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Perhaps the book is Storytime Tales-A
Treasury
of Favorite Stories Pictures by Corinne Malvern A Big
Golden
Book; 1950, Simon and Schuster I have this book and I was a
child in the 50s. It's big and red. The
cover shows a boy and a girl sitting on a red
chair looking at a book. A little dog is perched on the arm of the
chair.
Stories include Never Worked and Never Will by Margaret Wise Brown,
several fables, animal stories, poems, songs and some "modern" stories
(Carl Sandburg). I think your site is fascinating.
Pauline Rush Evans, The Family Treasury
of Children's Stories. 1956. 'I
had
these books as a child in three grey volumes, but have since found the
same books in two red volumes that are thicker. They contain many
nursery rhymes, poems, short stories, fairly tales, and excerpts from
books.
Included are T.S. Eliot's Macavity, Thurber's "The Night the Bed Fell",
Robert McCloskey's story about Homer and a doughnut machine, an excerpt
from Tom Sawyer, My Friend Flicka, The Call of the Wild, and Kon Tiki,
Custard the Cowardly Dragon by Ogden Nash, the story of the Seven
Chinese
Brothers and other Grim and Aesop fairy tales, and many more storys and
poems. If this is it, you may have had only one of the two books
in the set, so you may not have had all of these stories. The
first
book has a LOT of nursery rhymes. If you think this might be it,
I can list more of the contents for you (when I found them after 30
years,
I bought 6 sets--for all my brothers and sisters and my mom and an
extra
set for me just in case!).
Editor Augusta Baker, Best Loved
Nursery Rhymes and Songs, 1963. Could it be BEST LOVED
NURSERY
RHYMES AND SONGS from Parents' Magazine Press? This book is about 250
pages
long. I've been looking for a similar book and think this may be it
(I'm
waiting for it to arrive in the mail to be sure). My book had a very
particular
feature--I think it was a group of pages in the middle of the book that
were of a different color, and may have been an ABC portion.
Sounds a lot like the cover of The
White
Mountains by John Christopher, a post-apocalyptic novel.
Funny that you said hats and scarves; Christopher
wrote a trilogy about tripods, and it has to do with people reaching a
certain age and getting "caps," mandatory metal mind-control devices.
Actually, this sounds like a picture book. It
would be nice to have a vague date and whether it was a picture or
chapter
book.
T26 The person didn't say whether the three
mountains
book is a picture book or intermediate fiction. If it is a picture
book,
then I have a long shot. There is a book titled THE THREE ROBBERS
by Tomi Ungerer, 1962. The cover shows the large, hill-shaped
hats
that the three robbers are wearing, and their eyes. The hats do look
like
mountains. The robbers also live in the mountains. They rob people
until
one day they end up robbing a
stagecoach where there is nothing of value except
a little girl. The girl helps them mend their ways, and they open up an
orphanage. No scarves in the book, but the robbers all wear capes. Just
a total shot in the dark. ~from a librarian
This sounds like one of my favorite books, The
Catalog. Tiny picture book, simple line drawings. Three
mountains
order pets from a catalog, but when winter snows come they realize they
are ill-equipped to take care of them. Final illustration shows the 3
mountains
with giant hats on (ordered from the catalog) under which the animals
can
snuggle and stay warm.
Jasper Tompkins, The Catalog,
1981. Sorry I didn't give the author info yesterday. Also, the
publisher
is Green Tiger Press/Simon & Schuster.
Since you mention mountains and fog as
hats/scarves,
I'm wondering if it might be Joan Aiken's The Whispering Mountainwhich
includes a poem/prophecy, "When the Whispering Mountain shall scream
aloud/And
Fig-Hat Ben shall wear a shroud..." (turns out to mean fog on the
mountain).
This sounds like a combination of two time
travel
stories I've read: Tom's Midnight Garden by Phillipa
Pearce,
which has the old house and a grandfather clock as the key to the
travel, and Ormondroyd's Time At the Top in which the
time
traveling girl's father stays in the past to marry a woman there -- but
the time travel device in that book is the elevator in the modern
family's
apartment building.
I think the person is thinking of TIME
AT THE TOP by Edward Ormondroyd. A girl who lives in
NYC
unknowingly helps a fairy in disguise and is granted "3". (If this part
doesn't ring a bell, don't worry. It's a minor part right in the
beginning)
Turns out the "3" is three trips into the past. She takes the elevator
in her building to the top, but when the door opens, she finds herself
in a Victorian house in the past. The two children in the house (a
brother
and sister, I believe) take her in. They are worried their widowed
mother
is going to marry a slimy suitor. The girl returns to her own time, and
brings back her widowed father, who ends up marrying the children's
mother.
#T44--don't know about the tooth fairy, but
there's
a Rand McNally Junior Elf Book on a lost tooth called Tommy's
Tooth.
T46 - could this be Jonnesty?
