, i was
scared
to death of the picture as a child. some of the stories were
hansel
and gretel, rumpelskilskin, thumbulina, match stick girl, puss in
boots,
little red riding hood, rapunzel, jack in the beanstalk, the fisherman
and his wife, goldielocks, emperors new clothes?, the ugly duckling and
several more. the book must have had several authors. any
possible
way of finding out the author and/or name of this book, i would like to
purchase it for my daughter. good luck in finding it i've been
searching
everwhere
Old
Friends
and
Lasting
Favorites,
1962,
edited
by
Bryna and Louis Untermeyer. The book I
have
contains the picture of Hansel in the cage. It is hardback and has a
green
and purple cover. The other stories are Puss in Boots, Tom Thumb, Snow
White and Rose Red, Rapunzel, The Fisherman and his Wife, The King of
the
Golden River, The Magic Fishbone, Aladdin and the Wonderful Lamp and
The
Real Princess (Princess and the Pea). It is volume 4 of The
Golden
Treasury of Children's Literature, so perhaps you had a couple
different
volumes with the other stories you mentioned.
Bridget Hadaway, Fairy Tales,
1974. This sounds very like this collection. You can find more
about
on the solved mystery pages. The part about Hansel and the bird cage
definitely
fits, and it does have all the other stories mentioned.
The
pictures
you
are
describing
sound
so
familiar
-
but
I
can't
remember
the
specific
book.
I'm
almost
certain
that
the
picture
of
the
man
beside
the
tree,
and
the
witch
with
the
long
hooked
nose,
is
from
the
story
Jorinda
(or
Jorinde)
and
Joringel,
by
the
Bros.
Grimm. This story is not as common as some of the others, so might
help you to narrow down your search. In addition to stories by the
Bros.
Grimm, your list also includes stories by Hans Christian Anderson
and Charles Perrault. Hope this helps you find what you're
looking
for.
I have looked into
both suggestions and neither is the right
book.
Anybody else with a suggestions??
I
don't
know
the
name
of
this
book,
but
I
am
also
looking
for
it.
It
was
very
thick,
and
had
so
many
fairy
tales
inside.
I
remember
I
always
hated
the
Cinderella
illustrations,
but
otherwise
loved
the
book.
If
we're
talking
about
the
same
one,
it
also
included
The
Swan
Princess,
The
Tinderbox,
Snow
White
and
Rose
Red,
Ricky-of-the-Tuft,
Jorinda
and
Joringel, The Red Shoes, The Snow Queen,
The
Golden Goose, The Goose Girl....also a story about two sisters who meet
a
witch, one is mean to her and then snakes and toads fall from her lips,
the
other sister is kind and roses fall from her lips...
I
want
very
much
to
find
this
book,
too.
Can't
understand
why
it's
so
hard
to
figure
out!
Jane
Carruth, The Giant All-Color Book of
Fairy Tales, 1971.
I
KNOW
this
is
the
right
book,
because
I
have
been
looking
for
it
for
so
long,
myself!
The
green
illustrated
cover
is
lush and features a giant in front of a tree, vines, and fairy tales
characters
in the vines. The vine theme continues
on the beginning title pages, and each story is illustrated by a
different
artist. The subtitle is "50
Best-loved Stories," which is the part I remembered best, and threw me
off
the trail for so long. You can see it here:
http://www.librarything.com/work/2647288'
C377:
Come
out and play
Solved:
Snow
C378:
Children
befriend former ship's captain
Solved: Captain Ghost
C379:
Canoe
Solved: The Mystery of the
Great Swamp
C380:
Christian
book with ladybugs
Children's book, Christian theme, each page
has a separate christian message with little ladybugs for the child to
find.
Kenneth Taylor, Giant Steps For Little
People.
The subtitle of the book is The Sermon on the Mount and the Ten
Commandments.
Each page has a four line verse, a short summary, a few questions and a
Bible verse. Children are encouraged to look for the tiny lady
bugs
in every picture.
2006
C381:
Candy
Tree
I'm looking for a book I had as a child. It
contained many fairy tales (I'm not sure if they were the classic ones)
but I can remember one in particular that I would like to share with my
children. It had a red cover and some illustration in the center and
the
story I remember was about a group of children that after falling
asleep
would go to a special place were there would be a tree filled with
candy.
At first they couldn't reach the candy then the candy began to fall
from
the tree and they gathered the candy in the skirts of their nightgowns.
The illustrations seemed old fashioned but were full color and covered
the pages from corner to corner. The book size was about 11x14.
Eugene Field, "The Sugarplum tree."
I
read
this
poem when it was collected in The Gateway to
Storyland,
edited by Wally Piper.
C381: This has a BLUE cover, but check Solved
Mysteries for Illustrated Treasury of Children's Literature.
The
poem
sounds
like
The
Sugar-Plum
Tree
by
St.
Louis'
Eugene
Field,
who
died
in
1895.
You
can
read
that
poem
here.
Tasha Tudor's Bedtime Book, 1977.
I
thought I'd pass this along in case it's what you're looking
for.
It's a little smaller than you remember yours being -- it's
10x12".
The cover isn't red, but the print on it is. There are other
stories
printed along with The Sugarplum Tree.
I hope it's the one.
Another story that's probably from
the CHILDCRAFT series. This
series had a red hardcover, and the story you are referring to is the "Sugar Plum Tree"...
You
can't
reach
the
candy,
but
you
get
the
gingerbread
dog
to
bark
at
the
chocolate
cat,
and
the
cat
in
the
tree
knocks
down
the
candy
for
you
to
collect.
Beautiful
pastel
illustrations.
C382:
Cat
detective
Book I read in the
late 1960s, had a cat detective with a dog
assistant.
Cat very supercilious, dog rather stupid but enthusiastic. Set in
Britain,
British author? Possibly part of a series.
Don and Joan Caufield, The Incredible
Detectives,
1966. This sounds very much like your book. While it does not
take
place in England, it's very possible you're remembering the English
Bulldog
character who narrates the tale, and uses many Britishisms. He and a
Siamese
cat (who does act a bit superior) and a pet crow work together to
rescue
their kidnapped owner, involving in a climatic scene in a natural
history
museum.
Freda
M
Hurt,
Mr Twink Series,
1950's 1960's, approximate. I wonder if the book about the cat
detective could be the Mr Twink series
of books by Freda M Hurt.
I
have
not
actually
read
any
of
those
books
myself
as
they
are
very
difficult
to
find.
Mr
Twink
was
a
cat
detective
and
the
books
are
set
in
England.
I
believe
the
hardbacks
were
published
around
the
1950's
and
then
some
were
reprinted
in
the
1960's.
Mr
Twink
was
assisted
by
Sgt
Boffer
a
collie
dog
.
I
think
there
was
nine
books
in
the series.
C383:
Covered
in snow
Not sure if this was a book, but it was part
of a school anthology of short stories and novellas, required
reading.
Probably 1977 or 78, 7th grade level. The story was about a boy,
perhaps an only child, who continually withdraws emotionally from
school
kids, friends, parents, by imagining himself increasingly covered with
snow. (I thought the title was Silent Snow, Secret Snow,
by
Adele Geras, but that book is from 1998 and involves a family with
contemporary
themes of family secrets).
Conrad Aiken, Silent Snow, Secret Snow
I believe you are thinking of the short story
by Conrad Aiken called Silent Snow, Secret Snow.
Cipher in the snow. I only
saw this as a film in the classroom, but it has to be the same
story.
The boy gets off the bus and dies in the snow, and then the rest of the
story was a flashback showing how he got to that point - that no one
cared
about him, or paid any attention to him. Neglect kills.
Somtow Sucharitkul, The Fallen Country,
1986.
This story is about a young boy whose mother has let her boyfriend move
into the house. During the course of events, the boyfriend, who drives
a motorcycle, becomes very abusive to the boy. I remember vividly
images
of a snow dragon, or the boy imagining snow all around in order to deal
with how horrible his life was. The tone of the book borders on the
fantasy
genre, but when I read your stumper, I thought of this one.
C384:
cover
of book black w/ mouse, cake, baker
Solved: The Sugar Mouse
Cake
C385:
Children
go to Venus with uncle
Solved: Encounter Near
Venus
C386:
Cobbler
elf
Late 40's or early 50's,could have been a
California "Once Upon a Storeytime" type school book,seem to remember
the
illustrations in that style.Had a story about a Cobbler Elf sings
"tic-a-tack-a-too",
also a story about the farmer who gets a new automobile-horse is
jealous
until he is needed to pull car out of mud. Last story has seven
league
boots or something thereof.
C387:
Collection
of Fairy Tales (illustrated)
I am loooking for an illustrated collection
of fairy tales probably published in the 1970s or early 80s. I
don't
remember much of the text, but I remember the illustrations. They
remind me of Brian Froud, but I'm pretty sure he wasn't the
illustrator.
This collection definitely included The Princess and the Pea and the
Frog
Prince. The illustration for the Frog Prince was a beautiful,
long
blond haired girl sitting on a stone well (?) and holding a beautiful
golden
ball. There were other pictures of elves and fairies throughout
the
book. A few years ago I came across another book by the same
author
and illustrator, that was made up of Mother Goose rhymes and I wrote
down
the ISBN, title, author, illustrator and found it online. Only I
can't find that piece of paper now! I know that it is out of
print,
but there are still copies available. It's hard cover and I think
may have been published by Grosset and Dunlap, though I'm not 100%
sure.
It was thicker than a picture book, but larger than a chapter book.
C388:
Children
grow in garden
This book was about a woman/family who had
a lot of children. They grew in the garden in some kind of flower
pod. Some of the girls had names like April, May, June. I
vaguely
remember the clothing of the people in the book as being vaguely
victorian
- the kids were wearing pinafore's. I probably read this in the
late
60s. I wish I could remember more - the memory of that book still
haunts me!
I've been looking for this one too! (or
something
very similar, anyway) I do remember that the plant in the garden
that grew babies was called Roanoke (or maybe rowen oak or roanoak) and
that word, however it was spelled, was in the title. The father
was
missing, I think, and may have been a sailor. Some of the kids
were
"real", and others came from this mysterious plant in the garden.
Part of the storyline dealt with people in town becoming suspicious
because
there's a baby born while the father is gone. I hope someone else
can remember more. I'd love to find it again. I think the
author's
last name was in the R - S section of the library...
Ruth
Loomis,
Mrs. Purdy's Children,
1970, copyright. This is definitely C388! One of my favorites,
with illustrations by Steven Kellogg.
The
family
makes
amazing
pies
and
cookies
from
the
parts
of
the
roanoke
plant,
and
when
the
father
returns
home
he
decides
they
have
enough
kids
and
tries
to
make
them
get
rid
of
it.
There
is
a
plotline
about
Mrs.
Purdy
being
up
for
Mother
of
the
Year.
C389:
Chocolate
bars
Solved: Great Brain at the
Academy
C390:
city
boy goes to cowboy dude ranch; eats pancakes
Solved:
Cowboy Andy
C391:
cave-dwelling
time travel
I remember a book about a girl who vanishes
in a moor(?) and is transported to a different time. I think she met up
with a boy somewhere along the way, and they encounter a group of
people
who were a cave-dwelling type tribe. Then they set off on a journey, I
vaguely remember travel through a forest. They happen upon a
long-deserted/destroyed
civilization which they discover is actually in the future from the
girl's
time. I think she returned to her own time and everyone had been
looking
for her, parents/relatives, police, etc. This was prior to 1986
because
I was in middle school or elementary school when I read it, it was a
book
in the Boerne Public Library. This has been gnawing at me for a while -
I thought perhaps it was a Susan Cooper or Madeline L'Engle but none of
their books fit this description. I've been all over your site and
don't
find anything - just a few that are roughly similar. Any help would be
SUPER!
Zilpha Keatley
Snyder, Green Sky Trilogy?
There's
also something Scandanavian on the Solved Mysteries pages somewhere
that
my sick head can't remember at the moment....
This sounds very reminiscent of Margaret Jean
Anderson's In the Keep of Time, so I looked online and
found
she's written another book called In the Circle of Time,
which is described thus: "Jennifer, an American girl attending
school
in Scotland, meets up with Robert, a native Scottish boy at the Circle
of Arden, a collection of standing stones much like its more famous
sibling,
Stonehenge. Although they are drawn to this site for very different
reasons,
the sudden rolling in of a thick mist one grey dawn changes their lives
forever. When the mist finally disperses, they find themselves in the
future,
a world far more "primitive" in some respects than our own, but perhaps
more advanced in terms of its values (this you'll have to judge for
yourself,
but the characters and the issues are well developed and you'll have a
lot to think about). The very coastlines have changed and great cities
have crumbled to dust. Robert is slightly more prepared for this
strange
world he has heard tales in the village of the mists suddenly coming
down
into the valley, with people mysteriously disappearing every once in a
great while. His own mother wandered in among the stones as a small
child
and was found many hours later, safe, but wrapped in a strange, soft
grey
cloth. Jennifer is quick-witted and athletic, traits that come in handy
when facing the perils of this "brave new world." What must they
accomplish
there? How are they to return to their own time?"
Norma Fox Mazer, Saturday, the twelfth
of October, 1975, reprinted in
paperback
in the early 80s. The details don't exactly match but it may be
worth
checking a copy of this book. After spending almost a year with
cave
people from an earlier time, a young girl is transported back to the
present
greatly changed, both by her experience and by the fact that no one
believes
her. from the dustjacket: "Loonies, Zan thought, her throat
tight. Loonies! Crazies! She had never seen anything like the boy and
girl
who faced her. Naked, except for flaps hanging down from the front of
woven
belts, the two of them fingered, sniffed and tasted everything Zan
wore,
down to her dirty old sneakers. Loonies! But even as the thought came
to
her, Zan rejected it: there was another explanation, one that made her
recoil. The terrifying "storm" that had wrenched her out of Mechanix
Park
on a Saturday morning in October had set her down in this meadow lush
with
strange foliage and teeming with birds, insects and animals she
couldn't
name. Something awesomely out of the ordinary was happening to her, and
the two naked kids poking her and chattering in an unfamiliar language
were further evidence of just how far from her normal existence she may
have been swept. At first Zan cannot accept that there is no way back.
And then she finds herself irresistibly drawn into the gentle community
of cave dwellers. But even as Zan settles into the rhythms of life with
the People, she clings fiercely to her own memories of home. All that
she
has to remind her of civilization is a button, a key, a safety pin and
a jackknife, which she guards jealously. Only Diwera, the wise woman,
senses
the threat Zan poses to the ages-old life of the People. And it is
Diwera
who takes it upon herself to rid the People of Zan."
This is not the Green-sky trilogy or "Saturday,
the
12th
of
October". It's much more like the Margaret
Jean
Anderson books. Hope this helps narrow it down.
Curry, Jane Louise, Beneath the
Hill,1953.This is at best a partial match for the quoted
details,
but there are enough resonances that Jane Louise Curry's first
published
story involving the lost realm of Abaloc (in this case, hidden
underground
in the vicinity of an eastern-US coal mine) may be worth
investigating.
The best reasons to think this might match are the underground journey
and the author-comparisons. [There are several other loosely --
sometimes
very loosely -- linked books in Curry's extensive bibliography, though
few are currently in print.]
C392:
Carousel
horse
A
children's book available in elementary school library between
1972-1979
about a carousel horse that gets off the carousel to talk with a farm
horse
, police horse etc and other horses. See pictures that were traced (or
possibly drawn free hand) as seen in the illustrated pages.
Paul Jacques Bonzon, The Runaway Flying
Horse, 1976, approximately.
Could it possibly be this one? See solved pages R. Illustrated by
William
Pene du Bois, published Parent's Magazine Press 1976. Story of wooden
horse
on merry-go-round that wants to be a real horse, until he finds out the
lives that real horses lead. See solved pages R.
I am not sure if this is the right book or not.
C393:
Charlie
stories
When I was in first grade in northern Indiana
in 1964 our teacher would read us stories about a boy, I think his name
was Charlie. It seemed there were a series of these
stories.
Here are 2 I remember. Charlie was warned against walking too
slowly,
his feet would root into the ground. Of course he wouldn't listen
and his feet grew into the ground and his mother left him to spend the
night alone in the park. In another story Charlie came down to
breakfast
with a frown. His Mother warned that if the wind blew on his face
it would freeze like that. It did and that day his grandfather
(or
Uncle?) was taking him to the circus. Since Charlie was frowning
the entire time, Grandfather didn't think he enjoyed the circus.
Helen Hill, Violet Maxwell, Charlie books,
1920's. This is a very long shot, but these authors wrote a
series
of books in the 1920's about Charlie and His Kitten Topsy,
Charlie
and His Puppy Bingo, Charlie and His Friends, etc. The
only
story from these that I'm familiar with is "How Charlie Made Topsy Love
Him" (from The Better Homes and Gardens Storybook), but
that
one might fit your description. Charlie learns not to squeeze and
tease his kitten after he becomes tiny himself and is molested by a
nasty
giant girl--so, kind of a moral lesson plus a bit of fantasy.
Caudill, Rebecca, Did You Carry the Flag
Today, Charley?, 1960,
approximately.
Could this be it? It's been a long time since I read it, but what
I remember is that it was about a boy who got into a lot of
mischief.
I think it was set in the Appalachian Mountains.
C394:
Childhood
textbook-reader
Solved: Magic Carpet
C395:
Chameleons
I'm looking for a
book probably from the late 60's early 70's about
2 chameleons or 1 chameleon and a lizard. They have a contest changing
colors as they go through the book.
Lopshire, Robert, I am Better Than You,
1968. This may be the one you want. It's an I Can Read Book.
Lionni, Leo, A Color of His Own,
1975. It's not a contest, but in A Color of His Own A
little
chameleon
laments:
Elephants
are
gray.
Pigs
are
pink.
Only
the
chameleon
has
no
color
of
his
own.
He
is
purple
like
the
heather,
yellow
like
a
lemon,
even
black
and
orange
striped
like
a
tiger!
Then
one
day
a
chameleon
has
an
idea
to
remain
one
color
forever
by
staying
on
the
greenest
leaf
he
can
find.
But
in
the
autumn,
the
leaf
changes
from
green
to yellow to
red
. . . and so does the chameleon. When another chameleon suggests they
travel
together, he learns that companionship is more important than having a
color of his own. No matter where he goes with his new friend, they
will
always be alike.
C396:
Cyro
boy & girl raised separately by aliens
Solved: Alien Child
C397:
Cat
helps guards art gallery
Solved:
Minette
C398:
Children's
Australian Outback
This was a
children's book that I read in the late 1950's or early
60's, about the female author growing up on an Australian station
(ranch)
in the Outback. Included were details about her going to an Aboriginal
'Coroboree' disguised as a boy (as it was only allowed for males) and
going
to the Australian version of a rodeo, with descriptions of wild
horses
in 'bronco busting' displays. I'd love to know the author and
title
of this book if anyone can help.
Author: Miles Franklin.
Title:
My
Brilliant Career. Date (Copyright):
1954
There was also a movie of this book, starring Judy Davis.
Although this title or author don't ring any bells (and I believed
it was a female writer) I'll look this one up.
Miles Franklin was a woman and My
Brilliant Career is autobiographical. Here's a description of
the
book: This book is a bit like a grown-up Little House in the
Prairie
but set in 19th century outback Australia rather than the Wild West of
the US. It is a story of a young, spirited woman who rebels
against
convention and the desire of her relatives that she marry the wealthy
and
highly desirable local squatter. Unlike Laura Ingalls, Sybilla chooses
the road less travelled and refuses to marry. She follows her dreams
instead.
Mary
Elwyn
Patchett. Sounds like possibly you are looking for Mary Elwyn Patchett. She wrote
a lot of animal stories about the Australian outback, and I believe the
title Ajax the
Warrior is about her growing up years on a cattle station in
NSW. Originally published 1953.
C399:
Clothesline
children's book I
read early 1980's about a clothesline and some
type of colorful patchwork outfit, I think a shirt and pants
A long shot here: maybe Mrs.
Mopple's
Washing Line? "On a very windy day, while Mrs Mopple is
indoors
making the dinner, her washing is blown into the most unlikely places."
C400:
Charmichael/Benjamin
Solved: Benjie on His Own
C401:
Creepy
Stories, Mantis, Dog Lizard
Book possibly from the 60's or 70's that had
at least 3 kind of creepy stories. One was about a praying mantis
hinted
at being an extra terrestrial, one was about a guard dog (possible
doberman-thor
or zeus?) keeping guard after his owner had passed or something like
that
and another was about a strabnge lizard taken as a pet that ended up
growing
and could be heard thumping down the hallway. These were all
spooky
stories and not happy ones. I had read this in the later 70's so
I am not sure how old it is (I was in elementary school).
C402:
Christmas
toymaker
Solved: Oddkins
C403:
Conrad
find my book if you can! It is an English
anthology circa 1940s featuring stories about a boy named Conrad who
wanted
to be as remote as the furthest star, triangles who choose a God and a
lot of stories about toucans
C404:
Cookie
Book
I called it the Cookie Book and it was my
favorite book as a toddler in the early forties. It was a little
book about a puppy that loved cookies, and a cooky factory he hung out
at, finding it by following the smell of the cookies in the air. The
illustrations
showed the cooky smell wafting through the air.
C405:
Collection
of tales
I had a book in the 1980s, it may have been
an old or recent book at the time i have no idea. It was a
collection
of tales including - the bunyip, coat o'rushes /cap o' rushes (the
story
where the girls father throws her out because she tells him she loves
him
more than meat loves salt) it also has a tale that has beautiful
girls/princesses
behind glass or mirrors or something to that effect. I have seen books
with some of these tales in seperately but I can't find the one I
had with all these tales in together. It was beautifully illustrated
and
was probably published in England as I am English and I doubt it
came from overseas - thanks!
published by Dover, English Fairy Tales
- or - More Engish Fairy Tales. My dad was English too
and
we grew up with these two books. I just looked to see which copy
it was (I still own "More") but couldn't locate the book. I KNOW
I rememberall those stories. I still say "I love you more that
fresh
meat loves salt" I loved these stories much more than Grimm et
al.
The heroines always seemed more self assured and capable. It is
Published
by Dover and I'm pretty sure its older than '60's I read it in
early
70s but my dad may have brough the books from England earlier.
---
Jacobs, Joseph, English Fairy Tales.
I
found my copy of English Fairy Tales - it has Tom Tit
Tot
and Cap O Rushes but not the Bunyip. This copy is old, published
by Grosset and Dunlop but has no copyright page in it. A preface
from author is dated 1895. It is not the one I grew up with (which was
published by Dover) The other tales may be in More English Fairy
Tales. These 2 Dover books were interchangable in my
memories.
C406:
Collection
of Illustrated Children's Stories
American 1950's -
1960's. There were 2 books. Both hard, thick
covers, covered with cloth (I think). One was solid yellow and one was
solid red. The title and cover illustrations were in black. The books
were
thick (I'm guessing 200 - 300 pages), with heavy paper (not glossy),
the
illistrations were in black outline with one added color per story.
(e.g:
black outline and different shades of red). All the illustrations were
done by the same one artist, and I don't recall the stories being
credited
to anyone. Contents: The books consisted of different stories.
Some
of the stories were famous (The Velveteen Rabbit), some were fairy
tales
(Princess and the Pea), there were folk tales (I remember a story about
an old lady who let her goat eat the grass off her roof, and she tied
the
cord around the goats neck and then around her middle. And there was a
story of how some silly villagers in this one village tried to grab the
moon by jumping in the river and catching the reflection of the full
moon
with pitchforks and nets). Some stories were contemporary, (there was a
story of a little Caucasian boy who's nana - an African American
housekeeper,
with wide hips and dressed like Aunt Jemima before she became
politically
correct - took him and his sisters to the circus). I really do
not
recall the titles of these books, (I'm thinking "Story Parade", but I
won't
swear by that. What I do know is that the type was rather large, and
the
amount of type per page was not that much either. It was a lot about
the
illustrations, because I was able to read these books when I was about
5, and I was raised in Dutch, so they must have been real children's
self-read
books. I'm thinking that the publisher must have been American, because
of the circus story and the "Aunt Jemima" character. I got these
books from a relative, and I was born and raised on St. Maarten
(Netherlands
Antilles) and that relative must have ordered them from the States, so
I thinking they might have been special editions from a publisher like
Reader's Digest or something like that. If you can figure this
one
out I will be so grateful. I have been wanting to get these books back
ever since I lost them in a move.Thanks!
This kind of sounds like a set of books I have
been looking for. They are children's classics that came as a bonus
with
the purchase of Collier's encyclopedia sets in the 1960s. They are
clothbound,
oversized bound in different jewel-colored buckram. Two of my favorite
illustrations/stories/etc. were Winken, Blinken and Nod and
The
Velveteen Rabbit.
C407:
Clown
steals another clown's nose
This seems to
be the same as C81: "C81: Clown steals
another clown's nose! I have a friend that has talked about a
book
she had. It was about a clown who had a nose that another clown
envied
and stole!" Also: "Bedtime Stories - Burgess
--
A108: ... there were stories involving people also. One was
a story about a clown that had his nose stolen by another clown
(stumper
C81 talks about this story)." The nose is relatively long,
as
I recall, and the clown keeps it in a box with tissue. The first clown
tries to substitute for the stolen nose, using a paste-like
solution.
As I recall, the name of the clown who stole the nose was something
like
"Trendle" but I'm not sure. This is not the horror story of a boy
stealing
a clown's nose.
Jackson, Kathryn, Golden Bedtime Book.
(1949) I remember this book, and I think this is the right
title.
It's been expanded and reissued since, as "Richard Scarry's a Story a
Day"
(1998). If it's the one I'm thinking of, the nice clown who lost
his big red nose tried to make another out of bread and water. I think
his name was something like Trundle.
I was wrong, it isn't the Kathryn Jackson
book. Finally got it from the library, and it's not the right
one.
Darn.
C408:
Cute
grey squirrel/funny bunny
Solved:
The Smart Little Mouse
C409:
Chinese
boy lives through war in rice paddy
Solved: House of Sixty
Fathers
C410:
Children
dressed in a monster suit steal pears
Children's book
(perhaps from France) about a man who grew the most
delicious pears ever. But when they were ripe a monster started
eating
them – the man set a trap and caught the monster and it turned out to
be
kids in a monster suit. More happened, but that is all I remember!
Ungerer, Tomi, Beast of Monsieur
Racine,
The. (1971) This sounds like
it must be the book. From Novelist: "Determined to catch the thief of
his
prize pears, a retired tax collector sets a trap in his garden and
captures
a beast unknown to modern science.
Tomi Ungerer, The Beast of Monsieur Racine
Ungerer, Tomi, The Beast of
Monsieur
Racine. (1971) Determined
to
catch the thief of his prize pears, a retired tax collector sets a trap
in his garden and captures a beast unknown to modern science.
Tomi Ungerer, The Beast of Monsieur Racine.
(1971) I have this book in front of me--it's definitely the one.
It's a great story--hilarious! Totally charming from the first sentence.
Ungerer, Tomi. The Beast of Monsieur
Racine. 1971.
C411:
Children's
stories
Solved:
The Princess and the Goblin
C412:
Children
on holiday find magical shop
The book i'm
hoping to discover was read in the sixties in the UK
and the story was about 2 (i think) children, brother and sister who i
think were on holiday at the seaside and they go into a shop that sells
all kinds of wierd and wonderful things including vanishing cream that
actually made you vanish! I'm sure the shop was owned by a husband and
wife and the book was also illustrated.
Elizabeth Beresford, Vanishing MagicorInvisible
Magic. (1970, approx) I think this is Vanishing Magic by
the author of the Wombles series. I think I've got a copy somewhere
around
but I can't spot it immediately!
According to a another book I have by Beresford
[Traveling magic - abt a boarding house] the author
spells
her first name "Elisabeth."
C413:
Christine
and pony named Jet
Solved:
Horse and
Pony Stories For Girls
C414:
Chrismas
stories
Solved:
The Santa Claus Book
C415:
Cranberry
bog
Solved: The Nickel-Plated
Beauty
C416:
Coming
of age -- Natalie Wood
I found this book in the library a couple
of years ago. I checked it out, read it, then my husband returned
it and for the life of me I cant remember the title or the author but
it
was so well written. Its the coming of age story (but it was
adult
fiction) about a young girl whose mother leaves her when she's really
young
and then returns again when she's a teenager to die. The mother
looks
just like natalie wood (but the girl does not). And we find out
that
the girls mother had gone to hollywood and worked as a stand in for
natalie
wood when she was a teenager where she had a daughter (a different one)
and gives her up for adoption which haunts the mother and really messes
her up. The girl eventually goes to LA to meet her sister.
I know it was written in the 90's or the early 2000's. Hope you
can
help!! Thanks
This is LEAVING EDEN by
Anne
D. LeClaire~from a librarian
C417:
Children
sneak into parade
An illustrated page (or the cover) has
children
looking over a wooden fence and through a hole in the fence at a circus
or circus parade. They dress up like animals to sneak into the
circus.
It is an illustrated book that I read in the early 80's.
It's actually an animal parade, not a
circus
parade. They dress up like animals to sneak into and be a part of
the parade.
Farley Mowat, Owls in the Family.
the book you could be looking for is Owls in the family in one of the
chapters
somting very much like what you decribed happens but the children bring
there pets along to hope that helps
C418:
Chipmunk
punished - no dinner
Solved: Three Little
Chipmunks
C419:
Circus
boarding house
I remember reading a book in the late '50s,
and I believe that it was relatively new then. It's the story of a
young
boy whose parents and uncle, trarpeze or high wire artists in a circus,
have a tragic accident. His parents are killed and his uncle badly
injured
while performing. The uncle takes the boy to live in a boarding house
for
retired circus people, all of whom are interesting characters - I
remember
a boa constrictor, and possibly a parrot. The boy is under strict
orders
from his uncle never to think of joining the circus, but his landlady
doesn't
agree, and sends him to a friend of hers to learn the trapeze. The
friend
is currently a baker, but used to be in the circus himself, and has an
entire set of equipment in a big room behind his bakery. The uncle
returns
on the day of the boy's first professional circus performance, and
all's
well that ends well, so to speak. I'm fairly certain that either the
owrd
"Circus" or "Trapeze" is in the title.
Fenton, Edward, Hidden Trapezes.
(1950, approx) I think the person is looking for Hidden Trapezes,
by Edward Fenton. I also remember the trapezes in the attic,
where
the boy practices and keeps that fact hidden from his father. I
think
the landlady keeps ocelots who have some kind of amazing performance
they
practice, and there's an "india rubber man" who's a boarder. The
cover I remember was white and orange, with the boy in the center,
trapezes
flying around him, and a couple ocelots in his lap.
C420:
Cuthbert
the dog
I read a book as a child about a dog named
Cuthbert. He lived in a house with a bunch of other animals, and
they mysteriously received a magic pebble. When left in their
milk
jug, resulted in never-ending supply of milk. I remember it with
a simple salmon-colored cloth cover, in hardback. But that memory
could be faulty. I thought the book was just called “Cuthbert,”
but
I must be wrong because I can’t find it. Can you help?
Possibly this one? Cuthbert
by Blanche J. Dearborn, illustrated by Richard van Bentham,
Wilcox
and Follett Company, 1952, 111 pages. Definitely a children's
book,
but I can't find an online description. Someone who suggested a
solution
for "D137: Dog who lived like a human" wrote: "This sounds like the
book
Cuthbert, but he didn't live alone. Cuthbert was a butler.
My 3rd grade teacher read this to us in 1962." I don't know
whether
this is the same book you're looking for, but how many books can there
be about anthropomorphic dogs named Cuthbert?
C421:
Children's
illustrated treasury
I am looking for a yellow hard cover book,
no dust jacket, that is some type of children's illustrated
treasury.
I know it was extremely colorful, even the cover, and a very thick
book.
I got it in the 80's from my grandfather who was the children's rep for
a NY publishing company. I don't know if it came from his company
though. He worked for Penguin Putnam and also Simon &
Schuster.
It had poems and stories in it all full color. There was the
story
of the turnip that no one could pull out, and the Jabberwocky
poem.
The Jabberwocky poem was only a page and towards the last third of the
book. I don't remember it having a lot of traditional "classic"
stories
or poems but that doesn't mean they weren't in there. I remember
there were stories that were a few pages and some very short. It
was a large book maybe 9"x 12"? I had this book until my mother
moved
and threw it out because both covers were missing. I look pretty
much every month trying to find it. Thank you again for your help.
Louis Untermeyer, The Golden Treasury
of
Children's Literature.
(1966)
Louis Untermeyer compiled a number of anthologies, including the title
cited as a possible solution to the stumper as well as The Golden
Treasury
of Children's Poetry, c.1959, which includes Lewis Carroll's
Jabberwocky.
C422:
Creepy
creatures, trippy adventures mystery
Solved: Moomintroll
series
C423:
Casual
family
Solved:
The Luckiest Girl
C424:
Children,
seacoast, puffin birds
Both my husband and I remember reading this
series of books in the late 40's or early 50's. There were 3 or 4
children, in England during the 1st half of the 20th century, we
believe.
They had a pet puffin bird, lived on a seacoast area and had
adventures.
That's all we can remember. Thanks.
Arthur Ransome, Swallows and Amazons.
(1930) This sounds like the Swallows and Amazons series, by
Arthur
Ransome (though they had a parrot, not a puffin!). Siblings John,
Susan,
Roger and Titty Walker have adventures sailing (the Swallow) and living
(alone!) one summer on a little island in the middle of a lake in
England.
