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A A Milne, A Gallery of Children,
1925. I found the title and author, now I just need the
book!
Carole Kendall, The Gammage Cup.
The Gamage Cup (Harcourt,
1959) "A handful of Minnipins, a sober and sedate
people, rise up against the Periods, the leading family of an
isolated mountain valley, and are exiled to a mountain where
they discover that the ancient enemies of their people are
preparing to attack." Major characters= Fooley (balloonist),
Gummy (writer), Curley Green (painter).
---
A book about people who are secluded from
the world. One of them left before in a hot air balloon and
brought back things like "&" which is actually one of the
character's names. These people get attacked by a savage race
with poisoned weapons. Thier houses are colorful and a character
chews garlic.
Carol
Kendall, The Gammage Cup,
1960, approximate.This has to be The Gammage Cup, by Carol
Kendall, a childhood favourite of mine.
Carol Kendall, The
Gammage Cup. The Minnipins are a strange
people whose ancestor, Foley the Balloonist went on an
exploration mission and brought back names such as LTD, Etc...
their ancient enemies, the mushrooms later attack with poison
spears.
Carol Kendall, The
Gammage Cup. You'll get a dozen responses to
this one - it is, of course, The Gammage Cup.
Carol Kendall, The
Gammage Cup. Sounds exactly like The Gammage
Cup. The upper class were named from a list with "periods"
(ltd., etc., co.).
Carol Kendall, The
Gammage Cup, 1959, copyright. It's a Newbery
Honor book. There is also a sequel to it.
Solved: The Gammage Cup
Yes, this is the book! Thank you so much all of you. You have no
idea how much it means to me to finally be able to read this again
after nearly 14 years. It was a librarian who told me to look this
website up. I'll definitely recommend this site in the future.
Randall Garrett and Vicki Ann Heydron, The
Gandalara
Cycle. This is
definitely the Gandalara Cycle, I just reread it last
month. My copies are bound in three books, but look as if they
were originally seven different books. My copies are Gandalara
Cycle One (which consists of The Steel of Raithskar, The
Glass of Dyskornis, and The Bronze of Eddarta), Gandalara
Cycle Two (which consists of The Well of Darkness, The
search for Ka, and Return to Eddarta), and The River
Wall.
Randall Garrett and Vicki Ann Heydron, Gandalara
Cycle.
This is actually two
trilogies the books are (in order): The Steel of Raithskar,
The Glass of Dyskornis, The Bronze of Eddarta, The
Well of Darkness, Return to Eddarta, The
Search for Ka. Garrett became ill partway through, and
after the first book, most of it seems to be his coauthor's
work.
the solution to my request has been
filled successfully. you may mark w174 as solved.
the gandalara cycle is correct. thanks
------------
A series of books (at lease 20
years old) about warriors in a desert-like setting in which the
warriors rode and had a special bond with giant cats (like lions
or pumas, maybe). I think the cats were unvaryingly white. The
main character discovered he was a member of this race/tribe and
must cope.
Randall Garrett and Vicki
Ann Heydron, The Gandalara Cycle. These are definitely your books - the first in the
series is called "The Steel of Raithskar".
Randall
Garrett,
Gandalara cycle, 1981. This sounds like the
Gandalara series by Randall Garrett and Vicki Ann Heydron.
The series starts with The Steel of
Raithskar.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gandalara_Cycle
Randall
Garrett and Vicki Ann Heydron, Gandalara Cycle. This was a
series of seven books (though the paperback copies I read were
combined into three: Gandalara Cycle 1, GC 2, and The River
Wall) about a modern human who is hit by a comet and wakes up in
the body of a strange race that is human-like. The body he was
in had a bond with a huge white cat. Throughout the books he has
to integrate into the new society while solving some difficult
political problems caused by a special stone. His dual nature
comes in handy because a mind-control villain has a difficult
time controlling him, for instance when he thinks of sailboats,
since this is a desert land.
Randall
Garrett
and (mostly) Vicki Ann Heydron, The Steel of Raithskar and sequels, 1981+.
Perhaps the Gandalara books, credited to Garrett and Heydron
(but mostly written by the latter after Garrett's early
death). I haven't read them and don't know if the cats
were white, though. See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gandalara_Cycle
SOLVED: Randall Garrett, Gandalara Cycle. Several people posted the response
to my query -- I recognized the author, title and series name
instantly! Many thanks to those who responded!
M41 Moon path -- The Garden Behind
the Moon by Howard Pyle? Plot description
from the Parabola reprint (1993) "A lonely young boy
discovers the secret of walking the glimmering path across the
ocean waves to the moon, where he then learns of the
beautiful, happy garden behind the moon"
M41 moon path: more on the suggested Garden
Behind
the Moon, a Real Story of the Moon Angel, by Howard
Pyle, copyright 1895, reprinted 1988 by Parabola. "David,
a lonely young boy who's ridiculed as a "moon-calf" by the
other children in his seaside village, one night learns the
secret of walking the glimmering path on the ocean, where he
discovers the beautiful, happy garden behind the moon. Passing
behind the Moon Angel, he also passes into manhood and starts
on a hero's journey to bring lost treasures back to earth,
riding a winged horse and fighting a giant along the way and
winning the hand of a princess in the end... Howard Pyle wrote
this book following the death of his young son. It is a
touching and tender allegory."
Wow! either you or your readers are
fabulous - this is totally it! Thank you so much!
The Garden Behind the Moon,
Howard Pyle. (reprinted
in 2002) "In the fishing village where he lives, David
sits alone by the shore at night, watching the path of light
that stretches across the sea until it almost touches the
moon. Wondering, where does it go? Then one day he
hears a voice of the Moon Angel. Why not try the moon path
tonight? As David will discover, the path leads to a
magical world behind the moon."
Howard Pyle, The Garden Beyond the
Moon
Howard Pyle, The Garden Beyond the
Moon
George Selden, The Garden Under the Sea, 1957. "Humorous juvenile fiction, where talking starfish and crabs and lobsters make an underwater garden of the things people leave behind on the beach, like people do when finding rocks and shells and glass from the sea."
I believe that's Louisa May Alcott. Originally
published in 1908.
Rayner Mary, Garth Pig and the Ice
cream lady, 1977.
This book tells the story of Garth pig and his brothers and
sisters. Garth is sent to buy 8 whooshes from the ice
cream truck with the magic music - and a terrible fate
awaits. Not sure of the earliest published date, but there
is a 1977 McMillan version. There are several books about
Pigs by Rayner.
This probably isn't it, because the poster
seems pretty sure about the Lupino name, but perhaps it's Garth
Pig and the Icecream Lady, by Mary Rayner,
1977. "When Garth Pig tries to buy ice cream, he is
kidnapped by Mrs. Wolf, driver of the ice cream truck."
I posted the first solution. Maybe
there are two versions of this book, because the one I have seen
in the library definitely has Madame Lupino and not Mrs
Wolf. I did find a reference to it on the web, and it also
referes to Madame Lupino. Possibly a difference in
British/US publications? Here's
the
web ref.
Rayner, Mary, Garth Pig and The Ice
Cream Lady, 1977. Hi there- I posted this stumper,
and can officially declare it resolved. Despite the
Lupino/Mrs. Wolf question, the description sounded close
enough to check out. I recieved my copy in the mail yesterday,
and it is indeed the book, Mrs. Lupino and all. It's
nice to have it back after all these years. Thanks to the
poster who solved this for me, and to Loganberry books for
running such a valuable service. It was well worth the
two bucks. You are free to file this under Solved
Mysteries. Thanks again.
M238 When you think of word derivations,
Wolf would be a rough translation of Lupino.
Sound like a cross between Mary Chase's Harvey (the
seven
foot rabbit) and the comic strip by Crockett Johnson
called Barnaby...
I10 I just bought this book at a thrift
shop. Gary and the Very Terrible Monster by Barbara
Williams, illustrated by Lois Axeman, Watertower, 1973.
"When Gary was five, he had a pet monster, a very terrible
monster. His name was Mr. Green Nose." Mr. Green Nose makes a
terrible noise "a noise like a little boy burping" Because only
Gary can see Mr. Green Nose, other people think it's Gary who
throws the rock through Mr. Mudd's window into his goldfish
bowl, ties cans to Mrs. Fitt's fat cat and puts a fly in Debbie
White's milk.
I10 imaginary friend monster: Gary
and the Very Terrible Monster sounds like a good
match - Gary is close to Harry, and the fly in the milk episode
sounds pretty distinctive.
I'm hoping you can help find a cherished
book from my childhood. It was one of my favorites, but I
believe my little brother destroyed it, (he was a book shredder
in his toddler years). I read your Stumper page and
believe it may be the same book being searched for under
P4? Two pigs, a brother & sister, I believe their
names were Francine & Francois traveled to Paris, they
rode a train & a cruise ship & were locked in a barn to
be fattened up. They escaped & returned home. I
believe the book was old when it was read to me, some 30 years
ago. Would love to have it again to relive childhood
memories. Would appreciate
any help your site can offer. Thanks!
I think I remember the same book. I've
been looking for it on the Internet. I think it's a Little
Golden Book called Gaston and Josephine (I
remember that when I read references to "Alphonse & Gaston"
I thought they were talking about my book.) I remember
something about the two little pigs go into the dining car but
they don't have any money for their food, and the
little boy pig wears a navy blue sailor suit
and sort of a blue tam with a white pom-pom.
P-4 Gaston and Josephine!
Yes! Those were the pigs. How could I ever forget those
names...
Yes, indeed. It's Little Golden Book #65 by Georges Duplaix and
illustrated by Feodor Rojankovsky in 1949. And hard to find, of
course!
---
I am looking for a story read to me by my nana when I was a
child some 20 to 30 years ago. It is a story about 2
little pigs (in my memory they are French,) coming over on a
ship, basically ostrasized by the other passengers, but when
they are in a fog, they save the day when the foghorn is broken
by oinking and being heroes.
Georges Duplaix, Gaston and
Josephine, '40s or 50s,
approximate. A classic Little Golden Book illustrated by Feodor
Rojankovsky. The pigs are on a ship to
America. When the ship's siren breaks, they climb up into
the crows nest and squeal loudly so that other ships will hear
them coming through the fog.
George Duplaix, Gaston and Josephine, 1933, copyright. A Little Golden Book,
illustrated by Feodor Rojankovsky. Cute story of 2
French pigs on their way to America to visit their uncle. After
several misadventures, including their wallet being stolen by a
kangaroo at the Paris zoo, a missed train, being locked up by a
man who wanted to eat them, and a flat bicycle tire, they
finally make it onboard ship. When the thick fog rolls in and
the ship's siren is out of order, they climb to the crow's nest
and squeak loudly to warn other ships, becoming heroes to the
captain and grateful passengers.
Georges Duplaix, Gaston and Josephine, 1950's, approximate. This is an older
Little Golden Book, illustrated by Fyodor Rojankovsky.
It is out of print, I'm pretty sure. The story is just as
described by the poster, and yes, the pigs are "two very rosy
French pigs." They are on their way to America to visit
their cousins when the siren breaks during a heavy fog and the
pigs save the day.
I'm pretty sure that the book is The
Gauntlet, by Ronald Welch. Oxford U. Press,
date unknown. I can check my copy at home if you like.
See also the listing under Danny
Dunn: Invisible Boy.
Description from Four to Fourteen: a
library of books for children compiled by K.M.
Lines, 2d ed. 1956:
Welch, Ronald, The Gauntlet
illustrated by T.R. Freeman, Oxford Univ Press, 1951 "The
finding
of
an armoured gauntlet takes schoolboy Peter back into the past
and through his experiences the reader shares life in a castle
on the Welsh Border in the fourteenth century."
Condition Grades |
Welch, Ronald. The Gauntlet. Illustrated by T.R. Freeman. Oxford University Press, 1952. VG/VG. <SOLD> |
Genevieve Goes to Bed Early
(title of story within book). This was a story within a
collection of short stories not a separate book. I can't
remember the title, author or any of the other stories, but I do
remember that this was the title of the story. I read it as a
child in England in around 1966/1967. So not really a solution,
but a little additional info.
More info about a solved mystery, "Genevieve
Goes to Bed Early." This story was in the Golden Story
Treasury, a Big Golden Book from 1951 with stories, songs, and
poems. The stories are: Samson, Biffington Bopp,
Conundrums, The Very Quiet Fores(t?), Bumps, William the
Rooster, Genevieve Goes to Bed Early, The Tree-Toad Weather Man,
Ellie Phantastic, The Littlest Fire Engine, The Kite, From a
Tree Top.
I have spent about 3 weeks on the internet
trying to find any information on a story I remember from my
childhood in the 50's. I had no success as I didn't know
the name of the story or the title of the book it was a part
of. There were several other stories in the book as
well. I found your website through a search engine.
When I started looking through your site, I knew right away that
I would find what I was looking for. How exciting!
However, it was listed as a "solved mystery". The
reference number is "G123 - Genevieve Goes To Bed Early".
I was thrilled to just see it posted there, but I would like to
know what book it came from & would be interested in buying
the book. Could you please tell me how to proceed.
Thanks so much for your help.
---
A little girl is staying
up too late, so her parents take her to the doctor, who tells
her she should go to bed an hour earlier every night. The little
girl, in a defiant mood, decides to take this literally, so she
goes to bed at, say, 7 p.m. the next night, and then 6 p.m.,
then 5, then 4, and so on. Finally, she is sleeping during the
day and awake all night, and her only friends are the mice, who
come out in the middle of the night to keep her company. At the
end, she has gone back to a sensible bedtime. As I recall it,
this was a story in an anthology (like a Golden Books
anthology?) from sometime in the early or mid-1950s.
Golden
Story Treasury, 1951, copyright. See "Genevieve Goes to Bed Early"
under Solved Mysteries.
Golden Press, Tibor Gergely (illus), The Golden Story Treasury,
1951, copyright. The story you are looking for is "Genevieve
Goes To Bed Early," which can be found in The Golden Story Treasury,
which is a Big Golden Book. Other stories include: Samson,
Conundrums, Very Quiet Forest, Bumps (song), William the
Rooster, Tree Toad Weather Man, Big Barnyard, Jolly
Jack-o-Lantern, Worm's House, Kite, From a Tree Top, Key
Kittens, Growing Up of Littleberry Johnson, Aerobatic Bee,
Mirror, Littlest Fire Engine, Oliver the Old-Fashioned Trolley
Car, Farmer Jim, and Ellie Phantastic.
Tibor Gergely--illustrator, The Golden Story treasury: a
big golden book in full color, 1951 Golden
Press, copyright. I had this book, too, and the cover
is absolutely pink! It's a large format Golden book,
with an elephant, a fire truck, kids flying a kite and other
illustrations on the cover. I vividly remember the little
girl who went to bed an hour earlier every night. This is
definitely the one.
Genevieve
Goes to Bed Early, 1951. A short story from
the Golden
Story Treasury, a Big Golden Book. Pretty sure
this is the answer! See Solved Mysteries: G for more
information.
Konigsburg, E. L., (George).
NY
Atheneum
1971.
The
poster
has
a
good
memory.
"Benjamin
Dickinson
Carr
is
more
than just an average sixth grader. He has a sky high I.Q., a
knack for all kinds of science, and most of all, he has George.
He has an inner self named George. Ben ignores warnings from the
"little person" inside until the truth is out." "George is the
funniest little man in the world & he lives inside a boy
named Benjamin Carr & creates difficulty for Ben's brother
Howard." Ben is in an accelerated class (organic chemistry?)
with older children, and his lab partner is involved in
something illegal, but Ben wants his friendship so badly he
ignores the warnings of his imaginary friend George.
E.L. Konigsburg, (George). The English edition is called Benjamin
Dickinson
Carr and his (George)
hee, hee, I love it when I know the answer! George
and Martha by James Marshall. There were
several in the series, starring simple drawings of very funny (and
big) hippoes. I don't know why these books aren't better
known, they're classic! Maurice Sendak, for one, spares no
praise for the "judicious, humane, witty, and astonishingly
clever head of James Marshall."