The
little man's head is made of an honesty seedpod, but the rest sounds
right
- think author is Winifred Mantle
Thanks for reading my inquiry, but the book
I am looking for is not Jonnesty.
Margaret Martignoni (editor), The
Illustrated Treasury of Children's Literature, 1960. I don't
know
of any "Weekly Reader" connection but it seems to fit the
description
in other ways: big anthology for all ages, including nursery rhymes
children's
poems folk tales and excerpts from books ranging from "The
Velveteen
Rabbit" to "Penrod" to "Tom Sawyer" to "David Copperfield".
T46 thistle-head: this sounds as if it might
have been a children's annual, since it contained more than one story
and
a crafts page. I don't recognise it, though, so that's not much help.
Looks more general, but there's Thank-you
Book by Francoise (Seignobosc), published Scribner 1947
"In
simple text, the child says 'thank you' to the things and the creatures
that help to make the world a happy place for him."
I have this book! I will have to find it,
I think it is at my parents' house. I will send title asap.I am almost
positive it is in a series of 3 books, and I believe I have all three.
there's a picture book with the title Thankfulness:
What is It, by Janet McDonnell, illustrated by Linda
Hohag, 32 pages, but it was published recently, and seems to be a
collection
of ideas, rather than a straight story. Same illustrator but different
author is a companion book called Responsibility: What is It.
Carol Fernpheil, I Read About God's Love.
Hi There, I was looking for the exact book that you were and stumbled
across
your urgent request....I searched under Thankfulness for hours on the
internet
with no luck...Little did I know, my older sister had the book the
whole
time. This is definitely the book you are looking for..don't
thank
me, thank the man.... It is actually a book with a few stories in it
and
this is just one of the stories. Hopefully, now you will be able to
purchase
it and read it to your children!
T61 tall ship: maybe Aboard the Lizzie
Ross,
by Harriet Vaughan Davies, illustrated by Nancy Grossman,
published
Norton 1967, 221 pages? "Life aboard a sailing vessel in the last
century.
Ages 10 up." (HB Apr/67 p.147 pub ad) "the Lizzie Ross was a
Canadian
ship, and Captain Vaughan was a Canadian citizen. His fun-loving Yankee
wife, Ann, came from Maine, and the three Vaughan children were born
during
different voyages: Chad, the oldest, in London; John Colin two years
later
off the coast of Maine; and Harriet, the youngest, during a tropical
storm
on a voyage to Argentina." No information on the shape of the book,
though.
Caroline Tapley, John Come down the
Backstar,
1974. Summary: In 1857 a 177-ton sailing ship, Fox, was equipped for a
trip to search for Sir John Franklin and his men, who were lost in the
Arctic since 1845. This is an account, told from the perspective of the
youngest seasman aboard, as he might have written down his experiences
in his diary. This is a Jr. Literary Guild selection, chosen as a
outstanding
book for older readers (C Group).
T61 tall ships: another possible is Clipper
Ship, by Thomas P. Lewis, illustrated by Joan Sandin,
published
NY Harper 1978, reprinted 1992, 63 pages, 8 1/2" x 5 1/2" (if that
counts
as tall?), an I Can Read History Book. "Captain Murdock, on a clipper
ship
run from New York City to San Francisco, takes his wife and children
along
- fortunately, since his wife can take over when he becomes ill and the
children can also help. Lively 3-color drawings." (Children's Books
1978
p.3) The cover of the reprint can be seen on Amazon.
Smith, William, Thorndale : or The conflict of opinions, 1859. Classed as British fiction by LC.
Drawing a blank on this one, but it keeps
reminding
me of Martha Alexander's Blackboard Bear which
has
a very similar storyline. The first book came out in 1969, though.
maybe too late again - Midway by
Anne
Barrett, illustrated by Margery Gill, published London, Collins
1967
"Mark, middle boy in a clever family, feels unable to compete with
the
witty assurance of the older two or the complacent assurance of the
younger
twins. Even at school he is unbearably teased. In his solitude, an
imaginary
friend appears - a tiger, mentor and guide (and voice of his own
speculations?).
With this helper, and his own instinctive 'sense' about people, Mark is
able to save his father's precious notes from a sinister rival Doctor
(about
to fix his claim in a broadcast talk) and to find his own confident
place
as an individual." (Best Children's Books of 1967, Naomi Lewis)
Perhaps Andy and the Lion by James
Daughtery? This was first published in 1938, but it's been
reprinted
often.. Andy helps a lion out by removing a thorn stuck in his
paw,
the lion is very grateful, and Andy gains great confidence in himself.
T68 Tommy and the lion: Could be Andrew
the Lion Tamer by Donald Hall with pictures by Jane
Miller,
published in 1959, 56 pages, cute illustrations. "Great vintage
children's
story of a little boy named Andrew and what happens when he gets "lion"
seeds and decides to grow his own lion!"