They meet and befriend local residents, sisters Nancy and Peggy Blacket
(the Amazons) and their Uncle (dubbed Captain Flint, from whom the
Walkers
get the parrot). A long running series, and still in print...other
titles
are Peter Duck, Swallowdale, Winter Holiday, Coot Club, Pigeon Post (a
Carnegie winner), We Didn't Mean to Go to Sea, The Big Six, Secret
Water,
Missie Lee and The Picts and the Martyrs. If you google "Arthur
Ransome",
you'll find a couple of Arthur Ransome/Swallows and Amazon fan sites
that
give plot descriptions and various cover art that the series has had
over
the years (and from country to country!).
Enid Blyton, The Adventure series.
Pretty sure C424 isn't Ransomes' Swallows and Amazons
series.
Could it be Enid Blyton's Adventure series (eight books: Island
of
Adventure, Castle of Adventure, Valley of Adventure,
&c)?
Four kids (Jack, Philip, Lucy-Anne and Dinah) and their cockatoo Kiki
have
various adventures, aided by their policeman friend Bill Cunningham.
If it's one of the Enid Blyton Adventure series
it's probably Sea of Adventure - it features 2
puffins
called Huffin and Puffin.
Interpreting
Condition
Grades
|
Blyton,
Enid.
The Castle of Adventure.
Pan
Macmillan,
c1946
revised
1988.
some
creasing;
pages
good
(one
group
accidentally
creased
at
bottom
corner)
--
G
[YQ24560]
$8 |
|
C425:
Cloth
doll, new doll, wet doll
I remember the story as a little girl--she
owned a cloth doll but received a new one, I can't remember if it was a
talking one or not, but it somehow became wet and her cloth doll was
either
unhurt by the water...but regardless, she stayed with that one in the
end!
Peabody had been suggested in the past, but I know that one isn't it.
Liesel Moak Skorpen, Elizabeth.
This doesn't fit exactly but I thought it was worth mentioning.
In
this book the little girl (Kate) wants a fancy doll for Christmas but
instead
gets a rag doll. She initially rejects it (being especially upset
that her obnoxious cousin Agnes got a fancy doll that she wanted) but
eventually
comes to love it best. Agnes' doll is quickly broken but
'Elizabeth'
endures. Agnes throws Elizabeth into the ocean but she is
rescued,
dried out, and is as good as new. More info in the solved pages.
Liesel Moak Skorpen, Elizabeth.
This might be worth a look. The little girl in this book wants a doll
that
does something, but is given a sweet cloth doll (with brown pigtails
&
red cheeks.) Unmoved, the little girl gives the doll to her dog (a
collie)
who runs off into the garden with it. Later, the little girl feels
great
remorse & goes out to find the doll-- wet but unhurt. She names the
doll Eliabeth & realizes that the doll can do anything that the
little
girl can. Beautiful illustrations by Martha Alexander.
Lois Meyer, The Store-Bought Doll.
(1983) Sounds like it could be this one. "Christina
receives
her first store-bought doll and finds her old rag doll superior in a
number
of ways." It's a Little Golden Book.
Little Golden Book, The Store Bought Doll.
This sounds so much like The Store Bought Doll, a Little
Golden Book, book. The little girl lives in the country and has a few
treasured
toys, her favorite being a cloth rag-doll. One day a man with a shiny
new
automobile has car trouble and the girl's dad helps fix it. He comes
back
with a present for the girl in order to thank her parents. In my old
book
the little girl had brownish-red hair, the cloth doll looked similar to
a raggety Ann, and the new doll had blond hair a pink dress and blue
eyes
that open and close. The old doll is left on the steps while the new
doll
is dressed and undressed, hair brushed and other wise fiddled with. But
the girl cannot climb the tree with the doll for fear of dropping and
breaking
her, She cannot give a wheelbarrow ride to the doll for fear of getting
her wet and dirty, etc. At night the girl returns for the rag-doll she
left on the steps so she can sleep with it, but the fancy doll has to
do
with a chair in the corner of the room.
I haven't read this, as it is rare and
exceedingly
expensive, but another possibility is Cotton Top by Jean
O'Neill. Here's a description: "The story was about a poor
little
girl [from the Blue Ridge Mountains] whose mom had made her a doll that
she loved. Someone later gave her a store bought china doll dressed in
fancy clothes and she stopped playing with her handmade doll. After
trying
to do the same things with her new doll as her old one she realized
that
although her new doll was lovely, it didn't have nearly the play value
or love attached to it as her original doll. This story is very similar
to a Little Golden Book called The Store-bought Doll
written
by Lois Meyer." You can see a picture of the cover
here; click on the book cover, and you'll see a few pages from the
inside of the book.
Interpreting
Condition
Grades
|
Meyer,
Lois; adapted from Clara Louise Grant. The Store-Bought
Doll.
illus by Ruth Sanderson. 1983. boards; a bit of wear;
removable
tag; pages good. -- G [WQ5421] $4 |
|
Clyde Robert Bulla, Open the
Door and See All the People/ renamed The
Toy
House
Dolls, 1972. This
sounds like a book I loved - and still have. It's the story of two
little
girls and their mom. House burns down, and all their toys as well. When
they
move to a new place to live, they find The Toy House, where the toys
can be
checked out like a library. The youngest daughter (Teenie) falls in
love with a
doll, whose face is later licked off by a dog. She takes it back to The
Toy
House expecting big trouble. Instead, they repaint the face and let her
keep it
forever.
C426:
Cats
and flying rocking chair
Solved: The Kingdom
of
Carbonel
C427:
Coach
tour mystery series
I read this book in 2001 while living in
Scotland.
It was about a young woman on a bus coach tour throughout northen
Scotland.
It was supposed to be the first in a series. It was a paperback
and
would be called a cozy. It is not the Passport to Peril
Series.
Thanks.
Elizabeth Peters, Legend in Green Velvet.
(1976) This sounds a bit like Legend in Green Velvet by Elizabeth
Peters, original published in 1976, its still in print. Though Peters
has
written many mysteries, this particular book wasn't part of a series.
Well
worth a read, even if not the book in question!
This is not an Elizabeth Peters book. The female character
was traveling on a bus tour in the Highlands and Edinburgh.
C428:
Caro
and her brother, wheelchair, garden
SOLVED: Meriol Trevor, The Rose
Round.
C429:
Children's
Russian Tea
I think I
read this book in the early to mid 90s. It
was a paperback children's book with pictures. It was Russian and
I think it was called something like "The Tzar (Czar) Makes Tea" but
I've
tried every combination of keywords and can't find it. It went
through
the elaborate process of making tea for the Tzar using an enormous
samover.
The ritual was beautiful to me even before I was allowed to drink tea.
Thanks for your help!
Children's Russian Tea - Maybe How
the Tsar Drinks Tea by Benjamin Elkin (1971). "A
peasant's
song comparing himself to the Tsar brings him an audience with the
ruler."
C430:
Chocolate
Mudpie
Solved:
Chocolate Mud Cake
C431:
Catalogue
company, female workers
Solved: Fanny Herself
C432:
City
under the sea
This book is about
a boy and girl who travel in a bubble to a city
under the sea.
Could this be one of Gordon Dickson's
books?
There are three that I remember: Secret Under the Sea, Secret Under
Antarctica,
and Secret Under the Caribbean. The first one is about a boy
named
Robby with a pet dolphin who lives in the future (2013!) at a reasearch
station with his father. Vandals try to take over when he's
alone,
and he manages to escape and rescue his dolphin friend and save his
father
from one of the vandals, who has a grudge. It was written in the early
60s. I think there was a girl in one of the later ones, and they
definitely traveled in a kind of bubble ship but it's been so long my
memory
of it isn't that clear... Good luck!
Ruth Nichols, The Marrow of the World,
1972, approximately. There is a chapter that fits the description
in this book. The main characters are two teenagers, a boy and his
counsin
Linda, who have 'fallen into' a Arthurian world. They visit the ruins
of
the castle of Morgaine Le Fay under a lake, protected in a bubble and
guided
by a merman. It's only a chapter though, not the entire book.
You Will Live Under the Sea,
1965. This was a book about how in the future a city would be
beneath
the sea
the little boy was taken on a tour of it
in a sea-bubble boat. I think it was supposed to be non-fiction-ish. It
was green/blue. The publisher was the same one who published the Dr.
Seuss
books.'
C433:
Children
turning into fish
Solved:
The Thief of Always
C434:
Children's
Almanac
Solved:
The Kids' Diary of
365 Amazing Days
C435:
Cinderella
Book
I am looking for a
Cinderella book made probably late 70's early
80's. The illustrations (some b/w and some color) are the most
intricate
and beautiful I have ever seen. The opening page begins "Once upon a
time
there was a gentleman who married for the second time." I think it is
one
I purchased from a book fair at school and I've loved it so much the
covers
and pertinent info is gone! Help!
Perrault's Fairy Tales,"Cinderella
or
The Little Glass Slipper", 1729.
The first sentence starts out: "THERE was once upon a time, a gentleman
who married for his second wife the proudest and most haughty woman
that
ever was known."
It's not Perraults, though the wording is very similar....I'm more
interested in the illustrator!
Could the illustrator be Michael Hague?
I'm trying to think of other illustrators from around that time period
that are known for detailed and intricate work---Trina Schart Hyman,
Lisbeth Zwerger and PJ Lynch come to mind, but not sure if
they've
done "Cinderella".
McCall's Storytime Treasury Series,
1969. Very often when people are looking for fairy tale books
with
beautiful illustrations, they are remembering this series, which is
described
in depth on the "Solved Mysteries" page under the heading "Storytime
Treasury."
Charles Perrault, though translated,
adapted,
and illustrated by Errol Le Cain, Cinderella, circa
1974.
This fits the description given of the very intricate illustrations,
alternating
color with black and white illustrations throughout the book. The text
was translated from Perrault and slightly shortened. The first lines of
text are as follows: Once upon a time there was a gentleman who married
for the second time. His new wife was a very proud, haughty woman, and
her daughters were exactly like her. Her husband had a daughter of his
own, a girl of wonderful goodness and gentleness...
Charles Perrault, Perrault's Fairy Tales,
1998, reprint. It may be this book, illustrated by Edmund
Dulac.
The book was illustrated in 1912 but has been reprinted many
times.
I just bought a copy printed in 2003. The Cinderella story begins
" Once upon a time there lived a gentleman who married twice." The
illustrations
are beautiful.
C436:
Child's
book, Printed in Purple, Forest with grapes hanging
I LOVED this book
as an elementary student in the mid 60's- I
checked
it out of the library a few times a year. All I can remember is
the
end which was a picture of a forest with grape-like fruit hanging down
from the trees. That picture showed that the person was coming
out
of the forest - I remember that it made me feel very happy. The
book
was printed in purple ink and I remember loving the SMELL of the
book.
It was an over-sized book (bigger than Dr Suess) It was NOT
harold
and the purple crayon (but I loved that book too!) ANYONE remember the
title?? THANKS SO MUCH!!
Marie Hall Ets, In the Forest
This is a very long shot, because I haven't seen any copies of this
that
are printed in purple, and I don't have it here to look at the last
page--but
if you look at the cover of the book on Amazon, you might be able to
tell
if they're the right kind of trees. It starts out "I had a new
horn
and a paper hat, and I went for a walk in the forest." Along the
way the boy meets several animals who join in behind him, but they all
disappear at the end when his father shows up to take him home.
C437:
Child's
activity book
I'm searching for a children's activity
book.
It had puzzles, games, and (I remember this vividly) pictures to trace.
This book was given to me by my father in the mid-60's. I'm sure he got
it at a second hand store. The book was hardbound and shiny, the
backround color of the cover was bright green. It may have the word
"Fairy"
in the title.
C438:
Cat
who can talk follows children home
I read this book
when around 1986, although I remember thinking
it was old back then, so it was probably published much earlier.
I remember a stray cat following home some children in a park.
When
they get home, their mother feeds it a slice of pot roast and tells
them
they have to find the owner. They discover the cat can talk, or
has
magical powers or something, and when they bring it back to the park
they
meet an old homeless woman who knows the cat? They go to a
tree that has a lot of knobs on it and somehow enter another world
through
the tree. That's all I can remember.
Ruth Chew, The Wednesday Witch. (1969)
The talking cat who eats pot roast is an element of The Wednesday
Witch,
which also has an old lady (the witch). Maybe you are mixing up
two
or more books? Check Solved Mysteries for The Wednesday Witch and
see if it sounds familiar.
Ruth Chew, The Wishing Tree.
(1980) A talking cat, a mysterious tree, and a creepy old woman
in
the park involve two children, Peggy and Brian, in a magical
adventure.
The children and the cat are able to pass through the tree, and come
out
in another land.
C439:
Cave
flowers bubble swimming future
Solved: The Lotus Caves
C440:
Compass
My mom remembers
reading this book in the early '60s, about a boy
and his dad who find a shiny object (a coin or a compass) and it
magically
transports the boy to the four corners of the earth. Help!
There's a chapter in one of the Mary
Poppins
books about going to the four corners of the world using a compass.
Maybe
it was published separately?
C441:
Coralee
(Corally?) Cruthers Birthday Story
Solved:
Corally Crothers Birthday
C442:
Children's
Mystery Adventure cir. 1969?
Solved:
The
Secret Hide-Out
C443:
children
lost journey candy land
I remember being
fairly obsessed with this book from the middle
school library that I attended in Wayne, NJ in the 70's. For the
amount of times I read it, I cannot remember much about it but I would
love to share it with my son. It was a rather sad book, a sort of
melancholy tone, and I can vaguely recall is that it was about children
either on a journey home or children who were lost and had to a make a
long journey home through a land (this is my faulty memory here)
possibly
made of candy-they might have even been on an island, or going thru
forests.
It was a fairly heavy big book, so spectacularly, beautifully
illustrated,
hardcover, and it had a papercover sealed in that crinkly
plastic.
It was already an older book when I was reading it in the 70's (thats
why
I partly had an obsession-the fact that it seemed from another time
intrigued
me), so it may have been from the 40's, 50's? maybe earlier-the
30's
or 40's. I am desperate and have searched the net for the last
few
years, but I believe that the sketchy details in my mind are hampering
the location of this book. I hope someone can assist and that
reading
this may jog someone's memory! I would be eternally
grateful.
I thought I had found it once, I found a copy of a book called "Candy
Land"
but that wasn't it. If I saw it I would know it on the
spot!
Thanks everyone!
Hoffman, Ernst T.A,, The Nutcracker and
the Mouse King, 1930s.
So sorry I don't think that the Nutcracker book is it.
The book definitely did not fit a Christmas theme. Also, it was a
large heavy book with very detailed lush color illustrations. The
most vivid image I retain of the book is that on a right hand page,
there
is a picture of a girl holding a long stick or staff, as if she is
walking
a long distance - a journey. I thought it could be Floating
Island,
by Anne Parrish, but the illustrations are in color so that wouldn't
fit.
Unless the book was redone in color? Thanks, keep giving me your
ideas!
I'm not sure about this, but when you mentioned
the woman with the staff, I immediately thought of the amazing Russian
illustrator Ivan Bilibin and his illustrations of many Russian
folktales.
Some of those tales have themes about kids finding their way home - but
none through a candy land. I have seen his stories in colections and
published
separately: you can see some of his work online
including
a
woman
with
a
staff
in
the
woods.
Julie Andrews Edwards, Last of the really
great whangdoodles.
This
is a very long shot but the children traveling through a candy land and
forests and the bright illustrations reminded me of The Last of the
Really
Great Whangdoodles.
Louise May Alcott. Alcott wrote
a short story about children travelling through a candy land (maybe
land
of sweets) as well as a more nutritious bread land. It was in a
larger
book of stories.
Laura Bancroft (really L. Frank Baum), Sugarloaf
Mountain. Might this be
Sugarloaf
Mountain? Two children (named Twinkle and Chubbins, I'm afraid), wander
inside Sugarloaf Mountain to a land where everything is made of sugar.
I don't remember the book as particularly melancholy in general, but
the
children get very thirsty because even the drinks are made of sugar,
and
there is one poor character who is ostracized because he turns out not
to be solid sugar, but only cake (I think) with an icing crust.
Could this be Dorothy Nell Whaley &
Charles
W. Knudsen, The Land of Happy Days, 1938 in the
“solved”
section? Brother and sister Betty and Jack travel through enchanted
lands
including one made up of candy and other sweets.
C444:
Cosmetics
company
I'm searching for a book that was written
in the 40's, I believe. It tells a story of a young woman who takes a
job
at a high-end cosmetics company. The boss is named Simone and the color
red is significant.Trials and tribulations of glamour V. real life.
Does
this ring a bell? I would like to purchase this book if found. I read
it
in the library as a child and I believe the author wrote more than one
book.
Betsy Allen, The Riddle in Red,
1948 (approx.). Although there doesn't seem to be a character
called
Lorraine, this sounds an awful lot like Riddle in Red.
This
was the second book in the Connie Blair series. All the
titles
had color names in them.
Hila Colman, The Best Wedding Dress,
1947, approximate. The stumper's description reminded me of a
simlilar
plot to the book The Best Wedding Dress, written by Hila
Colman. Ms. Colman wrote in the 1940's "has written more than fifty
books for young adults and several nonfiction books for adults, a few
under
the name of Theresa Crayder. In many of her writings for young adults,
Colman has chosen themes that involve conflicts - between parents and
children,
among generations, economic classes and political viewpoints. She is
noted
for the realistic portrayals of her characters and her ability to
capture
the language of her young protagonists. Her characterizations are well
rounded and her themes universal." Although The Best Wedding
Dress
is not the book the stumper is looking for, I felt that this writer
would
be a likely candidate for being the author of the book the stumper is
looking
for.
Marjory Hall, Bright Red Ribbon
1961 This book is definitely Bright Red Ribbon by Marjory
Hall. Beverly, aka Mousie, leaves her boring job at the Pillow
Press
to go to work for the glamorous Simone at the cosmetics company that
has
just opened in her hometown. She falls in love with Simone's
nephew,
Andy.
C445:
Color
Solved: The Giver
C446:
Constitution
Solved: Brave
Pursuit
C447:
Curly
hair kid wants straight hair and vice versa
I use to have a book in the 80's
that had short stories in it. The book was either (I believe) a bedtime
or storytime type book. I remember that the first short story in the
book
was about 2 kids - one had curly hair (I think it was black) and one
kid
had straight hair. The kid with curly hair wanted straight hair and the
kid with straight hair wanted curly hair. They try this out and at the
end of the story they are happy with what they were born with. Its the
only story in the book I remember.Cheers!
C448:
Cinderella
late '60s or early to mid '70s. I am
looking for a copy of Cinderella that was my favorite as a child.
As I recall the book was oversized and blue on the covers. I
don't
recall how the book began (I believe that Cinderella may have had a
mother
in the beginning of this particular book) but I do know that the back
page
of the book showed Cinderella dressed up with her two sleek/shiny dogs
and the prince. I doubt it was a Disney book but I could be
mistaken.
Do you have any idea where I can find this version of the Cinderella
story?
Jane Werner, Walt Disney's Cinderella,
1981. I think this is what you are
looking
for -- it was one of my favorite books as a little girl! My much-loved
copy was printed in 1981, but it says that that was the 47th printing.
The covers aren't particularly blue, but the last page does show
Cinderella,
her prince, and her two dogs. It was published by Golden Press. The
illustrations
were adapted from the Disney film by Retta Scott Worcester and the
story
was adapted by Jane Werner. Hope this helps!
C449:
Closer
and Closer and Closer
My stumper question is about a book I read
as a child - I think it was a Golden Book -- that had a meat-eating
dinosaur
who was getting "CLOSER, AND CLOSER AND CLOSER." He left big footprints
in the ground. And then he stomps up to the drive-through window of the
hamburger place and orders millions of hamburgers. Does ANYONE know
this
book? I would love to find it and read it to my kids.
Art Seiden (author), Gene Darby (il), Dinosaur
Comes
To
Town (1963). It
does
not say "Closer and Closer" but it says "Thump Thump Thump the meat
eating
dinosaur is coming!" At the end, he goes to the drive-in and orders 60
million hamburgers. I'm sure it is the book (how can there be
another
one with a dinosaur going to drive-in!?LOL). I forgot to add that it is
a Whitman "Top Top Tales" book (shape of a golden book).
C450:
collection
of stories and fairytales
This small (5x7) book is probably from the
30's or 40's and is divided into at least 6 sections. some of the
stories are Pablo and the Princess, Benjy in Beastland, The Moons
Tears,
The White Pebble, and Boniface and Keep-it-All. I sure hope you
can
solve this one!! Thank You!
C451:
Christmas
Victoria
I'm looking for a Christmas book that my
mother
used to read to us back in the 50's. It was about a little girl
named
Victoria (I think) who is given a matryshka doll for Christmas.
She
opens each doll and gives one to each of her younger sisters.
Bianco, Pamela. The Doll in the Window.
New
York:
Walck,
1953. "Seven-year-old
Victoria stood in front of the toy shop window. She had
come to choose Christmas presents for her five
little sisters. But in the middle of the window was a beautiful painted
wooden doll, and she wanted
the doll more than anything in the world. Then
she accidentally lost all her money, and found she couldn’t buy
anything
at all. An unexpected meeting With a little boy who is a Cub Scout and
a very great surprise which comes from the painted doll herself help
Victoria
and all her sisters to have a happy Christmas, after all.
C452:
Cat
family
Cat family lives at bottom of ocean and runs
a pearl factory. From the 1970s or earlier, possibly a big Little
Golden
Book, size 9" x 12." They may be a royal cat family with crowns,
tiaras,
other jewelry made of shells. Help!
captain kitty. i am sure of the
title. it is written in rhyme. tabby went as my good first
mate, and pearly and mew were the crew. i was just wishing that
we
couldgo fishing if you think we could catch anything. what a
hullabaloo
when pearly and mew caught a prize all wet and shiny...
Lynn, Godfrey, Captain Kitty,
1951, approximately. Rand McNally, illustrated by Elizabeth Webbe
C453:
Christmas
storybook
Solved: The Christmas Book
C454:
Children's
bibliographies
Solved: Childhood of
Famous
Americans Series
C455:
Calling
all girls
Mystery series from 1960's calling all girls,
involved a playhouse
I think Whitman had a series called Calling
All
Girls...they were between the Trixie Belden and Meg series
Books at our local department store. I don't remember any more
about
them though!
C456:
Christmas
tree and forest animals
NOT The Golden Christmas Tree by Jan
Wahl.
All I remember is that the cover seemed so beautiful to me, almost
glowing,
of a Christmas tree outdoors (maybe with candles and decorations) and
forest
animals (squirrels? a variety) who had decorated it. I think it
was
just a fairly short picture book. I was in elementary school when
I checked it out, in the early-mid 80's, and I don't think it was brand
new then, so maybe a 70's book?
Rosenburg, Amya, The Biggest, Most
Beautiful
Christmas Tree, Golden,
1985.
"Residents of a great fir tree in a thick forest make their home
noticeable
in hopes that Santa will come for his first visit to them.: Check
Google Images to find a pic of the cover to see if it's the correct
book.
Jackson, Kathryn, The Animals' Merry
Christmas,
1958. I'm not sure, but this may be
it.
It's a Little Golden Book illustrated by Richard Scarry. I think
it has several stories. One is about Mr. Hedgehog, who'\''s
walking
with his wife (and maybe some other family members) in a village and
finds
an apple in the snow, which he presents to his wife. My memory is
hazy, but I think another story involves a young fawn and his mother
who
see a Christmas tree that has been docorated by humans. The fawn
is fascinated. When he wakes up Christmas morning, the mother has
gotten help from other animals, who have put different kinds of food
(and
maybe decorations) on the tree, and when the mother takes the fawn
there
it'\''s covered with birds and is otherwise sparkling (maybe
icicles?).
I think it may be this part that the requester is remembering.
(Aside
from my general hazy memory of this book is the fact that, while I
think
the "Mr. Hedgehog" story was definitely illustrated by Richard Scarry
in
his pre-Busy World days, I don'\''t remember the forest Christmas tree
story looking so much like his work, so it'\''s very possible this
story
is in another Little Golden Book containing Christmas stories.)
Scott, Ann, How the Rabbits Found
Christmas,
1961. This is a Wonder Book and was
one
of my sister's favorites.
C457:
Coolidge
series
This isn't actually a book stumper but more an author-biography
stumper. So maybe I'm not supposed to ask about this via book
stumpers...
Anyway: The Katy series by Susan Coolidge (Sarah Chauncy Woolsey) have
been among my favourite books since I was about 8 yrs old (I'm now in
my
mid-30s). I recently discovered that the author "was born in Cleveland,
Ohio, on January 29, 1835" and that "the Woolsey family home in
Cleveland...served
as the setting for the Carrs' home in What Katy Did, and the Carr
children
were loosely modeled on Sarah Woolsey and her siblings" (website).
Since
my
husband
and
I,
with
our
two
young
children,
are
actually
living
in
Cleveland
temporarily
(our
"real"
home
is
Brisbane,
Australia)
I
would
LOVE
to
know
where
the
Woolsey
family
home
is,
or
was,
located!
The website in your link is mine. I
checked
the census records and Sarah Woolsey's father was John M. Woolsey.
(Coolidge
was Sarah Woolsey's pseudonym.) The Cleveland Directory for
1835-37
lists his address as "Euclid St. below Erie St," but that's all I've
been
able to find so far. According to the Morgan Library of Ohio's website,
in 1850 her father (John M. Woolsey) lived at 137 Euclid St. in
Cleveland.
Here's a website that I found that might help:
http://www.heritagepursuit.com/Cuyahoga/Cleveland301.htm
The
names
aren't
in
alphabetical
order,
but
the
Woolsey
family
is
about
halfway
down.
My curiosity has been sated :-)
and even though I can't see the house any more, it's still interesting
to know where it was.
C458:
Childbirthing
license
Solved:
The Giver
C459:
Children's
deformity
I read this book
in the 1980's, it is a christian children's fiction
book about a boy who has a scar on his face and lives in a terrible
city.
He discovers a way to leave the city and enters a country where your
true
self shines through and there are all sorts of people who had different
marks or deformities who become their true selves in this place.
David and Karen Mains, Tales of the
Kingdom,
1983. This is the book you are looking for. It is actually the
first
book in the Kingdom Tales trilogy, the other two books being "Tales of
the Resistance" and "Tales of the Restoration".
David R. Mains, Karen Burton Mains, Tales
of the Resistance. I believe
this is what you are looking for. It's been a while since I read it,
but
I do remember a boy with a scar on his face. I don't remember many
details
other than that, but I hope this helps!
David and Karen Mains, Tales of the Kingdom,
1983. The first of the Kingdom Tales trilogy. A collection of
stories
about Scarboy, an orphan, who escapes from the Enchanted City with his
brother, Little Child. He goes to live with the exiled king in Great
Park
and becomes known as Hero.
C460:
Children
combat witches
Solved: The American Witch
I'm looking for a
book that I read in the late 70's or early
80's.
I don't remember a whole lot of detail, but I remember there were two
kids,
and on the way home form school or something (they may have even
decided
to skip school), they went to a house where there were witches.
They
were either trapped at the house or else they were spying on the
witches.
I remember a cauldron being stirred or something. The book was a
little scary--maybe not the plot per se but the fact that they were
trapped
there and being held by the witches. My memory puts the house on
a country lane or something--at least in the country. And no one
knew that witches lived there--maybe the inhabitants were just weird
people
or something. Anyhow, that's all I can recall. Maybe the
police
came in at the end? Something like that.
Phyllis Reynolds Naylor, Witch's
Sister/Witch
Water/Witch Herself books. Seems
to
me there was one part where Lynn and her friend Mouse went to the evil
Mrs. Tuggle's house and got caught there. Those books do take
place
in a rural kind of setting.
William Sleator, Blackbriar, 1972.
Could be a couple different books, depending on how old the kids were
and
how menacing the witches were. If the kids were teens, and the
witches
extremely scary, try A boy moves into a new home in the country
with
his guardian, only to discover that it's being used by witches/devil
worshipers.
A girl he meets at school helps him figure out what's going on.
If
it's younger kids with more traditional witches, try Sneaker Hill, by
Jane
Little, 1967. Two cousins discover that the boy's mother is trying to
become
a witch, but her coven don't appreciate their interference in her witch
tests.There are probably more that fit the description as well!
I don't recognize the exact plot, but it could
be one of Ruth Chew's books she wrote many about witches, and
they
were almost always about two children who stumble upon either a single
witch or a group of witches, and their tone is usually mildly
scary.
All her books look very similar as well, with soft charcoal
illustrations.
Roald Dahl, The Witches,
1983. I'm not sure if this is the book for which you're looking,
but part of it does take place in the english countryside, and there is
a large portion of the book in which two boys are taken captive by a
group
of witches and are subsequently turned into mice. Good luck!
Jay Jackson MacNess, The American
Witch, 1966, Published by McGraw Hill. I haven't read
the
book in a while, but I do remember that it was darn scary when the two
boys were spying on the witches.
C461:
Charlie's
blue drawstring
As a child in the
1970/80s i had a book containing a collection
of stories.I'm sure one of the characters was called Charles and he had
a blue drawstring 'rainy day' sack/bag filled with different objects.
Im
also sure there was a story where someone was 'as small as a pin' I
remember
them helping with cooking.
Ruth Ainsworth, Lucky Dip.
This is a collection of Ruth Ainsworth's short stories for children and
I am fairly sure one of them is the one about Charles and his 'useful
bag'.
This probably came from one of her 1950s collections, Charles
Stories
and Some Others or More Charles Stories.
Originally
written for the radio programme "Listen With Mother", I believe.
C462:
Children's
verses
I remember having
the book when I was very young so I'm certain
it was published before 198O, probably much earlier. It was full of
children's
verses and illustrations. The illustations were mainly of children with
very round faces and pink circles for cheeks. The weren't like
charactures.
The only poem I definitely remember is Babes in the Woods. There were
various
other verses/poems; however, they weren't your typical Mother Goose
Rhymes.
I believe each verse had an authors name below it and I vaguely
remember
Christina Rossetti being one of the authors. The book itself was
hardcover
and oversized, but not very thick. I believe the cover was gray, but I
may be mistaken.
I bet it's a book illustrated by Gyo
Fujikawa.
If you go to Google Images and do a search with her name, you'll see
covers
of books that she illustrated. One of them is mostly gray with a
part of a tree trunk on the side and and angel/fairy floating.
or visit Loganberry's Most Requested pages for Fujikawa.
Gyo Fujikawa, Oh, What a Busy Day,1976.
This is the book: it contains a short selection by Christina Rosetti
about
the old woman in the lane, and it also has the Babes in the Woods
poem.
Currently out of print but WORTH the time and money to track down--a
true
classic.
Interpreting
Condition
Grades
|
Fujikawa,
Gyo. Oh, What a Busy Day! Grosset
& Dunlap, 1976, 1986 edition. Quite edgeworn, badly
taped
spine and hinges, well read and well worn. P.
[EQ3052]
$8 |
|
C463:
Christmas
for the birds
Solved: Snowbound with
Betsy
C464:
Childrens'
adventure down a river
I believe this was published in mid-late 70s
or early 80s. It is the story of children in a family (I THINK 3
of them (2 girls & a boy?)- altho I know one was named Bridget for
sure)who leave a farmhouse where they are staying on moor ponies and
follow
a river for some time, with many adventures. I think they meet up
with another child/children at some point. They also spend some
time
on a raft going down the river. I loved this book and hope to
find
it again. It is not a picture book, but a full length novel.
Katherine Hull and Pamela Whitlock, The
Far Distant Oxus. Sounds
like
this classic, see solved mysteries E-F.
Thank you - the minute I saw the title I remembered the book.
I must have rec'd the 1969 reprint edition.
Interpreting
Condition
Grades
|
Hull,
Katharine;
Whitlock,
Pamela. The Far-Distant Oxus
[abridged edition]. Afterword by Arthur Ransome, cover
illusustration
by Karl W Stuecklen. Macmillan, 1969 1st printing thus.
exlibrary.
VG/VG [WHQ24605] $20 |
|
C465:
Cow
in the silo
Miss O'Gradys Cow, 1940s or 50s. A cow
was frighten by lightening and ran in a silo and could not get out. I
think
they rubbed grease on him and eventually got him out.
There are at least two books based on this
true
story: Grady's in the Silo by Una Belle
Townsend,
and The Cow In The Silo: Grady's Funny Adventure, by Patricia
Goodell (Wonder Books, 1950). Now I am almost sure that we had the
1950 book, but with a different title because I remember Grady
perfectly
(we loved that story!), but the title doesn't sound right. But I
can't find any mention of another title, so maybe I'm all wrong about
that.
C465 [from Wikipedia] On February 22, 1949, Bill
and Alyne Mach's six-year-old Hereford cow, Grady, gave birth to a
stillborn
calf in a small shed next to a silo. Since she was having trouble with
the birth, Mach called a veterinarian, D.L. Crumb, to help. Dr. Crumb
tied
Grady to a post so she would hold still. When he was finished taking
care
of her, he told Bill Mach to untie her. When Bill Mach untied her, she
whirled around and started chasing him. He jumped on a pile of
cottonseed
sacks to escape. The only light in the shed was from the small
opening
to the silo. Grady dove for the light in the opening. Mach and Dr.
Crumb
looked toward the silo opening and saw a few red hairs clinging to the
edge of the heavy steel silo door which was only 17 inches wide and 25
inches high. Grady was in the silo. They couldn't tear down the
silo
as it was too valuable and the opening could not be made wider because
it was encased in steel. Bill Mach asked for help through his local
newspaper.
The response was overwhelming. All over the United States, people were
trying to find a solution to the problem. Phone calls, telegrams and
letters
all flowed in with suggestions. Curious people started showing up in
cars
and even planes. Grady was featured in Life Magazine, TIME Magazine and
newspapers all over the country. One person suggested tunneling under
the
silo. Another suggested bringing an attractive bull to the opening to
lure
her out. An Air Force officer said he knew of a helicopter that would
lift
1,200 pounds but it was in San Marcos, Texas. Three days after
Grady's
leap, Bill Mach got a call from Ralph Partridge, the farm editor of The
Denver Post. He told Mach he was coming to Yukon to get Grady out of
the
silo. Partridge supervised while a ramp was built from the floor of the
silo to the door. The door edges were coated with axle grease. Grady
was
then outfitted with two heavy halters coated with axle grease. Dr.