The original books are hard to find, but these are new and in
stock:
Marshall, James. George and Martha.
Houghton Mifflin, 1972. New hardcover edition, $16
Marshall, James. George and Martha: The Complete
Stories of Two Best Friends. With a foreword by
Maurice Sendak. Houghton Mifflin, 1972-1988, 1997. New
hardcover edition, $25
Condition Grades |
Marshall, James. George and Martha:
The Complete Stories of Two Best Friends. Foreword by Maurice
Sendak. Houghton Mifflin, 1997. New
hardback, $25 Marshall, James. George and Martha. Houghton Mifflin, 1972. New hardback, $16 New paperback, $7 Marshall, James. George and Martha Encore. Houghton Mifflin, 1973. New paperback, $7 Marshall, James. George and Martha Rise and Shine. Houghton Mifflin, 1976. New paperback, $7 Marshall, James. George and Martha One Fine Day. Houghton Mifflin, 1978. New hardback, $16. New paperback, $7 Marshall, James. George and Martha Tons of Fun. Houghton Mifflin, 1980 New hardback, $16. New book. $16 Marshall, James. George and Martha Back in Town. Houghton Mifflin, 1984. New hardback, $16. New paperback, $7 Marshall, James. George and Martha Round and Round. Houghton Mifflin, 1988. New hardback, $16. New paperback, $7 |
|
The Gentle Giant?
Dooly and the Snortsnoot.
Summary: Although he enjoys playing with the village children
instead of scaring them, Dooly, a giant who never grew, can't
quite forget that giants are supposed to be big, brave, and
scary.
I think G89 may be a Weekly Reader book
titled George the Gentle Giant by Jeffrey
Severn. I just flipped through it at a book sale this
weekend, and it certainly seems very similar!
Could this be The Amiable Giant by
Louis Slobodkin (1955)?? Found in an anthology- Golden
Treasury
of Children's Literature.
George the Gentle Giant by Adelaide
Holl 1960- Cookies as big as wagon wheels and ice cream
cones as big as haystacks- A Golden Read it Yourself Book.
This sounds familiar - could it be Georgie
and
the Robbers, a smallish paperback I believe
Scholastic book, probably from the 70's?
Robert Bright, Georgie and the
Robbers. This is
definetely Georgie and the Robbers It is still in
print.
---
1960s or 70s.
Burglars target older home while owners are away, but resident
ghosts thwart them. One character named, "Gus" (can't
recall if it's ghost or burglar, though). Some of story
takes place in town; there's a gazebo in town square.
Robert Bright, Georgie and the Robbers, 1963, copyright. Georgie
thwarts burglars who attempt to rob the Whittaker's home while
they are away at a church social. Could the Gus you are
remembering be from a similar story, "Gus Was a Friendly Ghost",
by Jane Thayer?
Robert Bright, Georgie
and the Robbers. This sounds a lot
like Georgie and the Robbers. Mr. and Mrs. Whittaker go
off to a church sociable I don't know whether there's a
gazebo in the picture. Maybe the requester is also
thinking of Jane Thayer's
(Catherine
Woolley's) Gus the Friendly
Ghost books?
Thayer, Jane, Gus
Was A Friendly Ghost. The book I
thought of immediately is Gus was A Friendly Ghost, but
just now when I looked up info on it, I found that there
were other Gus books. So, look into the others, too.
One of the Gus
books by Jane Thayer
and illustrated by Seymour
Fleishman? See under Gus at Solved Mysteries.
Jane Thayer, Gus Was a Friendly Ghost,
1962, copyright. Possibly this or one of Thayer's
other picture books about Gus the Ghost.
Gus
was
a Friendly Ghost.
Robert Bright, Georgie and the
Robbers. As suggested, I may have
"borrowed" Gus from memories of another
book. Georgie, however, is beginning to
sound right - I think you've solved it.
Wonderful!
Thanks for your message. We have two copies of Geraldine
Belinda in stock...
Hi, I just want to be sure it is the book I am looking for. I
thought it was called Geraline Belinda Mabel Scott. What
is the picture on the cover of the book. Thank you.
It's the right book. The dj shows a little girl flouncing
across the cover with hands in a muff and braids trailing
behind. The first page talks about Geraldine Belinda Marybel
Scott.
I am delighted that you have the book. Please reserve one for
me.
---
Ever heard of a book called Geraldine Belinda Marybell Scott -
a childhood favorite of mine. Would love to get copy for
grandchildren.
Yes, and I have a beautiful copy of Geraldine Belinda
for you.
---
I'm looking for a little thin book, about 3"x 5." I
remember reading this book when I was very young, probably
around 1960. I think the cover was red. The story
was about a young girl who went to the candy store. I
remember a picture of her looking in the window at all the
candy. There was a man behind the counter. She had a
small purse that held her coins. Her clothing was old
fashioned. I believe she was wearing a coat, and maybe a
hat. Maybe even gloves. The drawings were fairly
simple, and mostly black and white.
HRL: I think this is Geraldine Belinda by Marguerite
Henry, 1942. Geraldine Belinda goes on a shopping
spree and doesn't want to share her new treasures with her friends
she passes on the way home. But by holding her head so high,
she misses that each of her little toys falls out of her bag
(paper horn), and cries when she discovers her empty load at home,
until all her scorned friends arrive on her doorstep, each one
holding one of the toys she'd dropped.
Marguerite Henry, Geraldine Belinda, 1942. Yes,
thank you, this is the book I remember. Although I
remember it being much smaller! I bought a copy and read
it with delight. I was so surprised to see the little girl
wearing a white fur hat and carrying a hand muff. My
sister and I had those, too, probably about the same time I read
the book.
---
I'm looking for a little thin book, about 3"x 5." I
remember reading this book when I was very young, probably
around 1960. I think the cover was red. The story
was about a young girl who went to the candy store. I
remember a picture of her looking in the window at all the
candy. There was a man behind the counter. She had a
small purse that held her coins. Her clothing was old
fashioned. I believe she was wearing a coat, and maybe a
hat. Maybe even gloves. The drawings were fairly
simple, and mostly black and white.
HRL: I think this is Geraldine Belinda by Marguerite
Henry, 1942. Geraldine Belinda goes on a shopping
spree and doesn't want to share her new treasures with her friends
she passes on the way home. But by holding her head so high,
she misses that each of her little toys falls out of her bag
(paper horn), and cries when she discovers her empty load at home,
until all her scorned friends arrive on her doorstep, each one
holding one of the toys she'd dropped.
Marguerite Henry, Geraldine Belinda, 1942. Yes,
thank you, this is the book I remember. Although I
remember it being much smaller! I bought a copy and read
it with delight. I was so surprised to see the little girl
wearing a white fur hat and carrying a hand muff. My
sister and I had those, too, probably about the same time I read
the book.
I don't have a solution to this stumper,
but I do have more details that might help someone else pin it
down. I remember this book and had thought it was called
something like Yours Truly, Trudy, but I haven't been able to
find anything by that name or close approximations online. The
main character's name is definitely Trudy or Trudie,
though I think she starts out hating her name, Gertrude,
and then the woman she befriends encourages her to call herself
Trudy, which she likes much better. Hope that helps someone
track down the real thing.
The hint about "Trudy" seems right---I
think maybe the girl signed her diary entries "yours Trudy"
instead of "yours truly". Still no luck with any combo
of those terms, though. I wonder if maybe this was a
reprint of slightly earlier book, since the part about the
oxygen tent seemed very old-fashioned.
Ruth Hooker (author), Gloria Kamen
(illustrator), Gertrude Kloppenberg (private),
1970. Eureka, I found it! I read this book many
years ago when it was first published, and remembered one detail
the stumper requester didn't mention. Gertrude puts a
symbol at the top of each diary entry to show whether she's had
a good, bad or medium day. A good day is marked with a
star, a medium day with a circle, and a bad day with a
square. Armed with this knowledge, I did an online search,
but could only find a brief synopsis for this title: "A lonely
little girl keeps a diary in which she records her search for a
'true blue friend.'" I borrowed the book through
interlibrary loan, and discovered that it is definitely the book
being sought! Gertrude is a latchkey child whose mother
works as a bookkeeper for a department store. (Gertrude's
father is never mentioned, and it is unclear whether her mother
is divorced, widowed, or a single parent.) Gertrude and
her mother live on the top story of a two family house.
The lower level is occupied by the five Murphy boys and their
parents. Gertrude purchases a black and white speckled
notebook and starts her diary on Monday, March 25th. She
signs some entries "Yours truly, Trudy." On March 28th,
Gertrude admires a garden through a knothole in a fence while
walking home from school. On that same day, Gertrude's
mother goes shopping with her friend, Miss Rice (the head of
housewares), and buys her daughter a plaid dress with a white
collar "just like pictures of school girls in magazines."
Gertrude meets Mrs. Blonski, the owner of the garden, on April
11, and her son, Carl, on April 23rd. Thanks to the kind
Mrs. Blonski, the shy and unsure Trudy learns to jump rope,
befriends the children at her school, gains the favorable
attention of her teacher, stands up to the rambunctious Murphy
boys, and becomes best friends with Sandra, the most popular
girl at school. At the end of the book, Trudy nearly
succumbs to undiagnosed pneumonia, but is saved by Carl (who is
studying medicine) and Mrs. Blonski, who take her to the
hospital where she is put in an oxygen tent. The book
concludes with the entry for Friday, May 24th. This was
Ruth Hooker's first book, and it was published by Abingdon
Press. It was followed by a sequel in 1974, Gertrude
Kloppenberg
II, which starts on Monday, May 28th, four days
after the first book ends.
Yay! I'm so excited to see my old
stumper solved! I swear I don't remember a car accident,
though...I'll have to re-read it.
The bear who liked hugging people,
and other stories. Ainsworth, Ruth and
Maitland, Antony, (New York : C. Russak, 1978,
©1976) Stories: The bear who liked hugging people.--The witch's
cat.--Beware of the bull.--Miranda and the mermaid.--Knock,
knock, who's there?--George's picnic.--Winkle the witch.--The
ship without a captain.--Mr. Velvet's bad deeds.--Pom-Pom the
clown.--The moon walk.--Pix!Pax!Pox!--Miss Peggy Top
Richard Hughes, Gertrude's Child, 1966.
Illustrated by Rick Schreiter. This is indeed the book
that absolutely horrified me as a child, approximately 35 years
ago. I received it in the mail today and after reading
just three pages, I can see why I was traumatized! Thank
you so much to this site and to the individual that solved my
query! Thank you Harriet for providing this service.
Without it I surely would never had resolved this and would have
been "wondering" forever!
---
Illustrated book from the late 60s/early
70s. The main character, a little girl who mistreats her
dolls, wakes up in a mysterious world where the dolls choose
and own the little girls. She goes through a strange process
of being put on a shelf in a little girl store. On a nearby
shelf there is a mysterious and beautiful little girl who lies
very still with her eyes closed. I think she is under a glass
cover. Our little girl is chosen by an awful doll and is
treated much the same way she treated her own dolls. One
memorable scene has the doll running a bath, plopping the
little girl in and forgetting her until the water is ice cold
and the little girl is shivering miserably. I can't remember
the outcome, but I remember being fascinated with both the
haunting story and pen and ink illustrations.
Richard Arthur Warren Hughs, Gertrude's
Child, 1966. Gertrude
was a wooden doll determined to be set free of the little girl
who owns her and abuses her. When she meets an old man who takes
her to his store, she finds all sorts of children for sale!
I wanted to thank you for identifying my
book! It was indeed Gertrude's Child. I have ordered a
copy and look forward to reading it again!
---
I am looking for the name of a book that I read as a
child. About 35 years ago. As I remember it, it was
about a doll named "Gertrude", although that could have been the
name of the "little girl" in the story too. The little
girl mistreated her doll... would drag her around by the foot,
leave her on the floor, etc. At some point, the doll comes
to life and mistreats the little girl. I remember being
horrified by the story and have been searching for it for years.
Richard Hughes, Gertrude's Child, 1966. I entered the key words Gertrude
doll. It came up with Gertrude's Child by Richard
Hughes written in 1966. The description says
Gertrude the doll is tired of what she thinks is abuse and runs
away. Could this be the book you're thinking of?
This same author has a 1971 book entitled Gertrude and
the Mermaid.
I am almost trembling, I am so excited. I think the
mystery of the title of the book I've been searching for for so
long has been solved! Someone responded to my post about
G300, The story of a doll that "owns" a girl and mistreats
her. If this mystery has been solved, the book is
titled: Gertrude's Child by Richard Hughes.
I have ordered it through [some huge corporate
monstrocity]. I will let you know as soon as I receive it,
if in fact it is the book I'm looking for!
S11 may very well be Richard Peck's The Ghost Belonged to Me, about Alexander Armstrong and Blossom Culp ("the spidery-legged little spook") who Alexander continually refers to as a spider. It was made into a Disney TV movie in the 76-77 timespan. I am having fun with these, and I'm suggesting the site to others!
I have no idea if this was a book or not. I saw this
movie on TV when I was young (mid to late 70s), so it was
probably a Disney or Sunday night movie for kids. It was
about a boy in the South (Louisiana?) who discovers the ghost of a little girl. She asks
for his help in solving her murder. I think she was thrown down
a well. Maybe by an uncle. I think it was antebellum
or thereabouts. I've tried Disney sites and haven't had
any luck, so I thought I would try you.
G10: The Disney movie is Child
of Glass. It is based on the book The Ghost
Belonged to Me by Richard Peck.
Condition Grades |
Peck, Richard. The Ghost Belonged to Me. Puffin paperback reprint, 1997. New. $5 |
|
Lois Lenski, Indian Captive: The
Story of Mary Jemison,
1941. I haven't read this book in a long time, and I don't
know how true the novel is to the real story, but Mary Jemison
was captured by Indians and her family was murdered, and she
eventually married an Indian man. Her hair is supposed to be
blonde, but looks reddish on the cover of the 1994 reprint. It
could also be Where the Broken Heart Still Beats: The
Story of Cynthia Ann Parker by Carolyn Meyer,
but I've never read that book and know less about it.
HRL: another Mary Jemison account is by Jeanne LeMonnier
Gardiner, and titled Mary Jemison: Seneca Captive,
originally published in 1966. Mary is definately blonde in
this story, an emigrant from Ireland settling in Pennsylvania
before being captured by the Senecas. The hiding in the barn
part of the story doesn't match.
I wish I had mentioned in my original post that I don't believe
the story to be that of Mary Jemison or Cynthia Ann Parker. I do
believe that the book for which I'm searching is fiction. It's
also not appropriate for young children. There was
some detail to the goings-on in the birthing hut. There was also
a bit of violence in the description of the torture of the rival
warrior. (He was forced to walk or run through rows of the tribe
while they punched him or hit him with objects. They cut flesh
from his legs and forced him to eat it before burning him at a
stake.)
I think this is an adult romance novel
called Ghost Fox. I remember reading it at about
the same time and age as the requester, as a Reader's Digest
Condensed Books selection. The girl had red hair and I
think her name was Sarah. Ghost Fox was the name the
Indians gave her, referring to her hair color. She fell in
love with an Indian brave and I thought the love scenes quite
risque at that age- there was one in which he put a string
of beads around her waist for her to wear secretly under her
clothes. Unfortunately I have no idea who wrote this and
Google turns up nothing. (I was also a fan of Lois Lenski's
Indian Captive, which is definitely not the same
book.)
You can mark this one as solved. I bought the book Ghost
Fox by James Houston and while at least one detail in my
memory didn't hold up, the rest did. Thanks so much!
To me, #S56, "Sadie's Grave," sounds like a
description of the same book as #W29, Witch's Garden,
which was identified as Ghost Garden.
S56 Sadie's Grave: Sounds like the
same answer for W29 - The Ghost Garden by Hila
Feil, 1976.