T68 tommy and the lion: just possibly Timmy
and the Tiger, by Marjorie Paradis, illustrated by Marc
Simont, published Harper 1952, 246 pages. "Although Timmy was ten
years
old, he was still - to his own disgust and
shame - secretly afraid of many things. His
valiant attempts to conquer his fears make an important part of a
rather
unusual story. It comes to an exciting climax when a next-door neighbor
actually brings home from a big-game hunting expedition the live tiger
which gives the book its title." (HB Aug/52 p.241) It's a real
tiger,
though, not an imaginary animal.
Could this be The Thirsty Lion
by Karine Forbes (Crowell-1950)?
Marek Veronica ( correctly Veronika), Tommy
and the lion. (1964 approx)
Hutchinson
/London published it.
Tommy and the Lion. I
remember
this book as it was my favourite bedtime book. It was definately called
Tommy and the Lion, not Andy, and it wasn't a tiger! I too would
love to know how to get hold of a copy for my own daughter.
I think the poem you are referring to might be
Palmer
Cox's Brownie's Year Book. Month by month, Cox details the
sport
and activities of the brownies, told in rhyme.
It is definitely found in The Illustrated Treasury of Children's
Literature
by Margaret Martignoni but I would guess it could be in other
anthologies
as well.
I'd suggest Return of the Viking
by Eva-Lis Wuorio, illustrated by William Winter, published
Toronto,
Clarke Irwin 1955, 208 pages. It's not a perfect match, but close.
Joan,
Wendy and John visit the Royal Ontario
Museum on a rainy Saturday during WWII, and meet
Thorvald, a young Norwegian refugee who points out the Viking sword
exhibit
as proof that Norwegians discovered Canada. In the reproduction of an
English
16th c.
room, they try the "very ancient looking, thick,
wooden door" and it opens, to reveal Lief the Lucky on the other side.
He fell asleep almost 1000 years ago while exploring 'Vinland', woke up
and couldn't find his sword -- which is of course, the one in the
exhibit.
Lief is invisible to adults, but ends up going for commando training
because
his homeland is in danger from the Nazis. At the end of the story the
children
read a news report
about a commando raid on a Nazi-held Norwegian
seaport supported by a ghostly figure in a strange costume. This is
actually
only the first story of 4 in the book, all involving time-travel and
Canadian
history, and
the same children and their friends. Nobody named
Crystal, though and the door is in a museum, not a study, and it takes
place in Ontario, not Minnesota.
Philippa Pearce, A Dog So Small,
1960s? The picture on the dw of this is a tiny dog on the palm of
a hand.
Most likely is - A Dog so Small,
by Phillipa Pearce, about a boy who imagines a tiny black
chihuahua
as his pet. Less likely would be - No Flying in the House,
which does involve a tiny mechanical dog, but I'm not sure whether he
needs
a key. Longest shot is - Aggie, Maggie and Tish, by
Betty
K. Erwin, which does feature a tiny black bulldog held in a girl's
hand.
On another track entirely, perhaps - Peanut, by Ruth and
Latrobe Carroll,
published Oxford Univ Pr 1951, 48 pages "Peanut
is a tiny puppy who lives in a teapot and eats out of a bottle cap,
until
a Great Dane becomes a pet in the same family. Poor Peanut decides to
run
away. His adventures are illustrated in soft two-color pictures." (Horn
Book Dec/51 p.380 pub ad) The review, p.406 says that he sits on a
spool
of thread and plays under a geranium in a plant pot, and that there are
'fine pictures on almost every page.'
Another, somewhat less likely is The
Smallest
Dog on Earth, by Rosemary Weir, illustrated by Charles
Pickard,
published London, Abelard-Schuman 1963 "This is a delightful story
about
a chihuahua pupy and the transformation of her character as a result of
exciting experiences with several owners - film star, riverside
outcast,
and the little girl she really loved." illustration shows a black
chihuahua
standing. (Junior Bookshelf Oct/63 pub ad)
another possible is Little Peewee Or Now
Open The Box, by Dorothy Kunhardt, pictures by J.P.
Miller,
published Simon and Schuster Little Golden Books 1948, 42 pages "This
is
the story of Little Peewee the
teeniest weeniest dog in the world. He performs
in a circus, but one day he starts to grow and grow and grow. He can no
longer work in the circus with all his friends. Now what will poor
Little
Peewee do?" Peewee is a tiny
dalmatian, and the cover shows a circus scene.
I submitted the Stump the Bookseller for the
Tiny Dog. I was looking a copy of Water Babies by Charles
Kingsly and there was an illustration of a boy a dog and a giant.
I know I had a copy of this book as a child but the illustrations were
different. I am now thinking that maybe this is where I saw the
picture.
The dog is not tiny, he is being held by a giant. I would love to
know if there is such an illustration in Water Babies and who is the
illustrator.