Crumb
gave her tranquilizers to make her relax. While men outside the silo
pulled
on ropes attached to her halters, Partridge and J.O. Dicky Jr., a Yukon
vocational agriculture teacher, pushed. Grady slid through the door
with
only a couple of scratches along her back. Grady went on to become a
mother
several times, and she was such a tourist attraction that Mach put up a
sign on Route 66 noting her home. He kept Grady in a special pen by the
road. Grady the Cow died in July 1961 and the old silo was torn down in
2001 to make way for a regional hospital. Two children's books
have
been written describing and illustrating the story of Grady the Cow. The
Cow
In
The
Silo:
Grady's
Funny
Adventure (1950) by Patricia
Goodell and Grady's in the Silo (2003) by Una
Belle
Townsend.
C466:
Coming
of age in NYC
The book that I am looking for was about a
young black boy growing up in New York I think. By the time he was 13
he
had been shot, been in jail I think, and had done and/or sold drugs.
However,
he was able to overcome his childhood and I believe became a piano
player
or teacher.
Claude Brown, Manchild in the Promise
Land,
1965. I finally found it. Manchild in the Promised Land
is indeed one of the most remarkable autobiographies of our time. This
thinly fictionalized account of Claude Brown's childhood as a hardened,
streetwise criminal trying to survive the toughest streets of Harlem
has
been heralded as the definitive account of everyday life for the first
generation of African Americans raised in the Northern ghettos of the
1940s
and 1950s. When the book was first published in 1965, it was praised
for
its realistic portrayal of Harlem -- the children, young people,
hardworking
parents the hustlers, drug dealers, prostitutes, and numbers runners,
the police, the violence, sex, and humor. The
book continues to resonate generations later, not only because of its
fierce
and dignified anger, not only because the struggles of urban youth are
as deeply felt today as they were in Brown's time, but also because
the book is affirmative and inspiring. Here is the story about the one
who "made it," the boy who kept landing on his feet and became a man."
C467:
Crocodile/alligator
Solved: Crocodile,
Crocodile
C468:
Coming
of age book-different types families
Solved: Poppy and the Outdoors Cat
C469:
Come
In and Put Your Sweaters On
Solved: The Secret Language
C470:
Chinese
(?) dragon shoots fireworks
Solved: The Laughing Dragon
C471:
Cathedral
bells
Solved: The Silent Bells
C472:
Castle
and fort craft book
Tells how to make models of a Roman Fort,
the Saucy Castle, and a Maginot Line gun.
Cummings, Richard, Make Your Own Model
Forts
& Castles, 1977.
contents:
A Roman Fort, Fort Phil Kearny, A Norman Castle, The Western Front, the
Maginot Line, Castle Gaillard (the 'saucy castle'), Mount Cassino
C473:
caran
d'ache crayons
a young girl comes home from school to find
her mom sitting at the table still in her coat. her mom has wet
herself,
clearly she has had a breakdown. the girl and her brother are sent to
live
with their dad and his new family. the girl becomes ill (possibly
glandular
fever?) and ends up hallucinating that every night she flies from her
bedroom
window and visits her nan who has died. the girl wants some caran
d'ache
crayons. thank you.
hi im the
original poster here, and im gutted no one remembers
this
book, so i want to add some more facts. this book is english and set in
england, possibly london. and i read it late 80s early 90s. the main
character
was about 11 i think. she had a younger brother. the girl in it was
overweight.
her family were very poor, and her mum was a single parent. when she
went
to live with the dad and his new family there was another girl there,
who
did ballet i think. the dads family was well off and doing well for
themselves.
please help stumpers, this is driving me crazy!!! thanks
2007
C474:
Creepy
house visited by boy
Solved:
House With a Clock in Its Walls
C475:
Crutches
painted daily
Solved: The Westing Game
C476:
Cat
named Pencil Tail
A cat named Pencil Tail. I read this in first
grade in 1963.
C477:
Charles
Geer
Lost Moon? Missing Satellite? 1965.
I am seeking a Young Adult novel published in the 1960's or late '50s,
illustrated by Charles Geer. I don''t recall the name of the author
this
might also be Geer. The title is something like "The Secret of the Lost
Moon" or "The Mystery of the Missing Satellite". The novel is set in
the
near future -- there's a space colony on the Moon, and so forth -- but
most of the action takes place on a future Earth that could pass for
1950s
Mayberry U.S.A. if you don't mind the extraterrestrials. Early one
morning,
a boy hears a disturbance outside his family's house: he gets dressed
and
goes to investigate. His younger sister follows him, but she doesn't
get
dressed: she wears pajamas throughout the book. The kids meet an alien
who looks something like a talking moose: he has huge antlers and is
always
honing them with a pumice stone. Years ago, the alien visited this
region
of space and he encountered a very interesting moon: now he'\''s back,
but he can'\''t recall the precise location or name of the moon he
visited.
(I know the feeling.)The alien has offered a reward for anyone who can
help him find the missing moon, so now various adult humans and aliens
show up to join the search. One is a big burly scientist named
Phillider
(correct spelling?) who is always causing explosions. Another is an
interplanetary
salesman who looks like Snidely Whiplash: thin, black clothes, tall
black
hat, long black mustache. Another contestant is a frog-faced alien who
keeps eating sugar wafers and who owns a creature called a Gibbous: an
enormous grey blob which can somehow fit itself entirely into the shell
of a hardboiled egg. (One chapter of this novel is titled "The
Gibbous".)
There is also an alien detective from a weird species: his body
consists
of a very tall pole with a single wheel at the base (like a unicycle)
and
his head at the top: his head wears a deerstalker cap and smokes a
pipe.
Meanwhile, all of his "internal" organs are attached to a separate
pole,
on a unicycle wheel of its own, which rolls along beside him. Each of
the
contestants has a different theory as to the identity of the lost moon:
one of them makes the obvious guess that it'\''s Earth's moon. When the
moose-like alien flexes his antlers, he is able to teleport himself and
all the contestants (plus the boy and girl) to whichever moon or
satellite
a contestant chooses. Teleporting long distances is easier for him than
short distances. At the end of the novel, when all the official
contestants
have failed, the boy and girl correctly deduce that the missing "moon"
is actually the Earth, which is technically a moon of the Sun. Can
anyone
identify this novel by title or author? I'm 90% certain that the
illustrator
is Charles Geer -- the pictures are certainly in Geer's style -- but I
don't find this book listed in any reference to Geer's work.
Chester, Michael, The mystery of the
lost
moon, 1961. There is a book
by Michael Chester of that title, illustrated by charles Geer. It
was published by Putnam, New York in 1961
C478:
children,
party, popcorn
Solved: Popcorn
C479:
Catholic
school literature book
Solved: Prose and Poetry
for Young Readers and Writers
C480:
Corky
I am looking for a book I probably read
between
1940 and 1945 about a boy named Corky, who is down with a fever and it
explains the battle that is going on inside his body with good germs
trying
to get rid of the bad ones. Very dramatic, and I believe he finally
gets
well. Lots of metaphors re outside world, possibly during WWII?
I saw something very like this as a Disney
educational
film at school in the very early 1960s. The body's cells are shown as
little
creatures who respond to immunization by believing they are threatened
with enemy attack, so they build antibodies (shown as war planes,
cannons,
etc.), so later, when a real sickness attacks the body, they have those
things in readiness. It was very WWII in storyline and general
ambience.
The film was clearly produced by Disney, so if this is the same as your
story, Disney probably published your book as well. Good luck
Harry A. Wilmer,
Corky the Killer:
A Story of Syphilis,1945.Not all details are correct, but it's
gotta be this book without a doubt. Right time period, same
premise
(the body is an anthropomorphized battlefield, and there is a WWII feel
in that some enemies are drawn as being Japanese or Nazi like), though
Corky is not the boy but the virus. Also, it seems more a book
for
teens and adults than kids, consitering syphillis is an STD! "In
this book an articulate microbe describes what goes on from the start
of
a syphilitic infection and what may happen if proper treatment is not
given.
Those who have read Dr. Wilmer's story of tuberculosis,
Huber
the Tuber (National Tuberculosis Association, 1942), will know
what to expect. Lewis Carrol fans will find delight in the book. The
uninitiated
may expect information presented in a form that almost makes one feel
sory
for the trials and tribulations of the villain". Quoting Corky's
working
song: "Oh, there ain't no match for a mucous patch/ If you look all
over
the world/The skin may blotch, the liver notch,/The brain may shrivel
and
curl./But for beauty pure, with deadly allure,/And with stitches
tightly
bound,/There ain't no match for a mucous patch/From here to
Chancretown."
C481:
chicken
finds ancient city
A picture book I
read in the early 1950's. A hungry chicken
belonging
to a poor old woman scratches the dusty ground, looking for food,
and keeps scratching until it uncovers a large ancient city. And
after that, woman and chicken are not starving any more!Based on my
very
dim memories, or perhaps later knowledge,setting might have been Italy
and the ruin might have been Roman
C482:
coup
on island during family vacation
Solved: Rebel on a Rock
C483:
Cows
in meadow
I'm looking for a book that I read as a child.
About a bunch of cows that lived in a meadow. On the inside cover of
the
book was a map of the meadow and all the places mentioned in the
stories
were marked.
C484:
Child
stays with naturalist
I read this in the late 50s, early 60s. A
Mrs. Molesworth type of book. A child, girl?, staying with a relative
who
lived in a house cluttered with things from expeditions (he was a
naturalist?).
Had pen and ink drawings. One was a drawing of his desk with a stuffed
alligator or crocodile hanging over it.
Elizabeth Goudge, Linnets and Valerians.
Maybe?
Uncle Ambrose does have a lot of things in his study including an owl.
C485:
Camping
trip, stranded
Teen adventure/romance - a girl and boy who
dislike each other are paired up during a school trip (an adventure
club,
maybe?). They have other people in their group, but because
they're
trying to outdo each other, they get away from the group. There's
an unexpected snowstorm, and they are stranded. The boy, I think,
breaks or hurts his leg somehow. One of them has a heart
condition
or diabetes or something. They have to learn to work together.
After
they're rescued, he visits her, using his crutches, and topples into
her
arms. Pretty sure this is NOT Snowbound by Mazer.
Laurel Trivelpiece, Just a Little Bit
Lost,
1988.Not
all the details fit, but this book does sound like Just a Little
Bit Lost. A group goes on a camping trip, Bennett Kinnell
(the girl - named after Elizabeth in Pride and Prejudice) is completely
unprepared, and gets lost. Phillip Hargrove finds her but they
both
end up lost, and he does hurt his leg, and they do end up falling into
each others' arms. No diabetes or other disease that I
remember.
A Scholastic paperback.
C486:
Community
in tree tops
Solved: Green Sky Trilogy
C487:
Children
in tunnel
I've been looking for a book I read in
elementary
school in mid 1970s. I know that it involved two children, the
boy's
name may have been Henry. The boy and his friend, a girl,
discovered
a tunnel leading from his back yard and visited it regularly. I
can't
remember the specifics of everything inside the tunnel, but I
remembered
reading the book repeatedly and loving it. Can you help?
This is in reference to the email from C487
called
Children in tunnel. I also read a book similar to this as a child
in the late 60's. I thought it might have had something to do
with
the tunnel being made of snow and when the boy and girl went through
it,
they reached the North pole. Does this sound familiar to
anyone?
I am not sure if this is the same book as children in tunnel but it
sounds
close. My Mother bought it for me and I loved the book so
much.
I would love to find it.
Eleanor Estes, The Tunnel of Hugsy
Goode. This doesn't sound exactly like what's being described
but
it does have a tunnel in the back yard and they do visit it
frequently.
It's about two boys who are neighbors who unearth a tunnel right by one
of their houses and explore it. It's a sequel of sorts to Estes'
book
The Alley.
I appreciate the two suggestions, but they
aren't my book. I'm not able to remember much more about this
book,
except I have the vague feeling that the tunnel ended in a library, or
at least the tunnel yielded documents that seem significant in the
community's
history. I do remember that at the end of the book the secret
tunnel
is revealed to their families -- either the children share it with
their
parents or are discovered somehow and lead others into the tunnel.
Eleanor Estes, The Tunnel of Hugsy
Goode, Are you sure this isn't the right one? The tunnel
does end in a library and the tunnel is revealed to the families of the
kids. The entire neighborhood traipses down there and walks
through
it!
This is a longshot, but your second clue makes
it sound a little like The Man in the Long Black Cape,
by
Patience
Zawadsky? I'm not sure when it was originally published, but I read
a scholastic book copy in the 70s. In the story, a boy sets out to
prove
to his community (and a bitter enemy his age) that his
several-greats-grandfather
wasn't actually a traitor/spy during the American Revolution.
There
is a tunnel, and a hidden musket in a fireplace that holds secret
documents
that reveal who was actually the spy. The parents (and one grandfather
or uncle) play a big role as they're running some sort of town naming
festival
that keeps the kids harping at each other. I don't remember a
girl,
but there is a younger brother who has a sort of unisex name.
Good
luck!
C488:
Cow,
hot potato
large old childrens book with different
stories
and rhymes, one has a short rhyme about a cow which swallowed a hot
potato,
it has a picture of the cow(thinks she is called dolly) with a tear
running
down her cheek. Please please help??? thanx
C489:
City
behind walls in future
Futuristic city behind walls. In the
1970's a friend from Finland let me read this so it may be foriegn (was
written in english) A girl or boy from the outside finds way in and
makes
friends with another child. The only part I remember is they go to a
store
where if you see something you want you get it "tatooed" on your neck
and
then can't leave the city again. Any ideas?
Barbara Bartholomew, The Time
Keeper,
1985.
Jeanette and her brother Neil find some time-transport stones in an old
hotel scheduled to be destroyed in a few days. One set of stones takes
them to an Amish-type farm community in the past, if I remember
correctly,
and another takes them to a future where it is a crime to time-travel,
and they are held captive.
N.
Roy
Clifton,
The City Beyond The
Gates, 1972, copyright. From the back cover: What
lies beyond the Fence? Why do living things wither and die on the other
side? When Janey-Ann decides to find out, she enters a strange world
where nature has been replaced by machinery and everyone is under the
eye of the all powerful Kemarch - a world where she must risk unknown
dangers when she encourages the Green Boy to escape with her back to
the land of the Trees... Quote p.46. "But you passed all the
shops along the street. Didn't you wish for something you saw there?
Didn't the wish-printer print your wish with dye on the back of your
neck?"
C490:
Cy
and Meredith
Solved: True Colors
C491:
Collection
of family stories
This is a book I read at school, in Western
Australia, in 1995. It is a very funny book,for teenagers/ young
adults/
older children. It is a very thick book. It is a book about a family
and
a collection of stories about their adventures, there are mum and dad,
brother? and sister? the story is narrated by a teenage girl. it starts
off with them moving house - the mum doesn't want to but the dad
insists
because he is always wanting to move. the dad owns a rock band which
are
very unsuccessful, they just live at the house. but they drive the
moving
vans, they take the swimming pool, but they don't empty it, and the
truck
is tipping up back-end heavy, so they put pot plants in the cab with
the
rock band guy, and fill his pockets with stones. When they stop at the
lights,then take off, the swimming pool splashes out in a big
tidal
wave.The story is full of their adventures, including a miniature
spaceship
with a couple of tiny aliens, who I think are lost, another part is
about
a mirror they find in the house which has a little boy trapped in it,
they
rescue him out of the mirror and adopt him, he is just called "Boy",
and
he doesn't talk. There is also something about a yeti/or bunyip/or
bigfoot
which sings? lives on a mountain? and is lonely? but they befriend him?
There is a big flood like a noah's ark kind of flood and they end up
meeting
the bigfoot ? They end up living together? I think the title of the
book
is something to do with the singing bigfoot. It is such a funny
book
I hope someone knows it because I would love to read it again : ) The
title
might be something like "the singing bigfoot, and other adventures of
the
_____ family?" Something like that, but I don't honestly know. : ) The
bigfoot's story is not until near almost the end of the book. : )
C492:
Crippled
Eskimo boy
Solved: Nuvat the Brave:
An Eskimo Robinson Crusoe
C493: Cannery
1950s, A girl falls in love with a boy from
the wrong side of the tracks who works in the town cannery.
Marg Nelson, A Girl Called
Chris,
1969.
This one could be A Girl Called Chris. It was a
Scholastic
paperback. Actually, she had to go work for the cannery (salmon or some
kind of fish, I think) because she needed money for college--lost her
scholarship
or something. Also seems like there were 2 boys--one nice guy and
one from the wrong side of the tracks but I could be confusing that
part
with Seventeenth Summer. I read them both around the same time.
C494:
City
Boy with Fancy Uncle, Tiger, Tall Tales
Black boy in city (NYC?) has a fancy uncle
who tells tall tales. Picture of boy sitting on stoop with giant
tiger behind building, uncle with fancy clothes, car. Someone
might
be named Leroy. Uncle might be visiting. Possible moral about
lying?
Probably late 1970s. Possibly Parents Magazine Press.
C495:
Children
with animals picture book
Children with animals picture book. I am
trying
to replace a book that was lost during hurricane Katrina. It was
given to my by by grandmother. It was a child's picture book of
farm
animals and was probably published between 1860 and 1920. It had
beautiful
victorian prints of children with bunnies, puppies, kittens, and other
baby animals. The front I think was of a donkey with a basket on
his back with children. It was a large hardbound book with a
burgandy
border, The prints look to be the same style as prints done by
the
artist,Elsley. I desperately want to find a replacement as the book was
very dear to me.
Eulalie (aka Eulalie Wilson), Baby's
Animal
Book (No. 860),1927, 1929. I'm almost certain this is
it.
Hardcover book w/ burgundy spine, front cover shows donkey standing on
the beach, w/ the ocean behind him. A little blonde girl dressed in
lavender
is seated on the donkey's back, and a dark-haired boy in an orange
romper
is walking beside them, with his left hand on the donkey's neck, like
he's
leading it. A small white dog is running beside the donkey. The
lettering
on the cover is red, with the word's "Baby's Animal" written
horizontally
above the girl/donkey, and the word "Book" written vertically, on a
slight
diagonal, behind the girl/donkey. The book was published by Platt and
Monk,
and features pictures of pets, farm, and wild animals. Hope you are
able
to replace your lost copy!
Eulalie, Baby's Animal Book, 1927.
Not
a
solution
so
much
as
a
follow-up.
After
reviewing
some
of
Elsley's
artwork,
I'm
no
longer
quite
so
sure
that
this
is
the
correct
book.
Eulalie's
illustrations,
while
charming,
are
not
quite
as
intricate
as
Elsley's.
C496:
Country
girl visiting relatives climbing tree, dungarees, elbow grease
Solved: A Nickel for Alice
C497:
Children's
activity book
This is a tough one. I remember a large book
with a pebbled, orange, leatherette cover, from my childhood in the
1950's.
As I recall, the cover was plain orange, without any writing or images.
The book contained children's activities and possibly stories. It's
similar
to the Junior Instructor books, but a little larger. I've ruled out the
Childcraft Encyclopedias, too. This has been nagging me for years, so I
hope someone can solve this stumper for me. Thanks!
This sounds possibly similar to my book
stumper
question. B556.
C498:
Children
sleep and dream while souls play
This was a book that I remember having as
a child in the late '80s - it was probably from the 60s-70s judging
from
what I remember. It seems very "new agey" to me now. I
remember
vivid blue and yellow as the main colors used throughout the book and
on
the cover. It was about how when children sleep, their souls
leave
their bodies and go play.
Elizabeth Kubler-Ross,
Remember The
Secret,
1988. This is kind of a longshot, but this book does talk
about leaving one's body at night and that this is proof of the soul's
survival after death. The story presents Edgar Caycean doctrine similar
to that found in books like Suddenly We Were or anything by
Alice
Bailey.
Boys and Girls Come Out to Play.This
sounds
a
little
like
a
picture
book
from
I
think
the
70s-80s
that
illustrated
the
nursery
rhyme,"Boys
and
girls
come
out
to
play,The
moon
doth
shine
as
bright
as
day.
Leave
your
supper
and
leave
your
sleep,And
join
your
playfellows
in
the
street."
C499:
Children's
book with colorful block people
Solved: Changes, Changes
C500:
Christian
mystic woman recounts conversations with Jesus
I read this non-fiction book about 25 years
ago. I think the cover was red. It gave the story of a woman who heard
a voice speaking to her (I think he called her 'Beloved') - the
conversations
were very beautiful. It also gave a little of her life story - I only
remember
that she liked to dance.
Caldwell, Taylor, THE LISTENER, 1960.
If this is it, there's also a sequel--NO ONE HEARS BUT HIM (1966)
Gabrielle Bossis, He and I,
1985
C501:
Cave
journey and teenage coming-of-age story
I read this book as a teenager in the
1980's.
Its about teenagers lost in a network of caves. I think there were just
two of them: a girl and a boy. At one point they follow the
course
of an underground river and get wet and cold. Afterwards they build a
fire
(I think), and then have a "let's get out of these wet clothes" moment,
except with the awkwardness of youth. I remember it had a
profound
effect on me, one of those books which made you feel all funny
inside.
I would love to find out its name
C502:
Cow,
GIs, tail, horsefly, rope
Story set in Europe during WWII. A cow has
had its tail shot off during a battle and is tormented by a horsefly.
GIs
devise a substitute tail out of a rope, and the cow can now swat the
fly.
C503:
Children
enter cat door and shrink
Children go through a cat door &
become tiny, encounter cat, bird etc that tower over them, picture book
- pictures are photographs. Probably published early 1970s. In one
picture
cat is looking at children through the cat door. Bird may be a magpie.
C504:
Chopper,
childrens' anthology
This is a large childrens' anthology that
contains only one specific poem that I can recall. the name of
that
poem is Chopper (Was a Lazy Dog).
children's anthology. I have the
anthology
on my lap. My copy (which was used when I was a child and contains no
identifiers)
begins on page 33 and ends on 370, with pages missing from both ends.
"Chipper"
(not Chopper) is in here, beginning: Chipper was a lazy dog/ He didn't
like to run/ He didn't like to jump or bark/ Or play with
anyone...
No author for Chipper is given, although many pieces in the anthology
do
list authors. My daughter loves this anthology, as I did, but the smell
is unbearable. I was able to track down a shorter version of this
anthology
(through the title and author of another story included---Little Hank
by
Alice Sankey) this anthology is called Big Big Storybook.
Whitman
Publishing
1955.
Hardcover
224
pages.
It
has
not
arrived
yet
but
a
photocopy
of
the
TOC
indicates
that
it
includes
Chipper.
Hope
that
helps.
Would
love
to
know
the
name
of
my
larger
anthology,
too!
C505:
crystal
tree, apple tree, girl lives with cousins
Solved: The Crystal Tree
C506:
children
create beginning of magic
Solved: The Twilight of
Magic
C507:
cat
stuck in boots, ocean liner
cat gets stuck in boots and travels from a
stream to a river to the ocean and is picked by an ocean liner.
Address
of owners happens to be in the boots and the kitty is returned.
C508:
Cathy
gets her own bedroom
Solved: A Room for Cathy
C509:
Child
has adventures in deceased aunt's house
The book I'm thinking of concerns an only
child who moves into a deceased aunt's house with her parents while
they
settle the estate and the adventures that ensue. One involves a
dumb
waiter, another lemonade made with soap powder instead of sugar.
Calhoun, Mary, Katie John. Katie
John and her family move into an inherited house in order to sell it,
but
find they don't want to part with it.
Many adventures and several sequels.
Mary Calhoun, Katie John. More
about
this
series
of
books
in
the
Solved
Mysteries
section
C510:
Colored
glass bottles
A book of many stories? 1960s-1970s.
I am searching for the name of a story in a big book of children's
stories.
The story is about a girl and a man who was maybe more of an elf. He
has
several colored glass perfume bottles and drops them while trying to
cross
a river. The story continues but I can't recall much else. The girl's
name
may have been Melinda or Belinda and the Cover of the story book was
red
and white with pictures. The pictures in this particular story were
colorful.
C511:
Callie,
lifeguard Curt, unrequited love
I am looking for a teen romance from the 80's.
It's about a girl named Callie who falls for a lifeguard named Curt at
her local pool. He of course has no interest in her and she ends up
realizing
that her friend Rusty is pretty special. She also has a younger sister
named Tessa. I don't know the title or author. Thanks!
C512:
City
teen, who's into "Weejuns", moves to country
Solved: Popular Girl
C513:
Child(ren)
keep(s) robot in back yard
I remember what I think was a children's book
from the late 70's. It was about a kid or kids who were keeping a
robot in their back yard. I believe the only thing it would eat
was
baked alaska. Unfortunately, that is all I remember about the
book.
Carol Ryrie Brink, Andy
Buckram's
Tin Men, 1966. Could this be Andy Buckram's Tin
Men?
I don't remember baked Alaska, but in the story, Andy built three
robots
a man-type robot, a softer, female-kind of robot, and a child robot.
They
develop personalities along those lines too. Then there's a
flood,
and Andy, his little cousin and a girl from the neighborhood are
trapped.
The robots rescue them and they all float down the river in a boat.
Somehow,
at the end, the kids are rescued and the robots float away. Now, I read
this a long time ago, and I may have some details wrong. But it might
be
worth checking out!
C514:
Californian
high school girls, Alex, Julie, series
I'm looking for a young adult series from
the eighties. Unfortunately I remember very little. It takes place in
high
school (California, I think), has four girls who are friends, One of
the
girls is Alex, a Japanese-American athlete. She has a handicapped
brother
with the nickname Noodle. The other girl is Julie, whose relatively
new.
She has a secret - she used to be quite overweight. I think there were
four or so books in the series. They were paperbacks.
Eileen Goudge, Seniors,
1984, approximate. The characters in this series were Kit, Lori,
Ellen and Alex. Alex's brother, "Noodle", had cystic fibrosis.
C515:
Cardinal
fairy-tale
Solved: Cappy Cardinal
C516:
Castle
grounds for goblin war
I'm looking for
the title of a book that I bought in the mid 60's
through either the Scholastic or Weekly Reader book club at our school.
I bought it thinking it was a mystery, I think because the word mystery
was in the title. It turned out to be a fantasy book about a castle in
a woods where all the people were shadows. A modern day girl is
visiting
a relative (grandma or aunt), I think. She goes for a walk through the
woods and hears weird noises from a cave or something. It turns out
they
are goblins who are following her. She comes across the castle and a
kid
(I think a boy, but I might be wrong) from way back when, who tells her
the story of the castle's enchantment over a number of visits. He also
warns her about the goblins in the cave. All that can be seen of the
rest
of the castle's inhabitants are shadows, until the proper time, when
they
will become real again and the princess will be ready to get married
(this
is why I think she meets a boy - he is waiting to marry her, I think).
Part of the history of the castle is a great war with the goblins.
Marian Cockrell, Shadow Castle.
George MacDonald, The Princess and the
Goblin. The classic tale of a
young
princess and a miner boy who outwit a colony of goblins in an exciting
adventure set in a maze of underground caverns. When Princess Irene
discovers
a secret staircase at the top of the castle, she enters a world so
mysterious
she doesn't know whether to believe it is real. For, hidden in the
highest
tower, is a beautiful old lady who lives among the pigeons, spinning
magic
thread beside a fire made of roses. But when strange cat-like creatures
are found prowling the palace gardens, and Curdie the miner boy
encounters
a band of embittered goblins plotting revenge on the royal household,
the
princess must place her trust in the old lady if they are to save the
palace
from destruction." Another possibility is "The Princess and Curdie",
a
sequel
to
"The Princess and the Goblin." These books
are
still in print.'
Marian Cockrell, Shadow Castle.
The very popular Shadow Castle!
Marion Cockrell, Shadow Castle.
Sounds a lot like Shadow Castle to me! Check out descriptions in
the solved section.
Marion Cockrell, Shadow Castle. Again!
C517:
Collecting
string
Anthology - book includes a short story about
an old lady and another man who collect string. The town holds a
contest and they unwind their giant balls of string. The anthology
could
possibly also have a play about pilgrims.
Robert McCloskey, Homer Price,1943.
This
is the story "Mystery Yarn" in this collection. Its in Solved
Mysteries.
McCloskey, Robert, Homer Price. This
is surely it. The book is not an anthology in the strictest
sense,
but is episodic. The pilgrim reference probably refers to the
founder's
day play that the townspeople put on. Remember? "Forty-two
pounds of edible fungus/In the Wilderness a-growin."
Robert McCloskey, Homer Price. Not
pilgrims exactly--the early history of Homer's town, Centerburg.
(Edible
Fungus, anyone?) And the ball of string episode is also included.
Robert McCloskey, Homer Price. Miss
Terwilliger has two suitors, each of whom collects string. When
the
two of them hold a contest, deciding that whoever has the longest
string
wins Miss Terwilliger, she joins in, with the yarn that she has
collected
over the years. There is also a chapter in which the
citizens
of Centerburg hold a pageant about the settling of their town.
"Forty-two
pounds of edible fungus, In the Wilderness a-growin'," they sing.
(The town was originally called Edible Fungus. There's also a
sequel
called Centerburg Tales, which you will probably also enjoy.)
Robert McCloskey, Homer Price.
Chapter book rather than short stories, and I don't remember a play,
but
one of the chapters focuses on a man and woman who unroll their balls
of
string to see who has collected the most.
Robert McCloskey, Homer Price.
This has to be Homer Price. The chapter called 'Mystery
Yarn'.
Uncle Telly and Mrs. Terwilliger compete to have the biggest ball of
yarn
in the county. It comes right after the donut machine chapter!
C518:
Clues
from grandfather for Indian items
This is a
childrens book. Some kids go visit their grandparents
and they figure out clues to find the items that are in a shadow box
type
display that their grandmther has. The items are an indian mask, a
little
pot, an indian doll and something else. Apparently ther great great
grandfather
went off to the civil war and hid these items and the clues for his
children
to find while he was away to war. They did not fnd the articles but
these
children do generations later. There is an old Indian women in the
story
also.
Peggy Parish, Key to the Treasure.
I'm positive this is the book you're looking for. There is a
description
in the solved section.
Peggy Parrish, Key to the Treasure,
1966. This is definitely the book. Its in Solved Mysteries.
Parish, Peggy, Key to the Tresure.
This
sounds like it could be Key to the Treasure the plot is
right
although I recall the details a little differently (e.g., an Indian
head-dress,
not a doll). Here's the plot summary from Amazon: "Each summer Lisa,
Bill,
and Jed visit their grandparents, and they hear the story of the
sketches
hung above the mantel. The sketches are clues to a hidden treasure, and
no one has been able to figure them out for a century. There is a
missing
first clue, but when the children stumble upon the second clue, they're
on their way. Could it be that on this visit they will solve the secret
that has eluded so many for more than a hundred years?" This book is
part
of a series.
Peggy Parish, Key to the Treasure.
Bill
and Liza and Jed are the names of the children. There were
several
sequels - Clues in the Woods, Hermit Dan, and a couple of others whose
titles I''m too lazy to go downstairs to find.
C519:
Children
playing in attic
Children, Hal and Carrie, were inside a big
house and got to play dress-up with the clothes in an old trunk.
This book was in the 1950's and was size of a golden book.
Mary Phraner Warren, The Treasure Trunk,
1967.
If there's a chance that you're a little off with the date, this might
be worth looking into. It was published by Rand McNally as a
Junior
Elf book, and a Start Right Elf Book. It's the story of two children (a
boy and a girl) who discover a trunk full of treasures, including old
photographs
and clothes to play dress-up with, in their attic on a rainy day.
Illustrated by Sharon Kane.
C520:
Cat
solving mysteries
Solved:
Barlow
Dale's Casebook
C521:
Combine
colors to make new ones
How colors combine
to make new colors. Children's book from 1960s
or early 70s used in schools to teach how colors make new colors. Paint
cans with colors showing. Is not the Little Golden The Color
Kittens
book.
Adelaide Holl, Colors Are Nice, 1962.
Could
this 1962 Little Golden book be the one? It was reprinted several
times. The cover has kids painting a fence with cans of
different-colored
paints. Each page shows an example of how color presents itself
in
a child's everyday world, e.g. yellow flowers, a rainbow.
Baker, Alan, White Rabbit's Color Book.
A
white rabbit falls into a succession of paint cans, blending the
colors.
(Falls in blue, then falls in yellow, comes out green, etc.)
Finally
it falls into all the colors at once and comes out brown.
C522:
Cat
with blue eyes
Solved: The Blue-Eyed Pussy
C523:
Children
walking through walls
I am looking for a book that I used to check
out from my school library in the early 80's. The library was organized
by author and I remember having to go all the way to the beginning of
the
"A's" to find this book. It was about a brother and sister that some
how
could walk through walls and even mountains. One of the children even
said
they had gotten rocks in their mouth because they forgot to close it
when
they walked through the stone. I remember the cover having a picture of
a little girl in her night gown looking through the wall in her
bedroom.
Not sure of this though, as I have a very active imagination and
sometimes
create very vivid pictures in my head! Yikes :o)
C524:
Cat
named Captain (time traveller)
mid 70's or earlier. A friend of mine
named one of his cats "Captain" after a book he loved as a child. He
doesn't
remember the name of the book, only that it was about a cat named
Captain
who travelled through time and space. (I do not know if it was a
picture
book or a chapter book.) I have asked the Children's librarians
at
a local branch, and they said it rang a bell, but none of them could
place
the title or author. I would love to surprise our friend with
this
book, if it can be found on the scant details provided. If anyone can
do
it, I'm sure that you can!