---
I hope you can help me with this request,
I have been searching for this book for at least 15 years. I
think the title was The Witches Garden but I am not sure. It
was not by Ruth Chew but is possibly an American book. The
story was about a 12 year old girl who goes to stay with her
Aunt? while her parents are overseas. The Aunt runs a big
boarding house/inn/hotel. I think the girls name was Sarah she
becomes friends with a girl named Christine? who is described
as being very pale - hair, eyes, skin. Christine is fascinated
by the local graveyard where a 12 year old girl named Sadie
was buried many years before. The girls discover that Sarah is
living in Sadie's old house and they find her room behind
layers of wallpaper. It still contains her furniture and toys.
The girls say a spell at midnight on Sadie's grave in the hope
that they will see her ghost but it doesn't work. Then
Christine dies, she leaves Sarah some seeds which she
eventually plants on her grave, I think they are sunflowers.
The rest of the book tells of Sarah learning to accept change.
And thats all I can remember.I hope you can help as I would
love a copy of it. Thanks in anticipation
Could this be A Witch's Garden
by Miriam Young?
No thats not it! Thanks for trying
though. If only I could remember the title correctly!!!
W29: Witch's garden: I have
this book, although it is in my old room in my parent's house.
There is a scene where the girls spread gold dust in a
"ceremony" to talk to the ghost. I'm fairly sure the title is The
Ghost Garden by Hila Feil, but I'll give
them a call and confirm it if I can. **Later...Hello
again, I talked with my mom who confirmed the title and author.
Hope this helps the person who was looking for it!
Thank you for your help and yes that is
the book!!! I have just received my own copy from a bookshop
in the US and am very happy!!!
More on the suggested title - Ghost
Garden by Hilda Feil, published New York,
Atheneum 1975, 236 pages. "A story of childhood friendship,
set against a real and vividly drawn backcloth, that of Cape
Cod. Into this setting comes Jessica, whose father went
butterfly hunting long ago and shows no sign of returning,
whose mother has embraced transcendental meditation and a new
boyfriend. For the holidays Jessica has been wished on a
scatty aunt who lives in a commune in Wellfleet, in a sagging
house which reminds Jessica of "one of the old horses that
pull the carriages in Central Park". It is anyone's dream of a
haunted house and certainly Jessica senses a strange presence
in it. Truro churchyard too seems to be haunted, but the pale
elusive figure hiding among the graves is no ghost but
Christina, another ten-year-old of an unhappy home. The two
little girls make an ideal partnership in many holiday
activities, notably ghost-hunting and witchery. At the end of
the holiday they conduct an eerie seance in the churchyard at
midnight, but the reflection which Jessica sees is not that of
the ghost but of Christina. Christina, who has always seemed
to exquisite to be quite real, dies. Jessica is left to keep
her part of the pact which they had made, in blood, at the end
of the holiday." (Junior Bookshelf Aug/77 p.233)
---
This is a book I read about 30 years ago
maybe when I was 10 or so about two little girls who are best
friends. I think they may have become friends when one moved
in next door to the other. I don't remember any names at all.
One of the girls has a vial of gold dust, I believe it was
dentist gold that she had gotten from her father. The two
girls make an agreement that if one of them dies, they will
somehow use this gold dust to somehow bridge the distance
between the worlds of the living and the dead. It turns out
one of the girls does die, I don't remember how, and the
surviving friend performs a ritual with the gold dust,
spinning in a circle and scattering it all over. For a while
she thinks nothing happened, but then she sees her dead friend
in a flower and learns that she has built the bridge but
instead of bringing her to the after world, she has brought
her friend back to the living world, but only briefly, through
this flower. Any help would be greatly appreciated.
Hila Feil, The Ghost Garden,
1976. I had remembered the title as The Witch
Garden for years, but actually found the book through this
Web site a couple years ago! Jessica is the girl sent to live
with her odd relatives on Cape Cod, she befriends Christina in
the graveyard, Christina later dies.
Ellen Raskin, Ghost in a Four Room
Apartment. I
think this may be the book you're seeking. It's square,
one of the men wears a pot on his head, and everyone has big
noses. It starts with one child in a room of the house and
relatives and friends keep arriving on each page until there is
a houseful. The ghost plays tricks on everyone.
Isabel Eberstadt, Who is at the Door?, 1960. Nell's mom is busy cleaning the
basement and leaves her and her dog in charge of taking phone
messages and answering the door. Mayhem ensues when
everyone including a friend, the ice-cream man, an organ grinder
and a repairman are let in by Nell. There is soon so much
party-like noise in the house that when Nell's dad rings the
bell and knocks, no one can hear him so he needs to climb in
through the window.
Maurice Sendak, One Was Johnny, 1962, approximate. Could it be this
book? Johnny lives alone and the book counts up from 1 to 10 as
more and more guests arrive at his house for a party, and back
to 1 again as they leave. Can't find an image of Johnny with the
pan on his head, but I seem to remember it...
The suggestion of "Ghost in a Four
Room Apartment" is it! Boy, I wonder how many brain
cells I've murdered over the decades trying to think of this?!
I'm fascinated by the fact that I remembered a guy with a pan
on his head and people with big noses but nothing whatsoever
of a ghost. Thanks so much!
Is there a pair of ghosts? Look at The Wicked Pigeon
Ladies in the Garden on the Solved Mysteries page to
see if that's a match...
Carol H. Behrman, Ghost in the
Garden, 1984.
This sounds like Ghost in the Garden by Carol
H. Behrman, in which Jennie and her family move to the
country and Jennie discovers the ghost named Samantha in the
garden where she paints. A Weekly Reader paperback, its out of
print, but fairly available used.
Mary Downing Hahn, The Doll in the
Garden, 1989.
This may not be the right book, but the cover shows a modern
girl sitting with a ghost girl on a bench in a rose
garden. I read it in about 1990, too.
Behrman, Carol, Ghost in the Garden, 1984. this book is definitely Ghost in
the Garden! I got it from the Scholastic book list in 1988 or
so. Jennie and Samantha become friends, they both decide to
paint a picture of their houses one day and they realize that
they have painted the same house...it turns out Samantha's a
ghost and lived in Jennie's house, jennie's mother is an artist.
Im sure this is it (what a great book.)
I don't have the title, but just a few more
things about it. The ghost, Felicia, is really
obnoxious. She rides a swing a lot. The copy I read
in 5th grade was hardback but without a jacket--the cover had an
actual picture, though; it wasn't just blank.
The Ghost in the Swing, by Janet
Patton
Smith, publ. by Steck-Vaughn Co., 1973.
G28 ghost felicia: plot description from the
LC catalogue for the suggested title The Ghost in the
Swing: "A twelve-year-old girl visits her aunt and
makes friends with a ghost inhabiting the house." which is a
reasonable match.
St. John, Wylly Folk, The Ghost Next
Door, illustrated by
Trina Schart Hyman, NY Harper 1971. Probably not the only
one to suggest this - mystery about the ghost of a young girl
called Miranda, clues include a cement owl made by her and her
aunt. It's on the Solved List with more detail.
Wylly Folk St. John, The Ghost Next
Door, 1971. This
is definitely the book. It has all the details the poster
mentioned. From the back: "Sherry Aston had never been told
about her dead half sister Miranda. So when Sherry came to visit
her Aunt Judith, no one could explain the odd things that
started to happen. Who was the elusive friend Sherry said she
saw in the garden? Was she an imaginary playmate-or could she be
the ghost of Miranda who had drowned in the pond years ago?
Uncanny reminders of Miranda began to turn up- a blue rose a
lost riding whip..." The main part of the plot is Sherry looking
for the "owl with love in its eyes".
It must be THE GHOST NEXT DOOR
by Wylly Folk St. John, 1971. More info is available on
the Solved Stumpers page. ~from a librarian
A Gift of Magic (Laurel-Leaf
Books) by Lois Duncan
You'll probably get a slew of responses to
#O24--Owl with Love in its eyes. It's The
Ghost Next Door, by Wylly Folk St. John, and
appears on your "Solved Mysteries" page.
Wylly F. St. John, The Ghost
Next Door. This
was one of my favorite books too. I remember reading it
many times. My copy is in storage, but I am certain of the title
- not sure about the spelling of the author's name.
This is a Wylly Folk St. John book
- it is either The Mystery of the Ghost Next Door
or The Mystery of the
Girl Next Door. The
main character is visiting her (grandmother?) and discovers that
there was a little girl who had died, she and the grandmother
died roses blue, made the owl in question, etc. She
drowned in a pond in the backyard after hiding the owl for the
grandmother's birthday and the grandmother hadn't been able to
find it. The children, along the way, expose a "psychic"'s
fraud when he claims to have found the owl buried by the pond.
Wylly Folk St. John, The Ghost Next
Door, 1971. This
seems to be a popular book. It's been asked about a few
times.
Regarding my stumper, O24: Owl with love
in its eyes, I just wanted to thank everyone who wrote in and
solved this 25-year-old mystery for me. Now I can share this
book with my daughter when she is old enough. Thank you! Thank
you! This service is terrific!
---
I am trying to find the name of a book that I read as a
child. It was about two children who were living in a
house with a pond nearby. A girl named Miranda once lived
in the house and drowned in the lake. The children are trying to
find out about her, and they find her diary and a ceramic (I
think) owl that she made when she was alive. Does this
sound familiar to anyone? Thanks so much!
Yes! I know this one and I have the book
right in front of me!! The book the reader is looking for
under M19 is The Ghost Next Door by Wylly
Folk St. John.
THE GHOST NEXT DOOR by Wylly
Folk
St. John, 1971
I have been looking for a book that I
read as a child. I've received several responses in the
past from sites like this one, but none of them have been the
right one. I remember that the "ghost" in the story is
named Miranda--she drowned as the child. The two
children who are staying at the house find her diary and a
ceramic owl that she made. They are trying to solve some
sort of mystery surrounding here. Anyone have a
clue? Thanks!
The Ghost Next Door, by Wylly
Folk
St. John, illustrated by Trina Schart Hyman, published
Harper 1971, 178 pages. "Miranda Alston was deeply loved by
her aunt Judith. After her parents' divorce, Miranda and her
father came to live in Georgetown with her aunt, and Miss
Judith became mother and friend to the lonely little girl.
Together they made roses turn blue, had a secret place in
which they left small notes to each other, and created a
cement owl 'with love in its eyes'. Then in a pond at the back
of the property, Miranda was accidentally drowned. Miss Judith
was shattered, and Dr. Alston, unable to restrain his grief,
left the family home and tried to bury the memory of his
daughter in his work. Consequently, when he returned to
Georgetown - for the first time since the tragedy - with his
second wife and their 10 year old daughter Sherry, all mention
of Miranda was carefully avoided. And then Sherry developed a
mysterious playmate - one who could not be put to rest until
both she and her half-sister were once again lovingly
recognized by their family. The plot, which is narrated by the
budding-adolescent-next-door, Lindsey Morrow, is punctuated
with seances, pregnant rabbits, and infamous psychics."
(HB Apr/72 p.148)
---
I only know the smallest bits of info on this book. I
think it may have been a Weekly Reader book. A young girl
moves (is visiting?) into a neighborhood. The neighbor has
recently lost their daughter (or other young female relative)
and things start appearing in the house that make the neighbor
believe the child is still alive. There are blue
carnations (which the little girl used to make by sticking white
carnations into blue dye) and I recall an owl with marble
eyes...behind the eyes are the words "Love" so that it can be
seen when you look into the eyes of the owl. Hope that is
enough info...this has been driving me nuts for ages!
Thanks! Great site BTW!!!
Wylly Folk St. John, The Ghost Next
Door, 1971. The
owl with love in its eyes is the give away. I have seen this one
show up as a stumper many times elsewhere.
St John, Wylly Folk, The ghost next
door, 1971. This
is definitely The Ghost next Door. This
info is from your solved pages Miranda Alston was deeply loved
by her aunt Judith. After her parents' divorce, Miranda and her
father came to live in Georgetown with her aunt, and Miss Judith
became mother and friend to the lonely little girl. Together
they made roses turn blue, had a secret place in which they left
small notes to each other, and created a cement owl 'with love
in its eyes'. Then in a pond at the back of the property,
Miranda was accidentally drowned. Miss Judith was shattered, and
Dr. Alston, unable to restrain his grief, left the family home
and tried to bury the memory of his daughter in his work.
Consequently, when he returned to Georgetown - for the first
time since the tragedy - with his second wife and their 10 year
old daughter Sherry, all mention of Miranda was carefully
avoided. And then Sherry developed a mysterious playmate - one
who could not be put to rest until both she and her half-sister
were once again lovingly recognized by their family. The plot,
which is narrated by the budding-adolescent-next-door, Lindsey
Morrow, is punctuated with seances, pregnant rabbits, and
infamous psychics."
Wylly Folk St John, The Ghost Next
Door. This is
definitely it ... the granddaughter had died some time ago,
before she died had hidden the 'owl with love in its eyes' that
she and her grandmother had made together. Two visiting girls
are trying to find the owl -- some plot with a fake seance.
Harriet, thank you! I just found the
book (it was already on your site and I missed it the other
day!). The Ghost Next Door (and it was blue
roses, not carnations!).
Thanks so much for having this site....I've
found three books that I thought were lost forever!
...and even a movie ("The House Without a Christmas Tree".
Someone was talking of the book and I had been looking for the
movie!).
St John, Wylly Folk, The Ghost Next
Door, 1971. This
is definitely the book, the owl with love in its eyes gives it
away. It's on the solved mysteries page.
Wylly Folk St John, Ghost Next Door. There should be something on the
Solved Mysteries about this one.
Wylly Folk St. John,The Ghost Next
Door, 1971. This
is The Ghost Next Door, by Wylly Folk St.
John, (it had lovely black and white illustrations by
Trina Schart Hyman). Two girls become involved in looking into
whether or not the ghost of a girl who drowned years ago in the
pond behind a neighbor's house has returned. The owl with love
in its eyes and the blue flower were things that Miranda had
made with her grandmother (whose house it is), now Miranda's
father is visiting his mother for the first time since his
daughter's death, bringing with him his new wife and daughter
Sherry. The appearance of the owl and flower, as well as an old
riding crop, taken with Sherry's assertion that she has a new
friend named Miranda, make it seem that it might be so.....
B401 This is The Ghost Next Door
by Wylly Folk St. John~from a librarian
Wylly Folk St. John, The Ghost
Next Door,1971. See Solved Mysteries.
Wylly Folk St. John (author), Trina
Schart Hyman (illustrator), The Ghost Next Door, 1981,
reprint. 'Please check the "G" Solved Mysteries page for
more information.
Wylly Folk St. John, The Ghost
Next Door, circa 1965. I'm fairly certain
this would be the book you seek. I have loved all of St.
John's books! Hope this helps.
Wylly Folk St. John, The Ghost
Next Door. I don't remember the carnations,
but the owl with love in its eyes is in a Wylly Folk St.
John book I'm pretty sure it's The
Ghost Next Door
St. John, Wylly Fox, The Ghost
Next Door, 1960's or 70's. I am sure that
this is the book that you are looking for! I loved this
one as a girl, it is just scary enough, but not too scary.
The story is (loosely) about a girl who goes to live somewhere
new and discovers that the neighbors had a daughter or
granddaughter named Miranda who drowned ( I think) in a backyard
pond. The part about the dyed carnations has always stayed
in my mind, too. Good choice for a clue. I hope this
helps.
Wylly Folk St. John, The Ghost
Next Door.
---
I am looking for a book that I read about 10-12 years
ago. It was probably published in the 70s or so. It
was about a girl who went to visit her aunt. While she was
there, she discovered a jeweled owl in a tree. Does this
ring any bells?
Wylly Folk St. John, The Ghost Next
Door, 1971. This
is the book you are looking for. It was one of my
favorites when I was a kid. I still own it!
:-) A child comes to visit her aunt and is seems to be
haunted by the ghost of her dead half-sister, whom she knew
nothing about. Two girls that live next door decide to
find out if there really is a ghost next door. The jeweled
owl is searched for throughout the story and is a huge part of
the mystery. Hope I helped!
Wyly Folk St John, The ghost next
door. must be
this (again!)
Wylly Folk St. John (author), Trina
Schart
Hyman (illustrator), The Ghost Next Door,
1971. Is it possible that the owl isn't jeweled, but made
of cement with amber glass marbles for eyes? If so, then
this is The Ghost Next Door. Sherry Alston visits her Aunt
Judith and finds an owl "with love in its eyes" that her
half-sister Miranda had hidden in a tree many years
before. Please see the Solved Mysteries "G" pages for more
information.