Not sure if I understood T82's question right,
but I had an illustrated copy of Charles Kingley's Water Babies,
and my recollection of the giant was that he lived on an island where
everyone
ran backwards (and Tom, the protagonist, had to travel backwards as
well
at this point in the story). As I remember the illustration of the
giant,
he was a sad-looking fellow in glasses, who had crowds of people
fleeing
from him. I do not recall him holding Tom's dog, or anything about a
key.
Hope this helps.
In an old school Ginn reader, Ten Times
Round, there is The Rice Bowl Pet. Ah Jim lives
in
a small apartment in Chinatown. He is told he can only have a little
pet,
one that will fit in a rice bowl. Rest of the story involves Ah Jim's
hunt
for a petite pet. Finally he finds a very tiny puppy (from China).
While
the puppy is golden it is pictured in a dark rice bowl as he carries it
homeward.
Lionel Davidson, Under Plum Lake, 1983. May not be the one but I thought it was worth a try ! If you're lucky enough to get your hands on a copy it's well worth reading .
Could this be Dangerous Island
by
Helen
Mather-Smith Mindlin? Three kids, Frank, Dorothy and Pug, are
stranded on an island, which eventually disappears. The island has gold
on it or something.
Maybe Two On an Island, by Bianca
Bradbury, illustrated by Robert Maclean, published Houghton 1965,
139
pages. "On an uninhabited Maine island from which their rowboat has
drifted away, nine-year-old Trudy and twelve-year-old Jeff endure a
three-day
trial of survival. The plausible framework for this unusual test of
endurance
has more than mere detail of hunger, sunburn, and nighttime cold. Miss
Bradbury skillfully develops the heightened class of different
personalities
- Trudy with a more generous nature, so willingly sharing the tiny bit
of food with their great dog; Jeff, a lone-wolf kind of boy with an
aggressive
habit of scolding and bossing - through a gradual change from bickering
to affection. Later, Jeff knew there was 'so much he and Trudy hadn't
told
and might never tell.'" (Horn Book Aug/65 p.386)
Possibly September Island, by Rosalie
Fry, illustrated by Margery Gill, published Dent/Dutton 1965, 112
pages.
"A
trailer camp holiday turns into a great adventure when three children
are
stranded on a storm-created sandbar island." Martin and Linda are
on
a caravan holiday when a terrible storm floods the river. When a girl
is
washed away clinging to a tree, they take a boat out to rescue her and
all three are washed up onto a new sandbank thrown up by the flood.
With
the tree and some flowers that are washed up this is just like a small
desert island, and as they had some shopping with them they are able to
spend a very pleasant day and night, and are rescued before danger can
spoil the adventure. (Junior Bookshelf Jun/65 p.146)
Given how we tend to mix up details and even
different books on occasion, is it possible you're thinking of
Two on an Island by Bianca
Bradbury,
1965? The boys 12, the girl is 9, they head out to an island with their
German Shepherd and as the tide comes in, the girl carelessly lets the
boat drift off. Since they've always fought constantly, they have to
learn
to overcome this over the next four days (they know no one will miss
them
until that point) while they figure out how to survive with minimal
food
and water - and how to protect it against the rats on the island. Not
to
be confused with the Elmer Rice play of the same name.
could it be An Island for Two,
by Ludek Pesek, translated from the German by Anthea Bell,
published
Bradbury 1975, 166 pages? "Desert island dreams come true. Traces the
development
of a relationship between two young social misfits who find through
each
other a new maturity."
T90 two stranded: another possible is Summer
Adventure, by Finn Havrevold, illustrated by E.
Wallenta,
published Abelard 1961, 127 pages. "Tine Tron, a 14 year-old girl
on
holiday with her parents and small brother is unhappy because she has
no
friends of her own age with her, except Jan, who knows nothing about
sailing.
Defiantly she decides to go by boat to the shop, though she has been
forbidden
to sail alone. Jan and Peik the dog go with her, but a squall arises
and
they are marooned on a bare island. Jan proves himself more useful on
shore
than afloat but the difficulties of existence for even two days have a
sobering effect on Tine." (JB Dec/61 p.348)
Lindbergh, Anne, Worry Week.
NY, Harcourt 1985. It's not a perfect match, as the island seems
to have always been an island, but worth checking out. "Left alone for
a week in their family's summer house on a Maine island, Allegra and
her
two sisters scrounge for food andsearch for the treasure supposedly
hidden
somewhere on the premises."
T55 teddy bear tea party sounds like T94 teddy
bear tea party. The described size is similar and the mention of a
picnic
or tea party (Teddy Bear's Picnic?)
Jimmy Kennedy, Teddy Bears' Picnic,
1947. T94 The song 'Teddy Bears Picnic' by Jimmy Kennedy
published
in 1947, and performed by a myriad of artists, spawned innumerable book
versions. "If you go down to the woods today, you're
in for a big surprise... Picnic Time for Teddy
Bears! The little teddy bears are having a lovely time today..." Hope
you
find your special book!