Todd, Ruthven, Space Cat.
This sounds like the Space Cat books, but the cat is
named
Flyball, not Captain.
Lloyd Alexander, Time Cat,
1996, approximate. This doesn't quite fit your parameters, but it
has to do with a time-traveling cat. Worth checking out, anyway.
C525:
Cats
merging molecules
Solved: The Looking Glass
Factor
C526:
Children's
Read Aloud
This is very
vague, but it was a paperback book from my
childhood.
I was born in 1955 so it was probably around 1964 or so when I read the
book. It was a pale green on the outside and it said Children's
Read
Aloud and had a number of stories in it. I seem to remember a
drawing
of a child or children on the outside. It wasn't a really big
book.
Probably around 100 pages or so. You would think I'd remember
something
about the stories, but I only remember that I loved the book and the
stories
in it. I realize this is a real longshot but I've been helped
here
before and you have an awesome clientele here!
Various authors, The Read Aloud Wonder
Books,
1957, copyright. There was a series of Children's Read Aloud
stories
from Wonder Books. I still have the Read Aloud Mother Goose
one. There is a listing on the back of the book of various Read
Aloud
books such as Child Life and Stories About
Children
in Other Lands.
Various Authors, Childrens Read Aloud, 1957,
copyright.
Thank-You! I DO remember it saying Child Life somewhere on
it!
I'd love to have a copy of this! Maybe I can get it here?!
Thanks again!
C527:
Crew
cut boy solves mysteries with friend
Solved:
Alvin Fernald series
C528:
Cinderella
Solved: The Glass Slipper
C529:
"Cat
Cat Lives on C Street"
1970's childrens
book named "Cat Cat Lives on C Street".
I am not sure of the author I know the cover had a picture of Cat Cat
sitting
on the railing of a front porch overlooking his street. I believe it
was
grey and green but not sure. The story was about a family who had Cat
Cat
and kept trying to bring home new pets like a bird and a fish and a dog
and Cat Cat would try to make them his own but the family thought he
was
after them, the family one by one would say " no cat cat bad cat cat"
eventually
they moved all cat cat's things and cat cat to the garage. Eventually I
think cat cat is missng "where's cat cat" . Eventually he gets his
family
back. This was my favorite book as a child and would love it if
you
could solve the stumper.
Gertrude Hevener Gibson, Cat-Cat,
1970, copyright. The story of a cat named Octavius Ramos Blue
King,
but everyone just calls him Cat-Cat. He owns a family, his own dish,
and
his own bed. Cat-Cat wants to play with young Jane's bird in a cage and
her fish in the bowl, so Jane's father decides it is time Cat-Cat lives
in the garage. But when Cat-Cat becomes so unhappy, the family decides
there has to be a better way.
Gertrude Hevener Gibson, Cat-Cat
Gibson, Gertrude Hevener, Cat-Cat, 1970,
[32] p. illus. 25 cm. / Chicago, Childrens Press ISBN: 0516034294 /
"Cat-Cat
runs away when the family moves her into the garage."
C530:
Civil
war female cousins
Solved:
Step to the Music
C531:
Christmas
anthology, Christmas with ? & 12 Days of Christmas
Christmas
anthology, I think mid 20th century. 2 stories are
Christmas
with the ? about a wealthy family Christmas in an English manor house.
The family gets along so badly the children end up spending all their
time
with the kitchen staff, a husband & wife who were hired at the last
minute. This couple is so wonderful that by the end of the story they
have
brought about a reconciliation among the members of the wealthy family.
Another story I think is The Twelve Days of Christmas about a young man
who asks a dept. store clerk to help him find 12 gifts for his fiancee
that represent the items in the song The Twelve Days of Christmas. She
goes out of her way to help him find the perfect items, but the fiancee
doesn't appreciate them, and the man ends up marrying the dept. store
clerk
instead.
I strongly suspect the second story you
mentioned
was written by O. Henry. If so, that could be a clue.
C532:
Children's
Paranormal Book?
Solved:
Golden Book of the Mysterious
C533:
Castaways
on island during World War II
Solved:
High and Haunted
Island
C534:
Children
captive in pretend town
Solved:
Race
Against
Time
C535:
California
gold rush, family journeys west
This book includes
the line poverty or being poor robs you of your
dignity. I believe it is about a family's journey west during the
california
gold rush. Along the way they encounter a lot of setbacks including one
of the kids falling ill, meeting shady characters etc. At the end the
father
declares that poverty robs you of your dignity. I don't know much else
other than it was published around 1940 - 1960.
This is a longshot, but could it be Sid
Fleischman's
Mr.
Mysterious and Company? The family traveled westward in a
medicine show, and there was something about the difference between
being
poor and being rich--at least for one of the daughters.
C536:
Car
as main character, black and red illustrations
I read this book
around 1965-1969. About a car involved some
adventure and the car was main character. Illustrated in black
and
red colors, like charcoal drawings or ? remember the drawings or
illustrations were vivid and different from most books. hope to
find
book for son. Help ?
Lois Lenski, The Little Auto,
1934, copyright. Classic picture book with Lenski's black, white
and red graphics. Story of Mr. Small's caring for his dear red
convertible
car and what happens on one drive.
the little auto is not the book, but
thank you. I only recall the vivid red and black illustrations of
the car in maybe pastels. There might have been a fire in the
story.
I was between 4 and 6 yrs. old which was 19967 or so.
Ian Fleming, Chitty Chitty Bang Bang,
1964, copyright. The first thing that came to mind from your
description
was Chitty Chitty Bang Bang - the book, not the travesty
of a movie they made! Ian Fleming was more famous for the
James Bond novels. Chitty Chitty Bang-Bang is a
children's
spy/mystery story with the car flying over the English channel and the
family meeting criminals in a cave on the French coast. The
illustrations
were by John Burningham and charcoal in appearance, but I don't
remember red, just black and white line drawings.
Virginia
Lee
Burton. The illustrations sound like ones for a book
by this author. Are you sure it was a car, not a train or a steam
shovel?
C537:
Cover
illustration of child with elongated neck
I remember being
so terrified as a child of a cover illustration
on a picture book that I wouldn't even look inside. I was born in 1955,
so the memory must be before or around my fourth birthday. I did see
the
book in a bookstore (new and in print) about ten to fifteen years
ago.
Here are the details I remember: The book itself was unusually tall and
narrow. The cover picture was in color. There were probably many
details
on the cover, but what was highlighted was an image of a child (girl?)
with a very elongated neck. Something about that image was frightening
to me. I would say the book, author, illustrator were fairly
obscure--not
one of the top sellers. I don't know if above is enough
information
to locate the book, but I am certain I will recognize the cover
instantly
if I see it. Thanks for any help!
One of the Alice in Wonderland
illustrations
shows a similar image that I always found rather disturbing. Here's a
link
to the illustration at Project Gutenberg.
http://www.cs.cmu.edu/~rgs/alice05a.gif.
Maybe it was a version of Alice in Wonderland (or some
other
book?) that was using that as the cover?
Alice in Wonderland. Your
girl with an elongated neck reminds me of the famous John Tenniel
illustration
for Alice in Wonderland, here's a link:
http://www.victorianweb.org/art/illustration/tenniel/alice/2.1.html.
Thanks to those who submitted the idea of
Alice
in Wonderland. I am familiar with that drawing, but that wasn't the
one I referred to.
C538:
Cuckoo
Clock and Pied Piper
Two children go
through a cuckoo clock, get picked up by a giant
girl and put in her doll house, then somehow end up with the pied piper
and escape back home through a cave. 1950s.
Are you sure this isn't The Cuckoo Clock
by Mrs. Molesworth (Mary Louisa Molesworth), 1914?
I have tried Mrs. Molesworth and that is not
it.
Enid Blyton, The Queer
Adventure, 1961,
reprint. Originally called The Yellow Fairy Book - The Queer Adventure
and later
called The Marvellous Adventure. Link to website http://www.enidblytonsociety.co.uk/book-details.php?id=321&title=The+Yellow+Fairy+Book+%28The+Queer+Adventure%29#illustrations.
C539:
Car
named True Love
I think this book
probably took place in the 50's, maybe early 60's.
I don't remember the title or character names. What I do remember is
the
boy drove an old car he named True Love. He eventually told the girl
who
liked him that he called his car True Love because the course of true
love
never runs smooth. Also, I remember the girl talking about having
pictures
in her wallet and wishing she had some of the boy. I hope this rings a
bell with someone!
Could it be: Seventeenth Summer,
by
Maureen Daly 1942 (sweet story of Jack and Angie in the
summer
before Angie goes to college). Or Jean and Johnny, by Beverly
Cleary: Fifteen-year-old Jean is astonished when a handsome
Johnny whirls her around the dance floor. She's never given much
thought
to boys before; now Johnny is all that's on her mind. Finally she finds
the courage to invite him to a dance. But the excitement of a new dress
and a scheme to take Johnny's photograph cannot stop Jean's growing
uneasiness
that she likes Johnny a lot more than he likes her . . .
This high-school story, which is both funny and
touching, is about a girl who lacks self-confidence, and a boy who has
too much. Or Fifteen, The Luckiest Girl, Sister of the
Bride--also
Beverly
Cleary.
C540:
cowboy
Solved:
Cowboy
Andy
C541:
children
turn into whales
This was a series
of books, although I only read this one, about
a boy and a girl (11 or 12ish?) who become wizards. In this book,
their two families are staying at a house on the ocean. The
children
figure out how to turn into whales and spend their days with a giant
shark
and other whales solving a mystery. At one point, their parents
figure
out something is weird, and the children tell them that they are
wizards.
Because the families don't believe them, they take them to the moon to
prove it. The main girl is worried because her little sister now
wants to be a wizard and she is afraid her sister will be more powerful
than she is. I don't remember anything about the title of this
book,
but I read it in 1989 or so and I think it was published not long
before
that. Thanks for your help!
I'm pretty sure I
know exactly what you're talking about: this
sounds
like Diane Duane's Young Wizards series, about a girl
and
boy named Nita and Kit. The first in the series is called So
You
Want
to
Be
a
Wizard, originally published 1983. The
book
you read with the whales would be Book 2, Deep Wizardry.
Summary
from
the
back
of
that
book:
"Young
wizards
Nita
and
Kit
are
supposed
to
be
on
vacation
...
but
magic
never
goes
on
summer
break,
as
they
discover
when
they
come
to
the
aid
of
a
fellow
wizard.
Only,
this
wizard
is
a
whale,
and
to
help
her,
Nita
and
Kit
must
join
a
group
of
whales
and
dolphins
in
an
ancient
--
and
deadly
--
underwater ritual. What they have to do
isn't going to be easy, especially since there are things in the deep
even
more dangerous than the Lone Power, such as the enormous Master Shark.
He, too, has a role to play in this ritual, doing what he's best at --
eating someone ... someone like Nita or Kit."
I agree with the solution posted above about
Deep
Wizardry. In the first book, So You Want To Be A
Wizard,
you discover how Nita and Kit become wizards. The third book, High
Wizardry, is about Nita's younger sister, Dairine, who goes
through
her wizard trial and helps a planet of silicon creatures with a little
assistance from her sentient computer. Also read the rest of the
series!
C542:
Captain
of Boat Taking Bath
One of my favorite
books as a child was a book about a boy who is
the captain of a ship. As I recall, he wears a sky-blue uniform as he
tours
the boat. This tour of the boat takes up most of the book. On the
last page of the book, we find out that the boy is really just taking a
bath and that he's dreamed up the whole thing. I have no idea how
old this book is. I was born in 1967, and I imagine that I wouldn't
have
had much interest in this book past the age of eight, so I assume that
it was published before 1975.
Sam Reavin, Hurray for Captain Jane,
1971, copyright. This one has a boyish looking girl for a main
character,
she wins a paper boat and bar of soap at a birthday party, and while
getting
a bath she imagines she's a ship captain and the bar of soap, "bouyant
beauty" as I recall, turns into a glacier. Pictures by Emily Arnold
McCully.
C543:
child
chooses a bear from a bear store
This was a picture
book. Bright, colorful pictures and not
many words. A child goes to a store that is full of different
kinds
of bears and he/she gets to choose one. The author shows
different
bears on individual pages. They're each unique and have some sort
of characteristic that identifies them -- for example, I
remember
that there was a pair of bride and groom bears. On one double
page
spread there was a picture of all the bears sitting across the shelves
of the store. At the end of the story the child chooses a plain
teddy
bear. This was my daughter's favorite book as a child, and
she still talks about it. I don't know the title or the
author.
Thanks for your help!
Dorothy Kunhardt, Kitty's New Doll,
1984. Are you sure this is about teddy bears, if it is not that I think
this could be the book you are looking for... "Kitty & her mother
go
to the toy store for her very first doll. Which one does Kitty choose?
Not the doll that walks and talks. Kitty chooses a rag doll that can’t
do anything, not even sleep. “But she can pretend cry and pretend sleep
. . . and she can say anything I want her to say,” says Kitty. And as
she
walks home with her new doll, she holds it close and pretends that it
says,
“I love you".
Yektai, Niki, Hi Bear, Bye Bears,
1990,
copyright.
This
book
matches
your
description
perfectly.
My
children
loved
it
when
they
were
little.
C544:
Classic
fairy tales collection
Solved:
Great Illustrated Fairy Tales: Beauty and
the Beast, Rapunzel, Thumbelina and Other Stories
2008
C545:
Carpet
factory, England, Murgatroyd
Solved:
Midnight
is
a
Place
C546:
Catherine's
Bells??/Catherine's Birds??
A girl is
adopted/goes to live with an older woman. There is a boy
in the story with a withered leg; I think his name is Peter. The
woman taking care of Catherine makes her a pair of pants and explains
how
much more practical they are than dresses. Chapter book I read in
1950s. THANK YOU!
Karen
Cushman,
Catherine, Called Birdy.
There's
a
Wikipedia
entry
about
the
book:
just
search
by
the
title.
"Catherine, Called Birdy" is
definitely not the book I am looking for. The story does not take
place in medieval times, and it was written at least 50 years
ago. Thanks for the idea, though. I'm ALMOST certain the
title is Catherine's Bells, though there is quite a bit of reference to
birds in it, and to a large garden.
Musgrave, Florence, Catherine's Bells, 1954, copyright. Call number
indicates it is juvenile fiction, and title and date match, so
presumably it's this one (I've not read it). "Author : Musgrave, Florence. Title : Catherine’s bells;
illustrated
by
Zhenya Gay.
Published : New York, Ariel Books [1954]. Description : 248 p.
illus. 22 cm."
Florence
Musgrave,
Catherine's Bells,
1954/55. One for sale here with photo of the dustjacket:
http://www.oldsaratogabooks.com/si/018969.html .
C547:
Colors book
I'm
trying
to
find
a
children's
book
from
the
60's
about
colors.
I
remember
one
line,
about
the
sun:
"is
a
yellow
fellow."
Other
memories
are
visual
-
inner
covers
were
vertical
crayons,
there
was
a
page
or
two
about
grandmother's
quilt.
I
think
it
may
have
been
published
by
Whitman.
Of
course,
it's
been
nearly
40
years
since
I've
seen
it,
so my memories
may be dusty...
dean walley, seals on wheels. this
was published a little later, but I remember the line "they turn into
yellow fellows" from my childhood.
C548:
Christmas book
Solved: The Santa Claus
Book
C549:
Carousel family
Solved: Five on a Merry-Go-Round
C550:
Chest in attic
I read this book 20 years ago.
I barely remember the details; however, I remember loving it. It
is about some kids who find a chest in the attic with old dresses in
it. Somehow, they travel back in time to the same
neighborhood. They attend parties at the Dunlap’s (or a similar
name) house. At the end, there is some kind of drama with an
elevator. I apologize for being so vague. Can you help?
Richard Peck, Voices after
Midnight.
Definitely
the
book
you
seek.
Chad
and
his
older
sister
Heidi
get
drawn
back
into
the
past
of
the
New
York
apartment
house
their
family
is
renting
for
the
summer.
They
are
able
to
see
some
of
the
events
that
occurred
years
ago
including
a
big
fancy
party
at
the
Dunlaps.
At
the
end,
they
save
the
brother
and
sister
they
are visiting in the past from
freezing to death when they are trapped in an elevator in the house
during a freak snowstorm.
Richard
Peck,
Voices after Midnight.
The
chest
in
the
attic
is
a
fairly
minor
point,
but
two
brothers
and
a
sister
do
travel
back
in
time
and
interact
with
members
of
the
Dunlap
family.
There
is
a
ball
and
the
climax
concerns
two
teenagers
being
stuck
in
a
broken
elevator
during
a
snowstorm.
The
modern
teenagers
rescue
the
1880s
ones.
Peck,
Richard,
Voices After Midnight,
1990, copyright. "Why is Chad so uneasy when his California
family rents a town house in New York City? Once there he hears
voices--late at night, after midnight in this strange house that's at
least one hundred years old. Then he finds that his younger
brother, Luke, hears them, too, and even their older sister Heidi's
afraid to stay in the house alone. As Chad and Luke explore the
house, they begin to slip in and out of their own time, back to the
winter of 1888. Are the voices they hear crying out for
help? Will Chad ignore the voices or plunge into the unknown
danger of one hundred years before?" I remember loving this book,
but haven't read it in years. Not all the details fit with your
description, but I remember an elevator scene being very important, and
the family the kids go back through time to visit are called the
Dunlaps. Hope this helps! It's a great book, too, even if it's
not the same one!
Richard
Peck,
Voices After Midnight.
Maybe
this.
C551:
Chess mystery with
Laurel
This
is
not
a
children's
book,
but
I
read
it
when
I
was
a
teenager.
It
was
a
mystery
and
somehow
the
game
of
chess
was
involved,
but
it
wasn't
technical--
you
didn't
need
to
understand
chess
to
enjoy
the
plot.
I'm
almost
positive
that
the
heroine
was
a
young
lady
named
Laurel.
I
have
no
idea
who
the
author
or
publisher
was, but it was one of those paperback mystery
romance-type books that were put out in the 1940's, 50's, etc. It
would have to be at least twenty years old since I read it as a teen,
but it could be significantly older than that. I also *think*
that the cover was dark-- a girl standing in a dark library with chess
pieces maybe?
Eleanor Cameron, A Spell Is Cast,
1964, copyright. Cory is the
name of the main character. She goes to stay with her
uncle. Laurel is the name of the neighbor, and there's some
mystery about her, and chess is featured in the book. It's been
some years since I read it (time for a re-read!) but I think this is
the book.
Ellen
Raskin,
The Westing Game.
Not a '40's-'50's romance, but definitely a mystery that involves chess.
Rex
Stout,
Gambit, 1962,
copyright. A long shot: the girl here is named Sally, not Laurel,
& it's not a romance; but it did have a dark cover, & it fits
the time period.
Eleanor
Cameron,
A Spell is Cast.
Possibly A Spell
is Cast? It's about a girl Cory who goes to visit her uncle.
When she is sick with a fever, she finds a chess set with unicorns for
the knights. She meets and befriends a woman named Laurel.
Walter
Tevis,
Queen's Gambit,
1983, approximate. long shot, but worth a look. A great read
regardless...
Cameron,
Eleanor,
A Spell is Cast.
Any chance this could be A Spell is Cast?
It
is
a
young
adult
book,
and
the
main
character
(Cory)
plays
chess
with
another
character.
I
don't
remember
anyone
named
Laurel,
but
I
remember
a
scene
where
she
is
walking
through
some
trees
(bay
laurels
perhaps?)
and
there
is
a
mountain
lion
in
the
trees.
The
book
is
set
in
California
along
the
coast.
Ellen
Raskin,
Westing Game.
This is a very long shot, but the Westing Game is a mystery by Ellen
Raskin that features a chess game (Theo plays chess with a mystery
person who turns out to be Sandy McSouthers, the Judge used to play
with Sam Westing, and Turtle plays with Julian Eastman). The herione is
named Turtle, though, not Laurel. Worth reading, whether it is the book
you seek or not.
Thank
you
so
much
for
all
your
help.
I've
checked
these
all
out,
and
unfortunately,
none
of
them
are
it.
"A
Spell
is
Cast"
sounded
as
though
it
could
be
the
one,
but
I
read
it
and
it
isn't.
This
book
was
a
Harlequin,
Bantam-type
paperback,
and
I'm
99
percent
sure
the
heroine
was
named
Laurel.
She
was
also
young-adult
age--
older
than
Cory
in
"A
Spell is Cast". Again, thank you for all your
responses, though.
I've been trying remember
this book, too, but I recall the details differently. The main
character was a young girl who goes to live with (I believe) her uncle;
both play chess well and that helps them get closer. It is a
mystery but I've lost all memory of that part of the plot. In the
course of it, the uncle meets and falls in love with a woman named
Laurel, who is a weaver or something else arty, and in the end the
three create a new family. I've coveted a bedroom with a
fireplace ever since I read that the main character had one at her
uncle's house!
C552:
Christmas Tree
This
is
not
the
title
but
is
the
subject
of
a
book
I
read
in
the
late
1950's/early
1960's.
The
book
is
for
younger
children.
It
may
be
a
take-off
on
the
Little
Fir
Tree/Pine
Tree/Littlest
Christmas
tree
story.
In
this
version,
a
young
girl
and
her
father
go
into
the
forest
to
find
a
Christmas
tree.
There
is
snow
on
the
ground. There is only
a small tree left, and they bring it back on a sled that they have
taken with them. There is an illustration of the father (I think)
pulling the sled, and animals are nearby. I remember them as being
Beatrix Potter types, like a hedgehog, but I checked the Potter
Christmas books and it wasn't one of those. The girl's name might
be Hillary, and I think she was blonde. ("A Christmas Tree for
Hillary"), but that could be a stretch. It was illustrated in
color, and had just the one story. Hard cover.
Chalmers, Mary, A Christmas Story,
1956, reprinted 1987. This is a
very cute little picture book, and I'm sure it is the one you are
looking for. The little girl's name is Elizabeth, though, and Hillary
is her friend, the cat. She also has a dog friend, Harry, and a rabbit
friend named Alice.
Chalmers,
Mary,
A Christmas Story,
1956, copyright. I also thought of this book when I read the
description. But there's no father in the book. The little
girl and her animal friends do, as I recall, bring a Christmas tree to
their house on a sled, but the search actually comes after that, when
they're trying to find a star to place on top. Elizabeth ventures
out to find one and eventually encounters the little Santa Claus for
small animals, who pulls a star out of his bag and gives it to her.
How
exciting! I'm going to try to check this out. I'm not sold
on the father being there. I'll have a look and report back.
C553: Children on Wagon
Train
The
book
I'm
looking
for
was
written
before
1985,
as
I
read
it
in
grade
school.
I
think
it
is
a
chapter
book,
but
I'm
not
certain.
It's
set
in
the
19th
century
and
is
about
a
group
of
children
who
survive
an
indian
attack
on
their
wagon
train.
They
have
limited
food
and
other
stuff
to
survive
a
winter.
At
one
point,
food
is getting
low and
one of the children (who I think was described as greedy earlier in the
book) secretly eats some of the rationed food. The children are
eventually rescued by another group of indians who are friendly, though
at first the children believe they are being attacked again. I
think
that a girl is the leader, but I'm not sure. There might have been the
word "valley" in the title. I LOVED this book as a kid and read it
several times, I wish that I could remember more.
Honore Morrow, Seven Alone, 1977,
approximate. Not sure if this is the book but the story line is
familiar and right time frame. Thirteen year old John Sager must
lead his six siblings on the Oregon trail after their parents
die. I read it in 1977 or 1978 in grammar school.
Thanks
but
I
don't
think
that
Seven Alone
is quite right. I definitely remember that it was a group of
children from different families and the parents died from an Indian
attack.
C554: Cookbook with
receipes from children around the world
Solved: Many
Hands Cooking
C555: Colonial Georgetown
revisited
This
might
be
the
same
stumper
as
C203:
Colonial
Georgetown
Time
Travellers.
I
remember
this
book
from
about
1966-8,
so
it
was
published
before
then.
It
was
about
a
brother
and
sister
who
go
back
in
time
to
American
colonial
times.
I
believe
they
go
back
to
an
old
Dutch
settlement
and
somehow
are
able
to
speak
and
understand
Dutch,
even
though
they
don't know Dutch in their regular life. I don't remember if
it took place in Washington, D.C., as C203 did, but it sounds like it
might be the same book.
Caroline Dwight Emerson, The Magic Tunnel, 1964,
copyright. If the story you remember takes the children back to
Colonial New Amsterdam, this is probably the book. It was a Scholastic
favorite, and reprinted many times. Look for it on Loganberry's solved
mysteries page here: http://loganberrybooks.com/solved-m.html.
Caroline
Dwight
Emerson,
The Magic Tunnel,
1968.
Originally published by Four Winds Press; reprinted by
Scholastic so it was widely available.
Most likely The Magic Tunnel
by Caroline Emerson, 1940. See
Solved Mysteries.
Caroline
Emerson,
The Magic Tunnel,
1968. It could be this one, although it's not Washington DC, but
New York City. The short synopsis is: "Two children enter the New
York subway and suddenly find themselves in a time tunnel that takes
them back three hundred years to New Amsterdam where they watch history
in the making and compare colonial and modern ways of life." I
remember they meet Peter Stuyvesant, because it was the first time I'd
encountered his name, and I had such a hard time figuring out how to
pronounce it.
Caroline
D.
Emerson,
The Magic Tunnel,
1964,
copyright. I used to read this book frequently. It's about
a girl and a boy who get transported magically from the subway to New
Amsterdam (New York under Dutch colonial rule) in 1664. They meet Peter
Stuyvesant, among others. I recall them being able to understand Dutch,
even though in their normal lives they don't speak it.
Caroline
Emerson,
The Magic Tunnel,
1964, approximate. Does this sound familiar? "Imagine suddenly
finding yourself living three hundred years ago! Sarah and John take a
subway ride one day - and magically find themselves back in 1664, when
New York was New Amsterdam. How odd it is to be living in colonial
times! Sarah and John are rescued by an Indian scout. They meet
Governor Peter Stuyvesant. They see the English take New Amsterdam from
the Dutch. They are living in the midst of history. But all the while
Sarah and John wonder - will they ever find the magic tunnel that leads
back home?"
Howard
Fast,
Tony and the wonderful door,
1968,
copyright.
In
case
it's
not
"The
Magic
Tunnel,"
here's
another
book
with
a
similar
theme.
"When
he
has
just
the
right
feeling,
Tony
can
open
the
door
in
his
New
York
City
tenement
backyard
and
step
through
to
the
time
when
the
Dutch
and
Indians
lived
on
Manhattan
Island--but
no
one
believes
him."
C556:
cursed gold quest
I
read this children's book around
1963. It was about a boy who comes to stay with his uncle or some
relation. I think it took place on an island, but I can't be sure.
Throughout the story they talk about and search for the hidden, cursed
gold. At the end they don't get the gold, but they console themselves
by saying it doesn't matter because the gold was cursed anyway.
C557:
Children's poetry book
A
book of about 100 children's poems,
published probably in the late 1930's or early 1940's. It had, I
seem to remember a cover with a mille-fleur pattern on black.
Some of the poems it contained were: "On the Road to Raffydiddle"(the
first lines of this were: "On the Road to Raffydiddle sits a fiddler
with a fiddle, and there, beneath the melting of the moon, each night
he puts his chin to his cheery violin and plucks him out a frisky
feather tune"), "Custard the Dragon", "Antonio", "Noise", "Shoes", "Tea
in an Old House", "Time, You Old Gypsy Man", "The Puffin" (though I'm
not sure that's the title; the first line was "There once was a puffin,
just the shape of a muffin, and he lived on an island in the bright
blue sea"). This is not the Big Golden Book of Children's
Poetry, which does contain the Road to Raffydiddle but not many of the
others. The Golden Book is a large but thin book, not containing
anywhere near the number of poems the one I am looking for does.
The one I am looking for is a little bit larger than your usual mass
market paperback and about as thick as a 300 to 400 page
paperback. I do not remember whether it was a paperback but I
rather think not as they didn't publish many paperbacks in those
days.. I look forward to your finding it, as I have searched for
many years on the internet and haven't found it. It was a
favorite of my early childhood and of my children's early childhoods.
C558:
Child befriends elderly
neighbor over summer
Solved: The 79
Squares
C559:
Coming of age novel about
Amber
A
sexual coming of age novel about a
girl called Amber. (quite a big girl if I remember, in the story her
sister is anorexic.) It was for young adults and had a boy in it who
only talked using a sock hand puppet, I think he was in love with Amber
but she ends up pregnant to someone else. Quite a downbeat story and
written early 90's at a guess it has really stayed with me and I'd like
to know the author and read it again.
C560:
children's book about
Cowboys &
Indians, published in Britian
Looking
for
this
for
a
friend's
birthday.
He
cannot
remember
the
title
or
the
author.
It
was
a
child's
book,
probably
published
in
Great
Britain
sometime
in
the
late
60s
or
early
70s,
tho
possibly
earlier.
Here
is
his
description:
It
was
a
picture
book
with
short,
descriptive
passages
in
child-friendly
large
print.
A
young
boy
and
his
mother
(the
father
is
never
seen or alluded to) move to a new town and
the boy hears of a party that the popular neighbourhood boy is about to
throw. The theme is the Wild Wild West. The boy's mother is obviously
poor; she makes him a splendid Indian scout's outfit by her own hand
and materials and the pictures show him resplendent in it. The auburn
brilliance of the buffalo-hide jacket and pants; the detail of the
cords swishing jauntily down the arms; the detail of the buttons and
the intricacy of the seam-stitching. He is an awesome Indian and he
will be, cannot but be totally accepted by the local boys and welcomed
as a kindred spirit. He ventures over to the house where the party is
in full swing. Inside, the boys are seen, jovial and comradely. The
Indian boy rings the doorbell and the housewife comes to greet him. Oh
horror! The theme is "Cowboys", didn't he know that? Of course he
cannot come in dressed as he is. The image that got me was of the boy,
stooped over on the lawn, crestfallen face buried in cupped hands as he
peers in the window at the party that excludes him, the acceptance
denied to him and the rank of the many against the one. Any
ideas? I would love to find a copy for his upcoming birthday.
C561:
child raised without anyone
knowing its sex
Parents decide not to tell anyone the
gender of their child, to allow the child the freedom to enjoy whatever
pleases without being confined to dolls or trucks. 1970,
childrens.
Lois Gould, X: A Fabulous Child's Story,
1972. You can read the full text posted here:
http://tinyurl.com/2tlutg .
C562:
Coffee/tea cups shaped like their owners
The
book
I
am
looking
for
is
one
that
I
remember
as
a
young
child
in
the
early
70's.
It
could
be
an
older
book.
The
only
thing
I
really
remember
is
that
all
the
people
in
the
book
seemed
to
live
in
the
same
house
and
they
all
had
different
coffee/tea
cups
that
were
shaped
like
them.
I
remember
most
vividly, a
tall, skinny man who lived in the broom closet and he had a tall skinny
cup, A large woman who had a fat cup that had polka dots on it, I
think. Thanks for any help!!!
No author, Little Lulu Lucky Landlady,
1960,
copyright.
Little
Lulu
rents
out
nooks
and
crannies
of
her
house
to
members
of
a
circus,
based
on
their
size
and
shape.
Published
by
Whitman.
A
Tell-A-Tale
book.
C563:
Civil War short story
Solved: Chickamauga
C564:
Cocker spaniel, obedience school, trophies
Solved: Champion Dog, Prince Tom
C565:
Chloe the ghost
daughter of a reclusive artist appears; Chloe died by drowning
Solved: The Otherwise Girl
C566:
Cat and several
generations of children
Solved: The Ghost of Opalina
C567:
Cuthbert
Train
eating
disorder
Solved: Bitter Ice
C568:
Children Make Best Bread
before
1980s?,
childrens.
Story
about
a
family
with
a
lot
of
children
and
hard
working
parents.
The
mother
always
makes
the
bread
but
one
day
she
is
busy
so
the
children
try.
They
use
the
different
ages
children's
hands
to
try
and
equal
their
mother's
hands
for
measuring
out
the
ingredients.
When
they
bake
the
bread
in
the
oven
it
ends
up
overflowing and filling
up the whole kitchen with bread. The father comes home from a
hard day's work and is hungry for supper but the whole kitchen is
filled with bread so no one can make supper. The father decides
to have a piece of the bread and it turns out to be the most amazing
bread he has ever tasted and has many flavors.
Roberta Duyff, The Bread That Grew,
1987, copyright. This may be a
bit of a stretch... "When the bakers' children are baking bread, one of
them adds a mysterious something that causes the dough to grow and
grow."
Mary
Ann
Hoberman,
The Seven Silly Eaters,
1997,
copyright. This is also a bit of a stretch, but the
children do end up making wonderful bread by accident. In The Seven Silly Eaters,
the
children
are
all
very
finicky,
each
one
with
his
or
her
own
quirks.
On
their
mother's
birthday
they
try
to
prepare
their
own
meals...
C569:
Cat turns into girl
Solved: Felicia
C570:
Cereal, porridge
Solved: Pals
C571:
Colorful book
features dragons/monsters
I
would date this book from the late
70s to the mid 80s. I recall it was a larger book, possibly hardbound.
There were several creatures, but my brain keeps conjuring a blue
dragon or similar. Color was integral to the book. I remember something
about the sky, maybe a pink cliff, and vines. Possibly involved paint
or art. There were children involved. I remember it was "trippy" and
whimsical. I think maybe it was supposed to be touting diversity, but I
could be wrong.
Beverly Cleary, Beezus and Ramona,
1955,
copyright.
