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It's my own query, but I now wonder whether
this
was an edition of Ransome's Old Peter's Russian Tales. Anyone
recognize it?
I don't know this, but just to be sure, you do
mean "snow maiden," right? Because that Russian(?) story - about a
childless
couple that builds a child of snow which comes to life - is very
different
from The Ice Maiden, which is a long Hans Christian
Andersen
story about a spirit of the Swiss glaciers who furiously pursues Rudy,
a handsome young man saved from her three deadly kisses as an infant.
(Sounds
like "The Snow Queen," doesn't it? Given the portrait of Rudy's
shallow,
fickle fiancee, you can't help but wonder if Andersen thought of the
ending
as a "happy" one, even though it was supposedly based on a true story
at
Lake Geneva.)
Zvorykin Boris, ill.. Boris Zvoriykin
illustrated a book of russian fairytales, including the snow maiden.
the
book I am thinking of is too late to be yours, sometime in the 70s I
think,
but he may have done other editions. see if his illustrations look
familiar.
There are several books about young boys,
Indians,
canoes and the Hudson's Bay Company. But I don't think any of them
feature
popcorn because corn doesn't grow anywhere the HBC operated and canoes
were used. Could the requester be mixing two books together? Possibles
- Olive Knox Little Giant (Miss-top-ashish): the story
of
Henry Kelsey illustrated by Clarence Tillenius, published Toronto,
Ryerson,
1951 "Historical novel for young readers about an English boy who
came
to Canada in 1684 where he joined the Hudson's Bay Company, exploring
Northern
America, making friends with the Indians." Ronald Syme Bay
of
the North: the story of Pierre Radisson published
London,
Hodder, 1951, 125 pages "Pierre Radisson was captured by Iroquois
Indians
when he was a boy and became a great explorer and hero of the Canadian
wilds."William O. Steele The Far Frontier
published
New York, Harcourt 1961 (Weekly Reader) "Story of a young white boy
from Philadelphia who is taught the ways of the Indians and living off
the land." Olive Knox (again) Black Falcon
published
Toronto, Ryerson 1954, 192 pages "Story of a boy kidnapped by
Indians
in Ohio in 1789 who went on to become the first white boy to live on
the
prairies of Manitoba."
On the corn side of the story, there's Runner
in the Sun: a story of Indian maize by D'Arcy McNickle, illustrated
by Allan C. Houser, published Winston 1954, 234 pages, Land of the Free
series. "The story of Salt, a teen-age boy being groomed to lead
his
people, who as he grows into manhood, is accepted into the tribe and
makes
a life-and-death trek to the opulent cities of the ancient Aztecs in
search
of a hardier kind of Indian maize." Also, more on the Hominy
story cited elsewhere - Hominy and his Blunt-Nosed Arrow
by George and Doris Hauman, published Macmillan 1950, 145 pages
"...
and whose skill won him a real reputation with the tribes and a
beautiful
silver arrow. Almost best of all - he discovers popcorn!"
(Children's
Catalog 1956 ed.) Actually, that sounds like a good possibility.
I8 may be the following: "I made you look, you
dirty crook, you stole your mother's pocket book. You turned it
in,
you turned it out, you turned it in to sauerkraut."
My dad always said -"Made you look, made you
look, made you buy a penny book."
Iona and Peter Opie's Lore and Language
of Schoolchildren (Oxford
University
Press, 1959) includes several variants of an English children's rhyme,
"Made you look; made you stare"; the commonest seemed to be: Made
you look, made you stare, Made the barber cut your hair, Cut it long,
cut
it short, Cut it with a knife and fork.
I always knew this one as 'Made you look,
made you stare, made you lose your underwear'.
When I was growing up, the rhyme was "made
you look, made you stare, made you lose your underwear"!
Keeko, written and illustrated
by
Charles
Thorson. The illustrations are wonderful-a charming picture
book
from the early 50's.
#I19--Indian boy plucks eagle's
tailfeather:
Not Indian Two Feet and His Eagle Feather, by Margaret
Friskey, to save you the trouble of even trying that one.
On #I19, Indian boy plucks eagle's tailfeather,
by far your best bet is Eagle Feather, by Clyde
Robert
Bulla. Originally published by Thomas Y. Crowell in 1953, it
went through a gazillion Scholastic printings and is by
far the most common of such titles. Here,
however, are some other possibilities: "Eagle's Feather," by
Emily
Post. Dodd, Mead, 1910. "The Eagle Feather Prize," by Lyla
Hoffine.
McKay, 1962. "The Eagle Feather," by Clide Hollmann. Hastings
House,
1963. "Eagle Feather for a Crow," by Alice Durland Ryniker.
Persimmon
Hill, 1980. "Eagle Feather--an Honour," by Ferguson Plain.
Pemmican
Publications, Winnipeg, 1989. "Quest for the Eagle Feather," by
John
Duncklee. Rising Moon, Arizona, 1997. "Eagle Feather," by
Sonia
Gardner. Writers Press, 1997.