Have you tried searching at photo stock agency
websites like Corbis? A lot of textbook photos come from stock
agencies,
and many now have on-line catalogs you can search.
T97: Teenager
With Lupus
Solved: 13 is Too Young to Die
Tworkov/Duvoisin, Tigers Don't Bite,1956?
Just a guess, I can't find any description of the story.
This is Mrs. Welladay's New Tabby Cat
by Kathryn and Bryon Jackson. I found it in the old school
reader-Treat
Shop by Eleanor Johnson and Leland Jacobs. Perhaps it is a stand alone
book as well.
T101: Time
travelling in aunt's house
Solved: Magic Elizabeth
People travel through space by flivvering in Alfred Bester's The
Stars My Destination. I think it's in print. The
protag
is named Gully Foyle.
It's definitely not The Star My Destination. In that book
instantaneous travel through space was called "jaunting" NOT
"flivering".
T102 time travel: I'm pretty sure that in The
Stars My Destination, by Alfred Bester, teleportation
(space,
not time) is called 'jaunting', not flivvering. What do they call
teleportation
in Zenna Henderson's The People stories?
T102 just a comment: In Zenna
Henderson'sThe
People, it is called lifting.
Madeleine L'Engle, Wind in the Door.
I thought I would just drop a note that "kything" is the word L'Engle
uses for time/space continuum travel in her
"Wrinkle
in Time" trilogy. I know you said "flivering," but sometimes I am
amazed at how my memory twists things!
just a further note. In Madeleine L'Engle's
books, the ability to move across time and space is called
"tessering".
The previous contributor's word "kything" is, in Madeleine L'Engle's
books,
the ability to connect mentally and more important emotionally with a
person
who is not with you (separated by time and space.) The tessering
concept she got from scientific principles the kything from Celtic
religion,
I think.
Actually, I think Madeleine L'Engle's "kything"
is the blending of one's soul with another's-- specifically for the
purpose
of combating evil. "Tessering" is using tesseracts or "wrinkles in
time"
to move about the universe.
"flivvering" - Aldous Huxley's Brave New
World uses this term, I think both as noun ("a flivver") and
verb
("flivvering"). But there's no time travel...
Flivver, the Heroic Horse by Lee Kingman and
illustrated
by Erik Blegvad, 1958. I don't know if Flivver is in involved in
time travel, but I couldn't resist adding this namesake to the Flivver
discussion. The story of an adventurous horse who is used
to
hauling a Boston fruit cart, but who becomes involved in other
activities
in a Massachusetts fishing town called "Smuggler's Cove".
I know that there are vehicles in the Star Trek
novels that are called Flivvers, and the books do occasionally
incorporate
some type of time travel. Perhaps you read one of these?
Possibly Elsewhere and Elsewhen,
ed. by Groff Conklin, Berkley Pub. Corp., 1968.
Contents:
Introduction / Groff Conklin -- Elsewhen: Shortstack / Walt and Leigh
Richmond.
How allied / Mark Clifton. The wrong world / J.T. McIntosh. World
in a bottle / Allen Kim Lang -- Elsewhere: Think blue, count two /
Cordwainer
Smith. Turning point / Poul Anderson. The book / Michael
Shaara.
Trouble tide / James H. Schmits. The Earthman's burden / Donald
E.
Westlake. Originally published in two volumes: Science Fiction
Elsewhen
(London: Rapp & Whiting, 1968) and Science Fiction Elsewhere
(London:
Rapp & Whiting, 1968).
Conklin, Groff, editor, Crossroads
in Time, 1953. Maybe this one. Sixteen stories and
two novellas. The publication date looks like a plausible match
This sounds like something I have read, but I
have no idea who edited it. The poster of this book stumper could look
up Roger Elwood or Martin Greenberg in hopes of seeing
if
their anthologies sound familiar.
Perhaps memory is conflating two Groff Conklin
anthologies? Conklin's 1952 anthology INVADERS OF EARTH
is
divided into sections that sound like what's wanted (The Distant Past,
The Immediate Past, The Immediate Future, The Distant Future).
However,
it is not an anthology of time travel stories, but of alien invasion
stories.
Conklin did do a time travel anthology, CROSSROADS IN TIME,
but it is not arranged in that manner. In any case, content
information
for all English-language sf anthologies and single-author
collections
published prior to 1984 can be searched on
this website, so questionner could see list of contents of each and
determine if they sound familiar (or if any other of the 3,900 books
indexed
there do. . . .)
The answer to T120 is not, I regret, Elsewhere
and Elsewhen. This is one of my favorite S.F.
anthologies.
It's a great collection, very wide-ranging in theme, but not including
time-travel. Good hunting!