I think that person is looking for The
Ghost
of
Dibble Hollow by May Nickerson Wallace.
---
I remember reading a book that I considered a very, very
favorite book, but over time I have lost memory of the title and
author. The book was very enchanting, and may have had
something in the title regarding "secret" or "hidden" and maybe
"door" or "garden". I think that there was a character by
the name of "Miles" in it. The book was read from my local
public library in about 1965, but it was not contemporary for
that time, it was much older (hence the name Miles). I
would love to find this book again to read it to my children.
Just guessing, but could this be The
Phanton Tollbooth by Norton Juster? It's
about a young boy named Milo who enters a fantasy world through
a magical tollbooth that appears in his house.
Norton Juster, The Phantom
Tollbooth. Not
sure...but isn't the boy in this book Miles?
I loved that book too. From the back
cover: "One day Milo finds an enormous and mysterious
package in his room. A phantom tollbooth, with a map to
a weird world beyond! So Milo sets off on a fantastic
voyage in which he meets: the not so wicked Witch, Faintly
Macabre, Alec Bings who sees through things, and the watchdog,
Tock, who ticks."
Could this be The Ghost of Dibble
Hollow? It was a book for older children, and was
about a boy whose parents moved into "the family homestead,"
where he encountered the ghost of a long-deceased relative named
Miles Dibble. The boy looked identical to Miles, who had died-I
believe he drowned-after hiding a bag of gold belonging to him
and his best friend (who was now a very old man). The gold had
never been found, and was the source of a feud between the
Dibbles and the old man's family. It is up to Miles' look-alike
relative to solve the mystery of where the gold was buried, and
to resolve the feud between the two families.
I think that this is also a book that I have
been looking for. I believe it was set in medieval times
and the boy, Miles, father has disappeared and he and his mother
were in difficulty until he finds whatever it is that is hidden
in the wall in the garden. I read this in grade 3 which
was about 39 years ago and it was an old book then.
May Nickerson Wallace, The Ghost of
Dibble Hollow.
That's the book, and I remember it very well, too. It's no
longer in print according to my quick research.
---
I'm looking for a book that I read in the mid 60's. It was a
mystery having to do with the ghost of a boy named Miles and two
identical trees on opposite sides of the yard or house. It seems
that Miles was entrusted with taking a sum of money home, but
disappeared. Everyone thinks he stole the money, but, in fact,
he had buried it under one of the trees. He had problems with
left and right, and had buried it under the wrong tree to keep
it safe, and, I believe, had died protecting the money. His
descendant, a boy about his age at his death, is trying to solve
the mystery, since the Miles' best friend at the time, the one
who thinks he stole the money, is still bitter about it, even
though it is about 50 or 60 years later, and he's an old man. At
the beginning of the book, the modern boy's family is moving
into Miles' old house and finds the well is dry. Miles helps the
boy locate a second well. The modern boy's name may be Benjamin
or Benny, but I could be confusing his name with one of the
Boxcar Children.
May Nickerson Wallace, The Ghost of
Dibble Hollow, 1965. I believe this is the book you
are looking for. Check the solved section for more details. Good
luck.
May Nickerson Wallace, The Ghost of
Dibble Hollow, 1965. Out of the graveyard comes a
ghost—the ghost of ten-year-old Miles Dibble. “I’ve been waiting
a long time for you to come to Dibble Hollow, Cousin”, he tells
Pug. “Now you must help me find that lost money.” From that
moment on, the ghostly Miles leads Pug from one spooky adventure
to another. Pug gets used to chairs that rock by themselves,
shutters that bang mysteriously, and hair that stands on end.
And all the while he follows clues to the weirdest treasure hunt
with the ghost of Dibble Hollow."'
May Nickerson Wallace, The Ghost of
Dibble Hollow, 1965. 'The ghost, Miles Dibble,
buried the money under a tree because he was being chased by
thieves. They chase him to a river, where he is killed and his
body swept downstream, and the money was never found. At the
end, the boy's family makes peace with Miles' old friend (a
neighbor - I think he had a grandchild who was friends with the
boy) by finding the money, the family decides to stay in the
house, and the unmarked grave where Miles was buried is found.
May Nickerson Wallace, The Ghost of
Dibble Hollow, 1950s.This is the book, a great
mystery and ghost story combined. Check Solved Mysteries.
May Nickerson Wallace, The Ghost of
Dibble Hollow. This is definitely the book you are
seeking. See the Solved Mystery page under G for more
details.
May Nickerson Wallace, The Ghost of
Dibble Hollow, 1965. Definitely the one you're
looking for! Myles is a ghost, and the great-uncle of the
modern boy
he can only appear to a relative of
approximately the same age. Myles knows what happened, but
can't say what it is, he has to lead the modern-day nephew to
the clues and let him piece together what happened. He keeps
humming or singing the song "The Derby Ram" because his body was
discovered in a town called Derby, and once the nephew puts the
clues together, and talks to the old man who found the body, he
can clear Myles.
May Nickerson Wallace, The Ghost of
Dibble Hollow. I'm pretty sure this is the book
you're thinking of. It is in the solved section if you
want more descriptions.
Condition Grades |
Wallace, Mary Nickerson. The Ghost of Dibble Hollow. Illustrated by Orin Kincade, cover by Dom Lupo. NY: Scholastic Book Services, 1965, 4th printing, 1967. Paperback with creases on front cover. G+. Hard to find! $45 |
|
N5--The Ghost of Five Owl Farm
has a similar storyline. I probably first read this in '70 or
so.
This could be Me and Caleb by
Franklyn Meyer. It is about brothers who live in a
small Missouri town. There is a lengthy description of
Halloween activities including greased doorknobs, stuck car
horns and a "garbage-launcher." . There was a sequel, Me
and Caleb Again.
More on The Ghost of Five Owl Farm
by Wilson Gage, illustrated by Paul Galdone, published
Cleveland, World 1966 "Surprised by the visit of two cousins
during a vacation, Ted decides to frighten them with ghost
stories about an old barn on their property. They all too soon
discover that there really are goings-on as they are led
through a series of hair-raising experiences. Ages 9-12." (Horn
Book Feb/66 publ.ad. p.105)
Condition Grades |
Gage, Wilson. The Ghost of Five Owl Farm. Illustrated by Paul Galdone. Pocket Books Archway paperback, 1966, 4th paperback printing 1973. VG. $8 |
|
The Ghost of Garina Street by
Lillian S. Freehof (1959).
---
I read this book in approximately 1961,
and I believe it was borrowed from the Vermont State
Bookmobile when it stopped at my school. The book would have
been published that year or before, so I think we are looking
at a book that is pre-1962 and may have been published any
time in the earlier decades of the 20th century. I do
not remember the author or the title, but I do remember the
book being rather small and its hardcover boards were white
which was rather unusual. I believe that the story featured a
young child (probably a girl, but it may have been a boy), but
I don't recall whether the child was alone or had friends in
his/her adventures. There was an old woman who lived in an old
house and there was some scariness around both. Perhaps the
child thought the house was haunted or the woman was a witch.
Eventually the child got to know the old woman who turned out
to be a retired Shakespearean actress or something along those
lines. The name Julia sticks in my head, but I don't recall if
that was the author, a character in the book, or it might have
been a person external to the book like the woman who drove
the Bookmobile! I have no other memories of the book
other than that it had an effect on me as a ten-year-old girl,
and I have been looking for it for years.
Barbara Wersba, The Dream
Watcher. I'm not certain about this one... here's
some details about the Dream Watcher so you can determine if it
might be your book. It's about a teenage boy named Albert
Scully who befriends an elderly lady named Orpha Woodfin.
She claims to be a great actress and to have known Sarah
Bernhardt. She quotes Shakespeare constantly. At the
end of the book he finds that it was all an act and she wasn't
really a famous actress in her youth. Another possible is
The Ghost of Garina Street by Lillian S. Freehof-
it was recently a stumper here. In this one a teen boy
named Ted encounters a pair of elderly sisters- Juliet and Mary-
who quote Shakespeare. He eventually finds that there is
really only one lady who is playing the role of herself and a
sister.
Freehoff, Lillian, Ghost of
Garina Street, 1959. Sounds similar with an old
Shakespearian actress. See T 331 in "Stump the Bookseller
Queries" - T.
Lillian Freehof, The Ghost of
Garina Street, 1959. Sounds like this is probably
the one you are looking for. A teenage boy befriends two
old women, both of whom quote Shakespeare frequently. One
of them is nice to him, the other kind of mean. He later
discovers that they are both the same woman, a former
Shakespearean actress suffering from mental illness.
Thank you very much for posting my
inquiry R171 on Monday. It was solved right away, and The
Ghost of Garina Street appears to be the correct match.
If I had had the patience to wade through all the old
postings, I might have found the answer anyway, although this
was a much more efficient way to get an answer. This was my
first time using your service and I want to tell you how
delighted I am. What a novel idea you had to start this!
Thanks once again.
---
A boy meets these two old ladies that are living in
poverty. He brings them food and helps them around the
house. One lady accepts his help, the other rejects
it. They both quote Shakespeare a lot and he learns it so
he can talk to them, it helps him do well in English class but
his other subjects suffer because he's working to try and
support them. Eventually he finds out the two ladies are
actually the same person, the woman has dual personalities or is
having fun with him. The lady dies in the end and leaves a
fortune to the boy. I read the book in my grade school
(grades 1-6) back around 1974. It was in with the regular
fiction so it was for at least grades 3-6. I have the
impression it had been there for a while so I'm guessing it was
published somewhere around 1970. It is so frustrating, I
can remember sections of it so clearly yet not the title.
There was one chapter where the boy is bring these two old
ladies milk and bread because he knows they have nothing to eat
in the house. The nice sister takes it and thanks him,
then disappears, then the cranky nasty one appears a minute
later and kicks him out. He looks in a window and sees her
gulping the food down and realizes they are one and the same
person, she is just playing a game with him. I remember
they are always acting out things from Shakespeare and he learns
it from them and his English teacher is thrilled but his other
teachers are angry because he has let his other work slide since
he's helping the old lady.
Barbara Wersba, The Dream Watcher.(1968) This could be the book you're
looking for. It's about a boy, Albert Scully, who doesn't
fit in at home or school, and the friendship he forms with Orpha
Woodfin, an eccentric 80-year old woman who claims to have been
a great Shakespearean actress in her youth. This book is back in
print.
The Ghost of Garina Street by Lillian
S.
Freehof (1959).
Freehof, Lillian, The Ghost of Garina
Street, 1959. We
looked for this for over a year on another stumper forum.
It has been confirmed as the correct answer by someone who had
the book in her hands -- all the details match.
N10 is Thomasina, the cat
who thought she was God, by Paul Gallico, Doubleday,
1957.
The Disney movie was based on the book Thomasina
by Paul Gallico.
N10 - I am wondering if the could be The
Ghost
of Opalina by Peggy Bacon. Opalina is a cat
and the book recounts her nine lives among generations of a
family. I think there is a hidden treasure.
This couldn't be Finnegan II: His
Nine Lives, by Carolyn Bailey, could
it? My sister and I *adored* this book growing up in the
mid 1960's.
It's got to be Thomasina by Paul
Gallico.
I think The Ghost of Opalina is
definitely the book I'm looking for. I must have seen
the Disney movie about the same time and blended them together
in my memory. I have reserved it through the library's
loan service. It's a children's book and I remember as
being on the first shelf of the library(A-B
authors). The full title is The Ghost
of Opalina or Nine Lives and I'm certain the cat was
female. Thank-you very much for the great leads.
---
Children (a brother & sister) are playing in the attic
while visiting their grandmother for thanksgiving. They
discover that grandmother's cat (a tabby) can talk because, in
the ninth life of a cat, they acquire the ability to speak.The
cat tells stories to the children of all of it's previous eight
lives living in that house. Since the cat has lived a very long
time, the stories are dramatic and date back to days of kings
& queens. I think the book was written for sixth or
seventh grade levels. I originally checked this book out
from the Cedar Rapids Public Library. I've looked for it there
but had no luck. I would like to purchase this book if we find
it. Thank you!
Peggy Bacon, The Ghost of Opalina or
Nine Lives, 1967.
This is the all-time favorite book of anyone who's ever read it.
Maybe that's a bit hyperbolic, but probably not. Searching the
web for succinct synopses (to be ultra-brief, Very Important
Presence Opalina tells three children of her adventures from the
1700s to the modern day), I came across this 'net post that for
some reason brought tears to my eyes: "We who have loved Opalina
are free to think of her still in her velvet chair in the
paneled room. She's a very special cat and couldn't possibly be
limited to nine lives."
Bacon, Peggy, The Ghost of Opalina or
Nine Lives.
Little, Brown, 1967. "A ghost cat tells three children,
the latest inhabitants of an old house, all about the people who
passed through and the events which took place in the house
during her previous eight lives."
C159 This might be THE GHOST OF
OPALINA; OR NINE LIVES by Peggy Bacon, 1967
~from a librarian
Thank you so much - we're expecting our first child and I
wanted very badly! The check will go out today.
The Ghost of Opalina is a great story.
Anyone looking to see it come back into print go to
twolakespress.com Sean Dwyer has recieved permission to reprint
the book by Peggy Bacon with her origianl artwork. The
reprint will be avaiable in the summer of 2005.
---
It's told as a series of
connected stories following several generations of children from
one family. A cat is used as the link (maybe by following
through its 9 lives?) I think the cat was the narrator, telling
the current generation of kids about things that happened to
their parents, grandparents, etc. when they were young. I
remember that one set of the kids were very strict parents when
they grew up, the next generation in reaction were very
permissive parents. I read it about 35 years ago.
Suitable for 8-10 year olds if I'm remembering right.
Bacon, Peggy, The Ghost of Opalina,
1960s, approximate. This sounds like The Ghost of
Opalina. This book is a favorite of everyone who ever
read it. Since most of the limited printing went to libraries,
it's hard to find and very expensive. See the Solved
Mystery page.
Peggy Bacon, The
Ghost of Opalina. Almost certainly The Ghost of
Opalina. The book recounts her life (well,
afterlife ;-)) with a family over many generations.
Peggy Bacon, The
Ghost of Opalina. Sounds like this
book in "Solved Mysteries."
Peggy Bacon, The Ghost of Opalina,
1967, copyright. Oh, I loved this book! I'm sure
that The
Ghost of Opalina is the book you're looking for.
She has nine lives, and she relates all of them to the
three kids currently living in the house she inhabits. I
think, in the end, she vanishes because her previous life
was the last one, and she either is or turns into a
ghost. Good luck finding a copy though!
They're pretty rare.
I did a search on The Ghost of Opalina,
and this is certainly the book I was thinking of.
THE GHOST OF GRAVESTONE HEARTH
by Betsy Haynes, 1977
I think this is The Ghost of the
Gravstone Hearth by Betsy Haynes ('77)
WOW!!! That's it and I can't tell
you how impressed I am! Next time I'm in Cleveland, I'll
swing on by. Thanks and have a great weekend!
Clyde Robert Bulla, The Ghost of
Windy Hill, 1968.
I remember excitedly snapping this up from the Bookmobile!
Clyde Robert Bulla, The Ghost of
Windy Hill, 1968.
I believe this is the book. Its about a girl named Lorna and her
brother Jamie. They are housesitting with their parents for the
summer because the owners of the house think it is haunted. The
children meet some strange people, including a crippled boy and
and eccentric old woman. Plus they solve the mystery of the
'haunted' house. My copy of the book is a dark blue hard back
with a silhouette of a house in a darker blue, with one window
lit.
I am the original poster. Thank you so much for
responding to my request. Yes, I believe this is the book.
I have been trying to remember this for years and am very
excited about this website. This is so cool. I have
called my local library and will check this out this week.
Will let you all know if this was it. THANKS!!!
This one is solved. Thank you to the responder, the title
The Ghost of Windy Hill is correct. I NEVER would
have remembered this... THANKS SO MUCH!!!!