Thanks so much for the reply about the book
about the little Indian boy and the eagle feather. I am
forwarding
the email to her and will let you know if that is the book she was
looking
for. I can't tell you how much I enjoy visiting your website.
#I19--Indian Boy plucks eagle's tailfeather:
Running
Fox, The Eagle Hunter. Shannon, Terry,
Illustrated
by Charles Payzant. Chicago: Albert Whitman & Co.,
1957.
Hard Cover. ISBN: 57-7755. 48 pages. This story
of a Hopi Indian boy in Arizona is not the one described. In
this,
the boy steals an eaglet from the nest, not a tailfeather.
Clifford Lindsey Alderman, The
Vengeance
of Abel Wright. It's eerie that I
happened upon your quest for this particular book. I read it when I was
very young and I decided that I wanted it for my sons, so I did a
search
and tripped over your plea. Is this the book that you are looking for?
Not a solution, but a comment: Death Wind was
the Indian name given to Indian fighter/killer Lewis Wetzel, who was an
ancestor of mine. His story has been fictionalized many times. The
poster
can do a google search for Lewis Wetzel and will come up with several
good
web sites about him, including several that list books about him.
Wetzel
was from just outside of Wheeling, West Virginia, where his remains are
now buried. However, Wetzel's family wasn't massacred--though several
were
killed over the years by Indians. He and his brother Jacob were
abducted
by Indians when Lewis was thirteen. He was shot, but survived, and the
boys later escaped. From that day on, he dedicated himself to revenge.
Later his father and brother were killed by Indians on the Ohio river.
Hope this is helpful.
I remember something just like that...
I've seen a book by Enid Blyton which
seems similar, a large-ish book like a children's annual, called
something
like Stories of Famous Heroes, with a coloured picture
on
the cover. Unfortunately I haven't been able to pin down that title or
a date for it.
C85 El Cid sounds like I26 stories of heroes
Maurice Sendak, Where the Wild Things
Are.
Couldn't possibly be? Max sails away and becomes King of All Wild
Things.
But he is the only child among them.
Where the Wild Things Are has really never gone out of
print...
My Father's Dragon. This may be it,
there's
3 of them, I ordered them for my daughter in paperback from Scholastic
last fall. I can't remember the author's name, but she wrote them and
her
daughter illustrated them. I hope this is it.
Henry Gregor Felsen?, Hot Rod?
This is only some information that may help you get further
along.
It sounds as if you're certain your book *isn't* one of Felsen's, and
I'm
not sure either. (I read several, 35 years ago, but they were
always
too graphic and gory to read more than once!) But I checked
Google
using search words "Henry Gregor Felsen" and "hot rods", and on a
website
called thecarplace,
in a safety discussion of a 2001 car, I found an extremely grisly
description from one of Felsen's books (or so says the discusser) of
just
such an accident, including dripping battery acid (no info on type of
car)
and names of victims. If you recognize the excerpt, that could
help.
Then, at
another
site, is a description, with photos, of the actual area in
Iowa
where the accident supposedly took place, and the names match.
(Frustratingly,
neither site gives an exact book title (unless it is Hot Rod),
and I can't quite tell whether the second one is fact or some kind of
"fan
fiction", but it clearly relates to Felsen's novel.) Finally,
another
writer of similar stuff was William Campbell Gault, if that's
any
help.
Henry Gregor Felson, Crash Club,
late 50's. The cover of theis book had cars painted with Playing
Card synbols I read it in high school in Virginia years
ago.
I have looked for a copy for years would love to have one
someday.
Hope this helps someone else.
Felsen, Hot Rod.
This is DEFINATELY Hot Rod! I have never forgotten the horrifying
image of battery acid dripping into the dead girl's eyes after the
crash.
C225/I48: Same book perhaps?
Bennett Wilson, The Magic Feather.
A possibility.
The Magic Feather is not the book;
the one I remember had to have been written no later than 1964, and
probably
before that.
I54 I found it but it is dark red, not white,
and I am afraid the emphasis IS on the victim: Meiselman, Karin C Incest;
a psychological study of causes and effects with treament
recommendations
Jossy-Bass c1978
Revised/Expanded Stumper Description:
I saw this book in paperback at a bookstore. It was in a
psychology/self
help section. I only got to browse it a little bit. It was a book about
incest, but it treated the subject in a very clinical, non-judgemental,
and objective way. It went into the history of incest, the
psychology
of incest, the multitude of different legal positions on
incest,
the multitude of different social attitudes about incest, etc. I
think that the solution presented is not the book I am searching
for.
I clearly recall that the book was NOT about the victim but a
dispassionate
clinical study of incest as a social condition.
Could this be Robin Fox's The Red Lamp?
I read it a few years ago while working on a paper about the
Westermarck
effect, and it certainly meets the description ("dispassionate and
clinical").
Fox,
Robin. The red lamp of incest. New York:
Dutton,
1980.
I am the original submitter of this
request.
I browsed the Red Lamp of Incest, and it did not appear
that
this book was the one I was searching for. In the original book,
the author explores incest as, in some cases, natural and normal and
acceptable.
It also goes into great depth as to how different societies treat
incest and in many cases encourages it.