T121 Sounds like it might be LITTLE
MONSTER'S
BEDTIME BOOK by Mercer Mayer, 1978 (one source said it
was
a Little Golden Look-Look Book, but other sources listed it as a
publication
of Merrigold Press). It also looks like it was republished in 1991, but
is now out of print. ~from a librarian
I think this person has two books confused. Mercer
Mayer does indeed have a book with a Wild-'n-Windy
Typhoonigator
in it, as well as a Paper-Munching Yalapappus, a Stamp-Collecting
Trollusk,
and a Letter-Eating Bombanat. It's called One Monster
After
Another and they're all trying to get Sally Ann's letter before
it reaches her friend Lucy Jane. But it's not about manners and
there's
no Kibitzer in the book. There are several books about monsters
&
manners (Monster Manners by Joanna Cole,
Magic
Monsters Learn About Manners by Jane Belk Moncure,
Monster
Manners by Bethany Roberts, Modern Manners for
Little
Monsters by Wilson Rogers) but I didn't see a Kibitzer
in
any of those, either.
Looked up TYPHOONIGATOR on Google and found one
guy'e poem using it, and then one ref to a Mercer Meyer book, One
Monster After Another, but it doesn't seem to be about manners.
Mercer Mayer, Little Monster's Bedtime
Book. It's the Baby Great Glern of
the Sea and the poem goes, "The Baby Great Glern of the Sea, gives
annoying
advice constantly, now if that hand were mine, id play the nine, my
goodness,
you'd lose without me." then the picture by his head says "kibits,
kibits,
kibits" i can recite all the poems.
Hardie Gramatky's Little Toot is definately a
small
boat in a harbor with huge boats, but her claim to fame is rescuing an
ocean liner during a storm.
Gertrude Crampton, Scuffy the tugboat Scuffy
was a toy tugboat, but the rest of the details sound right.
T129 Of all my little toot type things, this
title sounds like the best-- Hogner, Nils The
lost
tugboat illus by NIls
Hogner
Abelard Press 1952. tugboats; New York City - juvenile fiction
T129 if it helps any, all the illus are
red and green in Hogner. The tug's name is Betty Ann. The
skipper
loses his way in the fog and they end up near a big ship which needs
the
help of a tug.
Date-1964. Could this be Little Toot on
the Thames?? Tug gets towed across the Atlantic by accident and
gets lost in the London Fog!
T130:
two girls switch places during WWII
Solved: Searching for Shona
Jack London, The Star Rover. Possibly?
Bradley, Marion Zimmer. I think
that this might be one of the Darkover books. There are lots of them. Take
a look at this website.
Any possibility this illustration could be
associated
with the fairy tale The Twelve Dancing Princesses?
The princesses travel to a wondrous underground land each night to
dance
the huntsman following them in his invisiibility cape is fascinated by
the trees with leaves of silver and gold, but maybe in some versions
the
leaves are crystal or glass.
The 12 Dancing Princesses.
This could be one of the many, many versions of the fairytale "The 12
Dancing
Princesses" where the girls have to sneak out because their father
won't
let them "date." They go (usually) through a tunnel in their
bedroom
floor through wondrous places to a ball where they dance all
night.
Their dancing slippers are always worn out every morning and the father
cannot figure out why, since he locks them in their room at
night.
Anyhow, most versions have them going through areas full of trees with
glass leaves, golden leaves, jewelled leaves, etc. to get to the
ball.
So this might be it, the challenge would be in finding the version that
you remember the pictures from!
Henry Van Dyke, The Foolish Fir Tree.
1911. Alternatively, this poem (and variants I've seen online)
also
talk about a tree with glass leaves. "A Presbyterian Minister,
Henry
Van Dyke is perhaps best known for The Story of the Other Wise Man and
for the Hymn of Joy ("Joyful, joyful, we adore Thee, ..."). He
was
also a prolific poet, and the above poem can be found in: Van Dyke,
Henry.
The
Poems of Henry Van Dyke. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1911."
T137 This woldn't be Coleno again,
would it?
See also T157.
Watson, J. W., Twelve Dancing
Princesses.
Try
this Golden Book it may be the one. The old soldier who follows
the
princesses through a jeweled forest snaps one of the leaves off,
scaring
the youngest princess. He ended up marrying the eldest. The
illustrations are lovely.
J. W. Watson, The Twelve Dancing
Princesses. It could be this -- a beautifully illustrated
version,
Golden Book.
Sounds like the Foolish Fir Tree
to me, I do remember the various pictures of the tree with its various
leaves. The glass ones got broken by rain, gold ones were stolen by a
passerby, there may have been some kind of red leaf that also got
ruined. Don't know if it was a poem or a story.
Clare Newberry, Babette. Or possibly another of her cat books though I think this is one that definitely features Siamese cats. Alternatively, if the book in question is an illustrated book for adults/ older children, rather than a picture book, then it could be one of Doreen Tovey's series beginning Cats in the Belfry or possibly Irene Holdsworth's Little Masks.
Same as H67.