Clyde Robert Bulla, Ghost Town
Treasure, 1957.
This was a favorite of mine when I was young. Ty tries to
save his near-deserted hometown when he finds an old diary that
he thinks says there is gold in a cave nearby. He finds
the hidden cave, and although he is disappointed to realize the
diary actually said it was cold in the cave, the new tourist
attraction brings his town back to life anyway.
Clyde Robert Bulla, Ghost Town
Treasure,
1957. This one was familiar to me, but I had to go search
the attic for the book, since the title wouldn't come to me.
This is from the back cover: "This is where I want to live,"
says Ty. "It's the best place in the world!" But Gold Rock
is a Ghost town now, and Ty's family must move to the city to
make a living. Then Nora and Paul come to visit, and they bring
Great-Granfather's diary. The words are faded, but there under
the magnifying glass they can read the thrilling words: "gold in
the cave"! Can they find the treasure in time to help Ty's
family?
---
Kids are looking for treasure or gold in a canyon with a map or
clue that says it is below a cross. The cross turns out the be
formed by large cracks in the canyon wall.
I believe Treasure Mountain
by Florence Laughlin might be the solution. Check it
out!
C307 While I was going through ALFRED
HITCHCOCK'S
HAUNTED HOUSEFUL, I noticed a story in which the
characters were refering to a cross in a cave and money. And
there they find the treasure. It was in "The Treasure in
the Cave" story, which was an excerpt from Mark Twain's
THE ADVENTURES OF TOM SAWYER.~from a librarian
Bulla, Clyde Robert, Ghost Town
Treasure, 1957.
As I recall, the hidden cave (which the searchers believe
contains gold) in Ghost Town Treasure could only be found by
locating a cross on the canyon wall. Funny, another poster
was just looking for this same book last month.
Bulla, Clyde Robert, Ghost Town
Treasure. This is definately the book I was trying
to remember. Another clue I forgot about was the line "gold in
the cave" that actually turned out to say "cold in the cave".
Thanks for providing such a great service!
Condition Grades |
Bulla, Clyde Robert. Ghost Town Treasure. Illustrated by Don Freeman. Scholastic, 1957, 8th paperback printing 1966. paperback; Good. $6 |
|
The Ghosts by Antonia
Barber, 1969, 1993. Great book!
I just wanted to thank you for your help!
I saw the information added to the e-mail I sent you and I'm
going to find the book mentioned there. What are the odds that
someone else would know the story I was trying to describe and
with so little to go on! I really appreciate it!!
"The Amazing Mr. Blunden" was the
name of a movie adaptation of this book. It's apparently
not currently available on video.
Pam Conrad, Stonewords: A Ghost
Story. (1990)
Zoe's eccentric absentee mother named her after a tombstone
inscription. When Zoe goes to live with her grandparents, she
meets the ghost of her namesake, Zoe Louise, an 11-year-old girl
who died in a fire in the 1800s -- but isn't aware of it.
Eventually, Zoe finds a way to cross over into Zoe Louise's
time, and strives to avert a 100-year-old tragedy.
Pam Conrad, Stonewords. This might be too new - but could this be
Stonewords by Pam Conrad? The haunting by the Victorian
girl, the brother and sister caught in the fire, the changing of
history to prevent a tragedy - all are in here. If this isn't
the right one, it's still a terrific book!!
Antonia Barber, The Ghosts. (1975) If there were a brother in modern
times, it would sound a little like The Ghosts: James and Lucy
go to live in an old country house that's falling down with
their mother, who's the caretaker. They see two shadowy
figures in the garden, and befriend them. It turns out they're
the ghosts of two children who died in a fire in the house 100
years ago. James disappears and Lucy tries to find
him...there's a fire in the house, a maze and an an unexpected
heir. (Now that I've typed out what I remember, it's only
vaguely like what you're looking for, but it might be worth
checking out anyway.)
Antonia Barber, The Ghosts.
Well, I guess my memory is worse than I thought. After
investigating through this site I bought a copy of The Ghosts
by Antonia Barber thinking that it was not the book I was
seeking but would still be a good read for my pre-teen.
When I opened the package, I instantly recognized the front
cover. This is the book. The main character was
not just a girl...her brother played an important role in the
outcome of the story. Their father was the deceased
parent, not the mom. They drank potion in the overgrown
garden and were able to go back in time to the day the murder
of the ghosts from the past happened and change the past,
which also changed the present. Thanks to anyone who
read my original post in an attempt to help solve the mystery!
ed. Robert Arthur, Ghost and more
Ghosts, 1963. I'm not sure if this is the
right collection as I couldn't find a picture of it
but I know it contains the story "Do you
believe in Ghosts?" by Robert Arthur (also
published under the title "The Believers") which I am
sure is the story you remember about the reporter and the
monster conjured up by listeners imaginations with a head like
an oyster. Another book which contains this story is The
Mammoth Book of Ghost Stories 2 which appears to be
geared more towards adults.
I can tell you the titles of each of the
three stories described, but I can't be sure of the exact book.
The cover description and 1 story fits one book I have, and the
2 other stories are from another. So maybe it's from a
completely different source, or maybe some memories have
combined. The story about the radio host is "Do You Believe
in Ghosts?" and the story about the unusual shop and the
gift of forgery is called "Mr. Milton's Gift" (and I
found references online that make me think it may have been
published under the title "The Man with the Golden Hand").
Both stories are by Robert Arthur, and the book I have
is called GHOSTS AND MORE GHOSTS, with a
distinctive silver cover with creepy cover illustrations and
with a black & white illustration at the beginning of each
story (Windward Books/Random House, NY, 1972 (original pub.
1963) ISBN: 0-394-82197-1). However it doesn't contain the water
ghost story. The water ghost story is "The Water Ghost of
Harrowby Hall" by John Kendrick Bangs and can be
found in various ghost story compilations, but the book that I
have pretty much matches the book description of the query. It
is ALFRED HITCHCOCK'S HAUNTED HOUSEFUL, and it's
a large hardcover with a spooky mansion, one ghost, some bats, a
large face that might be Hitchcock, and the picture wraps around
the spine and continues onto the back becoming a wooded scene
with a running person. The endpapers are a dark black and
blue with creepy images from the stories. Each story begins with
a black illustration with a dark blue wash behind it, and there
are some half page and full page illustrations throughout the
book. (Random House, 1961, ISBN: 0-394-81224-7). I hope this
helps.~from a librarian
I recognize one story as John Kendrick
Bangs' (1862-1922) "The Water Ghost of Harrowby Hall",
which can be read online.
A
search on that title led to these 4 collections:
THE SCREAMING SKULL: House of
the Nightmare; Transferred Ghost; Real Right Thing; Water Ghost
of Harrowby Hall; The Eyes; Shadows on the Wall; Rival Ghosts;
Consequences; Ligeia; A Ghost Story; Ghost of Dr Harris
Hartwell, David G. (editor) (F. Marion Crawford; Edgar Allan
Poe; Mark Twain; Nathaniel Hawthorne; Edward Lucas White; Frank
R. Stockton; Henry James; John Kendrick Bangs; Edith Wharton;
Mary E. Wilkins Freeman; Brander Matthews; Willa Cather),
Illustrated by Jim Thiesen
THE (First) 1ST ARMADA GHOST BOOK (1)
One:
Sandy MacNeil and His Dog; School for the Unspeakable; The
House of the Nightmare; The Story of the
Inexperienced Ghost; Prince Godfrey Frees Mountain Dwellers; The
Water Ghost of Harrowby Hall Bernard, Christine (editor)
(Sorche Nic Leodhas; Manly Wade Wellman; Edward Lucas White; H.
G. Wells; Haline Gorska; John Kendrick Bangs; Louis C. Jones;
Sir Arthur Quiller-Couch), Illustrated by Gino D'Achille;
CHRISTMAS GHOSTS: Their Dear
Little Ghost; The Curse of the Cataflaques; The Story of the
Goblins Who Stole
a Sexton; Christmas Night; A New Christmas
Carol; A Christmas Game; The Great Staircase at Landover Hall;
The Water Ghost of Harrowby Hall Cramer, Kathryn;
Hartwell, David G. (editors) (Elia Wilkinson Peattie; F. Anstey;
Charles Dickens; Elizabeth Walter; Arthur Machen; A. N. L.
Munby; Frank R. Stockton; John Kendrick Bangs; Rosemary
Timperly; William D. O'Connor; Sir Andrew Caldecott)
The Water Ghost and Others. 1.
The Water Ghost of Harrowby Hall, 2. The Spectre Cook of
Bangletop, 3. The Speck on the Lens, 4. A Midnight Visitor, 5. A
QuicksilverCassandra, 6. The Ghost Club, 7. The Psychical Prank,
8. The Literary Remains of Thomas Bragdon.
C304 sounds like Hauntings,
ed. Henry Mazzeo, illus. Edward Gorey in appearance, but
not necess. in content. The woman haunting the castle who leaves
behind a puddle of cold water is probably "The Water Ghost
of Harrowby Hall" by John Kendrick Bangs, found online
here.
This is kind of a double solution.
GHOSTS AND MORE GHOSTS was the book I was primarily
thinking of--it includes two of the stories I dimly recalled
and has a cover featuring the cemetery scene I was
remembering. But I do seem to have blended the memory
with details from ALFRED HITCHCOCK'S HAUNTED HOUSEFUL
as well. I owned both books long ago. Thanks so
much. You folks are miraculous.
---
A blind newsstand owner does not believe
the story of one of his customers that he is being pursued by
a mummy. Later that night, though, he hears the
footsteps of some creature shuffling by his stand. This
story was in a book of other similar stories. I read the
book in the early 80's but the book was probably from the
60's. Another story featured a man who was somehow
cursed so he could only speak in ryhme.
Hi, I'm the person who posted C304, and
while I don't have a solution for you, I am fairly sure you and
I are looking for the same book. Although I had forgotten
them, both the plot lines you summarized (the mummy and the
blind newsstand owner, and the man who could only speak in
rhyme) immediately struck me as coming from the anthology I
described in my post. Does my description of the book
cover and fragments of other story lines ring any bells for you?
Two clever people found the book I was
looking for (Stumper C304), Robert Arthur's GHOSTS AND
MORE GHOSTS. And, as I thought, it does seem to be
the book you had in mind as well. A Google search revealed it to
contain a story called "Footsteps Invisible", which I
feel quite certain is your story concerning the blind news stand
owner and the mummy. I'm not sure which title corresponds
to the story you remember about the man who could only speak in
rhyme (The Rose Crystal Bell, maybe?) but I'm convinced it's in
there.
Robert Arthur, "Footsteps Invisible",
1940. I too have been looking for this story for
years. With the help of posts M270 and C304, I managed to
track it down! The story is "Footsteps Invisible", by Robert
Arthur. It was first published in Argosy magazine in 1940.
Thanks so much for this site!
M270 I think the poster is thinking of
GHOSTS AND MORE GHOSTS by Robert Arthur.
It was part of my answer for C304. Pretty sure the story about
the man being chased by a mummy is "Footsteps Invisible"
and I think the rhyming
one is also a part of "Mr Milton's Gift"
but I have to doublecheck the book to make sure.~from a
librarian
I checked my copy of "Mr. Milton's Gift"
from Robert Arthur's GHOSTS AND MORE GHOSTS, and
it does match the description. Mr. Milton wants to buy a gift
for his wife, and the gift ends up being the gift of making
money (and in a wish-gone-wrong way, it's the gift of forgery)
and as a free bonus gift, he gets the gift of rhyming (which
annoys everyone because he can't speak without rhyming). ~from a
librarian
Thank you so much for your site! I
have been thinking about this book since I was a kid.
$2.00 is a small price to pay to finally be able to get my
hands on a book that meant so much to me. Thanks.
C134 This drove me crazy because I know I
read it and I knew we had it in our library. It's THE
GHOSTS OF AUSTWICK MANOR BY Reby Edmond
MacDonald. Donald inherits a dollhouse that is a model of
the ancestral home. There is a curse on the MacDonald family,
and the sisters and brother end up experiencing the past through
the dollhouse. Don's friend Charlie has a scar that marks him as
the one who carry out the curse, and Charlie ends up in a car
accident. ~from a librarian
Reby Edmond MacDonald, The Ghosts of
Austwick Manor, 1982,
reprint. Ten-year old, Hillary and 8-year old Heather
MacDonald are excited when their 15-year old brother, Don,
inherits a dollhouse made to look like the family's old home in
England. Their parents discover 4 sets of dolls in a
drawer with a "do not touch" note attached but put one set in
the dollhouse anyway. The children then find that on
certain nights they can enter the dollhouse. There is also
a curse on the family that places Don in danger. A book
review on the net reads: "I think the best part is when
the kids visit the Tudor House in the 1700's during a robbery.
Donald with his fighting skills saves the day, or so you
think! This book isn't scary until you get to the end, it
turns out that Don & friends get into a car crash. Was Don
supposed to be in the car and die that day? Or was it just a
coincidence?"
Hello! My post C135 is solved! It is The Ghosts
of Austwick Manor. Thanks very much! I
appreciate your help, and the two folks who helped solve my
stumper!
---
Time travel book I read in the mid-80's. 3 siblings whose
father had mysteriously died. There is a curse on the
family where the oldest son always dies. The kids have a
dollhouse shaped like a medeival castle that has been handed
down for hundreds of years. There is a doll in the dungeon
that has a mark on his head. They end up time traveling
through the dollhouse back to medieval times and find out that
is when the curse started,because they find a man with a
horseshoe mark on his head and realize he is the murderer
then. Then they realize that a friend of the older brother
has a horseshoe mark on his head and when the kids break the
curse this friend dies then they realize he was a bad person
because of the mark on his head. Any help would be greatly
appreciated.
MacDonald, Reby Edmond, The Ghosts
of Austwick Manor,
1982. This sounds like the book. The details match the
poster's descriptions. Its on the solved mystery pages.
Reby Edmond MacDonald, The Ghosts of
Austwick Manor, 1982. I
am postive that S494 is The Ghosts of Austwick Manor by
Reby Edmond MacDonald. Hillary and Heather find themelves
entering the sixteenth century as a direct result of their older
brother Don's inherited dollhouse. Will they be able to save Don
who is in grave danger from an ancient curse?
The Ghost's of Austwick Manor, 1984. This is the
book I was looking for. Thank you very much!!!
Hi Harriett! I feel like a real goof---just after I submitted my stumper on the teenage car crash ghost story, I solved it. It's called Ghosts of Departure Point and is by Eve Bunting. Go ahead and put it up on solved mysteries if you want---maybe someone else is looking for it too! If you get a copy of it, let me know!
Ghost
Hotel
Larry
Weinburg,
2005, reprint
Last name may be Post. I think
she may have been in a wheelchair. On family vacation, they are
forced to stay at a very old hotel. Dad is history buff. May be
ghosts involved. Girl falls into an empty grave and crawls
through a tunnel and back in time. She helps her friend, a slave
woman, run away.
Weinberg, Larry, Ghost Hotel. Mysteriously drawn to an Indiana museum, a
twelve-year-old paralyzed girl encounters ghosts who return her
to a former life, where she attempts to save the son of a freed
slave traveling by Underground Railroad in Kentucky.
Larry Weinburg, Ghost Hotel, 2005, reprint. Thank you so much for solving my mystery, and for providing this service.
#M131--Mortimer: If this is the one I
think it is, Ghosts Who Went to School, by Judith
Spearing, it was until recently or still is in print, a
classic not to be missed.
Spearing, Judith, Ghosts Who Went to
School
Condition Grades |
Speariing, Judith. Ghosts Who Went to School. Illustrated by Marvin Glass. Scholastic, 1966, 5th paperback printing, 1970. VG. <SOLD> |
|
The Giant Jam Sandwich by
John Vernon Lord, 1972 - it's told in rhyme. Check out his
article "Creating
the
Giant
Jam Sandwich."
Yes, that is the book! Thank you
for the information.
Giant John is definately the book you seek.
I have a copy here and read it to confirm, cute book!