This
sounds
irresistably
like
the
opening
chapter
of
Beezus
and
Ramona. In the opening chapter, Beezus is in a summer school
art class. She says she hasn't got much imagination, but when Ramona
says she can't paint a picture of her imaginary pet lizard because he's
invisible, Beezus tries to do a picture of him and it ends up as a
psychedelic lollipop dragon. Anyway, if this isn't your book, you might
like to read it anyway.
Unfortunately,
that
isn't
it.
This
was
definitely
a
heavily
illustrated
book.
The
colors
and
style
of
the
pictures
were
really
what
drew
me
in.
I'm
beginning
to
wonder
if
it
isn't
something
along
the
vein
of
the
Serendipity
books.
Maurice Sendak, Where the Wild Things Are, 1963. The boy in this story,
Max, gets sent to his room without supper. In his room, a
mysterious wilderness grows, full of strange, wild creatures.
Some of th characters are blue and have lizardy looks. Also there
is a pink ske in one scene and in another, Max and the creatures are
swinging on vines/branches through the jungle.
Thanks
once
more,
but
this
is
also
not
it.
I
keep
wondering
if
this
was
not
associated
with
a
toy,
cartoon,
or
other
franchise,
but
none
of
the
"obvious"
ones.
It
definitely
had
a
"Sid
&
Marty
Krofft"
flavor,
but
softer,
more
in
line
with
the
Serendipity
series.
It
isn't
The
Reluctant Dragon either. This
involved several creatures or one that changed color (perhaps also
shape). It was a tallish book, in the size range of Tony Wolf's oeuvre,
another series I loved as a kid. One of the creatures might have
had head fins or dainty horns. I can't remember the cover, but I
think it might have been torn off or otherwise damaged. I think the
kids in the story might have been chasing this beast or communicating
with it in a light-hearted manner. I remember thinking it wasn't like
the other books I had and loving the swirly, trippy style of the
illustrations. I'm sorry I have so few details to share. I'd
really love to see this book again, so I know I didn't dream it
up. :)
Barbapapa
(series), 1970 - present. This is a
long-running series of books as well as a tv cartoon series (originally
French) featuring a family of blob-like creatures who each have a
specific color and specialty and who can change shape. Very trippy!
Check out the book covers at the Barbapapa website to see if they look
familiar: http://www.barbapapa.fr/gb/catalogue/flagship.html.
I
lived in France briefly, so I'm familiar with Barbapapa. Sadly, this
also isn't it. The style was softer and more feminine. Sorry this
is
so hard to figure out! I appreciate everyone's efforts.
Stephen Cosgrove, Robin James,
Shimmeree, 1980. My
boyfriend was looking for the same book! I'm a reference librarian, so
I did
some searching in WorldCat and found it (I believe): http://www.worldcat.org/title/shimmeree/oclc/7159559&referer=brief_results [...] I'm
glad
I
ran
across
this
stumper, I
probably wouldn't have figured it out the book without the reference to
the
Serendipity series... it IS part of the Serendipity series, that's why
it
looked so similar. Yay! So much fun! Now I get to help a random
stranger AND my
boyfriend at the same time. Hope it's the right book!
C572:
Cat wearing slippers
Childrens
book,
possibly
recent,
and
maybe
by
a
female.
All
i
have
to
go
on
is
a
picture
of
a
cat
wearing
a
pair
of
slippers.
http://i9.photobucket.com/albums/a94/xhatecruex/Cat.jpg
Alter,
Anna,
Estelle and Lucy,
2001, copyright. Talk about coincidence. I looked at the
picture online last night and this morning I was weeding the A's,
opened the book to check the condition and thought this looks familiar.
This is it.
C573:
Colt that is a
little different
Children's
Illustrated
book
about
a
colt
that
is
a
little
different
going
to
a
birthday
party
and
finding
horses
of
different
colors
dancing
around
a
maypole.
Sounds
like
Unsolved
Stumper
H127.
Not
a
solution,
but
there
might
be
some
clues
there.
C574:
Cat's eyes change
color
I'm
trying
to
find
the
title
of
a
book
I
had
as
a
child.
It
was
a
very
simple,
PB
story
book
about
a
cat
whose
eyes
would
change
colors
depending
where
it
stood.
For
example,
when
it
was
in
the
grass,
its
eyes
were
green.
The
next
page,
it
is
in
like
a
bunch
of
blueberries,
and
its
eyes
are
blue.
Finally at the last, its eyes are blue and it puts on pink
glasses, and now they look purple? Or something like that!
:)
Alice and Martin Provensen, Roses Are Red, Are
Violets Blue?,
1973,
copyright.
Pretty
sure
the
solution
is
this
paperback.
Other
characters
are
a
boy
and
a
girl
with
colored
spectacles.
C575:
Colorful creatures,
series of books
This
was
an
obscure
series
of
picture
books,
each
with
the
same
structure
and
same
ending.
They
were
extremely
colorful.
Each
was,
I
think,
based
around
a
colored
creature,
and
at
the
end
the
creature
went
to
the
magical
fantasy
land.
Very
strange,
probably,
in
retrospect,
diversity-oriented.
Published
most
likely
between
1973-77.
Children of
Wonder,
1987?,
approximate.
This
is
a
long
shot,
but
would
it
be
the
Children
of
Wonder
series? There
were four books, Helping the Sun, the Night, the Plants, and the
Animals. The structure was simple enough: a child and his or her
special animal friend would go through nature (animals, the sky, etc)
and help set things up as needed. The books were quite colorful and
meant for very young children, they may have been cardboard books. Hope
this helps.
C576:
cricket magazine
dead friend 1970s
This
is
driving
me
crazy.
It
was
a
serialized
set
of
beautiful
stories
published
in
Cricket
magazine,
for
many
issues,
and
the
time
period
had
to
have
been
between
1973
and
1978.
It
was
about
a
boy
who
had
a
dead
friend
who
followed
him
and
talked
to
him.
I
have
no
idea
if
it
was
ever
published
as
a
book.
My
mother chucked out all my old Cricket magazines. Alas. I would be
eternally grateful if you have any idea. I wish Cricket would publish
some archived stuff.
Ruth Ainsworth, A Sprig of Rosemary,
1978, approximate. A long shot,
but if instead of a boy it might have been a girl named Joanna, with a
ghost friend named Rosemary, this could be the one. I remember
reading this story in Cricket magazine, probably in the late 1970's or
early 1980's, but I don't recall whether it was serialized or not.
While playing in the overgrown garden of the house next door, Joanna
meets Rosemary, who is blind. The two become friends and play
together often. Rosemary is troubled, however, by the absence of the
rosemary bush from the garden, and feels that if she could smell it,
she would remember something important that she has forgotten, since
"rosemary is for rememberance." Joanna eventually plants a
rosemary bush for her friend, and when she smells it, Rosemary
remembers falling over a crumbling cliff. Shortly after, the
owner of the house, Mrs. Raven, appears at the window. Rosemary looks
up at her and calls out, "Mother, I'm coming!" Then both of them
disappear. Joanna returns home, alone and bewildered. She is
later informed that Mrs. Raven had died that morning, at the same
moment that the girls had seen her in the window, and that Rosemary had
been her daughter, who had died many years before. The story haunted me
for years, until I finally posted a stumper on this site, which led me
to find it in the book "The Phantom Carousel and Other Ghost
Stories," by Ruth Ainsworth.
Astrid Lindgren, The Brothers Lionheart,
1973. I've got a handful of Cricket Magazines left (brought home
from my Mum's just 2 weeks ago!), Volume 1, Number 12, September 1975
has part 2 of a serilisation of The Brothers Lionheart
by Astrid Lindgren. I
think it's the one you seek...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Brothers_Lionheart.
C577:
Cat hiding place
This
might
have
been
a
serial
in
Jack
and
Jill
Magazine
in
the
1950s.
A
girl
is
told
never
to
play
with
a
special
ring
which
belongs
to
her
crabby
aunt.
She
hears
a
sound
and
drops
or
pushes
the
ring
into
a
china
cat.
Then
either
she
can't
remember
where
the
ring
is
or
she
is
to
afraid
to
tell
her
relative.
Was
the
girl
blind?
One
of
Phyllis Whitney's
mysteries--The
Secret of the Emerald Star--has a blind girl who hides a
valuable emerald (although I think it's a necklace or pendant) inside a
statue that's drying. I can't remember why it's a mystery, other
than the main character isn't the same girl who hid the jewel...I think
the girl who hid it doesn't want to admit it or something. It's
been a *really* long time since I read the book, but it sounded similar
enough that it might be it. And the original publication date was
in the early 60s.
The Money Cat,
1950's-early '60s, approximate. I KNOW i have the name of the
story right...and yes, it did appear in Jack and Jill, which I received
from 1958-1962 (approx). There was a cupboard in the hous which
had been wallpapered over, so finding the statue of the 3-colored
"money" cat was difficult... the old woman's name was Eglantine... I,
too would love to read this story again, but have not had luck locating
the right issues of J&J. Hope this helps, and I'll keep
peeking to see if anyone else has any leads. :)
C578:
Cannonballs filled
with water
Story
in
elem
school
reader,
mid-70's,
3rd-4th
grade
level.
In
winter,
child
(girl?)
filled
old
cannonballs
or
similar
item
with
water,
so
they
split
when
the
water
froze/expanded.
I
think
she
did
it
to
earn
money?
Once
split,
they
could
be
melted
down
by
foundry
&
recast?
Older
gentleman
involved.
I
wish
you
had
asked
this
a
month
ago.
I
remember
the
cannonball
story
from
fourth
grade,
and
I
was
at
a
library
book
sale
holding
the
thing
in
my
hands!
I
read
the
stories
I
remembered
and
put
it
back.
The
title
wasn't
memorable.
?, ? early 1970s,
approximate. I remember teaching 3rd grade in the early 70's and
this story sounds very familiar. Try MacMillan readers series:
MORE THAN WORDS and BETTER THAN GOLD... maybe you'll get lucky!
Hope this helps. :)
C579:
Children’s Counting
Book
This
is
a
children’s
counting
book.
It
was
a
tall,
skinny
book
with
a
hardcover,
and
paper
pages.
I
believe
the
cover
was
black
and
each
page
had
a
black
background
and
the
items
(ex.
Butterflies)
for
kids
to
count
were
brightly
colored.
On
the
last
page
there
were
many
many
stars
and
the
book
asked
either
“how
many
stars”
or
“can
you count the stars”. It must have been published either
late 1960’s or early 1970’s. Thanks!
C580:
Church mouse,
cathedral, robbery
I
looked through your other church
mouse entries but none seemed right- this story was probably printed in
the late 70's, in colour (very intricate designs) and featured in a
cathedral w/ a cat and mouse, robbery of silver candlesticks and the
mouse found a 'smorgasboard' of stuff underneath the pew.
Graham Oakley, The Church Mouse,
1972. More info on Graham
Oakley's books: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Graham_Oakley.
Graham
Oakley,
The Church Mouse.
I think you ought to check this one out, because it does contain the
story about the candlestick robbery, and the pictures could definitely
be called "intricate"--lots of visual humour. From the
text: "Arthur tied the burglar's bootlaces together. He had
to do it himself because Sampson could only tie granny knots.
Then Sampson obliged with his party piece. It was supposed to be
the Song of the nightingale but everyone else thought it sounded like a
policeman's whistle. They counted on the burglar thinking so
too....Everybody had the idea of rolling him up in the carpet. At
any rate, everybody said it was his idea afterwards. They all put
their shoulders to the carpet and pushed. The schoolmouse said to
the mouse beside him that he felt like a Lilliputian, but the mouse
replied huffily that he couldn't stand foregin food because he was just
an average English working mouse and he felt like a cheese and chutney
sandwiich, and the mouse next to him said he felt like a bread and
butter pudinng, and Sampson said he felt like a mouse casserole and
he'd have one, too, if they didn't shut up and push."
Graham
Oakley,
The Church Mice at Christmas,
1980.
When
Arthur
and
Humphrey
decide
to
rally
the
church
mice
into
having
a
Christmas
party,
the
result
is
a
series
of
disasters.
Some
wonderful
scenes
include
the
mice
raffling-off
Sampson
(the
Church
Cat)
to
raise
money
for
their
party,
their
hopeless
attempts
at
carol-singing
for
the
same
purpose,
and
the
burglar
dressed
as
Santa
(he
has
a
bag
on
which
he
has
crossed
out
"Swag" and written
"presents"). Also look out for the bizarre Christmas window displays in
town. Here are all the Church Mice Chronicles: The Church Mouse, The Church Cat Abroad,
The Church Mice and the Moon, The Church Mice Spread Their Wings, The
Church Mice Adrift, The Church Mice at Bay, The Church Mice at
Christmas, The Church Mice in Action, The Diary of a Church Mouse, The
Church Mice and the Ring, Humphrey Hits the Jackpot, The Church Mice
Take a Break.
C581:
Chickens in
henhouse & henyard scratching
Early
1970's
?
childrens.
I
remember
a
story
about
chickens
in
the
hen
yard,
and
how
they
would
be
scratching
about
for
feed.
Also
alot
of
description
about
them
going
up
the
ramp
into
their
henhouse,
and
fluffing
up
on
their
nests.
There
might
have
been
something
about
a
dog.
There
was
also
a
vivid
description
of
how
the
henhouse
was
built,
how wide
the shelves were, and which hen had which nest.
Meindert de Jong, Along Came a Dog.
De
Jong
has
a
gift
for
writing
about
animals.
This
book
is
about
a
little
red
hen
that
gets
picked
on
by
the
chickens
because
she
lost
her
toes
when
they
froze
off.
She
hops
around
and
manages
to
survive
with
the
help
of
the
farmer
and
a
stray
dog
who
sees
himself
as
her
protector.
Lots
of
detailed
descriptions
of
the chickens, the henhouse, and the dog.
C582:
Children
flying
space
ship
Solved: But We Are Not Of Earth
C583:
Cheerleaders solve mystery
in a swamp
Solved: Cheer
Leader
C584:
Collection of Childrens
Stories and Poems
Solved: The Giant Golden
Book of Elves and Fairies
C585:
Compliation of fairy tales
Probably
published
in
the
80's.
It
includes
The
Happy
Prince,
The
Selfish
Giant,
The
Swan
Princess,
and
Silver
Saucer,
Russet
Apple,
which
seems
to
be
a
pretty
rare
story.
I
believe
the
cover
was
of
snow
white
and
was
dark
in
color.
Thick,
glossy
pages
with
great
illustrations.
Prob.
9x13.
Oscar Wilde, Arthur Ransome.
Ok,
so
this
isn't
exactly
a
solution,
but
perhaps
it
will
help
point
you
in
the
right
direction?
First,
are
you
absolutely
certain
that
all
those
stories
were
in
the
same
book?
Or
might
you
be
combining
the
memories
of
several
books?
I've
been
hunting,
and
so
far
the
only
books
I
can
find
that
contain
both
"The
Happy
Prince"
and
"The Selfish Giant" are the books that
contain only the stories of Oscar Wilde (eg. The Happy Prince and Other
Tales, or The Complete Fairy Tales of Oscar Wilde). I have not been
able to find any reference to a story about a russet apple and a silver
saucer, but was wondering if perhaps you meant "The Tale of the Silver
Saucer and the Transparent Apple" by Arthur Ransome, which can be found
in Old Peter's Russian Tales, The Kingfisher Book of Stories for
Seven-Year-Olds, and More Stories for Seven-Year-Olds And Other Young
Readers. The Wild Swans (Hans Christian Andersen) can also be found in
More Stories For Seven-Year-Olds, but the Oscar Wilde stories are not.
In a 2004 book, The Snow Maiden and Other Russian Tales (Bonnie
Marshall) the story is called "The Silver Saucer and the Red Apple" and
I've also seen it listed as "The Silver Saucer and the Red-Ripe Apple"
or "The Silver Saucer and the Ripe Juicy Apple" in volumes of Russian
folk or fairy tales. These, however, do not contain any of the other
stories you are looking for. Anyway, I hope this helps a little. Good
luck!
Oscar
Wilde,
The Happy Prince and other
stories, 1980, reprint. This is definitely Oscar Wilde's book called The Happy Prince and
Other Stories first published in 1880, reprinted in 1980.
C586:
Children on desert island
Group
of
children
stranded
on
desert
island,
older
girl
in
group
takes
charge
of
them,
sets
a
boy's
broken
leg,
they
are
rescued
at
the
end
and
she
apologizes
for
not
setting
it
straight.
I
read
the
book
in
the
fifties,
but
it
was
definitely
published
pre-1945.
Mira Lobe, Insupu,
1951,
approximate.
C587:
Cottage or garden in woods
A
little girl who goes into the woods
and finds a pretty little cottage that is empty. Maybe a
garden. Maybe through a hedge or opening in a wall to get
there. It could have been abandoned. It was maybe in the
early 70's. 2-5th grade level probably. Not Goldilocks.
Could
you be thinking of Mandy by Julie
Andrews
Edwards?
That's
the
title
that
popped
into
my
head,
though
I
don't
remember
many
details.
Frances
Burnett,
the secret garden,
1911.
C588:
Cinderella
Specific
version
of
Cinderella
probably
printed
circa
1970
-
1985.
don't
remember
the
author
or
illustrator
but
it
had
the
most
beautiful
and
intricate
illustrations.
I
believe
Cinderella
is
shown
in
the
transformation
to
ball
ready
Princess;
she
is
shown
in
more
than
one
gown
in
the
book.
I
think
the
dress
style
was
Elizabethan
and
I
remember
one
of
the
dresses
having
a neck piece that looked like it was
made of spider silk. Thanks.
Arthur Rackham (illus), story
retold by C.S. Evans, Cinderella.
Have
you
tried
looking
at
Arthur
Rackham's work? I don't know
that I'd call the style Elizabethan (more French, in keeping with the
nationality of the story), but his are definitely some of the most
beautiful and intricate illustrations I've seen for this story. The
story is the longer (non-Disney) version in which there are several
balls on successive nights, each with its own beautiful gown. This book
has been reprinted many times - including several printings during the
70's and 80's.
Other details:
The illustrations are similar to K.V.Craft but back when I was a child
in late 1970's early 1980's. The book was hard cover and slightly
larger, maybe like legal size (8x14?). On one page the words were
centered with Cinderella illustrated on the side, and the entire edge
of the pages were illustrated with many other details. I know I'm
being a freak but this book and another one (I can't remember which
classic princess tale) was illustrated by the same artist, and these
books are what inspired me to become a costumer. Thanks again for
all your patience and help.
Marianna & Mercer Mayer.
Just
a
thought...
Your
suggestion
of
similarity
to
Kinuko
Craft's
work,
and
mention
of
another
princess
book
by
the
same
illustrator,
reminded
me
of
Marianna
Mayer's
"Beauty
and
the
Beast"
(1978),
which
features
exquisite
artwork
by
Mercer
Mayer.
I
don't
know
if
they
did
a
Cinderella
together
or
not,
but
it
might
be
worth
looking
into.
Mercer
Mayer
also
illustrated
a
volume
called
"Favorite
Tales
from Grimm,"
which includes Cinderella, along with Snow White, Rumplestiltskin, Snow
White and Rose Red, The Goose Girl, Little Red Cap, The Bremen Town
Musicians, Briar Rose, Hansel & Gretel, Rapunzel, and other
stories. He also did a stand-alone version of Sleeping Beauty. As an
interesting side note, Kinuko Craft did the artwork for Marianna
Mayer's "12 Dancing Princesses" (1996).
Hi,
thanks to all for helping, although these illustrators produce
beautiful pictures, I haven't found the right one yet. I'll keep
checking up on this site. Another note, in one dress she has a
neck ruff that's heart shaped like classic Queen Elizabeth.
What about the version of Cinderella by Marcia Brown? That won the
Caldecott Medal, and has beautiful and intricate illustrations as
well.
Amy
Ehrlich/Susan
Jeffers or Michael
Hague?, Cinderella.
A
few
other
suggestions
(I
don't
own
copies
of
these
versions,
so
can't
check
for
the
specific
illustrations,
but
pictures
of
the
covers
can
be
found
readily
online
-
maybe
one
will
look
familiar?)
1)
Cinderella
retold by Amy Ehrlich,
illustrated by Susan Jeffers -
copyright 1985, reprinted 2004. Beautiful, intricate artwork on the
cover - might be worth looking into. 2) Cinderella and Other
Tales from Perrault, illustrated by Michael Hague - copyright 1989. In
the cover illustration, the fairy godmother wears a gown with an
Elizabethan-style ruff (Cinderella is in rags) - perhaps that style is
carried through into the ballgowns as well? 3) Cinderella - A PSS
Pop-Up Book (1980) illustrated by Linda Griffith. A long shot, as I
think you'd remember if it had been a pop-up book, but thought it worth
mentioning just because Cinderella wears a heart-shaped headress (not a
neck ruff) on the cover. You might also enjoy looking at the 1935
version illustrated by Juanita Bennett
(my personal favorite). It's not in the style of the one you are
looking for - many of the gowns are more reminiscent of the 1930's
movie star glamour pictures, and the cover reminds me of Glinda the
Good Witch from the Wizard of Oz movie - but the artwork and costuming
is beautiful.
One of my favorite versions that
features three balls and three gorgeous gowns is Charlotte Huck's Princess Furball! It may be
worth a look!
I've
checked
all
of
the
suggestions
on
line
so
far
as
of
11/14/08,
no
luck.
I
appreciate
all
suggestions
and
have
researched
until
my
eyes
feel
like
they
will
explode.
I'll
keep
checking
the
site
and
doing
my
own
research,
I
will
let
you
know
if
I
find
it.
Thanks
again.
The Story of
Cinderella, 1947, approximate. I think
this is the version you are looking for. It is published by Ladybird
and illustrated by Evelyn Bowmar.
I
believe
it
has
been
reprinted
several
times.
Fowles, John, Cinderella, Adapted from Perrault's
Cendrillon of 1697, 1974, copyright. Also take a
look at this version, illustrated by Sheilah
Beckett.
Mack,
Nila,
Let's Pretend.
This is a compilation of stores from the old radio show called Let's
Pretend hosted by Nila Mack. The publication date would not be
consistent with what you remember, but the illustrations and costumes
of the characters (including Cinderella) are just wonderful.
C589:
City family moves to
country - death?
Hi,
I
read
this
young
adult
book
in
the
late
seventies
or
early
eighties,
about
a
city
family
(dusty,
imported
cars)
who
moves
to
the
country
and
befriends
the
neighbor
(clean,
American
cars).
It
was
the
first
book
for
me
that
subtly
pointed
out
class
differences.
I
think
the
neighbor
boy
died.
C590:
Cranky girl, kids travel
with merman
A
cranky girl w/glasses meets a
handsome young merman who transforms her and a group of children under
her care (her cousins?) into mermaids and takes them on a journey
across the sea. Cranky girl likes the merman but can't express
herself. Antagonist is another girl or a wicked mermaid, I think.
Edith Nesbit, Wet Magic.
This
description
reminds
me
of
E. Nesbit's "Wet Magic".
It's
been
many
years,
but
I
think
the
children
summon
a
mermaid
by
reciting
a
few
lines
of
"Sabrina
fair",
and
they
visit
the
mer-people
under
the
sea.
C591:
City children visit ranch/farm
children
(possibly
cousins)
from
city
visit
ranch
or
farm
-
they
try
on
cowboy
hats
and
boots.
book
from
1950's
early
60's.
Baldwin Hawes, Come Visit My Ranch,
1950, copyright. Two city kids
(Susan and ____) go to visit their country cousin, Billy, on his ranch.
There, they learn about cowboy clothes (levis, "jack boots" and
10-gallon hats), get to ride horses, and go out to see cattle being
branded. Published by Wonder Books, and illustrated by the author.
Front cover shows a side view of the three children riding a
brown-and-white horse. Billy is in front, wearing a blue shirt &
black cowboy hat, then Susan in a red shirt (no hat), and her brother
is on the back, wearing a green shirt - he appears to be falling off
and his hat is in mid-air. The book was later reissued as "Calling All Cowboys."
C592:
Charm school
Solved: Mystery of the Chinatown Pearls
C593:
Civil War reenactment
Solved: Mystery
at Crane's Landing
C594:
cougar boy grandfather
Solved: An American Ghost
C595:
Children walk to
Washington, D.C.
Solved: The
Fragile Flag
C596:
Children learn about nature
This
book
may
have
been
a
grammar
school
text
circa
1930-40.
It
was
about
two
children
learning
about
nature
at
their
grandfather's
farm.
What
I
remember
is
the
beautiful
ink
drawings
that
illustrated
the
book.
The
one
most
indelible
in
my
mind
is
a
drawing
of
a
mud
dapper
wasp
building
a
nest.
Possibly
The Burgess Book
of
Nature Lore: Adventures of Tommy, Sue, Sammy with their friends of
meadow, pool and forest . . . with illus. by Robert Candy. Boston: Little, Brown
& Co., (1965). One thing I remember from the story is that Thornton W. Burgess, for all his
knowledge as a naturalist, didn't know that picking up a skunk by the
tail will NOT stop it from spraying! Other chapters have to do with
pitcher plants, monarch chrysalises, the chain of life, and bears.
Here's where you can see an alphabetical list of Burgess' 172 books:
http://www.thorntonburgess.org/Burgess%20Books.htm.
Sorry.
It
can't
be
The Burgess Book of
Nature Lore (published in 1965) because I had the book in the
early 1950's.
Enid Blyton, Enid Blyton's Nature Lover's Book, 11/1/08, reprint. First
published in 1944, this delightful collection of stories, poems, and
nature facts is centered on three children and their uncle who takes
them on nature walks, unveiling the delights of the countryside
throughout the seasons. Poems by Enid Blyton as well as classic works
by Wordsworth, Keats, and others are accompanied by lush illustrations
of various animals and plants. A field guide to common birds and plants
is also provided, making this a must-have for nature lovers young and
old. I'm so glad this book is back in print; it's gorgeous! I had
it on my staff picks this Fall!
C597:
Cinderella story
All
I
can
remember
of
this
is
one
illustration
in
colour
of
Cinderella
in
her
ballgown
(I
think)
on
her
way
to
the
ball.
She
wasn't
in
the
coach,
but
was
wearing
a
pale
cream
gown
and
cloak
and
had
jewels
interlaced
in
her
long
brown
hair.
The
story
may
have
been
in
it's
own
book
or
in
an
anthology.
Ruth Sanderson, Cinderella. There's
a
beautiful
version
of
Cinderella,
retold
and
illustrated
by
Ruth
Sanderson,
published
in
2002
by
Little
Brown.
The
cover
illustration
sounds
like
what
you're
describing.
Thanks for
searching - I had this book in the 1960s and looked up the Ruth
Sanderson one in case it might be a reprint but I'm afraid it isn't!
C598:
clothespin dolls, mystery
I'm
looking
for
a
mystery
about
two
clothespin
dolls.
They
were
connected
in
some
way
to
colonial
America
(I
think
they
had
been
a
gift
from
George
Washington
to
his
sister).
The
main
character
was
a
young
girl.
I
know
the
story
involved
a
dollhouse
with
a
secret
room.
Holly Beth Walker, Mystery in Williamsburg.
I'm
pretty
sure
this
is
a
Meg
mystery.
I
don't
remember
all
the
details
of
the
story,
but
I
believe
Meg
and
her
friend
are
visiting
historical
Williamsburg.
They
dress
up
in
colonial
costumes,
and
I
think
someone
was
trying
to
steal
the
clothespin
dolls
(I
recall
those,
probably
because
I
had
never
heard
of
them
before).
Holly
Beth
Walker,
Meg and the Mystery in
Williamsburg. This is one of the Meg mysteries -
Mystery in Williamsburg. The whole series is really very
enjoyable. They're set in Virginia.
2009
C599:
children's fairy book circa
1972, found in
England
Solved: Treasury of Children's Stories
C600:
chapter book, girl called
Chan, twin
brothers
Juvenile
chapter
book
from
mid
to
late
sixties,
possibly
British.
About
a
young
blonde
girl
whose
name
may
have
been
Chaneth
(called
Chan)
or
Richenda
(called
Chen)
but
she
was
called
Chan
for
short.
I
know
for
sure
that
her
two
brothers
who
were
twins
were
named
Gregory
(called
Gory)
and
Marcus.
There
were
several
illustrations
in
the
book;
one
was
of
the girl eating dinner with a
parent or aunt. The book had a mysterious air.
C601:
Christmas book, father
searching for gift
on Christmas Eve
Solved: A
Little Cowboy's Christmas
C602:
Compliation of stories,
puppy wants to see
his sick boy
I
had a book as a child that was a
compliation of stories. I remember it being a fairly thick book; but I
was young, so my idea of a big book might have been somewhat skewed. It
did not have classic stories in it (no little red riding hoods or
goldie locks). I remember one story particularly well; it was about a
young boy who had a puppy. The little boy got sick and the puppy wasn't
allowed to see the boy. The boy's room was on the second floor, and one
day the puppy decided to tackle the stairway and go visit his boy. He
crawls up them, pokes his nose in the room and is reunited with his
boy. I'm thinking this book was published in the
late 70s or early 80s. If you can help me find this book, I will be
thrilled beyond belief! I just had a little girl and I would love to
read her some stories from my childhood! Thanks
so
much!
This
probably
is
not
correct,
but
your
description
vaguely
recalls
the
comic
strips,
and
later
film,
about
Charlie
Brown's
Snoopy
when
he
went
to
visit
his
first
owner,
a
little
girl
named
Lila,
sick
in
hospital.
The
comics
didn't
emphasize
it,
but
the
film
stated
"No
Dogs
Allowed"
in
the
building.
Of
course
Snoopy
found
his
way
around
that,
and
had
a
loving
reunion with Lila, helping her get well. In both film and comics he did
come back to Charlie Brown. This is all I know, hope you can find the
real story.
C603:
Cat's paws catch on attic
floor, girl finds
doll
Solved: Magic Elizabeth
I read a book in the 70's that I loved
about a girl who went to live in a tall narrow house with black wrought
iron fencing, with a woman who lived there with who was really
old fashioned, and dressed all in in black. There were no friends, and
no toys and it was dark and dreary and it rained all the time. The
woman had a cat however and somehow this young girl got into the attic
with the cat whose paws caught on something beneath the floor boards
and it turned out to be a doll.. oh there was so much more and it
turned out wonderfully and I can't for the life of me remember the
title.. I must have gotten it from my school's library.. Can you help?
Norma Kassirer, Magic Elizabeth.
You've
forgotten
a
lot
of
the
plot,
but
this
is
certainly
your
book.
Norma
Kassirer,
Magic Elizabeth, 1966, copyright. Magic Elizabeth
has all the elements: the old house, the gloomy aunt, the cat and the
attic and doll - but although the doll figures at the heart of the
story, the actual doll is not found until the end. The book was
reprinted in 1999.
Norma
Kassirer,
Magic Elizabeth,
1966, copyright. This sounds like the often requested Magic
Elizabeth. Sally goes to visit her old Aunt Sarah who lives in a
creepy old house. While exploring the attic with the cat, Shadow,
looking for a long lost doll named Elizabeth, she finds the diary of
another girl named Sally.
Norma
Kassirer,
Magic Elizabeth,
1966, copyright. Sounds like this could be the book you're
looking for: While her parents are away, Sally has to move in
with her old Aunt Sarah whose old dark house looks to her like a
witch's house. Her aunt even has a black cat, Shadow. Scared and
unhappy at first, Sally slowly grows close to her aunt whose portrait
as a little girl holding her doll hangs above the fireplace.
Sally looks just like her aunt in the portrait and she becomes
determined to find the doll Elizabeth who has been lost for
years. Ultimately, Shadow helps her find her Elizabeth.
This popular book has typically wonderful illustrations by Joe Krush and is very hard to find
in hardcover now.
Norma
Kassirer,
Magic Elizabeth,
1960s, approximate. This is Magic Elizabeth.
I read it many times as a child and recently read it with my daughter.
It was just as good as I remember. Sally uncovers a mystery when she
visits Aunt Sarah.What happened to the doll Elizabeth on that Christmas
Eve so long ago? Sally travels back in time (or is it just a
dream?)With the help of the cat Shadow, she discovers the answer.
Norma
Kassirer,
Magic Elizabeth.
One of my all time favorite books!
Norma
Kassirer,
Magic Elizabeth.
Sally goes to stay with her great-aunt Sal at a very old,
spooky-looking house. She is given a lovely room that has a
portrait of an earlier Sally and her doll, Elizabeth. When Sally
explores the attic, she finds the earlier Sally's diary and reads it;
and as she looks in the mirror she sees the other Sally, and then
suddenly *is* the other Sally. The doll Elizabeth had been lost
years before, and with the help of Shadow, Aunt Sal's cat, Sally finds
it. A really wonderful book, illustrated by Joe Krush. I recently read it
aloud to a class of third graders, and they loved it. They loved
writing to the author and getting a reply, too!
Norma
Kassirer,
Magic Elizabeth.
Definitely the one. The favourite book of a lot of people!
Norma
Kassirer,
Magic Elizabeth.
I think this might be it. It was published sometime in the 1970s. Sally
goes to stay with her elderly aunt Sarah in her creepy old house. Her
aunt's special doll disappeared when she was a girl, presumably in the
house.
Norma
Kassirer,
Magic Elizabeth,
1966, copyright. I think you're looking for "Magic Elizabeth".
Sarah
is
the
name
of
the
girl...she's
sent
to
stay
with
her
scary
Aunt
Sally
because
(I
think)
one
of
her
parents
is
ill.
Aunt
Sally
lives
in
a
scary
old
house
with
a
black
cat.
Sarah
finds
a
portrait
of
a
girl
in
old
fashioned
clothes
carrying
a
doll-Elizabeth.
Aunt
Sally
tells
her
that
Elizabeth
was
lost
long
ago,
somewhere
in
the
house.
Sarah follows
Tib (the cat) to the attic, and sees as he finds a doll bonnet.