Roberta Moynihan, Futility the Tapir,
1959. Might not be the right book, can't find a copy or a
description
anywhere online.
I found this description of Futility, the
Tapir: A quietly hilarious picture book about a tapir
who,
upon awakening, begins the struggle to force his ungainly body to
stand,
and who at day's end exclaims, "What an exhausting day! I really must
get
some rest. After all, tomorrow I may succeed." Nicely humorous
illustrations
by the author.
There's a book titled Queen Titania's Radio Fairies by Oliver Garrison Pirie, Bower & Pirie, 1924, 116 pgs. (alt. title is Radio Fairies). Sorry, no description.
Ruth and Harold Shane, The Twins, The
Story of Two Little Girls Who Look Alike. This is a Little
Golden
Book, with illustrations by Eloise Wilkin.
T161:
tomato
people
Solved: The Visitors from
Planet Veta
There's a Little Golden Book called, Lucky
Mrs. Ticklefeather, but I haven't read it so I don't know if
there's
a Tommy in it. Good luck!
Negative on Lucky Mrs. Ticklefeather. But for more
info on her, see the Most Requested pages.
Mother used to read Timothy Ticklefeather to us when we were
kids on the farm. For the past 20 years we have been searching
for
a copy of this poem. I was so pleased and surprised to see it
spring
partially into view when I put the title on the web.
Adolph Soens,It was written by
my grandfather in the early 20th century in colorado along with other
peoms
catagorized as "Humor and Whimsey"
Regarding the tapestry story, a similar one
appeared
in Children's Digest Magazine, probably between 1971 and 1974, of a
princess
or lord's daughter about to be forced to marry against her will.
An expert needleworker, she tried to drown her sorrows while waiting
for
the inevitable marriage by working on an enormous tapestry. Upon
stitching a likeness of her dog into the tapestry, her dog disappeared,
the likeness being so perfect he couldn't exist in two places at
once.
Realizing what
had happened, the girl stitched herself into
the tapestry to escape the unwanted marriage. This isn't Andre
Norton's Through a Needle's Eye, about a girl crippled by
polio
who meets an old woman with similar needleworking abilities.
Mrs. Molesworth, The Tapestry Room,
1879, copyright. Possibly this is the story of Hugh and Jeanne, two
small
children who find a way into the great tapestry via various means
little
rubber attachments on the feet or by wings. Try this link
These are not the correct books. The
title I am looking for is The Magic Mountain. It is a
collection
of short stories. The first story in the book is also The Magic
Mountain.
The last story in the book is The Tapestry.
Neither of the two suggestions fit the book
I'm inquiring about. I believe the cover of the book shows the
two
children climbing a mountain, but I no longer believe the name of the
book
to be The Magic Mountain. It may be Children's Stories.
The tapestry story still holds.
I, too, have sought for a book about 'Twinkle
and Boo', two kittens who get into michief. I actually had
memorized
the poem-story in about 1st or 2nd grade. (opening stanza) "There
were two little kittens with eyes of blue, One was named Twinkle, one
was
named Boo They tried to be good and do what was right But they got into
mischief from morning till night!" I too checked all variations
of
Twinkle and Boo book names! BUT....I didn't have the right
title! The answer
is............. The Kitten Twins
by Helen Wing I sure hope I make somebody's day happier by
having
this title and author!
Your web site says Under entry T168 - the
name of the book is The Kitten Twins - This is NOT
the
same book - Can you help?
Three stray guesses: Julian, Lee, Fire
Dog, Lewis, Frank, Kerry the Fire-Engine Dog or
Browning,
James, Sparky the Fire Dog
Dorothy Grider, The Little Ballerina,
1959. Might this be The Little Ballerina?
Check
out more on the Solved Mysteries pages.
i did see your results, and that was not the book i'm looking for.
but if i could see a picture of the cover, it would help.
Here's
the picture of The Little Ballerina posted on the Solved Mysteries
page.
Meader, Stephen, Long Trains Roll,Randy MacDougal and his family, in Pennsylvania during WWII, are heavily involved with the world of trains, from his father, an engineer, to his brothers, serving in the armed forces in India and Africa. Randy, a high schooler working on the railroads in the summer, finds himself tutoring a newcomer. After breaking in newcomer Lew Burns, Burns disapppears, having lost a mysterious notebook, which Randy finds. Randy begins to suspect Burns of being a German spy. Randy finds himself saving the railroad from a dynamite explosion, apparantly set by Burns and some compatriots, and ends up defending the railroad in a fig leaf "kilt", because he was jumped, and left clothes-less. Stephen Meader is a very skilled writer of boys'' adventure book. it has been surprising not to see his name listed here more often.