Lobel, Arnold. Giant John. Harper &
Row, 1964. Pictorial boards. Excellent
condition. VG+. $18 plus $3 shipping.
I located the book several months ago, my
sister found it on ebay. My son loves it as much as I did or
still do. I can't believe it is out of print-it's such a
wonderful story.
I remember a book from the early 60's and I
came across your site by doing some random web searching. The
name of the book may be George the Gentle Giant. Can you
tell me anything about this book that might help me identify
whether or not it is the book I'm looking for and also do you
have a copy available. The book I remember had some great, fun
illustrations of a giant that wandered around different
landscapes - country, small towns, etc.
I'm not sure about the plot of George the Gentle Giant,
but I can tell you about Giant John by Arnold
Lobel,
which sounds much alike in name and plot (and might help you
distinguish between the two titles): Giant John's
mother is very poor and sends John out to find work. He
finds work at a nearby castle, holding an umbrella over them
during rain and shading them in sunshine. A group of fairies
comes by and begin to sing, causing John to dance
uncontrollably. He tries to stop, but can't, and winds up
stepping on the dog and knocking over the castle. When the
fairies do stop, John rebuilds the castle, and although it is not
the same, the people are happy, and John goes home with his pay
and invites the fairies to join him and his mother for dinner.
Condition Grades |
Lobel, Arnold. Giant John. Harper & Row, 1964. Weekly Reader Children's Book Club edition. F. $18 |
|
William Pene du Bois wrote a couple books featuring a huge
yellow dog named Otto. They're hard to find, but I do have Otto
at
Sea (1936) presently. Sounds like you want the
first of the series though, Giant Otto. I'll keep my eyes
peeled for you.
duBois, William Pene. Giant Otto.
Viking
Press, 1936.
Thank you very much. I had assumed it was from the 50's
because that's when I read it. Looks like it was something
my mother saved from her childhood. Hey, I'm just thrilled
to know it wasn't a figment of my imagination.
Condition Grades |
duBois, William Pene. Otto at Sea. Viking, 1936. First edition. Worn at edges, and especially at the spine. Brilliant color. Rare. G+ $95 |
|
Golden Press, The Giant Walt Disney
Word Book, 1971.
Harriett-- thanks so much for finding my book! I have
been looking for years!!!!!! I am so happy-- thanks
again!
G99: Sounds like Jolly Roger Bradfield, GIANTS
COME IN DIFFERENT SIZES, 1966. Plus, there's an
evil wizard and hamburger trees.
R.G. Austin,
Giants, Elves, and Scary Monsters,July 1983, copyright.
I was going crazy trying to figure out the name of this book,
finally I put the correct search term in on Google, which
allowed me to figure out the the the company who made the book
which was "Which Way" books. They only made 35 books, so I
searched every title and finally found it! It was like finding a
long lost tresure, I'm looking forward to ordering this book
from Amazon and reading through it! Thank you for your services!
Phyllis R Fenner, Giants &
witches, and a dragon or two, 1943. Possibility:
"Seventeen stories, including both folk tales and a few original
stories, about various creatures of fantasy, including Baba
Yaga, King Stork, Jack the Giant Killer, and The Terrible Olli."
There is a story in Giants and
Wtiches and a Dragon or Two (selected by Phyllis
R. Fenner, Alfred. A Knopf, 1943 titled "The Hungry
Old Witch" (from Tales from Silver Lands
by Charles Finger) that has a scene with ants.
Stout Heart had climbed a tree to escape the witch and she
sprinkled some powder over grass blades, and the blades turned
into ants. She told them, "Creep and crawl--creep and
crawl! Up the Tree-trunk, on the branch. Creep and
crawl--creep and crawl!...Seek and find the living
thing....Pinch him, bit him, torture him." So Stout Heart
droped from the tree branch into a lake, woke up in a stone
house where he met a maiden, whom he eventually married after
they did away with the witch (she drowned in the lake after
swallowing a bunch of turtles.) Is that the right story?
This sounds like one of the Green
Knowe Books, or possibly one of Susan Cooper's
series. I know there was a green giant (shaped from
shrubbery) in one of the Green Knowe series, but
the Vikings and mummies don't ring a bell otherwise.
John Gordon, The Giant Under the Snow, 1968. My memory is a lot hazier than the
requester's, but I'm pretty sure this is the one. Good
book reminiscent of Alan Garner. It had a belated
sequel, apparently - Ride the Wind, published in
1989.
Gordon, John, The Giant Under the
Snow, NY Harper
1970. This one again! Me and a dozen other people suggest
The Giant Under the Snow. "When one of them finds
an ancient talisman in the backlands, three British teen-agers
are plunged into a terrifying and dangerous mystery that appears
to be connected with an old legend. was the wood on the heath
haunted? who was this strange woman? and what is this buckle
that completes the belt?"
---
I read the book in the early to mid 1970s. All I remember is
that it was a suspense/mystery book set in England, and at the
very end the "green man", a giant, came alive from underneath
the forest and fields and went stalking across the land. I think
it was tied in some how to the myth of the green man.
LM Boston, The Secret of Green Knowe. A fabulous book - and recently back in
print, I think. The estate where Tolly goes to live with
his great grandmother used to be called Green Knowe, but is
called Green Noah after the tree sculpture of Noah. A curse was
put on the tree in the past at the end of the story the
tree comes to life. Story also involves the ghosts of
several children who lived in the house and numerous stories
about the house's history.
No, this book is not it. The book I am
recalling was not part of a series. Please keep your
suggestions coming!
John Gordon, The Giant Under the Snow, 1970. Sounds like this one! Please
see the Solved Mysteries G page for more information.
Lucy Boston, The Children of Greene
Knowe
Susan Cooper, Greenwitch. I'm not sure if this is the one
as the description doesn't fit exactly- Jane and her
brothers get caught up in an ancient ritual in England- the
making of the Greenwitch. The Green entity does come to
life but I believe it stays in the sea, I don't think it tramps
around the forest. Still.. a good book, worth mentioning.
John Gordon, The Giant Under the Snow. This was
the book I was searching for! Thanks so much for finding if for
me! It's better than I even recalled, though much scarier too.
I think this may be A Book of Fairy
Tales published by Dean & Son and illustrated by
Janet and Anne Grahame Johnstone. My edition was
published in 1977 and has all the stories you mention.
Some of the other stories are Little Red Riding Hood, Hop O'
My Thumb, The White Cat, Blockhead Hans, and Thumbelina.
The cover is grayish blue with Mother Goose and some of the
story book children waving to her. There is no castle. It
states it was originally published as Janet and Anne
Grahame-Johnstone Gift Book of Fairy Tales, Hans Christian
Andersen Fairy Tales, Gift Book of Fairy Tales, and
The White Cat. I don't know if that means
the book had four previous different titles or the other four
books were combined to make this edition.
The edition suggested was reprinted in the
80s under the title Dean's Book of Famous Fairy Tales:
Stories After Hans Christian Andersen, illustrated
by Janet & Anne Grahame-Johnstone, published London:
Dean, 1984, Pictorial Cover.
could be Treasury of Hans Christian
Andersen translated by Erik Christian Haugaard,
published Garden City NY, Nelson Doubleday 1974 - book club
edition - hard cover - 528 pages, 72 tales includes classics
like: Ugly Duckling, Emperor's New Clothes, Red Shoes, Snow
Queen, Little Mermaid, Little Match Girl, Tinderbox, Steadfast
Tin Soldier, and many others. Deluxe edition has dark blue
cover with gilt decoration, no information on cover of book club
edition.
Dean's A Book of Fairy Tales, 1977. This is def. the book you're looking
for. You can see the book under
Loganberry's
Most Requested Books, but the cover is a different
edition, probably an older one. I looked for this book for
years without a title of good idea of the cover until I found it
though Harriett's Book Stumper. I'm sure this is the book
by your description. If Harriett doesn't have any in her
store then you an probably find a copy on ebay. Janet and
Anne Grahame Johnstone are the illustrators.
Lois Duncan, A Gift of Magic, 1971/2. I love serendipity! Having
just read the latest Stumpers, I happened to browse Solved
Mysteries and came across "And This is Laura" which has several
other guesses listed with synopses! The Duncan book sounds
closest to this posting.
Lois Duncan, A Gift of Magic. This is definitely "A Gift of Magic".
Nancy has ESP and uses it to save her brother Brendon when he
gets in trouble. Each of the children has been granted a "gift"
by their dying grandmother---Kirby, the oldest daughter, is a
dancer Brendon is into music and Nancy gets ESP.
Lois Duncan, A gift of magic, 1971. Until she learns to control
it, Nancy's gift of extrasensory perception brings her more
trouble than she can handle.
Lois Duncan, A Gift of Magic. 'To the oldest girl I give the gift of
dance. To the boy I give the gift of music, and to the girl, the
one that looks like me, I give the gift of...
Nancy is furious. Her parents just got
divorced and she and the rest of her family had to move to
Florida, her mother's hometown. She is miserable. Her mother is
spending all of her time with Tom Duncan, a boyfriend she used
to have, and her only friend, her sister, spends all of her time
at the dance studio. Nancy has nothing to do with her time and
is a complete loner, until she predicts the answers on the
social studies quiz before they were even asked. That's when she
finds out she, too, has a special gift. Now, all she needs to
find out, is if she will use her powers for good or evil.
Duncan, Lois, A gift of magic, Published by Pocket Books in 1972.
Most of this sounds like Lois Duncan's book, although the
younger brother is Brandon, not Michael. The three
siblings are each left a 'gift' by their grandmother and Nancy's
is magic. Older sister Kirby's is the gift of dance, and parts
of the story revolve around her issues with anorexia. The book
starts in their childhood and continues into their adult life.
Lois Duncan, A Gift of Magic. You'll have a dozen responses to this
one. Verrrry popular book of the 70's.
I read this book in 1975. I think it
was called the gift. The boy received a
musical gift from his grandmother, the sister received a dancing
gift, while the girl received ESP. I will try to search
it. I think it has been solved here, too.
This is most likely a Gift of Magic,
by Lois Duncan.
Conford, Ellen, And this is Laura, 1977. This title is obviously later than
1973 - Laura is twelve and discovers she has ESP.
Lois Duncan, A Gift of Magic.The brother's name is Brendan, but all other
details are accurate.
Willo Davis Roberts, The Girl with
Silver Eyes, 1991,
reprint. your description sounds like The Girl with
the Silver Eyes -- The protagonist finds out her
mother tooks some pills while she was pregnant that give her
ESP.
---
Book about a teenage girl with ESP who
gets in trouble in school because a teacher thinks she is
cheating via her older sister who is in an earlier class, and
using her ESP she saves her little brother when he goes out to
sea in a cardboard boat that he and a friend built when it
starts to sink.
Lois Duncan, A Gift of Magic. Three kids -- Kirby, Brendon and Nancy --
are bestowed with the gifts of dance, music and ESP,
respectively, by their grandmother. Nancy doesn't want Kirby to
go to another dance school in another state. when Kirby
falls and hurts her leg, Nancy's afraid she might have
psychically willed the accident to happen. But Nancy does
eventually find that her ESP can be a blessing as well as a
curse.
Lois Duncan, A Gift of Magic. On the Solved Mysteries page.
This is definitely A Gift of Magic,
by Lois Duncan.
This book is Lois Duncan's A Gift of
Magic. Mom, two sisters, and a little brother
move back to the house on the sea where the mom grew up, after
the parents divorce. Grandma, now dead, had been some sort
of witch, and upon her death, had given each of the 3
grandchildren a special "gift" - one got ESP, one got
extrordinary dance talent (that girl breaks her leg at one point
in the story and is devastated), and the little brother got the
gift of music, but isn't really into it because he's too wild.
The ESP girl saves her brother's life when he and his friend
take a rowboat out without permission and get in trouble.
I tracked this book down myself a while back - oddly enough, one
of the things I also remembered most clearly was the accusation
of cheating due to the ESP.
Lois Duncan, A Gift of Magic. See solved stumpers.
Ruth Stiles Gannett, My Father's
Dragon (in Three
Tales of My Father's Dragon, 1997, reprint.) The
story of the little boy who gives gum to the tigers is from My
Father's Dragon. The other parts of the story are not
Phyllis R. Fenner, Giggle Box, 1950. I was the
one who originally requested this, so you can know that the
solution was found! By looking up the Ruth Stiles Gannett
book, and knowing The Mudhen and Homer Price was in it, I found
it in my local public library. Phyllis R. Fenner put out a
similar book in 1953 called Fun, Fun, Fun. Now I want to
buy My Father's Dragon!
David Sinclair, ACE ASTRO AND THE
STAR ROVERS : THE GILEAD BOMB, 1963. This one was published by Dell,
but a dog figures prominently in it.
David Sinclair, The Gilead Bomb, 1963. From title and date and fact that
it's sf, maybe this one (which I haven't read). It was a
Dell Seal pb original, a bit larger than standard pb but smaller
than most trade pbs, not Scholastic Books as requestor thought
but very similar. Cover
here.
YIPEE!!! Your wonderful Book
Stumpers service worked!! This has got to be the best $2
I have ever spent. No question about it!! As soon as I
saw it on the link I remembered the cover of the book by David
Sinclair, ACE ASTRO AND THE STAR ROVERS : THE GILEAD BOMB
just like it was yesterday, though it was 43 years ago.
Thanks SO MUCH for the help. My 12 year old son and I
read together almost every night. As soon as this book
comes in from the bookseller on the provided link, and we
finish our latest Brian Jacques book, we will read it with
great pleasure.
Thanks! I actually remembered the name of the book a day or so ago (after much brain-probing): Gimme an H! Gimme an E! Gimme an L! Gimme a P! by Frank Bonham.
Gingerbread Shop
This is a bit vague, but here it goes: this book is about
a child (maybe 2 children) who at the begining of the story
visit a special shop. I don't remember what kind of shop,
maybe a bakery or sweet shop. The child saved something
that they got in the shop or the wrapping it came in (shiny
foil?). The items were saved in a box and at the end of
the story the child took out the box, climbed a ladder and
pasted the siny bits into the sky for the stars. I know it
isn't much to go on, but I hope somebody remembers it.
Thanks!
P. L. Travers, One of the Mary
Poppins
books. I think I remember this scene in one of the
Mary Poppins books, though I'm not 100% sure. I don't
remember which one, though.
Oh yeah! I'll bet it's the Little Golden Book version of the
Mary Poppins chapter: The Gingerbread
Shop illustrated by Gertrude Elliott, LGB# 126, 1952.
P110b: Sounds like the Mrs. Corry(?) chapter
of Mary Poppins - except it's Mary Poppins who
swipes the
kids' gold stars left over from the
gingerbread and then she and Mrs. Corry, the shopkeeper, paste
them on the sky as the kids watch unseen from their window. Mrs.
Corry also has fingers made of candy which she can break off and
make grow again - though in Reading For the Love of It,
Michele Landsberg gets this fact wrong and uses it as one excuse
to hate the MP series in general! For those who know only the
movie, be aware that the kids in the book love MP not because
she's magical and sweet, but because she's both magical and a
no-nonsense tyrant who never gives hugs. The fact that she was
an imperfect grown-up while the kids are somewhat more
fair-minded made the series a novelty (in the 1930s) in kids'
literature.
#P110b--Pasting stars in the sky:
Oddly, this is the one scene from Mary Poppins,
by P. L. Travers, that readers seem to remember best,
and one that didn't make it into the movie!
Travers, P L, Mary Poppins...Sounds like the chapter in one of the Mary
Poppins books where the children visit Mrs. Corry's shop
and eat gingerbread with paper stars pasted on it.
This episode is very similar to one that
occurs in P.L. Travers' Mary Poppins series. I
can't remember the exact book in the series.
Travis, P. L., Mary Poppins.This sounds like the Mrs. Cory chapter from Mary
Poppins. They children collect the stars from the
Gingerbread and Mary Poppins sneaks them away and with Mrs. Cory
and her two daughter climbs ladders and pastes them into the
sky.
Regarding the comments about P110b (Gingerbread
Shop). Someone found it odd that this scene
didn"t make it into the movie. I found that the movie took
a lot of liberties with the original and wonderful book.