She's then determined to find Elizabeth. If you can't tell, I
loved this book as a kid!
Kassirer,
Norma,
Magic Elizabeth.
You'll get a lot of responses on this one!
Magic Elizabeth.
Great
book!
C604:
conditioned reflex,
characters named after
psychological phenomena on an expedition in the jungle
A
bunch of characters named after
various psychological phenomena on an expedition in the jungle. One of
the characters was a birdlike "conditioned reflex" that kept looking
around. I think it said "ook" a lot. This was from an excerpt in an
illustrated 4th grade textbook circa 1975.
C605:
cheese, peas and chocolate
pudding
Solved: Cheese, Peas and Chocolate Pudding
About
a
child
who
will
only
eat
3
foods
-
cheese,
peas
and
chocolate
pudding,
until
one
day
while
he
was
playing
on
the
floor
under
the
dining
table,
a
piece
of
hamburger
fell
into
his
mouth
-
then
things
changed!!
Caroline Feller Bauer, Cheese, Peas, and Chocolate Pudding.
Betty Van Witsen, Cheese, Peas and Chocolate Pudding.
Definitely
this
one.
The story was originally published in the 1950's,
but has been reprinted several times. If you can't find a stand-alone
copy, the story can also be found in several anthologies, including
"Let's Hear a Story (30 Stories and Poems for Today's Boys and Girls)"
by Sidonie Matsner Gruenberg (1961) and in "Believe and Make Believe"
by Lucy Sprague Mitchell (1956).
Betty
Van
Witsen,
Cheese, Peas and
Chocolate Pudding, 1956. This is definitely
your book--my kindergarten teacher read this to us and then we made and
ate cheese, peas and chocolate pudding. I can't imagine they went
well together :).
already in the solved file as
A284 / original author apparently Betty (not Betsy, as some show) Van
Witsen and apparently in more than one anthology, earliest possibly
being: Sheldon, William, Believe and Make-Believe,
1957.
It
has
also
been
published
solo:
Title:
Cheese,
peas, and
chocolate pudding / Author(s): Witsen, Betty Van.
Publication: Glenview, Ill. : Scott, Foresman, Year:
1971 Description: 32 p. : col. ill. 29
cm. Language: English Series: Scott Foresman
reading systems; Teacher's read-aloud library. SUBJECT(S)
Descriptor: Food -- Fiction. Note(s): "Special Scott,
Foresman and Co. edition for Teacher's read-aloud library." Class
Descriptors: LC: PZ7.W7825 Responsibility: by Betty Van
Witsen ; illustrated by Jack Haesly.
Betty
Van
Witsen,
Cheese, Peas, and
Chocolate Pudding, 1971, approximate. I found a
couple different versions of this online. It looks like it was in some
readers, too. This was the one storybook version I could find.
There's a story called "Cheese, Peas and
Chocolate Pudding" by Betty
Van Witsen and can be found in the book IT'S TIME FOR STORY TIME~from a
librarian
C606:
children solving a mystery
Solved: Secret
Agents FourThe book I
am looking for is from the
70's. It was about a group of children solving a mystery. There was
something about an island or place walled up they had to get in.
They had to solve it quickly because the bad guys were going to poison
the water supply and they made it there just in time.
Perhaps you are
looking for one
of the Boxcar
Children
mysteries by Gertrude
Chandler
Warner?
She
wrote
several
books
about
the
Alden
siblings
Henry,
Jessie,
Violet
and
Benny.
The
first
books
were
written
in
the
1940s,
and
have
been
reprinted
several
times,
including
in
the
70's.
There
are
dozens
more
sequels
that
were
written
by
other
authors,
as
well.
I
remembered another piece of information. When the bad guys were about
to poison the water supply, they came in (or were being spirited away
by) a helicopter.
Donald Sobol, Secret Agents Four. I don't remember the
specific details so I can't confirm about getting into a walled place,
but in Secret Agents Four the bad guys are planning to put a chemical
in the water supply that will make people repeat their actions of 24
hours earlier. If VACUUM (Volunteer Agents Crusading Unsteadily
Under Mongoos) and their Beautiful Assistant Gangbuster (thus, VACUUM
BAG) sound familiar, this is your book.
I'm guessing it's Secret Agents Four
by Donald J. Sobol, author of
the Encyclopedia Brown series. It's not a poison, exactly - it's a drug
that causes its victims to relive everything they did 24 hours ago.
There were six boys and a girl with a belt in judo, IIRC.
Donald
J.
Sobol,
Secret Agents Four,
1972, 1988, 2003, copyright. Eureka! You have found it! I'm so
excited! Thanks everyone, this is definitely the book - they have
to sneak onto an island, drug the water supply, and the cover even has
the helicopter! Another stumper solved!
I just got the book in the mail and it is definitely Secret Agents Four. Thanks!
C607:
Country Fair / Circus
mysterious adventures
A
Puffin Books paperback, late 1950's?
early '60's, juvenile. This British paperback followed several
different children in their magickal, transformative adventures at a
country fair or circus. There may have been encounters with a
Faustian character, or it may have been more benign than that. I
don't think that the children were necessarily related (i.e., not like
E. Nesbit's Five Children and It, or C.S. Lewis's Narnia sibs), but
there were both boys and girls.
Enid Blyton, Circus of Adventure.
Could you be thinking of the Adventure
series? Four children (and a cockatoo) got on a series of
adventures around the world. There is a Circus of Adventure title.
Arthur
Calder
Marshall,
The
Fair
to
Middling
1959,
copyright. I think
this is the solution, the children, orphans I seem to recall all go to
the fair
and experience something personal to each of them, which changes the
way they
think. One I remember was a colour blind girl with auburn hair, who was
able to
see what the colour was. It was not a conventional plot.
Arthur
Calder
Marshall,
The
Fair
to
Middling
1959.
I
am
pretty
sure
this
is
the
one.
Bill
Brittain,
The Wish Giver:
Three
Tales
of
Coven
Tree.
Im
pretty
sure
this
is
the
book
you
are
seeking...
a
strange
man
in
a
carnival
tent
gives
four
different
children
a
card
with
a
red
spot
that
allows
them
to
make
a
wish.
Arthur
Calder
Marshall,
The Fair to Middling.
I
think
The
Fair
to
Middling
must
be
the
book
in
question.
I
read
it
in
my
Englsih
childhood
and
it
was
definitely
a
Puffin
or
perhaps
a
Peacock
(for
teenagers).
The
character
I
most
remember
is
an
albino
boy.
Its
unusual
and
brilliant.
C608:
Children's book
compilation, late 70's
Children's
book
compilation
from
the
late
70's.
3
books
-
there
may
have
been
more,
only
remember
3.
Each
book
contained
three
stories
with
real
photographs.
Each
book
also
came
with
a
45
record.
One
book
was
red,
one
blue,
and
one
yellow.
Yellow
-
had
Ugly
Duckling,
Blue,
story
of
Jamestown.
C609:
Collection of Nursery
Rhymes, Fairy Tales,
and Poems (3 volumes)
My
Mother
purchased
a
3
volume
set
from
the
Book
of
the
Month
club
in
the
late
1970s.
It
included
Nursery
Rhymes,
Fairy
Tales,
and
Poems.
They
were
big
and
heavy
books
(about
10"
wide
and
15"
long).
The
covers
were
white/cream
with
either
red,
green,
or
blue
bindings
and
each
book
was
at
least
an
inch
thick.
I
remember
the
illustrations
inside were beautiful
but there wasn't a drawing on the outside cover. Some of the
stories I remember are: Annabel Lee by Poe; Wynken, Blynken, and Nod by
Field; Mr. Nobody; The Sugar Plum Tree; Something about what are little
boys and little girls made of (frog and snails and puppy dog tails);
and many, many more. Any insight would be greatly appreciated.
Is
it
possible
that
these
are
THE
TALL
BOOK
OF
MAKE
BELIEVE,
THE
TALL
BOOK
OF
FAIRY
TALES?
Loved these as a child.
C610:
Childrens mystery, renactment of event solves mystery,
attic of house or mansion helps solve mystery
I'm
looking for a 50s/60 children's mystery. The only plot points I
remember are
that the girl and her friends put on a renenactment of an historical
event in
the attic of an old house/mansion. I think the girl plays a dying
mother. As
she recites her lines, the solution to the mystery becomes clear.
Phyllis Whitney, Mystery
of
the
Strange
Traveler. Who was
the mysterious passenger? From the
moment Laurie and her sister, Celia, arrive at their Aunt Serenas home
on
Staten Island they attempt to find out.
Holly Beth Walker, The Ghost of Hidden
Spring. 4th in
the Meg Mystery series. The old Hannigan house is supposed to be
haunted by the
the ghost of Kathleen Hannigan who died as a child on the night of her
birthday
party. Meg and her friend Kerry think
theyve seen the ghost of Kathleen.
They actually have seen a descendent of Kathleen who is also
named
Kathleen and is a great-niece of the original Kathleen.
The little girl inherits the house if she
agrees to live in the house and re-enact the tragic birthday party. During the party, Meg and Kerry figure out
what happened to cause the tragic accident of the original Kathleen.
Phyllis Whitney,
Mystery of the Strange Traveler. Thank
you to whoever posted the answer!! I also discovered which book it was
after
posting the stump. Great book too!
C611:
Cats named Pinafore and Marmalade
I
am looking for
a book my father used to read to me in the 1950's. It's about two
cats. The black and white cat is named PINAFORE. The orange
cat is named MARMELADE. I think the title was MARMELADE AND
PINAFORE. I can still visualize the pictures, but don't remember an
exact storyline.
Virginia
Cunningham.
Those
Cats,
1940s-1950s.
This
is
the
story.
A
lonely
single
woman
named
Miss
Simpson
is
given
two
kittens
she
names
Marmalade
and
Pinafore
by
her
mailman
Mr.
Tooks.
Later
Mr.
Tooks
brings
her
two
boys
from
an
orphanage
his
sister
runs,
and
later
still
he
proposes
marriage.
Its
a
short
story
in
"Big
Big
Story
Book"
published
by
Whitman.
Coopyright
dates
listed
are
from
1944-1955.
I
know
I
got
my copy in
1964.
Virginia
Cunningham,
Those Cats
1949,
approximate. The pictures that you remember are
by Veronica Reed. Theres a woman who doesnt like cats, but is enchanted
by two cats given to her by her mailman.
These cats are Marmalade and Pinafore.
Kathleen
Hale,
Orlando the Marmalade Cat,
1938,
copyright.
Just
thought
Id
take
a
stab
at
this.
No
cats
named
Pinafore,
but
the
two
cats
depicted
seem
to
match
your
description.
Virginia
Cunningham
(Illustrator
Veronica
Reed,
Those
Cats,
1947.
Mr
Tooks
the
postman
gives
Miss
Simpson
2
kittens,
and
she
names
them
Marmalade
and
Pinafore.
If
you
scroll
down
near
the
bottom
of
this
website
(look
for
the
post
from
9/6/08)
you
can
see
a
cover
reproduction:http://goldcountrygirls.blogspot.com/2008_09_01_archive.html.
C612:
Children's folktales
I
am looking for a collection of
children's folktales
from around the world. Must have been
dated 1960-70s and has a story of the basilisk in it - was very scary
at the
time:) Large hardcover with color
illustrations. Not much to go on, I know...
C613:
Creepy Cousin
Book
published
in
the
late
1970s
about
a
creepy
cousin
who
visits
a
wealthy
family
in
the
month
of
March.
Lots
of
good
descriptions
of
the
rain,
and
of
the
house.
The
girl
cousin
throws
the
creepy
cousin
a
party,
which
doesn't
go
over
well.
Mysterious
marks
on
the
walls
and
a
ticking
clock.
Lois Duncan, Summer of Fear.
Could
this
be
Summer
of
Fear
by
Lois
Duncan?
"Soon
after
the
arrival
of
cousin
Julia,
insidious
occurrences
begin
that
convince
Rachel
that
Julia
is
a
witch
and
must
be
stopped
before
her
total
monstrous
plan
can
be
effected."
Alas,
no,
thats
not
the
book...
C614:
Crayon drawings of armies whi fight over apples?
Little
boy (ill?) in bed imagines his quilt to be fields and mountains - he
draws
armies of soldiers with his coloured crayons but his brother stamps on
one of
the crayons so he can't draw any more in that colour. I think they're
fighting
over apples - tree owner or owner of land they fall on?
Robert Louis
Stevenson. This
sounds like the RLS poem The Land of Counterpane from the anthology A
Childs Garden of Verses, in which sick child makes hills, valleys,
towns
etc in his counterpane (quilt). But no crayon battle etc--are two
memories
being conflated here?
C615: Costume
Party (Girls or Twins?)
In the
60's, I read a chapter bk about neighbor girls who decorated their
bedrooms
differently (one was cranberry/silver striped & one was a green
leaf
pattern) Costume party with gauze over
their eyeholes & stayed silent to confuse people but I might be
confusing
this pt. w/another bk about twins.
Another part of this
book involved the two girls being
in casts due an accident and their parents letting them surprise each
other
with a visit, dressing them up in red, white, and blue for the Fourth
of July.
C616:
Christian man badly burnt in light aircraft
I NEED TO
TRACE A BOOK ABOUT AN AMERICAN CHRISTIAN WHO IS BADLY BURNT WHEN THE
LIGHT
AIRCRAFT HE IS FLYING CRASHES IN TERRIBLE WEATHER. THIS BOOK IS POST
WW11 BUT
NOT A RECENT BOOK.THE BOOK TELLS OF HIS MANY OPERATIONS AFTER THE CRASH
AND HOW
HIS FAITH SUSTAINS HIM THROUGHOUT HIS TRIALS.
Norman Williams,
Terror at Tenerife. To
the
poster of C616: not sure if this is your
book, because I believe it involved a large commercial aircraft, but a
Christian man is badly burned in this plane crash and must have many
operations. Book is Terror at Tenerife
by Norman Williams. There is another
Christian book about the late astronaut Jim Irwin that also involves a
plane
crash: Flight of the Falcon by Paul
Thomsen.
Merrill &
Virginia
Womach, Tested by Fire, 1976. Perhaps
it is this one. I knew I had a copy of
it, but couldn't find it at first.
Hope it's the right one.
C617:
Childhood Library Book
This
book
would
have
been
in
the
school
library
when
I
was
a
child.
It
had
dark
pictures
with
black
and
white
or
perhaps
oneother
only.
This
was
a
book
of
tales
and
I
always
remember
a
story
with
a
tinker.
I
think
there
was
one
with
trolls
also.
C618:
Champion Fantasy Adventure
Young
adult fantasy adventure. Published before 2000. Fantasy world w/
monsters,
gods, humanoid races. Main character male, humanoid w/ rat-like
features (I
think?), larger than normal humans. Wields 6ft sword, became champion
for God
of Justice. Start adventure. Meets dual-wield lady human champion.
David Weber, Oath of Swords, 1995. Could it
be Oath of Swords or one of the sequels?
The hero is a seven-foot-tall humanoid warrior with foxlike ears, who
for some peculiar reason delivers all his dialogue in an Irish
brogue.
He is a champion of the god of war and
justice.
David Weber,
The War God's Own. This
sounds like The War God's Own by David Weber, which is the sequel to
The
Oath of Swords. Bahzell Bahnakso is a Hadrani, a humanoid with a
fox-like ears,
and has become the reluctant champion of the War God Tomanak (god of
Justice).
In The War God's Own he teams up with a woman warrior who is also a
champion
of Tomanak.
David Weber,
oath of Swords. Sounds like one of
the Bahzell Bahnakson books by David Weber.
Bahzell is a thinly disquised orc with foxlike ears and an annoying
brogue. He'\''s a paladin for the god of
war and justice.
David Weber, The War God's Own, 1999,
copyright. There's a good chance this is
_The War God's Own_ by David Weber.
It's the second in a series.
The hero is Bahzell Bahnakson, and he's a hradani (very tall
humanoids with fox-like ears and anger issues)
the human woman he meets is called Kaeritha. You'll have no
trouble finding a copy in
order to check: it's part of the Baen Free Library, so you can read the
whole thing for free if you want (from Baen's website).
Additional
details: The main character's race is
normally considered lower-class within the novel's setting, so people
thought
it odd that he was selected to be one of the few champions who
represent the
god of justice (or law or righteousness or some other good thing
can't remember the god's name). These divine champions are held
in high
regard and are able to commune with the god directly. The novel
begins with the main character
traveling with a sidekick (who also belongs to the lower-class humanoid
race)
to a large human city. They visit a high
church of the god to embark on some sort of quest. While there,
an arrogant human knight (not
quite a champion) questions the main character'\''s worthiness of being
a
divine champion. In response, the main
character offers to prove his worthiness in a duel with the
human.
Needless to say, the duel was one-sided. The main character
soundly knocks some
humility into the knight, breaking his arm by repeatedly hammering into
his
shield with a 6 ft sword. The knight
ends up joining the main character's quest as a companion. Not
long after leaving the city, they meet a
female human champion who wields two (much smaller) swords
simultaneously. She joins the main character's quest as
well, and during daily practice duels she demonstrates that her
fighting
prowess is on par with the main character's.
Their first major battle is with a giant worm. They emerged
victorious with perhaps some
minor wounds. Unfortunately, that's
all I can remember. Would appreciate any
leads to try to find this book again.
Thanks!
David Weber, Oath of Swords (and sequels). This seems a likely possibility.
The
hero is a thinly disguised orc with foxlike ears who is a paladin for
the god
of war and justice.
C619:
Crocodile in Bathtub
My
stumper
is
about
a
book
I
used
to
listen
to
on
record
in
the
1970s
about
a
crocodile
in
this
family's
bathtub.
I
think
the
dad
was
a
millionaire
and
there
was
some
fear
because
the
windows
were
open
and
the
crocodile
could
have
frozen
in
the
tub.
Cordelia Drexel
Biddle, The Happiest Millionaire /
My
Philadelphia Father, 1955,
copyright. This is
from Cordelia Drexel Biddle's story, originally called MY PHILADELPHIA
FATHER,
but made into a movie by Disney and called THE HAPPIEST MILLIONAIRE. The book was reissued in paperback with
the
movie's title, and another one called WALT DISNEY'S THE HAPPIEST
MILLIONAIRE, by A. J. Carothers, was a novelization of the movie (which
of
course differed from the original book).
Bernard Waber, Lyle, Lyle, Crocodile, 1962,
copyright. Lyle
lives with the Plimm family in a brownstone in Manhattan and loves to
take
baths. A grouchy neighbor plots to get
Lyle sent to the Central Park Zoo.
Bernard Waber,
The House on East 88th Street, 1963,
approximate. Could
this be one of the books about Lyle the Crocodile?
Happiest Millionaire Ever, 1967. There is
a Disney about a millionaire family that keeps an alligator in a
bathtub and
someone leaves the windows open and the alligator freezes. Could you
have had
the record of this?
Bernard
Waber, The House on East 88th Street,
1962,
copyright. This is
the first in the Lyle the Crocodile series. Lyle is found living in the
bathtub
when the Primm family moves into their new home. I remember the song,
from the Disney film Happiest
Millionaire, about a wealthy eccentric with crocodiles and a feisty
daughter I actually had a comic of the
story when I was a kid. The crocodiles actually lived in a conservatory
or
greenhouse, and did nearly freeze at one point, but did recover. Your
description also brings to mind the book Lyle Lyle Crocodile, where a
family
meets a friendly croc lounging in their tub. Hope this helps.
The
Happiest
Millionaire.
Could
this be from the Disney movie "The Happiest Millionaire?" In the
movie, Fred MacMurray play an
eccentric millionaire who keeps alligators in his bathtub.
Cordelia
Drexel Biddle, My Philadelphia Father. This
sounds like My Philadelphia Father by Cordelia Drexel Biddle, which was
made
into the Disney movie The Happiest Millionaire.
Bernard Waber, The house on East 88th Street, 1975,
approximate. Your
question reminded me of this book I read as a kid, where a family moves
into a
house and find a crocodile already living in their bathtub. There
are a few books in this series, all
about the crocodile and his adventures with the family. Check out
the Amazon website for The house on
east 88th street, http://www.amazon.com/House-East-88th-Street/dp/0395199700/ref=ntt_at_ep_dpi_4 and if that doesn't sound like the
book, scroll down
to the area that says "Customers Who Bought This Item Also
Bought". There you can view some of
the other titles in that series. Hope
this helps!
C620:
The Cookie Jar & Other Stories
I'm
from
Ireland-my
granny
(lived
in
Philadelphia)
sent
a
kid's
periodical
to
my
mum
in
the
70's.
Had
no
cover
when
mum
got
it
so
think
it
could
have
been
published
in
50's/60's.
Contained
stories
&
poems-
the
cookie
jar,
the
witch,
the
candyman,
halloween,
apple-picking
time,
the
sandman.
Thanks.
C621:
Choose an Adventure
Solved:
Giants, Elves, and Scary Monsters
C622:
Cursed House
Old
house
with
curse:
"the
line
is
down,
the
land
is
dead,
something,
something,
til
white
rules
red.
"Girl
falling
down
stairs
and
getting
caught
by
old
woman
house
with
L
carved
on
either
side
of
door.
C623:
Citrus Ranching Family
A
children's or YA novel I read in the
70s with a citrus
ranching family testing whether the big freeze had destroyed the crop
by
testing the oranges to see if they would float
.
Patricia Beatty, The Queen's Own
Grove.
Beverly
Clearly,
The Luckiest Girl,
1958,
copyright.
Shelley
Latham,
16,
is
invited
to
spend
her
junior
year
of
high
school
with
the
Southern
California
family
of
an
old
friend
of
her
mother's.
An
only
child,
Shelley
longs
to
leave
her
predictable
boyfriend
Jack
behind
and
gain
some
independence
from
her
mother
who
still
regards
her
as
a
"child".
With
her
dad's
encouragement,
Shelley
gets
to
leave
her
Oregon
town
and
experience life among a bustling family and the "exotic" environment
of San Sebastian where oranges and lemons grow on trees and river beds
are
dry. I recall that the family owned an
orange grove. This is one of Cleary's
best malt-shop books.
I
remember
this
book
too,
but
unfortunately
not
the
title
or
author.
If
it
helps,
I
think
there
were
also
horses
in
the
story,
and
it
was
set
in
California.
I
seem
to
remember
the
title
of
the
book
was
also
the
name
of
the
ranch,
and
it
was
vaguely
Spanish
(it
may
have
been
D'oro--or
some
translation
of
gold).
It
also
seems
like
the
author was in the
E/F/G
author section.
Patricia
Beatty,
The Queen's Own Grove,
1966,
copyright. Amelia
Bromfield-Brown travels from England through Canada all the way to
Riverside,
CA with her parents, brother Edmund, sister Theodora, and Grandmother
Thorup
for her father's health. They
purchase an orange grove which is threatened by white scale. The
children have to contend with their
unruly neighbors, the Appelbooms. They
befriend their Chinese cook, Bill Lee.
Their father develops the method of putting the oranges in water to see
if they float - frozen oranges float and good oranges sink to the
bottom. This saves the area's crop so that the
farmers can ship out only the good oranges.
Grandmother Thorup has to contend with running into Hesketh Thorup who
is the black sheep of the family. Hesketh
ends up saving the orange crops from the white scale by traveling to
Australia
and finding out that ladybugs will eat the white scale.
C624:
Coworkers on Vacation
I'm
looking
for
a
fiction
book
about
a
group
of
coworkers
who
go
on
a
vacation
to
some
remote
location
and
take
along
their
wives.
The
wives
go
out
on
a
boat
ride
and
return
to
see
their
husbands
murdered.
They
escape
into
the
jungle
and
the
story
is
about
how
they
manage
to
survive.
Shirley Conran, Savages, 1987,
copyright.Violent
bestseller about five women and one man stranded on an
island.
I read this when it was first released, and
I still remember some of the scenes very clearly. I suspect that
certain aspects of it have
been borrowed from it by the producers of "Lost." Not for
children!
Shirley Conran,
Savages, 1987,
copyright.I
remember reading this one. The wives go out for a sail with a fishing
guide,
they return to witness their husbands massacred by local insurgents.
The
spoiled rich girls escape into the jungle and learn survival techniques
from
the guide, and struggle to last long enough to be rescued.
Shirley Conran, Savages. I saw a
similar question answered on another Web site, but I didn'\''t think
they were
talking about the same book that I remembered.
So, I asked the question here and, in the meantime, bought the
book. In reading through it, I now
remember things I had forgotten...it is the same book.
Shirley Conran, Savages. Hi, to
the poster of the C624 stumper: I'm
pretty sure the book you're after is called Savages, by Shirley
Conran.
(I have not ever read the book but have heard
about it. The reason that this book and
its plot stuck in my mind is because I own a copy of another book by
the same
author, but on a totally different subject- a how-to book about
housekeeping! I
used to think, what a contrast between these two subjects.)
Conran,
Shirley, Savages, 1987,
copyright.
"From the author of Lace comes a spirited survival story undoubtedly
destined to become another bestseller. When a group of Nexus executives
brings
their wives to the South Pacific paradise of Paui, vacation is not on
their
minds. Having found rare minerals on the island, they are determined to
strike
a swift deal for mining rights. But in their greedy rush to claim the
prize,
the men fail to take into account a rapacious general, who takes
control of the
island in a military coup and brutally executes all of them. Returning
from a
sail in time to see the massacre, the women escape into the jungle,
where they
painfullybut a bit too easilylearn survival tricks from the ship's
captain.
His subsequent death leaves the once shy Annie in charge of the rest:
Silvana,
a wealthy, distant matron the athletic,
high-strung Patty outspoken Carey and Suzy, a sensuous,
spoiled child. Although
misfortune rains down on the group, opportunity also has a way of
magically
appearing as these castaways battle jungle, cannibalistic natives and
their own
frightening desires with a gritty determination that belies their
pampered
pasts. Conran whips up excitement, tension and, at times, a
horror-struck
fascination that makes this tall tale an entertaining page-turner. "
Conran,
Shirley, Savages, 1987. Nexus
employees vacation in the tropics, but when they find precious minerals
a
general has them all killed. Their wives, coming back from a boat trip,
escape
into the jungle.
C625:
Chief Horse Girl
Jumper
50's
book, juvenile. All i
can remember is a young girl that works in some kind of show or
rodeo. she is caring for and jumping a horse named
chief, i believe. she is forced by her
cruel boss to jump over a car as part of the show. she loves this
horse and is always trying to
protect him. thanks for any help.
Patsey
Gray,
Heads Up!,
1956,
copyright.
The
book
you're
looking
for
is
Heads
Up!
by
Patsey
Gray
(note,
the
"e"
in
Patsey
isn't
a
typo,
that's
how
she
spelled
it).
Published
in
hardcover
by
Coward-McCann,
reprinted
by
Scholastic
in
paperback.
The
girl
is
Peggy,
the
horse
is
Chief,
an
Appalossa,
the
mean
trainer
is
Mr.
Mac.
I
checked
my
copy
and
the
car
jumping
incident
is
there
just
as you remember it. Gray was
a
prolific writer of juvenile horse books, you might want to check out
some of
her other books while you're at it!
C626:
children mystery young boy who has a rowboat named the
donut
This was
a series of mysteries I read as a child.
All I can remember now is that the main character, a boy, had a little
dinghy named the donut.
C628:
Book Stumper: Children's Safety Songs Songbook
Solved: Irving
Caesar's
Sing a Song
of Safety
C627:
Copperknob
Book for girls, prob
ages 9-12, hardback. Girl starts
at new girls' school (possibly boarding
school), meets another girl called Coppernob because of her red hair,
which
clashes with green uniform. Have a feeling cover depicts blue uniform
by
mistake. Girl's and school's name likely in title.
Elinoe
M
Brent-Dyer,
Redheads at the Chalet SchoolThis
is
a
very
long
shot
but
may
be
the
one
you
are
thinking
of
-
the
detaisl
are
not
exactly
the
same
but
there
are
similarities.
Flavia
(nicknamed
'Copper'&
'Coppernob'
is
a
new
pupil
at
the
CS
- I seem to remember that there is a plot
device around her hair (spys trying to kidnap her because of her
father?) I
think the schools uniform *is* blue but one of the reasons she is
pleased to
have changed is becaue it suits her better than her previous school's
green
uniform.
Elenor
Brent-dyer, Readheads at the chalet
school. The
chalet school is a series based around a boarding school in
Switzerland.
C629:
Children Scret Agents
Children's book I
checked out of the Penn State Library
sometime between 1969-71 about spies, or spy training, or secret
agents. The
book had lots of illustrations of a spy lurking around and practicing
sword
fighting, etc. I believe it was a story on how spies or secret agents
were
trained.
C630:
Cat
Eats People
1970s
illustrated book in which Cat
keeps eating different people,some called Hottentots, until he meets a
woodcutter, who cuts open cat'\''s tummy and lets everyone out. Cat has
big
bandage on tummy in the end. Might be danish.
Jack Kent, The Fat Cat: A Danish Folktale, 1970,
approximate. A few
others identified this book previously under the heading "Fat
Cat." I think the
"Hottentot" you're thinking of is "Skohottentot."
Jack Kent, The Fat Cat, 1971,
approximate. I
remember this book, and I'm pretty sure this is the edition the
requester is
referring to, though there are other versions of this tale out there.
Kent, Jack, The Fat Cat: a Danish folktale. Definitely THE FAT CAT by Jack
Kent.
It also appears on your solved pages with a picture of the cover.~from
a
librarian
Jack Kent, The Fat Cat, 1971,
copyright.
Kent, Jack, Fat Cat. I ate
the gruel and the pot and the old woman too.
I ate Skohottentot(sp), Skolikenlot, five birds in a flock, seven girls
dancing, lady with a pink parasol and a parson with a crooked staff and
now I
am going to eat you! I love to use this
one for storytime.
Jack Kent, Fat Cat.Sounds
like this one in the solved section.
Kent, Jack, The fat cat : a Danish folktale, 1971,
copyright. Definitely this one. A Parent's
Magazine Press book - A cat grows fatter and fatter as he eats everyone
he
meets. To make it confusing, there is
another retelling called "The fat car: a Danish folktale" by Margaret
Read Macdonald from 2001.
C631:
Cocker Spaniel puppies
Children's book about litter of cocker spaniel puppies who live
in a pet
shop, and each of their journeys with their new owners. They all lead
different
lives and the tan colored one is chosen last to live w/a family. Not
sure if it
is a Little Golden book circa 1960.
C632:
Close Knit Family
I'm
looking
for a book series that I
read in the early
1980s. The main characters were two teen
girls who are related as aunt and niece even though they were the same
age. They were part of a large,
close-knit family & lived in an American town around the turn of
the 20th
C.
Norma Johnston, A Nice Girl Like You. This
sounds like it could be one of the later books in Johnston's The
Keeping
Days series. The online reviews will tell you that Saranne Albright is
the
niece of Tish Sterling (heroine of the first 4 books), but Tish has a
much
younger sister, Katie, who is Saranne's age even though she is her
aunt, and
by the time they are teenagers, the rest of Katie's large family is
grown
up. It's interesting to realize that
though the books feel very "small town", that town is the Bronx --
100 years ago!
Norma
Johnston,
The Keeping Days,1973,
copyright. Could
this be the Keeping Days series. A lot of the elements sound familiar -
ths
close family - takes place at the turn of the 20th century, is a series
of 6
(?) books and were published in paperback in 1981.
C633:
Coloring Bunnies
A 1970s or 80s children's book. It was a
book about baby bunnies living with the momma bunnie in a bunnie den
(hole). The bunnies colored on the walls
of the den. Two days after ready the
book to my daughter, I found in the living room coloring on the
walls.
My daughter now has a daughter and I would
like to get the book for my granddaughter.
C634:
Colt too ungainly to prance
Colt can't prance. Finally learns by accident...has to
prance so
he doesn't tromp on a family of baby rabbits that gets in his
path. Small picture book. Now he's able to prance like all
the other
horses.
Hucklebones.
Maybe
Hucklebones? "The story of a pony
who was invited to the Steeplechase Ball but was very sad because he
couldn't learn how to dance but then quite accidentally figured it
out."
Mabel Watts, Casey the Clumsy Colt, 1954,
copyright. A
Whitman BIG Tell-a-Tale Book about a clumsy colt who must learn to be
careful.
(I've submitted this suggestion twice already, but it has not shown up
in
either of the last two updates, so here'\''s hoping third time's a
charm!)
Mabel Watts, Casey the Clumsy Colt. A
Whitman BIG Tell-a-Tale Book about a clumsy colt who must learn to be
careful.
C635:
children's illustrated bonnie prince charlie time travel
A large
(red?)book contained the story of a young girl (dressed in a school
girl's
short plaid skirt--reminiscent of the 1920s or 30s or 40s? dropped
waist?) who
helped Bonnie Prince Charlie. Time
travel involved? Definitely some black
and white pen illustrations. Maybe other
stories as well?
Sally
Watson, Highland Rebel,1960,
approximate. This is
a long shot, because there's no time travel involved, but you could be
looking for Highland Rebel. The cover is red, and the girl on the front
is
wearing a boy's kilt...so she does have the plaid 50s look going on. :)
In
the story, Lauren wants to fight for Bonnie Prince Charlie, so she
pretends to
be a boy and rides around the countryside with her brother, looking for
ways to
fight for his cause. Unfortunately, she's captured by the British and
put in
prison. The story goes on from there with some adventures, new
friendships, and
a little hint of possible romance.Sally Watson wrote a whole series
about this
family...Lauren turns up in another book--The Hornet's Nest--as an
adult and
mother to one of the main characters in that book. (sorry to go on, I
loved
these books as a teen!)
I
don't
have
specifics
for
you
-
but
I
had
a
book
with
what
sounds
like
the
same
story
-
my
book
was
several
hundred
pages
long,
it
was
slightly
larger
than
paperback
sized
hardback
with
a
blue
cover
with
some
pictures
on
it.
