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Mysteries |
Books |
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Martha Alexander
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ABOUT THE AUTHOR (1920- ) Martha Alexander has written and illustrated a host of books for children with a fanciful soft touch that reminds many of the precarious and magical world of childhood. She lives in Hawaii. LOGANBERRY LEGACY BIBLIOGRAPHY ILLUSTRATED BOOKS BIBLIOGRAPHY
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Condition
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| Used
Books
Alexander, Martha. Blackboard Bear. Dial Press, 1973. Third Pied Piper paperback printing. VG-. $10 Alexander, Martha. Sabrina. Dial Press, 1988. First Puffin Pied Piper Paperback printing, 1991. F. $18 Alexander, Martha. You're a
Genius,
Blackboard Bear. Candlewick
Press, 1995. First edition. Ex-library copy.
VG/VG.
$10 Alexander, Martha. I'll Protect You from the Jungle Beasts. Dial
Press, 1973. First Pied Piper paperback printing, 1980. G.
$3.50 Alexander, Martha. When the
New Baby Comes, I'm Moving Out. Dial Press, 1979.
First Pied Piper paperback printing, 1981. VG $20 Alexander, Martha. Nobody Asked Me If I Wanted a Baby Sister. Dial Press, 1971.
First Pied Piper paperback printing, 1977. VG $20 Alexander, Martha. Marty McGee's Space Lab, No Girls
Allowed. Dial Press, 1981. First edition with
dustjacket. Tear on DJ across title, but otherwise good. G. $9.50 |
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| New
Books ~ please confirm availability ~ Alexander, Martha. I'll Protect You from the
Jungle Beasts. Charlesbridge
Publishing, 2006. New Hardcover, $9.95 Alexander, Martha. Nobody Asked Me If I Wanted a Baby Sister.
Charlesbridge Publishing, 2006. New Hardcover, $9.95 Alexander, Martha. When the New Baby Comes, I'm Moving Out. Charlesbridge
Publishing, 2006. New Hardcover $9.95 Kaye, Buddy, Fred Wise, and Sidney
Lippman.
A You're Adorable. Illustrated by Martha Alexander. Candlewick
Press, 1998. Board Book. New, $6.99 McGrath, Barbra Barbieri. The
Little Green Witch. Illustrated
by Martha Alexander. Charlesbridge Publishing, 2006. New
Paperback, $6.95. New Hardcover, $15.95 Zolotow, Charlotte. Big Sister and Little Sister. Illustrated by Martha Alexander. Harper & Row, 1966, 1990. New paperback, $6.99 |
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Out-of-print books are harder to stock than new books, and some are hard to find, period. If the title you are seeking is not listed for sale above, that probably means that I am currently out of stock. However, I am always on the lookout for books, and will gladly quote you when I do find your coveted book. To add your name to my Wants Files, simply fill out a Book Request Form and I will e-mail you when I have a copy in stock. Thanks. |
| By crosby bonsall?????,
1960-1975. I'm
looking for a book I read as a child (early 70's) about a boy who tries
to give his baby sister away. He pulls her around in a wagon because he
has to watch over her, and decides it is no fun and tries to give her
away.