The charm of the bok was Mary Poppins' outward gruffness and
grouchiness (yet she secretly did wonderful things for the
children. Julie Andrews' Mary Poppins was sickeningly
icky-sweet. The time period was changed from the World War
II era to about 1910, and Mrs. Banks was a suffragette!
Really bizarre. And what happened to John, Barbara and
Annabel? I'll bet you can guess that I'm no fan of the
Disneyized version of one of the all time greatest children's
series.
---
Please help me with the title of a picture book I remember my
friend's mother reading to us when I was about three or four
years old in the mid-50s. A little boy and little girl are
walking somewhere and meet an old woman. She breaks off
her fingers and gives her fingers to them!!! It must have
been written in the 40s or early 50s. Someone HAS to
remember this book - please!
P.L. Travers, Mary Poppins. The "Mary Poppins" series has a character
named Mrs Corry who owns a sweet shop. (In the film, she appears
towards the beginning as the tiny old lady with the two enormous
daughters.) At one point in one of the books, she breaks
off some of her fingers and gives them to Jane and Michael and
their younger siblings. The fingers turn into sticks of candy.
Mrs Corry appears in the first book, but the fingers into
candy incident might happen in a later book.
Travers, P.L., Mary Poppins, 1935. Sounds like the Mrs. Corry chapter
from the original Mary Poppins. It could also be the
Little Golden Book called The Gingerbread Shop
that featured just this story from Mary Poppins. Finally,
I had a book when I was very little that I think was called Mary
Poppins from A to Z. At any rate, it was an
alphabet book, and the little story for one of the letters
involved Mrs. Corry breaking off her fingers, whch turned into
candy sticks, for Jane and Michael.
Travers, P.L., Mary Poppins, 1934. Mrs. Corry "broke of two of her
fingers and gave one each to John and Barbara. And the
odders part of it was that in the space left by the broken-off
fingers two new ones grew at once. Jane and Michael
clearly saw in happen"
P.L. Travers, Mary Poppins, 1934. The woman with the breakaway
fingers is Mrs. Corry, who is in the eighth chapter of Mary
Poppins. A slightly altered version of this chapter was
also published in 1952 as a Little Golden Book titled The
Gingerbread Shop. Please see the solved
mystery pages under "M" and "G" for more information.
P.L. Travers, The Gingerbread Shop: A
Story from Mary Poppins,
1952. This is one of the chapters in "Mary Poppins". The
chapter was also published on its own as a picture book under
the title "The Gingerbread Shop". Mary takes the Banks
children to the shop of Mrs. Corry, who has peppermint-candy
fingers which she breaks off and gives them to eat (she can
re-grow them). You can find this on the Solved Mysteries
page.
Mary Poppins. This
sounds like the chapter in Mary Poppins where they buy
gingerbread - the old woman breaks off her fingers, which
become/are the gingerbread.
Travers, Pamela , Mary Poppins, 1940-1950s. One of the Mary Poppsins
stories is about a visit to the sweet shop run by Mrs. Corry,
who breaks off a figer for each child to nibble on and gives
them gingerbread. Later that night she and M.P. hangs the
gold starts from the gingerbread up in the sky. Might be
it.
P.L Travers, Mary Poppins. Could it be "Mrs Corry" from Mary
Poppins? Her fingers are barley-sugar, and she breaks them
off and hands them to the babies to suck.
Sounds like one of the Mary Poppins
books. The fingers peppermint sticks?
Condition Grades |
Travers, P.L. The Gingerbread Shop:
A
Story from Mary Poppins. Illustrated by Gertrude
Elliott. NY: Simon & Schuster, 1952, first
Little Golden Book edition (LGB #126). Edges worn,
rear gutter cracked, otherwise VG. <SOLD>
Travers, P.L. Mr. Wigg's Birthday Party: A Story from Mary Poppins. Illustrated by Gertrude Elliott. NY: Simon & Schuster, 1952, first Little Golden Book edition (LGB #140). Fine copy. <SOLD> |
|
Could this possibly be one of the Amelia
Bedelia
Books?
Woolley. Catherine, Ginnie and the
Cooking Contest.
Ginnie is about ten years old when she enters a cooking contest,
the prize being a trip to Washington D.C.
Wooley, Catherine, Ginnie and the
Cooking Contest, 1966.
This sounds like a book from the "Dot"
series. At least I think that was her name. The whole
series was done in the 1950's (from the illustrations), and in
this particular book, the girl enters a baking contest. I
remember the hall where the baking contest was very cool and
quiet when the contest first starts...and the girl, Dot, is the
only one to make something so simple, but wins the contest. I'm
sorry I don't have the title, but this might spur someone else
to remember it. (She also bakes a fantastic chocolate cake,
which set me to baking, too!)
L140 Again, my copy has been sold, but I
nominate Woolley, Catherine, Ginnie and the cooking
contest. illus by Paul Frame; cover by Jim Woodend.
Random, 1966.
Catherine Wooley, Ginnie & the
Cooking Contest. That's it! The name Jenny
kept popping into my head but I knew it wasn't right.
Thank you!
For G2--in the 60's Scholastic Books had a
paperback called Ginny and the---it was "and
the New People" or "the Mysterious Strangers"
or some such and was about a girl named Ginny who met American
Indians and ate a soup they made during a blizzard..
Could this be Julie Campbell's Ginny
Gordon series? I think there were 4 or 5 books
in the series. Ginny solved mysteries while setting up
business concerns in her town.
I had emailed you a week or two ago about
the above stumper. I thought it was the Ginny Gordon series
written
by
Julie Campbell. I checked one of the books at home, and
she did live on Maple. Hope this helps.
You have a request for information about the
"Ginnie" series on your website. The Ginnie books, written
by Catherine Woolley, were my absolute favorites.
I have been collecting them for my daughters, who are now
enjoying the stories as well. Titles include Ginnie
and Geneva, Ginnie Joins In, Ginnie and the New Girl, Ginnie
and Her Juniors (later reprinted as Ginnie's
Babysitting Business), Ginnie and the Cooking
Contest, Ginnie and the Mystery Cat, Ginnie and the Mystery
Doll, Ginnie and the Mystery Light. I am still
seeking a copy of Ginnie and the Wedding Bells to
add to my collection.
I remember that book too!!! Ran to my
bookshelf in the attic and found it. Woolley, Catherine. Ginnie
and Geneva. Illus. by Iris Beatty Johnson. New York,
W. Morrow, 1948.
Funny you should wonder about the Ginnie
books. Two weeks ago I was going through my childhood books and
came across Ginny and the Mystery Doll. I am
reading a chapter a night to my own 8 year old daughter now and
we are both loving it!
There are two books I want desperately,
whose titles I cannot remember: Book One--a little girl loses
her beautiful doll. The book traces the doll over the next 50+
years until the girl (now an old woman) is reunited with it.
D3 This is just a guess, but the
answer might be the ever-popular Magic Elizabeth by
Norma Kassirer. After all, even though the old woman
isn't the focus of the story, it is her doll that Sally recovers
after all those years.
Actually I have recently learned that it is Ginnie and the Mystery Doll by Catherine Woolley. I think I got
a few of the details wrong. I now have a copy and am so
excited. By the way, just a day or two ago I found a
paperback copy of Magic Elizabeth. Can you believe
I never read it as a child, but I keep hearing other people say
it was one of their favorites, so I just had to have it.
Will keep looking for a hardback copy. Love your website.
It has solved a couple of mysteries for me and I am most
appreciative. I have more to submit later on, but do not
want to be piggy.
---
Received the book and was thrilled at the
condition. I was expecting something really dirty and
yucky based on your description, so was pleasantly surprised at
how nice it was. Began reading it last night with my little
girl, who I had to force it on, I think because it looked old
and not so beautiful.I thought I remembered this story, but so
far it is all fresh to me, although I recognize enough to know
it is definitely the right book! Anyway, my little girl is
loving it as much as I did as a little girl. So - to the point
of this e-mail - can you locate other books in this series
for me? I recall there are several.
Since no-one answered, I figured I'd take a
shot in the dark. The details remind me of two books. One you
could try is MAGIC ELIZABETH by Norma
Kassirer, published in the 1960s and 1970s and recently
republished. I know it does rain in the book, when she arrives,
and at least one other time when she goes up to the attic to
play. There is a missing doll, though I don't recall a brooch,
nor do I remember berry-picking (although you know how
memory can be!) There may be more details on this site - I
think it's on the Most Requested page. You could also try GINNIE
AND THE MYSTERY DOLL by Catherine Woolley,
published in the 60s and 70s (and perhaps even earlier). Ginnie
is visiting Cape Cod. She finds a doll that has been missing for
years, and then it disappears again. I can't recall if it rains
a lot, but I seem to remember them picking beach plums and
making jelly (although I wouldn't swear to it, and it's possible
it was in one of the other Ginnie books. I hope this helps a
little bit.~from a librarian
S313 I think this matches, from glancing
thru it: Woolley, Catherine. Ginnie and the
mystery doll. illus by Bob Magnusen.
Scholastic, 1960 mysteries - juvenile; dolls;
Cape Cod, Massachusetts
Ginny and the mystery doll is
it! I just looked at a copy, and this is the book
I've been trying to find for years! Thank you so much to
the "librarian" for taking a shot at it! You've brought
back wonderful memories- I can't begin to tell you how happy I
am. Thank you!!
---
I remember a book about a girl named Ginny who was sent to live
with her Aunt and she got involved in a mystery regarding a lost
doll that her elderly aunt had lost in her childhood. I
would like to know the title of the book.
Catherine Woolley's Ginnie and the Mystery Doll,
1960. See more on Solved Mysteries.
Thank you! That was so quickly done
and I guess I should have been able to figure that one out by
myself, considering the title was basically the description I
sent in.
---
This was about two friends who would solve little
mysteries around their town. It may have been set in the
Northeast, like Cape Cod or some other ocean town. The
characters were probably patterned after Nancy Drew, but I'm
pretty sure it was not her. But the tone and atmosphere
was of fresh-scrubbed girls doing wholesome things, like Nancy
Drew. The only other detail I remember was that they wore
seersucker outfits at one point, and I had to ask around to
find out what that was.
This sounds like the "Ginnie" books.
My sister had one called Ginnie and the Mystery of the
Doll, but there were lots of them. This one
had them visiting Cape Cod and going to a clambake.
Catherine Woolley, Ginnie and the
Mystery Doll, 1962.
I looked up the author, and there were at least ten "Ginnie"
books. Ginnie and Geneva solved a lot of crimes.
Meg of Monhegan Island?
Trixie Belden? Her "sidekick"
was Honey something--Wilder or Wheeler, maybe? Crabapple Farm,
Sleepyside... sound familiar at all?
Could be the Ginnie and Geneva
mysteries by Catherine Woolley, most published in the
1960's. For example, Ginnie and the Mystery Cat, Ginnie
and the Mystery doll, Ginnie and the Mystery House, Ginnie
and the Mystery Light (her friend Geneva is always
along) And if I recall correctly, Ginnie and Geneva live
in Cape Cod. ~from a librarian
Catherine Wooley, Ginnie and the
Mystery House/Ginnie and the Mystery Doll, 1957/1960, respectively. The books
about friends who solve mysteries on Cape Cod could be part of
the "Ginnie and Geneva" series.
Kathryn Kenny , Trixie Belden. There was a series of books in the 1950's
and 60's about a girl sleuth named Trixie Belden and her
friends. There are probably other girl sleuths, but this
is the first that came to my mind.
Possibly the Trixie Beldon
Series. Authors were Julie Campbell and Kathryn Kenny.
Characters both had wholesome morals and good values I read
these books as a child about two teenage girls (Trixie Beldon
and best friend Honey Wheeler) who solved mysteries around their
town somewhere in northeast. Can't remember the exact town, but
remember she lived on a crabapple farm or something like that.
Trixie was tomboyish and had a
boyfriend named "Jim" and used expressions
such as "jeepers". Her friend, Honey, was a rich girl who was
rather prissy and sickly (at least in the first episode, which I
believe was entitled: Trixie Beldon and the secret of the old
house/mansion)
Possibly the Dana Girls Mystery
series by Carolyn Keene? Jean is a
16-year-old blond, and Louise is a 17-year-old
brunette. Since their parents died, they lived with their
maiden aunt, Harriet, and her bachelor brother, Captain
Dana (Uncle Ned). Their favorite dates are Chris Barton and Ken
Scott. They seem to go on
vacation a lot, and wherever they go they
find a mystery to solve.
This sounds like it could be one of the Meg
Mysteries, by Holly Beth Walker. Two friends
who live in Virginia solve various mysteries. The seersucker
outfits sound vaguely familiar.
The Ginny/ Geneva books were set in the New
England area. In Ginny and The Mystery House, the
girls ride a bus to NYC for a weekend with friends. The
Trixie Belden books were set in Sleepyside, New York. I
don't recall seersucker suits in any of the Trixie books,
though.
Catherine Woolley, Ginnie and the
Mystery Doll.
(1960) The searcher is thinking of Woolley's Ginnie and
Geneva mystery set on Cape Cod and involving a convertible
sportscar (a jaguar)a la Nancy Drew and a mention of a pair of
seersucker shorts found at a church rummage sale. This was
the most Nancy Drew-ish of the 4 Ginnie mystery books right down
to the illustrations which make the 11-12 year-old heroines look
like teenagers.
Catherine Woolley, Ginnie
and the Mystery Doll. This was solved
for me here, quite a long time ago! I just realized I
had never written back to say so. So this stumper can
be moved off to the solved page. Thank you so much!
Condition Grades |
Woolley, Catherine. Ginnie and the Mystery Doll. William Morrow, 1960; Scholastic 1962, 2nd paperback printing 1965. VG $8 |
|
Catherine Woolley, Ginnie and the Mystery Light,
1973, copyright. This is the last book in Catherine Woolley's
popular Ginnie series. Ginnie gets invited to visit her
best friend Geneva who has temporarily moved to Louisiana, near
New Orleans? The girls try to solve the mystery of the
flashing lights that appear at night. A Ouija board is one
of the things they use to try to solve the mystery. The
book's dust jacket depicting Ginnie was in somewhat psychedelic
blues and greens.
Catherine Woolley, Ginnie
and the Mystery Light I''m pretty sure this is the
one. Not the best of the Ginnie and Geneva series, though. A
later book when Ginnie goes to visit Geneva in her new home in
the south and the girls try to locate the source of the
mysterious light in the swamp.
Woolley, Catherine, Ginnie and the Mystery Light,
1973, copyright.
Solved:
Ginnie and the Mystery Light
Yes!!!! This is the book!!!! WONDERFUL, I can't thank you all
enough....what a fabulous service this is!!!!
this sounds good - Ginny and Custard, by Frances Clarke Sayers, illustrated by Eileen Evans, published New York, Viking 1951. "A charming story of a little New York girl's happy year in Los Angeles with an understanding father and mother to enjoy exploring with her all sorts of new and exciting things - the famous Farmer's Market; the wonderful fields of wild flowers; Olvera Street where they took Ginny's much-loved cat, Custard, for the Easter Saturday Festival; and many, many more. I enjoyed the story of Ginny; and the book left me with a feeling of really having had a happy time myself in Los Angeles, so well does Mrs. Sayers picture the city." (Horn Book Sept/51 p.331)
Sydney Taylor, More
All-of-a-Kind Family, 1954. Just a suggestion
because this book is not about orphans but about a close-knit
family of five sisters and a young brother. One of the
chapters involves choosing a Queen of the May for a May party
and Mary Stevens's cover illustration is of all the kids in
their holiday costumes around a colorful Maypole.
Doris Gates, Blue Willow, 1940.
There's
a picture of children dancing around a maypole, although they're
not orphans.