Hendrich Paula, Who says so?,
c. 1972. GK Hall, Boston. Illustrated by Trina Schart
Hyman.
A girl loses her best friend, an imaginary creature, at the end of a
fun-filled
summer but gains a new flesh-and blood friend who seems very familiar
The book was a short book... Who
Says So is 176 pages but thanks anyway. I think I remember
the
book being smaller like the size of a Junior or Tiny Elf book.
The
book was purchased at a discount store in Memphis, TN in the late
1970's.
I sort of remember the monster had spots???
I've read Who Says So? and I don't
think it's a match with what the reader describes. Some of it is
vaguely reminiscent of A Birthday for Frances by Russell
& Lillian Hoban, but there is too much that doesn't match for
that
to be right...
Lystad, Mary, Millicent the monster,
1968.
Doesn't fit exactly but as the requester was only four at the time...it
does not
actually have a monster, Millicent is the one
who is the monster. There is a swing in it which is why I thought
of it, she has a little baby brother, and she decides to be a monster.
Cute story even if it isn't the right one.
I don't think it is Who Says So. When I looked that
book up it's main characters were animals as far as I could tell.
Thanks for trying. It would be so nice to find this book as I
would
love to get it for my children. The one thing that I am sure of
is
that a character in the book was named Geraldine.
Francis and Zenobia has several
elements that are the same as the I64 query: a little girl, a birthday,
an unusual friend. Her friend is an owl, so the feathers may have been
spotted. The publication timeframe of mid-1970s is the same. The
girl's birthday may have been forgotten also. There is a birthday
cake in the story. At least part of the action takes place in a tree or
on a tree limb. This book is out of print and I think it was written by
Edward Gorey, but it was not illustrated by him. I know the name
Geraldine
is missing, but so many other elements were similar that I thought I'd
make the suggestion.
I am still looking for this book if anyone has suggestions please
post. Perhaps it was a Tell-A-Tale book if anyone is familar with
those books during the 1970's.
John McInnes, Have You Ever Seen
A Monster? I remember the
book,
she was sitting in a swing on the cover. I think this is it, one of the
lines is Have You ever seen a monster? I have. My monster is... All the
copies I could find on various sites had no photo and just condition
descriptions.
This sounds like the book I am looking for,
except
I thought the girl's name was Gertrude. It was about a little
girl,
with a friend who was a monster, and I remember a tree on the front but
I thought her and the monster were near a forest. It had a picture that
filled most of the cover and then an orange or yellow border.
Coombs, Patricia, Dorrie and the
Witch's
Imp, 1975. That's just a
guess,
but it's the only book I could think of with an imp.
I66 It's too cold and dark to check this now
in storage to see if if matches: Will and Nicolas, pseud of
William
Lipkind Perry the imp.
illlus
by William Lipkind Harcourt
1956
Vague possibilities: Montgomery,
Rutherford.
Amikuk.
illus by Marie Nonnast. World, 1955. polar regions;
Aleutian
Islands; sea otters; Alaska. Finney, Gertrude E. Stormy
winter. illus by Don Lambo. Longmans, 1959. San Juan
Islands
- Canadian- American border dispute; Haida Indians. McCracken,
Harold. Caribou traveler. illus by Rod Ruth.
Lippincott,
1949. polar regions; caribou; Barren Grounds, Arctic Islands. Catherall,
Arthur. The strange intruder [former title The
strange invader] Lothrop, Lee and Shepard, 1965.
Faroe
Islands; Faroes; polar bears; rescues.
Lavinia R. Davis, Buttonwood Island.
I'm not sure if this is the correct book, but there are some similaries
- finding arrowheads, finding an untouched indian mound, and a big
storm
at the end. The children involved are all interested in horses and have
a riding club on Buttonwood Island, which is near the farms where they
live in Connecticut. The father of one of the boys trains horses for a
living.
Hi! I am the original poster of this
stumper and appreciate the suggestion I received that the book might be
Buttonwood Island. I have purchased this book and read it and
although
it is somewhat similar, it is not the book I am looking for. Any
further suggestions would be so helpful, I have been trying to find
this
book for over 20 years. Thank you!
---
I am the original poster and wanted to thank
you for the suggestion but the book I am looking for is not Buttonwood
Island I read the book and it was similar but not them same
story.
Any other suggestions would be greatly appreciated, this has been
bugging
me for over 20 years..... The book seemed very like a
Trixie
Belden story but it is definitely not one of that series, I don't think
it was a series book at all, just the style reminds me of Trixie Belden.
This sounds like it could be Fairy
Tales
and Fables by Gyo Fujikawa, or one of his other books.
The book you describe is definitely NOT Fairy
Tales and Fables by Gyo Fujikawa. Rip Van Winkle
is
not in the Fujikawa book. The edition that I have (c. 1970) does
not have the rich illustrations you describe (e.g., I saw not one mouse
peeking out from a tree in the book).
Did you look at the Ponsot/Segur The
Golden
Book of Fairy Tales? There's a reprint available.
See
the Anthologies Page.