In the end he changes his mind and decides that he loves her and will
keep
her. (I can't remember what makes him change his mind. The
illustrations
look like other books that I've seen written and illustrated by Crosby
Bonsall but I am not 100% sure. Hope you can help me I'd love to have
this
book! **later** I have found out in the last week that Crosby Bonsall is probably NOT the author of this book. I was just hoping I had hit upon something because of the illustrations I saw and story line that I saw in her book The day I had to play with my sister. This is not the book I am looking for although for some reason it reminds me of it. Martha G Alexander, Nobody Asked Me if I Wanted a Baby Sister, 1971. Resenting the attention and praise lavished on his new baby sister, Oliver tries to give her away to several people in the neighborhood. The boy giving away his baby sister is by Martha Alexander -- I think the title is Nobody Asked Me If I Wanted a Baby Sister (sequel to When the New Baby Comes, I'm Moving Out). The boy puts his sister in a wagon and tries to give her away to various people. The baby is calm through it all, til the boy's friend's family takes care of her and he walks away. The baby starts crying, and he's the only one that can get her to stop. That makes him decide to keep her. It's a picture book, illustrated in soft pastels (though it may recently have been reissued in a newly-illustrated edition). Babies are Like That. I already have a copy, one I used when my children were small. I want to get another one to give to my new grandchild. The book is small, around 5" x 5", with Martha Alexander's wonderful illustrations and very little text. Hope you can find one. Nobody Asked Me if I Wanted a Baby Sister: Read early 70s about a boy who tries to give his baby sister away. He pulls her around in a wagon because he has to watch over her, and decides it is no fun and tries to give her away. In the end he changes his mind and decides that he loves her and will keep her. I can't remember what makes him change his mind. The illustrations look like other books that I've seen written and illustrated by Crosby Bonsall but I am not 100% sure. IT'S ABOUT A LITTLE BOY AND HIS TEDDY
BEAR THE
BOY AND HIS TEDDY PLAY HIDE IN TREES ETC. AND THE BOYS MOTHER EVEN
MAKES
THEM MATCHING SWEATERS, SOMEHOW A LITTLE GIRL GETS THE TEDDY AND TREATS
HIM VERY POORLY (MEDICINE IN HIS EYES, DRESSES HIM LIKE A DOLL, HOLDS
HIM
BY THE EAR, CALLS HIM A BAD TEDDY ETC.) AND EVENTUALLY THE BOY GOES TO
GET HIS TEDDY BACK AND THE LITTLE GIRL IS DROPPING HIM OUT OF THE
WINDOW
WITH A HOMEMADE PARACHUTE AND THE BOY GETS HIS TEDDY BACK. I WOULD LOVE
TO SHARE THIS STORY WITH MY TWO SONS. |
Make-believe bear and a boy: I
think this
book might have been published as a Whitman Tell-A Tale" book. It
was one of the favorite books that I read to my boys. We called
in
the "Me Bear" book but I cannot recall the real name of the book.
The little boy went for a walk and came back with a bear. It seems that
maybe the bear could only be seen by the little boy and not his
mother.
We lost this book in a move many years later an all our grown sons have
asked about the book because they would like to share it with their
sons. #M122--Make-believe bear and a boy: A story about a boy bringing a bear home is Benny and the Bear, by Barbee Oliver Carleton, but there is no mother in that and the bear is quite real! Stories about a boy, his mother, and an imaginary bear are the Blackboard Bear series. Joan Walsh Anglund, Cowboy and His Friend. This the story of a little boy and his imaginary bear friend. I am looking for a book I read as a girl
(book
was probably published in the early 1970s). A girl receives a
cloth
or rag doll for Christmas. Yet one of her playmates, a snooty
type
of girl, gets a new doll that is electronic and that moves. I
*distinctly*
remember the line from the book in which the snooty girl says about her
doll: "She walks, she talks, she turns somersaults!" Sadly,
the main character in the story rejects her cloth doll -- I think she
gives
it to her dog and the dog buries it in the backyard -- but then she
realizes
that her doll is actually wonderful. She digs her up and does
"plastic
surgery" on her, sewing her up and making her pretty again. I
would
love to find this book again. Any ideas? This is the story of a little girl who
gets a
doll for Christmas, names her Elizabeth, has a rotten cousin who gets a
fancier doll but doesn't really love it....Elizabeth is "lost" and
eventually
found. The book was small, and we got it from the library several times
but never found it in a bookstore. It would make a lovely
graduation
gift for my Elizabeth, who loved it! Martha Alexander. Babies are Like That. I remember this book from childhood and my mother says it disintigrated from being read over and over, and must, sadly, have been thrown away. I now teach first grade, and want to use it in my classroom as a model for a book I want the students to write called "First Grade is Like That". |
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Mysteries |
Books |
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