It
had
one
of
those
names
like
"best
children's
stories"
that
make
searching
for
it
impossible.
My
book
also
had
a
story
about Elizabeth
Barrett Browning and her husband (I think called How do I love thee).
Reply
and
update
on
"Stump
the
Bookseller"
C635:
the
book
is
definitely
NOT
"Highland
Rebel"--but
it
could
be
the
"best
stories"
item
that
is
suggested
in
the
following
post
(the
book
was
several
hundred
pages
long).
I
seem
to
also
remember
that
the
pages
were
thick
and
uneven
on
the
edges
(whatever
that
is
called?).
And
I
believe
the
book
was
quick
definitely
published
before
1940
(given the illustrations I
remember).
C636:
Christmas
1940s childrens' book about a
family getting ready for Christmas.
Little girl baking with mother, cleaning house with kerchief on
head. Family in church on Christmas.
Pictures on each page with some prose, hard yellow (I think)
cover.
Lovely muted illustrations.
C637:
Cauldron of Color
Childrens
book
from
the
70s
(I
think)...medeival
setting...each
page
was
drawn
like
a
"Where's
Waldo
book"
for
its
time...the
world
is
black
and
white
and
a
man
mixes
up
a
cauldron
of
color
and
paints
the
world
one
color...then
one
other
color,
etc.
At
the
end
all
the
colors
mix
in
the
world.
Lobel, Arnold, The Great Blueness and Other
Predicimants, 1968,
copyright. A wizard
invents colors and gives them out to his village. Complaints ensue
until all
the colors are released together,
Arnold Lobel, The Great Blueness. This is
definitely your book! A wizard invents the colors one by one, in his
basement
lab. There are lots of problems until people discover how to mix them.
You can
see a cover image here.
Arnold Lobel, The Great Blueness and Other Predicaments, 1968,
copyright. This is
an old favorite, which is readily available. A wizard living in a gray
world
discovers blue, which everybody wants painted everywhere. The blue
makes
everyone "blue", so he invents yellow, and so on until the world is
colorful.
C638:
Cat, Runaway's
Nickname
Solved: The Runaway's Diary
C639: Cobbler
with a Dilemma
The book I'm looking for was a
story book that my Grandma Hattie read me. My mom was born in 1943
so I'm
guessing it was sometime around then.
It had several stories. One was
about a cobbler who had a naughty green leprechaun in his home that
played
tricks on him. The cobbler decided to set a trap, and he caught
it, but
during the night the naughty leprechaun had a change of
heart and
turned into a good gold leprechaun. Another story was about a
little
girl that had to polish the whole earth. It had a picture of her
sitting on a
rock polishing it with a rag. Another was about a paperdoll family.
There were two old maids that went to visit people at dinner time so
they would
be invited to stay and eat with the paperdoll family. One of the old
maids was
named miss toothpick. I think the cover was pink. It was
about 10 by 12 in size, and probably about 1 1/2 inches thick. It
was
illustrated with sketches, with just a little color here and there. Boy
I would love to find that book! Thanks, Kim
Rowena
Bennet, Sally De Frehn (illus),
Lots of Stories,
1946,
copyright. By
Whitman publishing. Stories include Lucy and the Leprechaun, The Little
Red
Goblin, Down the Chipmunk Hole (about a French doll who falls down a
chipmunk's hole), Mother's Game (the story about the paperdolls, Miss
Hintamaster and Miss Toothpick, who dropped in unannounced for dinner),
The
Fairy Who Fell From the Nest, The Rainy-Day Fairy, The Bunny's Secret,
Mother's May Basket, The Somersault, Big Ruth and Little Ruth, A Golf
Ball Goes
to School, The Roadster's Secret, and many more (74 poems and stories
in
all, 382 pages). Cover is yellow, with pictures of a jack-in-the-box
and a toy
panda, a little boy next to a doll buggy that contains a cat wearing a
blue
dress and bonnet, and right in front, a little girl in a pink dress,
standing
on a pink carpet, holding a yellow tulip and talking to the seated
leprechaun,
who is making a shoe. Pictures continue on the back cover, with a
brown-clad
elf fishing, a lute-playing minstrel, three children flying kites, and
a boy
skiing (with a squirrel and rabbit standing on the skis behind him). A
scarecrow is pictured on the spine. There is another cover (probably a
reprint)
that is gray. It shows a little boy's head, arms and shoulders. He is
leaning on a book and holding a soap-bubble pipe. Pictures from the
stories
appear in soap bubbles around/over his head, including a small dog, a
yellow
duckling in front of a red barn, a rabbit carrying a basket, a
bluebird, and
the seated leprechaun, making a shoe. I don't have a copy of this
version,
but since it is listed as "Lots of Stories", Whitman publishing,
1946, 382 pages, and 73 stories, I assume it to be the same book.
Rowena Bennet, Sally De Frehn (illus.), Lots of Stories, 1946. From the
Solved Mysteries: "Miss Hintamaster
and Miss Toothpick are paper doll "old maids" cut from advertisements
on How to Get Thin and How to Get Fat, and they appear in the story
"Mother's Game". Other stories in this book include A Golf Ball
Goes to School, Lucy and the Leprechaun, The Little Red Goblin, Big
Ruth and
Little Ruth, Peter and the Pumpkin, Down the Chipmunk Hole, Grandma's
Story,
The Unhappy Fir Tree, and many others. Cover is grey, with a picture of
a
smiling little boy in a yellow shirt lying on a throw rug, with a bowl
of soap
bubble mix and a bubble pipe in his hand. Illustrations from some of
the
stories appear in soap bubbles around/above him."
C670:
Caro, brother in wheelchair, rose garden
Solved: The Rose Round
C671: Collection
of
Old
Friends
Cat & Mouse in Partnership, Bluebeard, Puss
in Boots
(both illstd by Gustav Dore), The Brave Tin Soldier, The Tinderbox, Why
the Sea
is Salt, Beauty and the Beast (illstd by Walter Crane), and the
Wonderful Tar
Baby Story (illustrated by EW Kimble). Lg. book w/ others
also-brown/orange/white cover.
Augusta
Baker
(editor),
Best
Loved
Fairy
Tales,
1974.This
book
does
not
have
all
of
the
stories
mentioned,
nor
are
the
illustrations
(by
various
artists)
credited.
But
it
is
a
large
book
with
a
brown/orange/white
cover,
fwiw...It
has
these
stories
(and
more):Puss
in
Boots
,
The
Brave
Tin
Soldier
(Here
as
"The
Steadfast
Tin
Soldier'),
The
Tinderbox,
Why
the
Sea
is
Salt,
Beauty
and the Beast , and the
Wonderful Tar
Baby Story. (and more)
C672:
Christmas
childrens' large
oversized collection from the 1960s or 70s of Christmas stories
--possibly a Big or Giant Golden Book
-- with shiny pictorial cover. One story I remember had a tiny winged
horse
that flew in the window and pretended to be an ornament on an old
fashioned
Christmas tree. There may also have been a story about the Swedish
custom of
the daughter of the house wearing a wreath with candles on Christmas
morning.
These were very good quality illustrations.
Not
a
solution
yet,
but
is
C672
the
same
as
P109? That might help both parties
Corinne Malvern
(illus) Compiled by Gertrude Crampton, The Golden
Christmas Book (A Big Golden Book), 1947. The story about the
winged horse
posing as an ornament is in this book. It is "Pegasus and the Star"
by John Brangwyn. In it, the mythical winged horse Pegasus sees an
image of a
Christmas tree in a floating bubble, and goes to a village to learn
more. The
baker's wife is able to transfrom him into a frosted gingerbread winged
horse
to hang on the tree, so he can see it for himself - though he is
terribly
afraid of being eaten by mistake. He is very nearly eaten by a little
girl,
when a fire breaks out at the baker's house. Pegasus is restored to his
own
form and pulls the water cart to put out the fire. The book contains
many other
Christmas stories, and poems, including Granny Glittens and her Amazing
Mittens, The Peterkins' Christmas Tree, The Cratchits' Christmas
Dinner,
A Visit From Saint Nicholas, and If I Were Santa's Little Boy, plus 10
songs
and an assortment of riddles and puzzles. The front cover shows Santa
with two
small angel children seated on his lap: a boy in a purple robe, beating
a
yellow drum, and a girl in blue, blowing a trumpet and clutching a
candy cane
in her free hand. The wings on both children and the stars in the
background
are printed in a metallic golden ink.
C673:
Children's Picture Book - Look Inside Family Homes throughout Time
80's or early 90's. Inside cover was
yellow with
illustrations. Large book. Picture of homes and the lifestyle a
traditional
family led during different time periods are shown, on two full pages.
Reader
can see inside home into the different rooms. There was a viking ship,
a
castle, and a mansion.
Usborne (publisher), The Time Traveller Book of Long
Ago, 1984,
approximate.
From
your
description,
I
think
you
might
be
remembering
this
book
(slightly
hazily),
especially
if
you're
British.
My copy is a hardback, whose cover
(not inside cover, but
not a dustjacket either) is yellow with four squarish
illustrations.
It's a little bigger than A4 size, and
half an inch thick. It's an omnibus
volume containing four original books: Knights & Castles, Viking
Raiders,
Pharaohs & Pyramids and Rome & Romans.
The first of those includes cutaway pictures showing life inside a
castle, and the second one includes cutaway pictures showing life
inside a
Viking ship. There's no mansion as
such, but the cutaway Roman villa could be mistaken for one.
There's also a small picture of a fairly
posh drawing room in each of the books (illustrating 1900, a
stopping-point on
the reader's journey back through time).The intent of the books is to show
and tell children what
it was like to live in those times, so the emphasis is on everyday
life, not
historical events. I can't find any pictures of this
edition online, but
Usborne books from the 1970s and '80s have a fairly distinctive look,
and in
particular, the Viking one was illustrated by Stephen Cartwright, whose
style
was unique (and charming) you might be able
to find enough to jog your memory (or convince you it's not the answer).One warning: it looks as if there've
been a couple of
reissues, as "The Usborne Time Traveller Books" and "Usborne
Time Traveler", with different covers and slight changes to some of the
illustrations, more recently. Their
covers look nothing like the book I have here.
Terry Martin, Open House, 1996,
copyright.This was
the American edition of the British publisher Dorling Kindersley's
book. It is a Lift-the Flap Book with
over 90 flaps. The cover isn't yellow
but glossy with a picture of a 17th-C. Dutch home of wealthy merchants. In addition, the book depicts an ancient
Roman street with shops, a Scottish tower from over 500 years ago, an
1800's
French farmhouse, and an 18th-C. typical British or American country
mansion, a
Japanese house from 200 years ago and an American store from the "Wild
West". Open the flaps and peer into
the rooms of these buildings.
C674:
Circus, Toile, black & white shifting to color, oddly
shaped book 4" *10"
Oddly shaped little kid Cardboard
book, like
4"*10" horizontal. The book was about a circus, it was all images,
not sure if there were any words. There
were images of a circus like in a toile pattern and it started out in
black
& white and turned into colors as the pages progressed. early 70's.
Munari,
Bruno, Circus in the
Mist, 1969,
approximate.
Thanks
for
the
suggestion,
Circus in the
Mist is not it. Please keep guessing!
C675:
Children's Illustrated Mystery
I can't find a book
that I read in the mid 1980's
that
involved kid's running around town in costumes, like batman and other
super
heroes, to solve a mystery or find a lost item.
I think they used wooden go-carts or scooters to get around town
as
well. It was a short book, around 20-40 pages.
John Peterson, The Secret Hideout.
Since
no-one has answered, I'm
going to hazard a guess. Could it be The Secret Hideout? The kids find
a
notebook hidden behind a loose stone in the basement wall. It is the
notebook
of a secret club, and contains instructions on how to join. They have
to make
lion masks and pass tests/tasks. I could be wrong, but I thought that
there
were instructions at the back of the book for making a scooter out of a
wooden
box.
The
suggestion
is
not
correct.
It's a
group
of
kids
who
all
pretend
to
be
characters
from
the
DC
comics:
Superman,
Batman,
Wonder
Woman,
and
so
on,
and
in
their
favorite
personas,
solve
mysteries
in
their
neighborhood.
They
have
a
backyard
treehouse
they
call
"The
Fortress
of
Solitude",
and
a
suped-up
go
cart
that
is
their
"Batmobile".
Any
ideas?
Cindy West, The Superkids
and the Singing Dog,
1982,
approximate. I read this with my
son not long
ago, it's definitely the right book. The superkids are looking for a
missing
dog.
Odile Ousley and
David Russell,
On Cherry Street Ginn Basic Reader, 1949. Could it
be possible that the football team story you're searching for was in
one of
these school readers? The cover is red
with a yellow inset picture of an organ
grinder, his dancing monkey and a boy and girl.
C676:
Children's Bible Storybook
Hardcover book, 4-5 stories about
Jesus' interactions with
people: a blind man, zacchaeus (the wee man), Jesus calming the storm,
can't
remember rest. Each story begins with solid color page corresponding to
the story
and ends with a few questions. Illustrations from an odd perspective.
C677:
Childrens book with detailed illustrations and clues and a real
treasure to find
Solved: Masquerade
C678:
Children Sleeping (Homes?) Around the World
Published before 1990, probably 70s. I
wanna say the
title was "Where do YOU sleep?" Each page would start with that
question(?) and then a new child would say, "I sleep in a bed" or
"I sleep in a hut" or "...on the floor"...or "in an
igloo," etc. Early, simple multicultural/global awareness.
Theo LeSieg (aka Dr. Seuss), Come Over to My House. This
beloved classic doesn't have the recognizable Dr. Seuss pictures, but
beautiful illustrations by Richard Erdoes instead, picturing houses and
living
styles around the world.
Come Over to My House.
Could
the
requester
be
thinking
of
Come
Over
to
My
House,
Come
Over
and
Play?
The
book
does
have
a
page
showing
children
sleeping
in
various
ways
according
to
their
home/culture.
Theo
LeSieg
(better
known
as
Dr.
Seuss)
Richard
Erdoes
(illus),
Come
Over to My
House, 1966, 1970 reprint,
copyright. Sounds
like you might be looking for this one. "Come Over to My House is a
multicultural look at playdates around the world and the homes and
young people
that go with them. A little boy wanders across the globe and sees what
life is
like in different houses from thatched huts to tents in the wind to
igloos."
C679:
Countryside
Written (probably) 1940-1960 - wish I
could be surer or
more specific. I probably read it in c. 1965 at age 10 give or take,
but it in
retrospect it might have a late 50s-early 60s "feel" to it. Got it at
yard sale, so purchase time/venue no help on that. A
girl living in a city apartment with Mom and Dad (don't
recall siblings, may have been 1 or 2) has to move with her family to
the
country - probably due to Dad's job, but not sure. Don't think there
was any
financial come-down. She very much enjoys roller skating in the city,
but there
will be few sidewalks or pavements, so that'll be out, and she is
upset. For
some reason, she is also asked to pare down her toys/belongings/games -
I guess
there will be less room - and she finds that upsetting, as well. The
whole move
is disconcerting and upsetting. I think she doesn't much care for the
house/cottage when they get there.
Naturally, once in the country,
eventually she finds
things to enjoy - the school, the neighbors, the small-rural-town
chumminess of
it all. She especially enjoys their winter fun, with a kind of
cross-country
ice-skating (I swear) over the black ice in the woods, it was
especially noted,
as a favorite pasttime. Don't remember much else, except there *might*
have
been some pencil or pen-and-ink illustrations - or maybe just on the
dustjacket.That's it. Do let me know if/when/where you
post this,
and if there's anything else I can do for you, in terms of
graphics/art, etc.
The
Four-Story
Mistake.
Some
details sound like Elizabeth Enright'\''s The Four-Story Mistake--the
move to
the country (somewhat reluctantly for Randy, the most sentimental
child), and
the skating through the woods. But there
was no paring down of stuff--in fact, it'\''s mentioned that they pack
roller
skates. So maybe not the right book.
Ruth Sawyer, Year of Jubilo, 1940. I am pretty sure this is Ruth
Sawyer's Year of
Jubilo, not the Elizabeth Enright book. The girl is named
Lucinda and this is the sequel to Roller
Skates, which
is a charming portrait of a young girl's childhood in NYC at the turn
of the
century. In Year of Jubilo,
her father
has died, and her mother and brothers must leave their city life for a
more
affordable home in the countryside. Lots
of adventures ensue, and Lucinda decides her new life is not so bad
after
all. The books are semi-autobiographical
and the author's daughter Peggy married children's author Robert
McCloskey (Make Way for Ducklings
Ruth
Sawyer, The Year of
Jubilo. Perhaps
it's the mention of the
roller skates that reminded me. It has
been years since I read The Year of
Jubilo, which is the sequel to Roller
Skates, so I don't remember the details, but it's a possible
solution. Lucinda and her family have to
move to their summer cottage in Maine when her father dies.
Carol
Ryrie
Brink,
Winter Cottage.
This
sounds vaguely like Winter Cottage, except that the family in question
didn't intend to move into the cottage. It's set during the depression,
and the family has lost their home in the city. Their car breaks down
and they
find a summer home that they decide to "rent" for the winter.
Probably not it, but the winter scenes sound
very similar.
C680:
Camping Trip
YA book about two high school kids who
get separated from
their camping trip. I think his name is
Richard. Her name might be Claire. They survive by eating
oatmeal. A bear gets into one of their backpacks and
Richard breaks his leg before they are rescued.
Thanks!
Laurel
Trivelpiece, Just a Little Bit Lost, 1988. Bennett
is the girl, Phillip is the boy, but I'm fairly sure that this is the
book.
C681:
Children make newspaper
The book is about children who make a
newspaper in the
garage or some other building in the backyard and was probably
published
sometime between the thirties and the fifties. I remember it had a blue
cover
and I believe the last name of the author was White.
John D. Fitzgerald, More
Adventures of the Great Brain. Part
of
the
"Great
Brain"
book
series,
set
in
Utah
during
the
1890's.
In
chapter
four,
"Tom
Scoops
Papa's
Newspaper,"
eleven-year-old
Tom
is
hurt
when
his
father
says
he
is
too
young
to
help
him
at
the
Advocate,
the
town's
weekly
newspaper.
Tom
asks
his
father
if
he
can
have
the
old
printing
press
that
is
boxed
up in the back room, so he and younger brother JD can practice
being
newspapermen. They set up the press in their barn, enlist some of their
friends
as reporters, and start up their own paper, The Adenville Bugle, to
"compete" with their father's paper. When the town bank is robbed,
Tom convinces one of his junior reporters - the son of the Cafe owner -
to hide
behind the counter and eavesdrop on the customers, hoping to discover
clues
leading to the identity of the robbers. Sure enough, Basil overhears
the two
robbers arguing about whether to take the money and leave town right
away, or
to lay low for a while to throw off suspicion. They even disclose where
the
money is hidden. Tom prints the story is his newspaper, then sends
Basil and JD
with a copy of the story to their uncle Mark, the town Marshal, so he
can make
the arrests. Once the arrests have been made, the boys sell out every
copy of
their newspaper. Unfortunately, they have also included as "local
news" the embarrassing secrets and scandals of a number of the other
townsfolk, leading to an angry mob, screaming, crying, fighting, and
threatening
lawsuits. Papa and Uncle Mark calm down the mob and Papa gives Tom a
lecture on
journalistic integrity and responsibility. Then, as punishment, Papa
takes away
the printing press, makes Tom personally apologize to everyone he has
offended,
takes away his allowance, and imposes the "silent treatment" on him
and JD for four weeks.
C682:
Cindy or Skipper
Solved: Lone Swimmer, Haunted
Island et al. Sindy Adventure Series
C683:
Cat, kittens, lost, siblings, fifties
The book we are looking for was mine as a
child (I was born in 1951). It was a larger book than the standard
"Elf" books, maybe 8x11 inches. We "think" its a blue cover but don't
exactly remember the picture. My children loved the book when they were
at the grandparents house but we don't know what happened to it when
the house was sold. Best we can remember, there were two children in
the story (brother and sister? two friends (boy and girl)?) and they
were looking for their cat which had gone missing. They searched high
and low and finally found the cat with a new litter of kittens in a
closet in the house. We found a book called Good, A Mother Cat by Inez Bertail,
but the book cover does not look like what we think it should. Also
found a book about a lost cat with kittens in a barn. Any help would be
appreciated. I would love to find this book. Thank you so much for
trying to help locate this.
Mabel Watts, Hildy's
Hideaway, 1961. When
I
was
about
five,
my
great
grandfather
gave
me
this
and
asked
me
to
read
it
to
him.
(He
was
blind
at
the
end
of
his
life.)
After
I
read
it,
he
told
me
I
had
done
such
a
nice
job
that
I
could
keep
the
book.
I
have
never
forgotten
it!
C684: Children
find
new
baby
in
backyard
The children find the baby in the
garden-if this is
garden meaning back yard, the story could be English. The buggy
features in my daughter's memory
of this book.The children seem to keep the baby's presence secret
from the elders. She loved this story, and maybe because she was then
an
unwilling reader, has a poor remembrance of it.
My
daughters
have
become
greatly
desirous
of
finding
grade-school
stories
and
books,
and
just
this
summer
I
have
retrieved
King of the Dollhouse by
Patricia Clapp, for my oldest daughter who is 45 y/o
this month! Additional
note:
The
children
bathed
the
found-
baby
in
an
old-fashioned
rubber-
sling
bath.For
those
of
us
old
enough
to
have
experienced
bathing
our
own,
or
our
Mother’s
tiny
babies
in
these
contraptions, the mere
mention should jog someone’s memory!
Teal, Val, Angel Child, 1946. You're not the first person
who's asked about this book
Wylly Folk
St. John, Mystery
of the Gingerbread House, 1969. Was it a
mystery? It could be this one...two brothers find a baby left in their
yard,
with a note on her that says her name is Joy. They're determined to
solve
the mystery. When a girl starts hanging around their house, they figure
out
she's the one who left the baby, and discover that her mother has died
and
she's trying to find her grandmother, so she can take in the sisters.
(The
kids are all ten and twelve.) All she
has is a photo of a fancy house. The boys help her follow the clues,
while
trying to avoid her stepfather. One of the things I remembered most
about this
book was that the girl cries "perfect tears"...fat drops that just
well from her eyes. It takes place in
Atlanta, GA, if that helps.
C685a:
Chess Playing Orphan on
Mars
central character is a homeless boy,
living on mars (I
think), with a very thin atmosphere, meaning he's always looking for
oxygen
cylinders... This boy is also a chess player, and when he plays against
someone, a move is recognised as a "family" move and he is re-united
with his family.
Heinlein, Robert A, The
Rolling Stones. It's
a
long
shot,
but
some
elements
of
this
request
resemble
"The
Rolling
Stones"
by
Robert
A.
Heinlein.
C685:
Corruption in the roman army
Scholarly
book
about
fall
of
the
Roman
empire
w/
evidence
suggesting
cause
was
gradual
institutionalization
of
financial
corruption
in
the
military;
local
citizens
began
to
consider
the
Roman
forces
their
financial
oppressors
rather
than
their
protectors.
translated
from
french.
Not
Ramsay
McMullen...I
am
looking
to
acquire
a
particular
source/scholarly
book
about
the
fall
of
the
Roman
empire
that
presented
evidence
suggesting
one
big
reasons
for
the
fall
was
the
gradual
institutionalization
of
financial
corruption
in the military.
I
believe that is was translated from french originally; however, I am
unsure of the title, or even the author! Many attempts as research has
led to the suggestion that the book is Ramsay
McMullen's corruption and the decline of rome; however, it turns out
that this
is not the appropriate volume I am looking for. He says this
title by McMullen is
more "flamboyantly written" and "less scholarly" than the
book he is thinking of, as its author makes heavy use of
quotes.
The
narrative
he
offers
is
this:
"At
first,
military
commanders
were
condemned
and
disciplined
if
they
stole money from the shipments of soldiers' pay. Then military
commanders came to have a right to taking some of the money. Then so
little of their pay was getting to the soldiers that they didn't have
enough money to live on, so the soldiers began routinely looting the
populations where they were stationed. Finally, the local citizens
began to consider the Roman forces their financial oppressors rather
than their protectors. As a result, the citizenry came not to care much
when barbarians came to drive out the Roman forces."
Thus,
I
was
wondering
if
you
by
any
chance
would
be
able
to
help
me
identify
the
author
and
title
of
this
book
referenced
above,
so
I
could
go
about
acquiring
it.
I'm
just
wondering
whether
this
might
be
one
of
Rosemary
Sutcliffe's stories. She wrote several
about the Roman Army in Britain. Including most notably ''Eagle of The Ninth."
C686:
Cookie cutters, rabbit, carrot
SOLVED:The
Bunny
Bakeshop, 1989.
C687:
Rabbit grows carrots
I am looking for a
book about a small rabbit who grows carrots. Near the end of the book,
a small
rabbit lays down next to his carrot to see who is bigger: the bunny or
the
carrot. As I recall, the book was possibly called "A
CARROT IS TO GROW" but I have never been able to find a book by this
name
on any search engine at places that sell old books. The
actual
book was small - about the size of the Harold & Purple Crayon
Books by
Crockett Johnson. It is not "THE CARROT SEED"
by Ruth Krauss, though I recall the art work as being somewhat
similar. I read this to my daughter in the late 1970's
or
early 1980's. Here's hoping someone knows the name of
this
book!
Robert Kraus, The Littlest
Rabbit.
The
littlest rabbit is so little,
even a carrot is bigger than him! It's by Robert Kraus.
Robert Kraus, The Littlest
Rabbit. I'm
pretty sure this is the right book there
is a picture of the rabbit lying next to a carrot to show his
size.
When he finally grows bigger he beats up two
bullies who are picking on little rabbits.
C688:
Cat face map opens secret
door
A book (published before 1995) about a
couple kids who
are in a big old house. They find a crumpled piece of paper in the
trash of an
unused bedroom, which turns out to be a map. They eventually open a
secret
door/wall by pressing knots in the wood in a particular order (looks
like a cat
face).
Brent
Locke,
Mystery of the
Hidden Cat.
For
sure.
This certainly seems
like the book I remember,
based on what little I can find about it on the internet. There is
surprisingly
little about the author or book anywhere! I remember it was a faded
blue
(fabric?) hardcover that I had checked out from my school library, and
Mystery
of the Hidden Cat was published in 1957 which sort of fits. I can't say
definitively because I can't find a full plot summary anywhere, let
alone
the actual book. Thank you though!
Brent
Locke,
Mystery of the
Hidden Cat.
I
haven't finished unpacking from
a move and don't at the moment have access to my copy of the book, but
here's what I remember (SPOILER WARNING):
Two girls (I can't remember any names, sorry) have a sort of hidden
meeting place in the tall plants at the edge of the yard of a deserted
old
house. One day they see people moving
in turns out to be a man, his daughter,
and his sister. Girls are afraid the
plants will be cut down, but they bump into the new girl and she
convinces her
father not to cut them. He is a writer,
I believe, and is in poor health, and they don'\''t have much
money.
He inherited the house. There is fear that he will lose the house
because someone loaned money to the previous owner and allegedly it was
never
paid back, and the person holding the debt wants to take the house
(because
there is story about hidden treasure).
The girls find a paper that leads them to believe that in fact the
money
was paid back. They also find secret
passages in the house, that among other things lead up to a hidden part
of the
attic. There's a wall with knotholes,
and they use the pattern of a drawing of a cat to know in which order
to push
the knotholes. They find proof that the
loan was repaid, and they find a room full of antique furniture.
(Details are sketchy I read it only once after looking for years
for a copy after someone recommended it).
There is a sequel, The Mystery of the Vanishing Jaguar, which is quite
easy to find.
C689:
child pianist, car
accident and convalescence at relations in country
SOLVED: Summer
of the Silent Hands
C690:
colorful bird that teaches
colors and counting
I think the book was made in the mid
80's, where a bird
possibly a macaw or a parrot teaches colors and counting. On some of
the pages
he is holding a painters palet in one wing and a brush in the other. I
think at
the end of the book it shows you rectangles of all the different colors
he
taught you.
J.P.
Miller, Do You Know Colors, 1978. A parrot with a
palette flies
through this book, introducing colors and explaining how they can be
mixed to
form new ones.The flora and fauna are labeled by name as well as color.
C691:
Childs illustrated poetry
book
Childrens illustrated poetry book, inc
a poem which I
think is called A Child's Thought, by R. L. Stevenson (at 7 when I go
to
bed....). Pic is of a castle on a hill with a horse at the bottom.
Another one
of the poems relates to poppies, lady with poppies in her hair?
Robert Louis Stevenson, A
Child's Garden of Verses.
C692:
Children need money to go to circus
The circus is coming to town and a
sister and brother
need money to go to the circus. They
plan to ask their babysitter/nanny/caretaker as her purse has been full
of
money. However she has just purchased a
new hat for which she has been saving.
How did they get the money?
Mary Nash, While Mrs.
Coverlet Was Away.
This may
be While Mrs. Coverlet Was Away. The three Persever children are
usually
watched by their housekeeper, Mrs Coverlet, but she is called away by a
family
emergency. I can't remember why the children want money, but they try
all
different schemes. I believe they finally earn money through their cat
(she's a rare breed, and they end up selling her or her kittens)
C693:
Cheese, Peas, and
Chocolate Pudding
This is a picture book about a
little boy who will eat only different kinds of cheese, different kinds
of peas and chocolate pudding. When his brother drops a hamburger crumb
in the boy's mouth by accident, he likes hamburgers also. In the end he
likes all types of food.
This
is
in
the
Solved
Mysteries
under
''C''. It appears to be in a
collection of stories, and its title is "Cheese, Peas, and Chocolate
Pudding."
C694:
children's book, 1970's,
"The Man Who Couldn't Read"
A man who can't read is sent to the
store by his wife and
instead of buying soup, ends up buying soap because the boxes look the
same. This is just one of many such
misadventures. (I'm hoping to surprise a
good friend by finding this favorite childhood book! )
Irma Simonton Black,
Seymour
Fleishman, The Little Old Man Who
Could Not Read, 1968. Its
about a little old man who makes toys and cannot read. Children that
play with
his toys write him letters, but he cannot read them.Usually
his
wife
buys
the
groceries,
but
she
goes
on
a
trip.
While
she's
gone
he
has
to
get
groceries.
She
asks
him
to
get
a
can
of
soup,
a
big
can
of
spaghetti
sauce,
spaghetti,
sugar,
milk
and
oatmeal.
Since
he
can't
read,
he
buys
groceries
by
looking
at
the
containers
and
the
pictures.
Irma Simonton
Black, The Little Old Man Who Could
Not
Read.
The
Little
Old
Man
Who
Could
Not
Read
by Irma
Black and Seymour Fleishman, 1976.
C695: Central/South America jungle, girl
This book was about a young girl who went to
Central or South America (for a visit?).
It seemed very exotic to me as there were parrots flying around
in the
jungle.
Lloyd
Alexander, The El
Dorado Mystery. Could this be the book about Holly
Vesper the intrepid 16 year old adventurer who goes to Central America
to solve
a mystery?
Eva
Ibbotson, Journey to the
River Sea, 2002.
"In 1910, Maia, an English
orphan, accompanied by her newly appointed governess, Miss Minton, sets
off to
Brazil to live with distant cousins. She dreams of exploring the banks
of the
Amazon and viewing exotic wildlife, but her self-serving cousins and
their
spoiled twin daughters despise the outdoors--almost as much as they
despise
Maia. The heroine feels like a prisoner, forced to live inside the
"dark
clinical green" walls of her relatives' bungalow. Her life would be
dismal indeed, if she didn't sneak out every once in a while to meet up
with
two other orphans with whom she has crossed paths: Clovis, a traveling
actor,
who longs to return to England, and Finn, a rich heir, who would rather
live
with the "Indians" than be sent to the British estate where his
grandfather eagerly awaits his arrival."
There are macaws in the jungle.
2011
C696: Cat or dog as
chimney sweep in story/picture book
This story was about a cat or dog as a
chimney sweep or
something similar, who wears clothes & is in a town/village with
other
animals living like people. Very detailed, colorful illustrations. Read
in
early-mid 1980s but probably older than that. Not Mister Dog &
TobyTown
seems too long.
Richard Scarry, Richard
Scarry's Busy, Busy World, 1970. Has
the
story
of
Schmudge
the
German
Chimney
Sweep...
I just wanted to let you know that I've been checking the
stumpers page and the one comment about the Richard Scarry book listed
under my
stumper C696 is not the one I'm looking for. The illustrations in
the
book I've been looking for are more ornate and detailed, if that helps
any. Thank you to whoever posted the comment though!
Thanks, we'll keep trying!
Tasha Tudor. Just a
guess, but your description of the illustrations made me think of Tasha
Tudor.
I don't know what specific book it might be, but she did have several
with
animal characters, the Corgiville series in particular.
Katharine
Hale, Orlando the Marmalade Cat Is it
possible that you are thinking of one of the ''Orlando'' books? They
involve Orlando, his wife Grace, and children. They wear human clothes
- I
think at least one may involve a sweep, although I don't remember which
one.
Good
Luck!
Hi, I checked back on the Stumpers page and the
Corgiville
and Marmalade books aren't the one I'm looking for. I'm still looking
and
haven't been able to find the book. Thanks for the suggestions though!
C697:
Collection
of
christmas
stories
/
hardback
book
This is a hardback, rather big book.
yellowish cover with
a black train at an angle on the left side and 3 children walking in
the snow
as the main picture. there is one story where they are in a cottage and
an elf
comes and gets turned upside down by the children and stuff falls out
of his
pockets
C698:
Children's
poems/stories
anthology
Children's poems/stories anthology.