I don't think the book described
is The Golden
Book of Fairy Tales, translated by Marie Ponsot and illustrated by Adrienne Segur, original copyright
1958 (reprint available). In the Ponsot book, Rip Van Winkle does
not appear. The illustrations are beautiful and detailed, but not
exactly as described. Some of the illustrations are in
black/white/pinkish tones, rather than color and even so there are not
pictures on every page. I searched through my (reprinted) copy and
never saw scenes with as much detail as described.
Constant, Alberta, Those Miller Girls,
The
Motoring Millers and Does
Anybody
Care About Lou Emma Miller, c.1979. These take place
around
the turn of the century and are about Lou Emma and Maddie Miller who
live
with their father in Gloriosa Kansas. I know in one of them one of the
girls starts a lending library, and their father has a romance with a
woman
he later marries. I believe she owns a hat shop though.
No, I am sure this is not it. The period is too early, and they
didn't really live anywhere, which is part of why she was so unhappy.
She
was hoping they could settle down and have a home. They traveled,
picking
other farmers crops, etc. I don't believe the main character had a
sister,
and the woman his father has an interest in is either a librarian, or
one
of the girls teachers.
Doris Gates, Blue Willow.
This is a longshot as there was no romance involved but it does tell
the
story of a little girl who is living the life of an itinerant farm
worker
during the dust bowl. She travels with her father and stepmother
from farm to farm. They stay in one place until the work runs out
then they move on. The title refers to a blue willow plate that
used
to belong to her mother. There is something about a school
teacher
and a librarian but no romance with the dad. You might check it
out
as it should be very easy to find, even if only to rule it out.
Zilpha Keatley Snyder, The Velvet Room,
late 60s/early 70s. I think the mother in this book was alive,
but
the girl (who's family are migrant workers) finds an abandoned mansion
with a library, where she goes to hide out. There is some kind of
puzzle about who owns the home, and I think a semi-romantic
resolution.
Not involving the parents though, but the home owners. Maybe
something
to check out?
It's neither Blue Willow nor The Velvet Room.
Written
for an older audience than Blue Willow. I'm sure the main
character
is at least 13--she' coming of age. I'm pretty sure she experiences a
kiss
with a boy around her age, with all that angst and joy stuff. I think
he
was also an itinerant worker. Definitely a bit more bitter and
cynical
than Blue Willow. She really wants better for herself. I think
her
father's meeting with the teacher/librarian has to do with
that--perhaps
getting her more schooling, or into a special program, something like
that.
Sue Ellen Bridgers, Home Before Dark.
A long shot- Teen girl (Stella) and migrant family return to father's
family
farm (tobacco). She longs for a permanent home, family moves into
cropper's
house. Mother(Mae?)dies and father begins to court spinster lady
(Maggie?)
who owns a clothing store. Stella refuses to leave her first real home
when father marries Maggie. Stella dates rich Rodney, but is also
courted
by poor boy. Link
to excerpt.
Lois Lenski, Judy's Journey.
(1947) I haven't read this book, but found the following summary here
and was struck by the possible similarities: Ten-year-old Judy
longs
for a permanent home as her family goes from sharecropping in Alabama
to
Florida, where they become migrant workers. The family follows the
crops
north up the coast to New Jersey. The hardships of the lives of migrant
workers and their children are realistically portrayed. Ten seems
a little young for a first kiss, but I don'\''t know how much time the
book covers, so maybe she gets old enough during it?
Eulalie Osgood Grover, The Sun-Bonnet
Babies
Collection, 1900s. "
The inside cover of the books shows three small babies beside a huge
ink-
well, while two more are carrying an immense quill pen." I found this
info
on the web. Its the closest I could find to ink-well babies and since
they
are the size of one it sounded like it may be it. Its also about the
right
time frame. Hope this helps.
Ruth Dyer, Adventures of the Ink
Spots, 1916.This might be the one your uncle is seeking. The
ink
spot people are drawn in red and black. Cute stuff. I hope this helps.
You might try The Adventures of the Ink
Spots by Ruth O. Dyer (Lothrop, Lee and Shepard, 1923).
The characters are ink spots, and the illustrations are in red and
black.
I too remember reading that book. I'm 54,
but we had the book in our house in the late 50s/early60s . The
title
is "the Ink Bottle Babies" and the babies were fat drops of ink.
I don't know the author though, and I'm still searching
Sounds a lot like The Golden Compass,
except that it was published in the 90's, not the 80's. Here is the
synopsis:
In this first part of the "Dark Materials" trilogy, Lyra's friend Roger
disappears. She and her daemon, Pantalaimon, determine to find him.
Their
quest leads them to the bleak splendour of the North where a team of
scientists
are conducting unspeakably horrible experiments. This book is readily
available
in bookstores and libraries if you want to check it out.
Sorry, The Golden Compass is not
correct.
I am positive I read it during the 80’s, because I was still in school
at the time. But thanks for the suggestion.
Phyllis Krasilovsky, The Very Little
Girl.
There's at least 2 editions, with slight updating. There's also The
Very Little Boy. It's about a little girl who is getting
older, just in time to take care of a new baby brother. She does
sit at her own little table in the book.