Gladys Baker Bond, Patrick Will Grow, 1966, llustrated by David K. Stone, Western Publishing/Whitman, Racine. from the book: Two beds were in the living room. Grandpa, Grandma, and Patrick's tallest sisters slept there. In the back bedroom a bed sat between Grandma's trunk and Mother's cedar chest. Patrick slept in the middle of that bed between Mike and Tim. "I'm glad Patrick is small," Mother said. "I don't know where we cold put another bed." "Patrick will grow," Grandma said wisely....Patrick's new bed was delivered and put in the back bedroom. But, oh, my! Mother could not walk between the beds. Grandma could not open her trunk. "What'll we do?" they cried. Grandpa knew what to do. He cut the legs of the cot in half. Then he slid Patrick's cot under the bed which now belonged to MIke and Tim. When night came, Grandpa pulled it out again..."
Patricia St John, The Tanglewoods Secret.
There's a book called The Tanglewoods Secret by Patricia St John, first
published 1948. I've just given my copy away so can't check details but
it's a Christian tale, set in England, where the girl who narrates it
and
her brother, Philip, live with their Aunt Margaret. She's naughty and
rebellious
till she finds God and peace.
NOT the Tanglewoods Secret.While
The Tanglewoods Secret (1948) is a wonderful story, it is
nothing like the description given in this query. In this story, it is
a (British?) brother and sister who move in with their maiden aunt
while
their parents go off to India as missionaries, but when WWII breaks
out,
the parents are unable to come home for years. The girl struggles with
rebelling against her aunt's child-rearing while her brother is a real
saint. They befriend a gypsy boy and his mother, there is a
terrible
accident, and the results lead all the characters to learn about what
it
means to love others as God loves them/us.
Kenize Mourad, Regards from the Dead
Princess:
Novel of a Life
Someone has suggested Regards from the Dead Princess: Novel of
a Life, by Kenize Mourad. Thank you. But sorry, that is
NOT the solution. Mourad's book is about a TURKISH Princess (not
Tunisian) who went to Libya and India before winding up in Paris.
That story is somewhat parallel to the story about the Tunisian
Princess
but it's not the same. (Funny thing is that I first learned about
Kenize Mourad just this past January when I was in Paris.) Anyone
have any other suggestions?
Edith Unnerstad, Twilight Tales.
A collection of Swedish fairy tales at least one was about a
troll.
I haven't read the book since my own childhood, so can't remember
whether
it fits the description in other ways.
i've read a story about a baby stolen and
replaced
by an ugly fairy. I think the ugly fairy was called a changeling,
although
I don't remember the name of the book. I hope it helps spark a memory.
Lyon, Elinor, Rider's Rock.
Chicago, Follett 1958. Not a lot of information to go on, but
perhaps
this one "Since a tidal wave covered it years before, a seaside village
has remained buried and intact beneath the sand. Then four children
discover
how to tunnel into the buildings and are exploring when another wave
hits,
with revealing results." No description of the cover, unfortunately.
William Mayne's Low Tide
(1994) has 3 New Zealand children trapped by a tidal wave, but they are
lured out by a low tide to see a shipwreck, not any place with windows.
Elinor Lyon, Rider's Rock,1958.
The cover you describe definitely belongs to this book The children are
trapped in the house they have uncovered when another tidal wave hits
and
she saws her plait off to secure the window. This was a favourite of
mine
when I was about 8 .
Lyon,
Elinor, Rider's Rock,
Follett 1968, copyright. I've seen the cover of this book
<http://pictures.abebooks.com/LEMMAYJ/854406976.jpg> and it's
exactly as described in the query.
Helen Wind, Kitten Twins.
Rand McNally, 1960. Found this on your Solved page.
Your web site says Under entry T168 - the name of the book is The
Kitten Twins - This is NOT the same book - Can you help?
Palmer Brown, The Silver Nutmeg
The Silver Nutmeg: the Story of Anna Lavinia and Toby
by Palmer Brown ; with pictures by the author. New York
:
Harper, 1956. Here's the only plot description I could find: "The
protagonist of The Silver Nutmeg is a child who loves
nature
and learns an understated lesson about love."
Not a complete answer, but maybe it will
contain
some clues to help you. The title A Friendly Bear (or The
Friendly Bear) turned up, by Robert Bright, BUT the
description
says that a boy goes to visit his grandfather to have him read a book,
but there's a friendly bear there instead. So this may be throwing your
search off. The Norwegian tale about a bear and trolls sounds like CAT
ON THE DOVREFELL (the trolls think the bear is a giant white
cat
and are scared off). I also found a variation of the story by Jeannette
Winter called THE CHRISTMAS VISITORS. It seems like CAT
ON THE DOVREFELL is the more familiar title, but I couldn't
find
a flip book that contained it.~from a librarian
Diana Kimpton, The Bear that Santa Claus Forgot. A bear, not a town, but could be the one!
Marjory Schwalje, I Walk to the Park. Published by Whitman in 1966--a possibility? I think the opening was something like "I walk to the park, and what do I see?--something, something, da dum, dee dee (you get the idea)." It was written in rhyme.