1950s. Included Table
and the Chair, Walrus and the Carpenter, O. Henry's The Gift, Casey at
the Bat,
etc. Several-hundred double-column pages. Based on browsing stumper entries the other
day, I
strongly suspect it may be the "Arbuthnot Anthology of Children's
Literature" (double columns, 1000+ pages), but can't be sure without
seeing a Table of Contents. Update: I determined that the Arbuthnot Anthology
is defnitely
NOT the one I'd suspected it was. Shucks!! Maybe someone will have a
clue....
Johnson,
Sickels,
Sayers, Anthology of Children's
Literature. A long shot, but if it was a
children's lit anthology, the Johnson, Sickels, & Sayers collection
first appeared circa 1938. (The stories
and poems listed in the post are not in the 5th edition, from the
1960s, but
might be in earlier editions.) Also,
Arbuthnot had a 1952 collection, Time
for
Fairy
Tales
Old
and
New, in addition
to her anthologies.
C699:
Chief
Joseph
biography
or
fictionalized
history
Back in 1972 in 8th grade I read a
book about Chief
Joseph which inspired me to memorize and recite his famous speech for
my
class. The book had a beautiful painting
of Chief Joseph on the cover. the author
was male and wrote several other biography type books that I remember
enjoying.
Shannon Garst, Chief Joseph
of the Nez Perce, 1968. I
don't
know
if
this
is
the
book
you're
looking
for,
from
your
description,
but
Shannon
Garst
was
a
popular
YA
biographer
in
the
'50's
and
'60's.
Other
biographies
include
Crazy
Horse,
Kit
Carson,
Custer,
Will
Rogers,
Jack
London,
Buffalo
Bill,
and
Amelia
Earhart,
plus
many
more.
Some
of
the
covers
were
illustrated
with
colorful
realistic
portraits.
C700:
Children's
book-Teacher
disguised as a witch to teach a lesson
SOLVED: Harry Allard and
James Marshall, Miss Nelson is Missing!
C701: Cow that says
"When I'm calling moo-moo-moo"
I'm looking for a children's book read
to us in the 2nd
grade (1982) about a group of farm animals.
I remember the cow would say "When I'm calling
moo-moo-moo". She also tried to
jump over the moon like the nursery rhyme and the animals tried to
build a swimming
pool out of bricks.
Walter R Brooks,
Freddy
series.
This
is
a
real
long
shot,
but
could
this
be
one
of
the
"Freddy
the
Pig"
series? There
were
three
cows,
Mrs
Wiggens,
Mrs
Wogus
and
Mrs Wurzburger, and I have a dim recollection of one of them trying
to jump
over the moon in one of the books. The
other things, such as the singing, would certainly be true to the
spirit of the
books.
C702:
Childrens Anthology from late 50's/early 60's
The
stories
I
remember
are
The
Nightingale
and
a
story
about
a
barn
that
caught
on
fire,
but
since
it
was
full
of
popcorn-the
farm
was
soon
filled
with
popped
corn.
The
"Emperor's
New
Clothes"
might
have
been
in
it
too.
It
was
about
10"
squarish,
with
a
mostly
green
cover.
Many
thanks!
Pauline Rush
Evans(ed), The
Family Treasury of Children's Stories, Vol 2, 1956. This is the 2nd in
a 3 volume set,
the cover has story characters colored mainly green. The story about
the barn
burning and the popcorn is one of Carl Sandburg's Rootabaga stories:
The
Huckabuck Family And How They Raised Popcorn in Nebraska And Quit And
came
Back, its on pages 148-152. The Nightingale isn't in this volume or the
other
two, but The Emperor's New Clothes is the very first story in this
volume.
The
popped
corn
story
is
The
Huckabuck Family, by Carl Sandburg. I think that Sid Flieschman
may have
written a version in his McBroom series
as
well.
I
don't
know
the
anthology,
but
maybe
having
the
title
of
the
story
could
help?
C703:
Children's
verse
(anthology)
This is a golden book, published in
the
late '40's, early
'50's. Included were poems such as "I'm hiding, I'm hiding", some of
Walter de la Mare, Robert Louis Stevenson (When I was sick and lay
abed); there
once was a puffin, and an elusive one about a key to a cupboard and in
it were
banburry tarts.
Your
"elusive" poem is The Cupboard, by Walter de la Mare.
Jane Werner,
editor,
The
Golden Book of Poetry, 1949.
This
one
contains
The
Puffin
and
the
Penguin,
The
Cupboard,
and
quite
a
few
by
Stevenson
and
Walter
de
la
Mare.
Not
sure
about
"I'm
Hiding,"
though.
Pictures
by
Gertrude
Elliott.
My
copy
is
a
large
yellow
book
with
a
boy
in
a
red
sweater
and
a
girl
in
a
blue
dress
walking down a lane on the
cover.
C704:
Children
grown
down
in
size
Land where childern start off at their
adult size and
grow downwards. Also, a kid is punished and has to dig a hole through a
mountain. From the same book.
Norton Juster, The Phantom
Tollbooth. 1961. The
book
you
want
is
probably The
Phantom Tollbooth. The boy who
grows
down from his adult height is definitely here.
There is also the event of digging a hole in a mountain,
although
it's not so much a punishment as a tedious task to keep the hero, Milo,
from
completing his quest. He is trying to
rescue the sister Rhyme and Reason from their tower atop the mountain,
to
restore sanity to the kingdoms of Digitopolis and Dictionopolis.
Phantom
Tollbooth.
Norton
Juster, The Phantom
Tollbooth, 1961.
Milo,
a
young
boy
who
finds
everything
boring,
discovers
a
magic
tollbooth
in
his
room
one
day
and
takes
a
ride
into
the
Kingdom
of
Wisdom. He goes
on many adventures and visits a forest where people are born into their
adult
height- they grow down and eventually hit the ground.
On the way to save the Princesses Rhyme and
Reason, Milo is sidetracked by the Terrible Trivium who presents him
with tasks
such as sharpening pencils and digging through a mountain with a spoon. Hope this is what you're looking for!
C705:
Children's
book
set
in
english
country
estate
called
Castle
Combe
SOLVED: Norman Dale, The Casket and
the Sword, 1956.
C706:
Christmas doll buried
The
first
is
about
a
book
with
a
girl
who
gets
a
new
doll
for
Christmas.
The
doll
gets
buried out in the snow by a jealous cousin I think, and found
again in
the spring. Someone's name is Elizabeth, maybe the doll.
Is
it possible that the poster is thinking of more than one story?
Because the lost doll named Elizabeth (with
the connection to Christmas) sounds like Magic Elizabeth, by Norma
Kassirer. But the jealous cousin...that
sounds more like Twin Spell/Double
Spell by Janet Lunn...or
the lost doll could
be The
Most Wonderful Doll in the World, by Phyllis McGinley, or even On the
Banks of Plum Creek, where
Laura's doll is taken by a neighbour child and then
left in a puddle.
Eloise
Lownsbery, Marta The
Doll. Probably
not the one you are looking for, but does have Christmas & the doll
lost in
snow. "Hanka is next to youngest in a Polish farm family. Older sister
knows how to do housework, big brother is wonderful at carving and
herding, but
six year old Hanka is not useful for anything. She longs for a doll --
longs so
greatly that older sister gives up a new skirt so Hanka can have a
beautiful
doll. Everywhere that she goes Hanka takes her dear Marta -- Grandpa
tells
stories, they go to a wedding, and the little mother explains
everything to her
child. One day when she is coasting, hanka loses the doll
in the snow. Her grief is almost to great to bear until she is prompted
to
believe the doll will be returned to her. On Christmas Eve, Burek, the
dog,
brings a slightly paler Marta home and the whole family shares in
Hanka's
happiness. The feeling of loving family ties, of
cherished legends and celebrations, makes a pleasing background for
Hanka's
poignant little story."
Liesel
Moak Skorpen,
Elizabeth, 1970. You're thinking of
"Elizabeth" by Liesel Moak Skorpen, illustrated
by Martha Alexander
(1970). Kate gets a cloth doll for Christmas instead of the walking,
talking
doll she wanted. She gives it to her collie, James, and he buries it
out in the
snow. After lunch, she regrets this and takes the doll back. Kate names
her
Elizabeth and they become best friends. There is a mean cousin in the
book --
during a trip to the beach, she tosses Elizabeth into the ocean (but
James
rescues her). This book is very hard to find, but is still a favorite
in our
house at Christmastime!
C707:
Christmas
Story
Collection
A book of Christmas stories I had in
the
early 80's. There were many stories in it, but the only one I remember
is one
where Santa's sleigh gets stuck in a bog and someone helps him out and
saves
Christmas.
C708:
Clarinda and the Ducks
I'm looking for a children's book
probably
written/published in the 40s or 50s. We
think it's title is: Clarinda and the Ducks.
It's about a little girl who's very dirty and doesn't want to
take a bath. She finally does and a duck comes up through the
drain. Then she follows the duck down
the drain and into the river. and so
on. It has some line drawing pictures. Anyone know anything
about it?
Frances
Duncombe, Clarinda, 1944,
approximate.
According
to
the
New
Yorker,
an
"airy
tale
of
a
little
girl
who,
when
she
felt
rebellious,
had
a
habit
of
popping
down
the
bathtub
drain
into
a
world
of
talking
ducks
.
.
."
C709:
Car with headlights
for eyes and grille for mouth
I was a four or
five when I saw this book. I was born in 1954. I don't
remember reading, though there certainly must have been a title and
story. The cars and other vehicles had eyes in their headlights
(not in
the windshield like the movie "Cars"), but their grilles were mouths
(like "Cars"). The story was set in a city landscape.
There may have been a steam shovel. Some of the cars were unhappy
with
the main character. I think they even beeped at him. My
sense is
that he was lost, but he found his way home. Thank you for any
help you
can give in naming this book.
Ingri
and Edgar
Parin
d'Aulaire, The Two Cars. This may be the one you remember.
In
regards to C709,
your comment that it might be "The Two Cars" is in the right decade
(1955 when it was first published), but I checked on Amazon at their
"Look
Inside" page, and the illustrations are not what I remember. Yes,
the headlights are like eyes, but the bumpers and grilles had more
expression
to them in the book I recall. Thank you for telling me about this
one
though.
Emerson, Caroline, illustrated by Paul
Galdone, The Little Green Car,
1940. This matches your description of the headlight eyes and
grille mouths. The story begins with other cars and being frustrated
with the little green car and beeping at him. We have a copy here at
Loganberry!
C710:
Cowboy herds and finds
lost horses
I remember this picture book from the
early
1960's. The
cowboy has to find lost horses one at a time. I think he had started
out
herding them and they had become lost. The color drawings were not
realistic but
more childlike I think.
C711:
Castaway
girls
on
island
Probably from late 80s or early 90s
and less than 200
pages. There were teenage girls on an island (no boys, from what I
remember)--I
think they were shipwrecked, but I'm not sure. The only plot points I
remember
were that one girl was jabbed in the leg with coral and there was a
run-in with
a shark
William Golding, Lord of the
Flies, 1954. Other than the
mention of teen
girls, your description is very similar to this excellent but dark
book. Are
you sure they were girls??
Linda Williams
Aber, Lost
Girls (Book #1 "Adrift" and Book #2 "Alone"),
1990,
approximate. Maybe
a long shot, but this two-book series is a possibility: "An improbably
incompatible crew of six sets sail for a week-long cruise in this first
volume
of a new series. There is a good deal of bickering among the girls ...
But
survival rather than squabbling becomes the girls' main concern when a
sudden storm sinks their boat, and they take refuge on a deserted
island.
Marianne
Wiggins, John
Dollar, 1989. Somewhat
gruesome
and
definitely
not
for
children,
but
it
is
about
girls
shipwrecked
on
an
island.
(At the time, much was made of the fact
that
the author was married to Salman Rushdie and came out of hiding with
him to
promote the book.)
C712:
Children's
Short
Story
Collection
I remember one story was about a kid
making a little
person out of an acorn and some pins. The only other story I remember
from the
book was about a girl taking a lion, named Noil, to school to scare
bullies,
and she ended up becoming more confident on her own. I don't remember
the other
stories.
C713:
Character
named
Peaky,
obsessed
with
Jo
March
from
Little
Women
Looking for a young adult novel from the late 1960s or
early 70s. Main character was a girl named Peaky who was semi-obsessed
by Jo
March from Little Women. She is sent to a boarding school during WW1
(?) during
an outbreak of Spanish Influenza. Need title and author.
Lavinia Russ, Over the Hills
and Far Away, 1968.
It
sounds as if this might be Over the Hills and
Far Away (with a British
title
of And
Peakie
Lived
Happily
Ever
After).
It's
set in 1917, with a twelve-year-old protagonist who goes off to
a private school during the course of the story.
C714:
Children's
SciFi
series,
hardcover
gray
slender
rock
and
star?
1979 Grade 5
Several stories per book. Gray
clothbound with small colored simple picture, a rock and a star.
The boy scuba dived in the waterfilled cave
with the star. He became a star. Or only one jungle left on
earth, as they
escape with animals, machines tear last jungle down. Thanks!
C715:
Crazy
old
woman;
children's
story;
upside
down
picture
Children's story about an old woman
who had her home set
up strangely that everyone thought she was crazy. Every "strange"
thing was logical
when they got to know her. The picture
of her husband hung upside down on the wall (or maybe the ceiling) so
that she
could see it when she was lying down.
Betty MacDonald, Mrs. Piggle
Wiggle Series.
This
is
a
series.
The
first
book
was
written
in
1947,
yet
it
is
still
available
in
bookstores
today.
It's
about
a
women
who
moves
into
a
neighborhood
and
her
house
is
upside
down
and
she
proceeds
to
cure
the
bad
habits
of
the
children
in
her
neighborhood.
Everyone
thinks
she
strange,
but
as
she
helps
them
they
come
to
love
her.
Norris,
Pamela?, Mr. Bailey, 1980s,
approximate. This sounds like an
episode of the
1980s TV Show
Designing Women. The characters have
a client who dies and leaves
all her money to her cat, "Mr. Bailey." They find her house decorated
in a strange way, with the dead woman's husband's picture upside down,
car license plates nailed to the walls, etc. It's later found that
there's a logical explanation for everything - the portrait is hung
that way
so the woman could see it while lying on the couch the license
plates are valuable
collector's items, and the cat actually earned all the money starring
in a
commercial. The episode was called "Mr. Bailey" and it is credited in
IMDB as written by Pamela Norris. Maybe you are remembering the TV show
as a
story, or maybe it was based on a children's story, maybe plagarized?
or
maybe Ms. Norris just didn't remember she had read the story before.
C716:
City
under
the
sea,
crystal,
Saa,
dome
SOLVED:
Gerry
Turner, Stranger From
The Depths, 1967.
C717:
Caveman
twins
When I was a kid in the early 70s, I
read a whole set of
picture books or easy readers about brother and sister twins who
traveled to
different places and times. The only one I clearly remember is when
they became
cavekids! I think they also went to France and to outer space, but I'm
not
sure.
Any chance that this is Lucy
Fitch
Perkins?
Lucy Fitch Perkins,
Cavetwins, 1916, reprinted in 1968. Firetop
and Firefly go to prehistoric times
I
don't
think it's the
Perkins books, though the listing of titles sure looks right. I thought
the
books I read were shorter/younger and the illustrations
simpler/younger/cleaner.
I feel like if I could see the covers, I'd be able to tell. I'll
explore
further on this set and anything anyone else has to suggest--thanks.
C718:
Cereal
Box
Cutout
Magical
World
is
Thrown
in
Fire
SOLVED: Aiken, Joan, The Serial
Garden.
C719:
Circus
dog
SOLVED: Dorothy Kunhardt, Pee Wee
the Circus Dog or Now Open the Box, 1948.
C720:
Children's
book
about
boy
and
bears
with
fill
in
the
blanks
The book was great because it was a
different story every
time I read it. There were blanks in the
text and you pulled out a slip of paper with a word on it. This
would have been around 1963 or 1964 (I
was 8 or 9). I think the story was about
a boy and some bears. Yellow cover?
C721:
Children
marooned
on
sinking
island
SOLVED: Helen Mather-Smith
Mindlin,
Dangerous Island, 1956.
C722:
Classic
Fairy
Tales
White hardcover book w/ title "Classic
Fairy
Tales" on the front with blue letters. Below title is illustration of
Cinderella and Prince at ball c.1700s. Cinderella has a white powdered
wig and
a golden/yellow dress. First/last pages forest w/ characters. Author
unknown
pub. 1980s-early90s.
Hadaway, Bridget, Fairy
Tales. I
just
suggested
Hadaway's
book
a
few
weeks
ago
to
another
stumper,
but
I
think
it
could
what
you
are
looking
for
as
well.
It
has
a
number
of
familiar
fairy
tales
with
beautiful
illustrations,
and
was
printed
from
1971
to
sometime
in
the
late
80's.
Check
out
the
solved
mystery
pages
for
more information.
C723:
Child
finds
room
with
mechanical
toys
SOLVED:
Gillian Cross, Roscoe's
Leap.
C724:
Collection
including
Indian
girl
visiting
pool
daily
The book I am looking for was most
likely published in
the 50`s. It was a book with several stories in it, but the one that
comes to
mind was an Indian girl going to a pool of water daily. The turtle in
the water
always tells her how beautiful she is, tricks her into falling in the
water.
E. Dolch,
I know I've read that story and I
believe it may be in one of E. Dolch's books. Could be Pueblo Stories,
Wigwam Stories, Navajo Stories, Teepee Stories, Lodge Stories --
he had a whole
series of _____ Stories books.
C725:
Ciphers
and
codes
explained
to
brother
and
sister
by
mysterious
older
man
The kids learn that ciphers and codes
are part of
everyday life...for instance, the numbers inside the girl's shoe give
information about the origins of the shoe. The man also gives them
puzzles to
solve and shows them how to send ciphered messages. I think they find
out he
was in the war?
Clifford
B. Hicks, Alvin's
Secret
Code, 1963. The
Alvin books are classics. There is even an alvinfernald.com website!
Clifford Hicks,
Alvin's Secret Code, 1963. When
Alvin
and
Shoie
find
a
secret
message,
they
first
try
to
break
the
code
themselves.
Then,
they
visit
a
man
who
knows
more
about
codes
and
ciphers
than
anyone
in
town:
Mr.
Link,
a
former
spy.
He
teaches
them--and
readers--how
to
be
ace
decoders.
Soon
they're
using
their
skill
to
solve
a dangerous mystery!
Clifford
B. Hicks, Alvin's Secret Code. Could
this
be
the
right
book? It's been a while,
but I do remember that
Alvin gets a huge discount on a stereo(?) from a department store
because they
are claiming it's the newest thing and he deciphers their code and
proves
that in fact they've had it for months.
Alvin's little sister is Daphne ("The Pest").
C726:Children's
book
about
a
crocodile
or
alligator
I was born in 1965 an had a book when
I was
a child about
an alligator or crocodile that went to an elderly lady's home to help
her when
she was sick. From my memory the book
was nicely illustrated. The lady lived
in an victorian house and one page shows her 4 post bed with a
canopy. Thanks.
Martha Sanders, Alexander
and
the
Magic
Mouse, 1969.
Harriett guesses Alexander and the
Magic Mouse. You can see solved stumpers, here, for
more discussion and a cover picture.
You
are
right
the
pictures
are
very
nice
in
this
book,
but
I
don't
think
this
is
it,
only
because
it
does
not
reference
the
elderly
lady
being
sick.
We'll keep trying!
Bernard Waber, The House on
East 88th Street, 1962,
approximate.
It's
got
a
crocodile
and
a
Victorian
house
-
not
exactly
the
plot
that
the
requestor
detailed
but
memory
does
play
tricks!
Tomi
Ungerer, Crictor. The
details
don't
fit
exactly,
but
since
it
hasn't
been
answered-
my
gut
instinct
is
that
the
person
is
thinking
of
CRICTOR
by
Tomi
Ungerer
The
details remind me of a story about an old lady in a Victorian mansion
who lived
with animals she'd befriended over the years, including the mentioned
alligator, a yak, a wise mouse, and one I don't recall. The mouse and
old
lady predict a lengthy storm that threatens a nearby town and
ultimately only
the alligator is able to reach the people and warn them. As I recall,
it was
the alligator who then got ill and rested in the four-poster bed,
tended by the
old lady. Hope this helps.
Martha Sanders, Alexander
and
the
Magic
Mouse, 1969.
Please
take
a
closer
look
at
Alexander and the
Magic Mouse. The alligator (Alexander) gets sick, and one
picture shows the Old Lady sitting on the edge of the bed with a cup of
tea.
The bed is quite a large structure, with a wooden frame and red
curtains with
tassels.
C727:
Caterpillar
named
Burfur
and
a
bird
named
Phoebe
SOLVED: Roderick Remmele Huff, Chip, 1958.
C728:
Canadian
Horse
named
Tucky
Looking for a book about a Canadian
horse named Tucky or
Tuckie.
C729:
Codes
and
Ciphers
Children's book, late 60s or early
70s, probably
published by Scholastic Books, kids learn about codes and ciphers, In
one part,
the figure out the date codes on the tags at the stereo store and get a
better
deal. Takes place in a town by a river with bluffs. There is a mystery
involved.
Might this be the same book as C725?
Clifford Hicks,
Alvin's
Secret
Code.
Clifford
B.
Hicks,
Alvin's Secret Code. Definitely the same book.
C730:
Children's
literature
textbook
This is an oversized book that is
approx 3 inches thick. It has all different cultures and mythology in
it. One of the stories is " the girl with 7 names". It was used in
teacher education classes around 1950 I think. Paper is very thin -
almost like tissue. I remember that it had hundreds of pages.
Well,
"The Girl with Seven Names" is by Mabel
Leigh
Hunt and was
published
in 1936. Some big books from around that
time with that story include A
basic
book
collection
for
elementary
grades,
American Library Association, 1951 What
books for children?: Guideposts
for
parents, by
Josette Frank, Child Study Association of America - 1941 - 462
pages Character
formation
through
books:
a
bibliography, Catholic
University of America - 1945 A
book
of
children's
literature,
by Lillian Hollowell - 1950 -
697 pages. The
right
book
for
the
right
child:
a
graded
buying
list, by Mary
Stanclyffe Wilkinson, Winnetka (Ill.). Board of Education.
Research Dept - 1937 - 389 pages.
Evelyn Ray
Sickels,
Anthology of Children's Literature,
1948,
approximate. The
Sickels anthology is from the period specified and includes "The Girl
with
Seven Names"
the story
is also in the 1959 edition edited by Edna Johnson, Evelyn R. Sickels,
and
Frances Clarke Sayers (but apparently not in later editions). I
think the early editions have thin paper,
and they were designed for use in children's lit courses.
C731:
Colonial
boy
kidnapped
by
Native
Americans
Book I read late 60's about a young
boy being kidnapped
by Native Americans. Set during Colonial times, the boy witnesses the
raid
which destroys his home and perhaps kills his family.I think title is
character's name. Vivid account of ceremony where man is accepted into
tribe. Returns home
Mary Smith, Boy Captive of
Old Deerfield, 1930,
approximate. This one doesn't
have the
boy's name as the title, but it does fit your description.
Conrad Richter,
The Light in
the Forest, 1953.
Might be
this one, captured boy who eventually returns home but doesn't fit in
there
anymore.
C732:
Cow
by
train
tracks
Maybe a Little Golden Book, might have
been about a
train, but not sure. I remember the song
or poem towards or at the end of the book: I'm moo moo the cow I eat
lots of
hay I sit on the track for most of the day. & went on to say made
milk for
boys and girls, may have been a boy & girl in picture.
Puff 'n Toot. Found
the rest of your poem on another website, along with the title:
"i'm moo
moo the cow/ i eat lots of hay / i sit on the tracks / for most of the
day
my milk is so goodit doesn't take long / for all little children / to
grow big and strong"
C733:
Children's
story
book
50's children's story book. Three of
the stories: How the Rabbit Lost His Tail (by catching sun
in a trap); Spring Comes to the Forest (she arrives late, animals take
baskets
of eggs to village children to let them know she's come); man puts pot
of gold
under large stone in road beside his house.
C734:
Clocktower
protects
village
SOLVED: Jay Williams, The Question
Box.
C735:
The
Cherry
Street
Gang
Children's book, 1940s or 1950s, about
kids in a
neighborhood getting together a football team to play another
neighborhood's
team. May have Cherry Street or Oak Street in the title. Team name may
be the
Cherry Street Gang.
Odille Ousley and David
Russell, On Cherry Street, 1957,
approximate. Published by Ginn Basic Readers.
This was a great guess, but
that’s not the book. On Cherry Street is a collection of
stories; the
book I’m seeking is one story, a short children’s novel. It’s really
nice that
folks pay attention and respond to the queries, and nicer still that
you post
them.
C736:
Clues
and
pictures
used
to
solve
mysteries
(not
"Black
Hand
Gang",
but
similar
idea)
Early 80s-Scholastic?Clues used to
solve mystery in each
chapter. Had a group of kids, one had a little sister. In one chapter
it was
Halloween and they had same ghost and monster costume as other kids
except
their ghost had three eyes. In another they were trying to find out who
ate a
blueberry pie
Crosby Bonsall,
The Case of
the Hungry Stranger.
That's
the
one
with
the
blueberry
pie.
Crosby
Bonsall, The Case of
the Hungry Stranger.
They
are
the
Private
Eyes
Club
(Skinny,
Wizard,
Snitch,
and
Tubby)
In
THE
CASE
OF
THE
HUNGRY
STRANGER
the
kids
are
trying
to
figure
out
who
ate
Mrs.
Meech's
blueberry
pie.
There's
also
THE
CASE
OF
TTHE
CAT'S
MEOW,
THE
CASE
OF
THE
SCAREDY
CATS,
THE
CASE
OF
THE
DUMB
BELLS,
THE
CASE
OF
THE
DOUBLE
CROSS
Crosby Bonsall,
The Case of
the Hungry Stranger. Definitely the
"Private Eye
Club" books by Crosby Bonsall. The
Case of the Hungry Stranger The case of
the double cross The case of the dubm
bells The case of the scaredy cats
The case
of the cats meow. I still have
my
Scholastic book club edition of The Case of the Hungry Stranger - where
Mrs
Meech's blueberry pie is stolen from her windowsill.
The Private Eye Club (no girls allowed!)
consists of four boys - Wizard, Skinny, Tubby and Snitch.
They are still in print (though with full
colour pictures) as part of the I can Read series.
Marvin
Miller and Nancy K. Robinson,
T*A*C*K
into
Danger, 1983.It's
"T*A*C*K into
Danger". There's a series of the T*A*C*K books, but this is the
particular one with the blueberry pie and Halloween story.
TACK stands for the kids names: Toria, Abby,
Chuck, and Will (Code name K). The little sister mentioned is Holly,
younger
sibling of Toria.
C737:
Cheese
man
has
cheese
stolen;
brother
and
sister
help
him
SOLVED:
Virginia
Sorenson,
Miracles
on
Maple Hill.
C738:
Collection
of
scary
short
stories,
maybe
Scholastic
SOLVED: Nora
Kramer, The Ghostly
Hand and Other Haunting Stories.
C739:
Car
breaks
down
and
find
magic
abode
I read a book as a kid about people
who either travel to
or get lost/car breaks down and end up at a remote home/hotel
constantly
referred to as the "____ abode".
They go in and visit the crazy rooms and things that go on in the house
ie furniture on the ceiling etc., aged 7-12 1990's HELP!!
Eth Clifford, Scared Silly. Sounds
like it may be SCARED SILLY by Eth Clifford. Sisters Mary Rose and
Jo-Beth and
their father stop at the Walk-Your-Way-Around-the-World Museum, which
is a
magician's house and a shoe museum. But it's very strange, with one
room
containing furniture on the ceiling, secret passages and strange
inventions
Eth Clifford,
Scared Silly. Mary
Rose and Jo Beth Onetree are with their father, who stops to see a shoe
museum.
Unfortunately, the bridge falls in the river after they cross it, so
they're
trapped. It turns out the shoe museum is just the tip of the
iceberg...the
family that runs it lives next door in The Abode. There's a magician
dressed
as a giant rabbit, upside down rooms, shoes that bounce and more. This
is definitely the book you're looking for!
C740:
Children's
Poetry
&
Story
Book
SOLVED: Edited by
Margaret E.
Matignoni,
The Illustrated Treasury of Children's Literature, 1955.
C741:
Children's
book
with
menacing
alligator
or
crocodile
SOLVED:Bertha
Amoss,
Old Hasdrubal and the Pirates,
1971.
C742:
Christmas
roses,
crippled
girl,
newspaper
story
This ran in a central Illinois
newspaper (possibly either
the Bloomington Pantagraph, the Danville Commercial-News, or the
Champaign-Urbana Courier) at Christmas, either 1965 or '66. It took up
one
whole highly decorated (in color!) page. A young girl sits in a
wheelchair
outside a big department store. She sells roses on the street like the
little
match girl. Her name may be Rose too. I believe that she is left behind
on the
street when everyone goes home, and she gets to witness a great light
and a
miracle. I can't remember if she dies at the end, although I think
that she does not.
C743:
Christian
Children's
Fantasy
blue
cover
1980ish
SOLVED:
John
White,
The
Tower of
Gerburah, 1978.
C744:
Cereal
maker
leaves
fortune
hidden
in
mansion
SOLVED: John Bellairs, The mummy,
the Will, and the Crypt, 1983.
You're right, that's it! Thanks a lot, you guys are awesome!
2012
C745:
Childhood
Dangers
Can you help me find a book from my
youth?
I would
have read it in the early 80’s but it may be older than
that. It
was a children’s book that through the use of animal characters
taught
about the dangers of life.I remember a wolf and a bear, one of which (
can’t remember
which did what ) got hurt sticking stuff into light sockets, the other
did not
look both ways when crossed the street. I do vividly remember the
critter
that didn’t look both ways was laying in the street and the (
somewhat
creepy illustrations) showed blood coming from it’s head. I
asked
my mother and sister about this book and they confirmed it’s existence
but
neither could remember the name . My mother seemed to
think
it also contained a story about an elephant that no one liked because
she peed
her pants. My sister said that it wasn’t an elephant but a Hippo
in a
pink dress that did that and that there was also a story in the
book
about a panda that got lost and couldn’t find her way home.
I’m pretty sure the panda part is correct but I suspect the
elephant/hippo
peeing her pants was a completely different book. Any help with
this
would be great. We have been reading with our oldest daughter for
the
summer reading program at our local library and it has brought
back a
flood of partial memories of how much I enjoyed reading as a
kid.
Munro Leaf, Safety Can Be
Fun. Rather a
long shot, as the characters are nondescript stick-people, referred to
as ''Nit-Wits'', rather than animals. However, it is about childhood
dangers
and awful examples. It sounds as though you may be amalgamating more
than one
book, and if so, this might be one of them.
C746:
Children
run
away
to
mountain
Looking
for
a
children's
book
I
read
in
the
40's
about
children
who
run
away
to
a
mountain and then can only get off by
progressing
from house to house. Each house with a
different goal such as eating oatmeal with raisins. Maybe called
The Enchanted Mountain or Magic
Mountain.
Alexander
Key,
Escape to
Witch Mountain.
That
sounds
rather
like
this
book.
The
two
children
are
Toni
and
Tia.
Toni
has
powers
of
telekinesis,
and plays the harmonica to use them. And I think Tia can
pick
locks, or something of the sort, if that jogs any memories.
Eliza
Orne
Jewett,
The
Enchanted Mountain,
1939. It
sounds a lot more like this book. When you go to the enchanted mountain
you
have to stay in certain houses to learn various lessons. In one place
you learn
to work without speaking, in another you have to learn how to rest, and
in
another you have to learn to like every kind of food. I would bet
anything this
was it.
C747:
Cat
in
pipe
Looking for a book my mother read to
me in mid fifties. I
think it had a fire engine,ladder, a cat in pipe. The little boy was
always too
" too little " to do anything.
The firemen needed him to save a cat in a pipe because he was small
enough to fit. The book was red and about 12 X 14 .
Pearl Daru Snyder, Too
Little, 1947. Billy
was
tired
of
being
called
"Little
Bill"
and
"too
little"Hcouldn't
go
hiking
with
his
brother
or
fishing
with
his
Dad. And
how could he do big things in his town that was "too little" to be on
the map? One Spring, Billy gets a chance to do something big when the
floods
come. A dam is going to be built. Everyone went to see the work on the
dam. Then a baby went missing and was
discovered stuck in a small pipe in the dam.
Billy turns out to be the only person who can fit in the pipe
and save
the baby. After calling him "too
little" for the job, Billy convinces the town officials and firemen
that
he's the right person for the job and he saves the baby. The book is
also
informative about what dams are in what states.
C748:
Candy
fills
apartment,
sisters
Seeking a kid's book I read in the
mid-70's
about a black
girl, I believe living in Harlem, who had an older sister. They didn't
get
along well. Something happens to grant
her wishes. One involves so much candy
that the whole house/apt. is filled.
Another wish is that her sister can't talk.
Striped
Ice
Cream. Long shot, about two
sisters growing up in Harlem with their
mother I do remember about the apartment
filling up with sweets, only it was ice cream, and it was in a bad
dream. The
younger sister keeps hoping to eat "striped ice cream", the
neapolitan kind with chocolate, vanilla, strawberry for her
birthday
she also argues with her sister a lot,
don't remember if the older sister does stop talking for a while. In
the end
she finds her mother and big sister have made her a dress with
ice-cream
stripes. Hope this helps.
C749:
Cats in a spaceship
Children's book with
fantastic cutaway illustrations of cats in a spaceship.
C750:
Crow
prophet
and
friends
warn
animals
SOLVED:
Linda Cline, The Miracle
Season, 1977.
C751:
Coming
of
age,
NYC,
published
between
1972
and
1987