Can't be The Very Little Girl
because
that was written in third person, not first person. "But one day, she
could
reach the doorknob," and so on.
Not much help, but I've seen somewhere a series
of books I Am Three, I Am Four, and so
on.
Could it be one of those?
Margaret Storey, Timothy and the Two Witches, 1966. It sounds like this one. Lots of people seem to remember this book! See the Solved Mysteries for more info.
Ray Bradbury, Jack-In-the-Box.
Sounds a lot like this short story by Bradbury, which is included in
his
anthology The October Country. A boy lives in an isolated castle
and abides by very strict rules, until one day he discovers that all
the
people in his life (his tutor, etc.) are really an elaborate series of
costumes donned by his mother. She dies and he gets released into
the outside world for the first time.
Ray Bradbury, Jack-In-The-Box.
I suggest this one- it can be found in the collection "The October
Country"
William Pene Du Bois, Lazy Tommy
Pumpkinhead.
(1966) Amazon did not have a review or a description, but the
stumper's
question sounded like good old Lazy Tommy. I was always fascinated by
this
character's inability to dress himself and comb his hair. The
illustrations
only add to the weirdness - definately a classic!
Regarding I87, they sounded like they might be the story (and are
clearly very entertaining in themselves) but, alas, neither are the one
I seek.
H. G. Wells, Love and Mr. Lewisham, 1900, copyright. Could it be the novel Love and Mr. Lewisham
by H. G. Wells? It's not
a children's book, but the first chapter of the book describes the 18
year old Mr. Lewisham is his attic room at the school in England where
he is an assistant master and his life is completely ordered by two
lists he has taped to his wall: a Schema and a Time-Table. You
can read the first chapter on this website
http://www.online-literature.com/wellshg/love-and-mr-lewisham/1/
. Ever since I read this book I have never forgotten the
description of the schema and sometimes whenever I get very romantic
about how I'm going to get all organized, I'll title whatever I write
down on paper as my schema (just like Mr. Lewisham did!).
Stirling, S.M., Island in the Sea of
Time.
I haven't read it, but possibly this first book in a trilogy about the
island of Nantucket that gets sent back 3,000 years?
S.M. Stirling, Island in the Sea
of Time. A cosmic disturbance transports the island of
Nantucket
and its inhabitants ovewr three thousand years back in time to the
shores
of stone age America. In addition to coping with the day-to-day
problems
of survival and the trouble with losing all connection with the modern
world, the residents of the time-stranded island find their lives
complicated
by the presence of native tribes across the water.
I don't think this is it...Island in the Sea of Time seems
to have been written in the 80s or 90s. I'm looking for a book I read
in
the 60s or 70s.
I89:
Irish
fairy story
Solved: The Woman Who Flummoxed the Fairies
Edith Lambert Sharp, Nkwala.
Parker, Red Streak of the Iroquois.
This is a comming of age novel of a young Iroquois boy named Red Streak
because of a streak of color in his hair I think. It was set in a
pre-european contact time I think, and had a lot of detail of the
manhood
initiation rites, and daily life of the people who lived in long houses.
I didn't dig out my copy of Nkwalato
check the story because my computer record says it has
illustrations.
I91:
Isabel,
red haired witch
Solved: The Witch who
Wasn't
That story appeared in either Projection
in Literature or Counterpoint in Literature
(Scott, Foresman: America Reads series) in the 1970s. This is back when
junior high and high school English textbooks had some substance and
presented
stories which dealt with adult themes, inviting thoughtful discussion.
My copy is in storage, and I can't remember the name of the story, but
I remember it vividly.
Flack, Ambrose, The Strangers That Came
to Town. I think this
may be the one. It dates from the '50s. I'm pretty sure
"The
Strangers That Came to Town" was also dramatized for a 1959 episode of
"The Loretta Young Show."
|
Condition Grades |
Cunningham, Julia. Dorp dead. illus by James Spanfeller. Pantheon, 1965. exlibrary; glossy heavy boards, missing ffep. G [AQ11628] $6 |
|
Is this a picture book or a chapter book? If it's a chapter book, you might be thinking of The Ice Cream Heroes by Judy Corbalis." Delivering an ice pick to his mountaineering mother in the Himalayas, Oskar and his friend Henrietta (a girl dressed as a gorilla-gram) meet a tribe of abominable snowmen and find themselves captives in a palace made of ice cream." There's no rhino in it that I remember though.
Brewster, Patience, Nobody,
1982. Whenever something happened and mom asked who did it,
'Nobody'
always got blamed. "Although Sarah frequently claims "Nobody did
it," no one is more surprised than she when Nobody is finally revealed
to be somebody." I don't remember it being pink, I remember the
pages
as mostly white. I think Nobody resembled a stick figure with
curls
- but I could be remembering incorrectly - so this may not be the right
book.
Greenfield, Eloise, Me and Neesie,
1975. While I cannot find any references to sticks of butter, I
believe
this is the book. The child's imaginary friend is constantly
getting
her into trouble the copy I have is "squarish" and red which
could
easily have faded to pink in the copy you remember. A sample of
the
dust jacket blurb: "Neesie was Janell's best friend and they had
fun all the time. Before Neesie came, Janell didn't have anybody
to play with. Neesie got Janell into trouble, too--especially
when
Aunt Bea arrived." I hope this helps.
Zolotow, Charlotte, Three Funny Friends,
1961,
2003. I am positive that this is the book you are looking for.
Zolotow, Charlotte, Three Funny Friends,
1961. It is the 1961 edition of this book, illustrated by Mary
Chalmers."A
little girl moved to a new town. She didn't know any children there,
but
she wasn't lonely because she had three funny friends. Guy-guy,
Bickerina,
and Mr. Dobie." (and its Guy-guy who puts the butter on top
of the stove where it melts)
Beatrice Schenck de Regniers, How Joe
the
Bear and Sam the Mouse Got Together.
Beatrice Schenk de Regniers, How Joe the
Bear and Sam the Mouse Got Together. I'm
pretty sure this is the book. I've seen a couple of versions as
far
as illustrations go, but the text matches your description.
Alan Nourse, The Bladerunner,1974. I think this may be Nourse's The Bladerunner, from memory of reviews I'd seen (I've not read it). At least Nourse's premise is the same -- idealist fights against system in a future where medical care has been forbidden. The Nourse novel should not be confused with the movie "The Bladerunner," which was based on a Philip K. Dick novel (though as I recall the film company did buy rights to Nourse's novel, just so they could use the title).
The Little Golden ABC, 1951.
I have a 1951 Little Golden Book version. The picture for the
letter
"I" is of an Indian sitting on an iceberg eating ice cream. The
cover
of the book features a dancing alligator, bear and clown.
Originally,
inside the back cover there was a jig saw puzzle of a zoo.
That's not it, but thanks. It's
definitely
like the picture I described.
-
Someone told me that it could be a Rand
McNally
book by Dean Shirley.
1970. Many details are different, but this
sounds
a little like Molly Weir's three volumes of memoirs of growing
up
in Glasgow titled Shoes Were for Sunday, Best
Foot Forward, and A Toe on the Ladder.
I looked up Molly Weir's books and it is not
what I am looking for.
I read this book, too, and now I need to know
the name of it! I was thinking it was a Phyllis A. Whitney
book, but I couldn't find one that fit the description. I seem to
remember it having the word "sea" in the title. I believe it was
a sea town they lived in.
Graham, Bob, "Let's Get a Pup" Said Kate,
2000, approximate. A long shot, but Graham's picture book is done
in colorful, cartoon style and the mother has tattoos and
piercings.
The book is about a family (Kate and her parents) adopting a puppy and
a large older dog.
Mary Tannen, The Wizard Children of Finn.
This is a book about Fiona and her brother Bran who go back in time and
meet Finn McCool and the Fianna. There's a mysterious family
connection-
perhaps their father is out of the past? There's a sequel- "The
Lost Legend of Finn".
Mary Tannen, The Wizard Children of Finn.
Possibly The Wizard Children of Finn? A brother and
sister
go back to the time of the legendary Irish hero Finn MacCool, and
discover
he was an ancestor of theirs.
Nancy Bond, The String in the Harp.
This is probably The String in the Harp, by Nancy
Bond,
which was a Newbery Medal honor book in 1977. There were a couple
sequels
though, so it could be one of those.
Tannen, Mary, The Lost Legend of Finn,
1982. New York : Knopf : Distributed by Random House, ISBN: 0394852117
/ Determined to find out the truth about their father, Bran and Fiona
use
their uncle's magic book and go back in time to ninth-century Ireland.
Sequel to "The Wizard Children of Finn."
Ottenheimer Publishers, Inc., My Giant
Storybook,
1972,1973, copyright. This might be the book. It is on the
found pages (my original post : ) ). It has Snow White and Rose
Red
and Beauty and The Beast but not The Swan Prince. But it has a
lot
of other common fairy tales from Grimm and Anderson, etc.
Glenn Balch, Spotted Horse.
The solution to stumper #I118 is, without a doubt, Glenn Balch's Spotted
Horse. I read this book over and over again when I was
young
(although I don't recall the Native American putting the stallion's
skin
on the mare), checking it out many times from the school library.
I loved every single Glenn Balch book I could get my hands on-
oh,
the thrill of discovering new Glenn Balch books at the
library!
Simply terrific writing. Many happy hours spent reading them,
many
happy memories.
Glenn Balch, Horse of two Colors.
Hi, I'm the person who sent in the solution to Stumper # I118 as being
Glenn
Balch's Spotted Horse. But after deciding to do a
Google
search on Balch as a trip down memory lane, I have found out my
own memory was not as good as I thought it was. Apologies... it
turns
out that the book is called Horse of Two Colors, not Spotted
Horse, as I thought. Apologies to the poster!
Field, Eugene, Winkin Blinkin and Nod.
It sounds like it could be an illustration for Field's
poem--there
have been so many illustrators: Cooney, Dutton, Johnson,
Westerman,
Jeffers, Berg, Parrish...
Gertrude Elliott, illustrator, The
Golden Book of Poetry. I think this is from my mother, Gertrude
Elliott's illustration for the Land of Nod, probably in the Golden
Book of Poetry. I always loved it too. I'm unable
to
find my copy, perhaps someone else can check this. I seem to
remember
it was on the endpapers. A deep blue sky-sea with a big golden
fish,
night clothes, a sail, perhaps. It's one of the illustrations I
would
love to have in the original. I have so few - the Oh Ball, The
Gold
Fairy Book, Jamie and the Fire Engine, her first book, in 1940.
Gertrude Elliott, illustrator, The Big
Golden Book of Poetry,
1940's.
You may mean Wynken Blinken and Nod, by Eugene Field,
in the Big Golden Book of Poetry. The illustration
is a wooden shoe afloat in a skylike sea, with three children in
nightdress,
and a big golden fish.
My
request is a bit unusual. I'm wondering if anyone knows the title
of the book this illustration comes from, the author, or what the names
of the characters pictured are. This photo is for a trivia
contest
I'm participating in on 2/8/08, so an answer later than that won't help
me. I don't even know what the exact question will be, so any
info
about the photo will be useful.
This picture, or at least the old woman,
reminds
me a bit of Alexander and the Magic Mouse by Martha
Sanders.
Information about the book, including a picture of the cover, can be
found
under Solved
Mysteries:
A. Maybe this will help get you started.
Elizabeth Enright, Gone-Away Lake.
Based on the children's modern clothing and the woman's 1890ish garb,
I'm
guessing that this illustration shows Portia, Foster, and Aunt Min from
Gone-Away Lake, or possibly the sequel Return To
Gone-Away.
Elizabeth Enright, Gone-Away Lake,
1957, copyright. I can't seem to locate my copy of this, so I
can't
be 100% certain that it is this book and not its sequel, "Return
to Gone-Away". I am, however, positive that the illustration is
from one of those two books, and probably the first one. The
illustration
was done by Joe and Beth Krush.
Elizabeth Enright, Gone-Away Lake.
This picture is from Beth and Joe Crush illustrated version of Gone-Away
Lake by Elizabeth Enright. Here's a link to a picture
of
the cover that was illustrated by the same illustrators (there are
several
different covers now):
http://derosia.com/phlog/graphics/book_covers/gone_away_lake.jpg.
You can see the boy has the same striped shirt and glasses. In my
edition,
the picture appears on page 40.
Elizabeth Enright, Gone-Away Lake,
1957, copyright. The kids' names are Portia Blake and Julian
Jarman,
the old lady is Mrs. Cheever. The illustrations in the book are done by
Beth and Joe Krush. The picture is on page 40 of my sister's
copy,
which I'm borrowing right now. Good luck with the contest!
Enright, Elizabeth, Gone Away Lake,
2000, reprint. The illustration looks to me like Joe and Beth
Krush, who did a few Beverly Cleary books, inluding Fifteen.
The boy looks very much like the character of Buzz (at least I think
that
was his name) from Fifteen. I looked up their
names
as illustrators and this book came up and both the boy and girl were
wearing
backpacks so I though it might be fitting or at least worth checking
out.
In a follow up book, they go searching through an old Victorian
home.
I also have another suggestion, but I'll repost.
Chew, Elizabeth, Secret Summer or Baked
Beans for Breakfast, 1976,
approximate.
My other guess, one of many of Elizabeth Chew's Scholastic
books,
this one was written and illustrated by her. I just remember from
the book that two kids took off and were on a vacation on their own,
camping.
One thing they did, though, was visit an older lady in an old fashioned
home and help clean her house and attic and she fed them and they
hadn't
had good, warm food for days so they were very grateful.
Enright, Elizabeth, Gone-Away Lake,
1957, copyright. This illustration is 1/2 of a double page
illustration
found on page 40 of this book.
Elizabeth Enright, Gone-Away Lake,
1957, copyright. Illustration is from this classic book.
It's
of cousins Portia and Julian visiting the old home of Minnehaha Cheever
in the country town of Creston where Julian lives.
Elizabeth Enright, Gone-Away Lake,
1957, copyright. this is a delightful book! It's called Gone-Away
Lake by Elizabeth Enright, and the illustrations are by
Beth and Joe Krush. The illustration you listed shows Portia
Blake
and her cousin Julian Blake meeting Mrs. Minnehaha Cheever for the
first
time.
Beth and Joe Krush. The style of
the drawing looks very much like the work of Beth and Joe Krush.
Just looking at the drawing, of a lady in old fashioned dress and two
kids
in modern dress, reminds me of Elizabeth Enright's Gone Away
Lake
or Return to Gone Away, which were illustrated by the
Krushes.
Wow, everyone figured this out really
quickly!
Definitely Gone-Away Lake. The picture is indeed
on
page 40 of both editions listed for sale below. It shows Portia
Blake
and her cousin Julian Jarman with Mrs. Minnehaha Cheever.
Enright, Elizabeth, Gone Away Lake,
1957, copyright. This is an illustration by Beth and Joe Krush.
It shows Portia Blake and her cousin Julian Jarman with Minnehaha
Cheever.
Mrs Cheever, later to become 'Aunt Minnehaha' to them, and her brother
Pindar Payton live in a house each by a large swamp, where a lake
had been. It is a lovely read.
Elizabeth
Enright, Gone-Away Lake,
1957,
copyright. Easy-Peasy
- just re-read this last year. I hope it's not a cheat to give you this
info! In my first edition, the picture spreads double-paged across
pages 40 and 41 (what you show is only half of the picture). The
illustrators are Beth and Joe Krush.
The girl is Portia Creston and the boy is Julian Jarman. The old woman
is Minnehaha (Mrs. Lionel Alexis) Cheever.
Ok, so this isn't so much a solution as
a follow-up question for the original poster. Based on the number
of responses you received, I'm sure there are quite a few of us out
here wondering, how did you do in that trivia contest?
|
Condition Grades |
Enright,
Elizabeth. Gone-Away Lake.
Illustrated by Beth and Joe Krush. Schoolastic, 1957, 1985.
Trade paperback, as new F. $8 Enright, Elizabeth. Gone-Away Lake. Illustrated by Beth and Joe Krush. Harcourt Inc., 1957, 2000. New hardback with dust jacket. New. $17 |
|
J12 jason and fleece variation: perhaps The
Dawn Palace: the Story of Medea, by H.M. Hoover,
published
Dutton 1988, 244 pages. It's a novel about Medea and Jason.
J12 jason and medea: there's Strangers
Dark and Gold, by Norma Johnston, published Atheneum
1975,
but it looks like more the complete Argonaut story "Jason, Medea,
the
Argonauts, the quest for the golden fleece, and the final tragedy that
rose from the unequal love between Jason and Medea. 12 up." Another
possible
is Witch Princess, by Dorothy Johnson, illustrated by Carolyn Cather,
published
Houghton 1967. "Told from the point of view of Daphne, a handmaiden to
Princess Medea, the author takes her turn at interpreting the mystery
and
legend of the Witch Princess. Ages 12-up." (HB Oct/67 p.535 pub ad)
Was the novelization for young adults or for adults? For instance, did
it include or hint at Medea's murder of her young brother while
escaping
with Jason (throwing his body into the sea to delay her father's ships
pursuing
them) or at Medea's later murder of her own children by Jason?
J15: One of my all-time favorites. It's The
Case of the Marble Monster by I.G. Edmonds, 1950s,
originally
known as "Ooka the Wise". BTW, the proper
pronunciation
is "oh-oh-ka"! There are 17 stories about the cases undertaken by the
clever
but unconventional early 18th-century Japanese judge. Back
cover:
"If you were a judge, would you: -punish a man for stealing a SMELL?
-call
in a WILLOW TREE as a witness to a crime? -order a barber to give an OX
a shave? "Judge Ooka does all these things. And when Ooka
commands,
let the thief and the cheat beware!"
The Case of the Marble Monster and Other
Stories is the version I have which is a Scholastic paperback
that
I got from a school book order in '67-'68 and does have the
illustration
described. The judge is named Ooka and
always makes wise and fair judgements.
This version is not a complete collection; I saw a large hardback at a
bookstore which contained more stories.
I checked my copy of The Case Of the
Marble
Monster and the author is I. G. Edmonds and Ooka
the
Wise is listed as the original title.
This sounds like I.G. Edmonds The
Case of the Marble Monster and Other Stories (original title: Ooka
the Wise), illustrated by Sanae Yamazaki, published by
Scholastic
in 1967. I have the Scholastic edition and it does
have a picture of a green statue in front, of
a lion-dog, if I remember rightly.
One further note: For those who like accuracy,
the stories in COTMM are taken from two older
collections
of the 1950s - Solomon in Kimono and Ooka: More
Tales
of Solomon in Kimono. Each book has at least a dozen stories in
it. The afterwords make it clear that many stories the Japanese
attribute
to Ooka are actually fictional Japanese folk tales - or sometimes not
even
Japanese, as in the Aesop-derived tale of the Stronger Stick! However,
the stories in COTMM which DO seem to have a direct
connection
to Ooka are: Marble Monster,
Terrible-Tempered Tradesman, Tosuke's Tax,
Willow Witness, Wasted Wisdom, Suspect Statue, First Two
Sons, and Death Decree.
J16 julie and time: a long shot, and I haven't
read the book, but perhaps The Day and the Way We Met,
by
Mary
Stolz, published Harper 1956, 250 pages. It's a sequel to Ready
or Not, and the main character is Julie Connor. "The book
opens
with Morgan's marriage and it is Julie's turn to take over. Far less
successful
than her sister at homemaking and mothering, Julie has to struggle with
problems that never bothered Morgan. ... at first in her own
dreamy
adolescent world, in love with Geoff, her much older brother-in-law;
and
breaking away at last toward maturity and a realization of the world
around
her." (HB Aug/56 p.274) On the other hand, this is a fairly
well-known
book, so if it were correct someone would probably have already
suggested
it.
Craig, Margaret Maze, Julie, (1950's).