Irma Wilde, The Giraffe Who
Went to School, 1951. I know this is a long shot,
but I immediately thought of this book when I read your
post. Two old ladies teach school to four little girls in
their big, old-fashioned house. A giraffe named Alice
wants to attend school too, but when she tries, she bumps her
head on the ceiling, can't sit on the little chairs, and can't
learn her ABCs, so she must return to the zoo. The next
day, May Day, as the girls are begining to dance around their
Maypole, a wind comes up and blows the Maypole away. The
children are in tears, until Alice comes up with a brilliant
idea. The teachers quickly festoon the giraffe with
flowers and ribbons, and the children dance around their unusual
new Maypole. This is a Wonder Book, about the size of a Golden
Book, illustrated by the author, featuring several cute,
colorful pictures of the children with both the old Maypole and
the giraffe/Maypole. While the children are not orphans,
there is no mention of their homes or parents in the book, so it
might be possible to believe that they were.
This is it! Many thanks to the
person who provided the solution. The Giraffe was the
key.
Mazer, Harry, The Girl of His Dreams,
1987. The book was actually a sequel to another book The
War on Villa Street and the main character was Willis
Pierce. I went to my local library thinking that the
main character was the girl that he meets in the book
--fortunately I found it by subject in the online catalog at
my local library within five minutes. Not recalling what
the title or author was, I was amazed to find that I had a lot
of the details correct. I think I related to the
character of Sophie, being a teen, so that's why she stuck out
in my mind. And to think it was that easy after looking
for so long on the internet!! I do appreciate the posting,
however and I'm thrilled to read my favorite teen romance
again, just for kicks.
Harry Mazer, The girl of his dreams, 1987. I think it's this book.
"Willis thinks he wants to fall in love but when Sophie
comes into his life, and falls in love with
him, he's not sure if she really is the girl of his
dreams." It's a sequel to The War on Villa Street:
"A teen-age boy tries to come to terms with various aspects of
his life, his relationship with his often drunk and abusive
father, the menace of a local bully and his gang, and his love
of running."
Could this be Gene Stratton Porter's A
Girl of the Limberlost. Details fit. It's online.
If
original poster can remember moths, this is it!
Gene Stratton Porter, Girl of the
Limberlost
I can't remember the title or author, and a
library search produced hundreds of books about witches.
Still, I'm sure I read this book---the description is familiar,
and my age is consistent with the time period! Does the
stumper requester remember how the protagonist becomes convinced
that she is not really a witch? In the book I read, she
tells the boy she admires that she suspects she's a witch
(possibly tearfully explaining why she's rejecting his romantic
advances?---not sure). He is determined to prove that her
odd experiences are purely coincidental. He explains that
witches can't cross running water, then picks the girl up and
carries her across a stream to the other side (how
romantic!). Does this sound familiar?
Duncan, Lois, A Gift of Magic, 1971. I don't know if this is right -- some of
the ideas match, but she is not a witch, but has several kinds
of "ESP". The rival may be her sister. This is
apparently the only Lois Duncan book that isn't really a
suspense book.
Thank you for the suggestions. It's
definitely not Lois Duncan's Gift of Magic. This
was not a dark story at all, more like a feel-good,
coming-of-age story from the 60's. Honestly, I can't
remember whether or not the protagonist's boyfriend carried
her across running water. I do vaguely remember that she
told him about her suspicions and that he tried to convince
her otherwise. It's also possible that, though her
"spells" "worked" at first (e.g., putting her with the boy or
causing bad things to happen to her rival), they eventually
petered out, and she realized that she actually didn't have
power over these events. Thanks so much for the help!
Zilpha Keatly Snyder, The Witches of
Worm. This might be
it, but I'm not sure. The main character in this thinks that
she's posessed by a witch and is causing bad things to happen.
Katharine Newlin Burt, Girl on a
Broomstick, 1967. Someone helped me find this
title, and even though it's been a long time since I posted
the query at Loganberry, I thought I should come back with the
solution. Thank you to those who very kindly tried to
help me.
Paul Goble, The Girl Who Loved Wild
Horses. Is this The
Girl
Who Loved Wild Horses? befriends the stallion,
eventually becomes a horse herself. the stringy,
wind-blown manes sounds right.
#I28--Indian and her horse: The
Girl Who Loved Wild Horses, by Paul Goble,
won the 1979 Caldecott medal.
Goble, Paul, The Girl Who Loved Wild
Horses, 1978.
Could this be the book you're looking for? The girl ends
up leaving her tribe to live with the wild horse. Each
year she brings a colt back to the tribe, but one year she
doesn't return and the tribe believe that the girl turned into a
beautiful mare. Paul Goble won the Caldecott Medal for
this book.
Possibly The Girl Who Loved Wild
Horses, written and illustrated by Paul Goble,
published New York, Macmillan 1978, reprinted several times, 32
pages. "There was a girl in the village who loved horses... She
led the horses to drink at the river. She spoke softly and they
followed. People noticed that she understood horses in a special
way." And so begins the story of a young Native American girl
devoted to the care of her tribe's horses. With simple text and
brilliant illustrations. Paul Goble tells how she eventually
becomes one of them to forever run free." "A young American
Indian girl has an unusual rapport with wild horses and during a
storm she runs off with
them and joins a herd led by a beautiful
spotted stallion."
O.T. Nelson, The Girl Who Owned A
City. (1975)
Possibly this one? I haven't read it, but an online
description says, "A killing virus has swept the earth, sparing
only children through the age of twelve. There is chaos
everywhere, even in formerly prosperous mid-America. Gangs and
fierce armies of children begin to form almost immediately. It
would be the same for the children on Grand Avenue but for Lisa,
a ten-year-old girl who becomes their leader. Because of Lisa,
they have food, even toys, in abundance. And now they can
protect themselves from the fierce gangs that roam the
neighborhoods. But for how long? Then Lisa conceives the idea of
a fortress [in an abandoned school], a city in which the
children could live safely and happily always, and she intends
to lead them there." Please note that you may be
disappointed when you reread this book: many reviewers at [an
enormous online corporation] have commented on the huge plot
holes they've noticed in adulthood.
Nelson, O.T., The Girl Who Owned a
City. (1975) The
edition we have in our library is copyright 1995, and it's "an
updated edition". The original Lerner publication was
1975. The killing age is 12, not 15, but I think it's the
right Highly politicized, but young readers probably don't
notice.
Nelson, O.T., The Girl Who Owned a
City. Everyone
over the age of 12 dies of a virus. Ten year old Lisa tries to
organize the run amuk children.
O.T. Nelson, The Girl Who Owned a
City. (1975) I'm
amazed this isn't in the solved mysteries section yet!
O.T. Nelson, The Girl Who Owned A
City. (1975)
O.T. Nelson, The Girl who Owned
a City. (1977)
The plague kills everyone over 12, not 15 but it sounds like the
same book.
I looked at the book, "The girl who
owned a city" and I think that is it.
I have been looking for that book for almost 20 years. I
even called the original library that I read it at, and they
thought I was crazy for asking about a book I read so many
years ago. Thank you so much.
---
I remember this book from the late
70's/80's. A virus has swept across Earth and killed everyone
over 13 years old. A girl and her younger brother band
together with other kids to make a community, but the "bad
kids" burn it down. The group travels and go into homes and
wander until they come across a school and decide to stay
there. The book ends with a hopeful tone for the future.
O. T. Nelson, The Girl Who Owned a
City, 1975.
O.T. Nelson, The Girl Who
Owned A City. This is certainly The Girl Who
Owned A City by OT Nelson. Great book, and
not hard to find.
O. T. Nelson, The Girl
Who Owned a City. This is the one.
O.T. Nelson, The Girl Who
Owned A City,1975. All of the elements described
match Nelson's book (also in Solved pages). This has recently
been reissued.
O.T. Nelson, The Girl Who
Owned a City, 1975.
O. T. Nelson, The Girl who
owned a city. I think this is what you're looking
for.
Nelson, O.T., The Girl Who
Owned a City, 1977.You'll probably get a lot for
this one, since it's still a well known title. From the
publisher: A killing virus has swept the earth, sparing only
children through the age of twelve. There is chaos everywhere,
even in formely prosperous mid-America. Gangs and fierce armies
of children begin to form almost immediately. It would be the
same for the children on Grand Avenue but for Lisa, a
yen-year-old girl who becomes their leader. Because of Lisa,
they have food, even toys, in abundance. And now they can
protect themselves from the fierce gangs that roam the
neighborhoods. But for how long? Then Lisa conceives the idea of
a fortress, a city in which the children could live safely and
happily always, and she intends to lead them there.
O.T. Nelson, The Girl Who
Owned A City.One of my all time favorite books! The
girl and her brother are named Lisa and Todd. All the adults on
earth have been wiped out by a mysterious virus. Lisa forms a
militia of local children to protect each other from a gang of
bullies who stole their food. When this gang burns Lisa's house
she moves her militia into the school for shelter. Lisa teaches
herself to drive and locates a warehouse full of food, (all the
stores have been emptied out by starving kids), and uses this
secret resource to convince her neighbors to band together.
Unlike such novels as lord of the flies Lisa and her militia
face their fears and work together to create a refuge from the
chaos that surrounds them where humanity triumphs over hysteria.
Could this be O.T. Nelson's The
Girl
Who Owned a City (1975)?
Charley by Joan G Robinson, Illustrated by Prudence Seward, London: Collins, 1969 (NY: Coward-McCann, 1970, later reprinted by Scholastic as The Girl Who Ran Away). Original endpapers illustrate the map of the neighbourhood where Charley spent her unusual holiday. The Scholastic paperback stated "Original title: Charley", or perhaps "Formerly: Charley."
Marguerite De Angeli, The Goose
Girl, Doubleday
1964. I am afraid I don't know the old school reader to
which you refer but I did come across a reference to The
Goose Girl by Marguerite De Angeli. (Doubleday, 1964)
Perhaps that was the one included in the reader.It might prove a
key to help track down the reader!
The Little Girl Who Sat In The
Ashes... When I was a child, I had a bunch of
discarded school readers and lately I've been thinking often of
a story in one of them, and I'd like very much to find it again.
The story was a version of Cinderella. The young lady in the
story was a gooseherd. Everyday she went through the village and
rounded up the geese and took them to pond and pasture and
watched over them. One day, she heard that a party was being
held for the prince and all eligible young women were invited to
go. But she only had one old grey dress. The geese seemed to
understand her plight, and at the end of each day, they raised
thier wings and flapped thier wings until feathers (down) flew
like snow. She gathered up and saved all the small downy
feathers. She sat and sewed all the feathers on her old grey
dress. There was a color illustration of her standing on a rock,
holding her long golden hair piled on top of her head, wearing
the white fluffy feathered dress and gazing at her reflection in
the pond while the geese watched. She went to the ball and the
prince fell in love with her. Her dress of goose feathers
rivaled expensive gowns of richer women, her bare feet were as
pretty and dainty as the finest slipper, her flowing locks as
lovely as elaborately arranged hairstyles, and her face shining
with happiness... This is quite definitely "The
Little Girl Who Sat In the Ashes" one of my favorite children's
books ever. It's a LOVELY version of the Cinderella story. I had
to BEG and make a major donation to a local library to get first
dibs on mine...I waited a decade till it was finally knocked off
the shelf and into the discard section! LOL
This isn't a solution, exactly, but it
might aid anyone out there trying to help solve this
stumper--just a few minor details to add to the original
poster's description. I, too, remember reading this story,
probably in junior high, which would have been about 1980-1982,
and I can't recall the name of it either! However, it
seems to me that it was a short story, or else it was a
book-length novel that was excerpted in our text book, because
we read it aloud, in class, and it didn't take more than a
couple of days. I originally thought it was a Ray
Bradbury story, but I haven't found it in any of his
stuff, and I think I may be associating it with him simply
because we read it around the same time that we read "All
Summer in a Day." The poster's description is
dead-on, though, and I remember everything that was mentioned,
right down to the sunburn and the foxes and rabbits that the
girl brought back with her in a box. The only thing I
would add is that I don't remember it as being a "time travel"
story. I thought that the girl was from another planet
similar to earth but with no animals, or maybe that she was from
a distant city and everyone BELIEVED animals were extinct, but
somehow she had wandered into a remote area where a few still
existed, but I could be wrong about that. I'm wondering if
this story is a staple of middle school lit classes in the
sci-fi genre? Maybe some 7th or 8th grade teachers out
there might know the title.
Hendrich, Paula, The Girl Who Slipped
through Time.
FOUND IT! I'm almost positive this person is looking for
"The Girl Who Slipped Through Time" by Paula Hendrich.
Description: "...juvenile science fiction. 12 yr old Para has
time-travelled back to rural Kansas in the 1930s, before the
animals became extinct, to learn what her robo-teacher never
taught her, in this suspenseful tale of past and future
time." I was the second poster for this book (I added some
details I remembered to what the original poster sent in).
I'm pretty sure we were both looking for the same book--this is
definitely the one I was thinking of.
Paula Hendrich, The
Girl Who Slipped Through Time. Yes, you are
absolutely right! This is the book I've been looking for. I
have purchased a copy and am reading it to my kids. Hooray for
solving my Book Stumper!!
---
1975-1988,
juvenile. A young teenage girl is from the future where
most species have gone extinct, like frogs and jackrabbits and
the environment is in bad shape. She somehow end up back in time
and meets her grandfather as a young teenager. Eventually
she makes it back to her own time with a box with a few animals
that have gone extinct. There is also an old woman
involved with the story who I think knows who the girl is and
helps her. The book has a strong environmental theme.
This almost sounds
like one of the books by Annabel
and Edgar Johnson, but not quite. They usually
had a teenager from a future where the earth is in dire straits
travel back in time and meet a relative, somehow changing the
world for the better in their own time. None of the
specific titles I recall seem to fit though...
Paula Hendrich, The
girl who slipped through time, 1978,
copyright. Definitely this book. Paramecia is from the
far future and is transported back to 1930s Kansas.
Your
website solved this: Paula Hendrich, The Girl who Slipped Through
Time, is the correct book for T440. I
am very grateful to your website and it's readers for
solving this for me as I've been trying to find it again for
20 years.
Girl with the Silver Eyes
I read this book as a kid. It was about a
girl with silver eyes and horn-rimmed glasses. She was one of
several little kids whose mothers had taken some kind of pill
or medicine that left their kids with a birth defect of sorts:
they all had special gifts (I think they were really smart but
maybe psychic), and they wore horn-rimmed glasses and they had
silver eyes.
This must be Girl with the Silver
Eyes by Willo Davis Roberts.
Hey! I was right and actually had a
copy in stock.
Condition Grades |
Roberts, Willo Davis. The Girl With the Silver Eyes. Scholastic, 1980. Paperback. G. $8 |
|
I'm not sure, but I know there's a story by
Joan Aiken called "Jehane of the Forest" in a
book titled Girls' Adventure Stories of Long Ago.
Not a solution, but C97 and W76 appear to be
the same book. [W76?
wrong number...]
Thank you for posting my stumper! I was so excited to see
a response so soon. I think the contributor is onto
something, I think my books WERE called "Girl"'s
Adventures...". Hope now springs very strong!
C97 collection for girls: more on the
suggested - Girls' Adventure Stories of Long Ago,
published London, Hamlyn 1968, reprinted 1971, 1979 and 1984,
illustrated by Will Nickless. Contents: Sign of the Hawk,
by Renée Frazer; The Wreckers, By Elizabeth
Sheppard-Jones; Jehane of the Forest, by Joan Aiken; A
Lamp for Elizabeth, by Kathleen O'Farrell; Highland
Escape, by Judy Thomas. The cover is either blue cloth or
laminated pictured boards, though.
I just wanted to let you know that with the help of the last
tip on the stumper, about the illustrator, I was finally able to
find a copy of the book to give to my daughter. I never
could have done it without you and am eternally grateful - it
was so much fun to read her the story that inspired her
name! Thanks again! p.s., I'm giving her a
book club member ship for Christmas, so expect to hear from us
again!
Keo Felker Lazarus, The Gismo/The
Gismo From Outer Space,
1970. It might be this one: "The Gismo that Jerry and Ron
have found is no ordinary gadget. It's part of an alien
spaceship's radio and what's more, they must return it. But
how?"
Lazarus, Keo Felker, The Gismo (from
Outer Space).
Chicago: Follett 1970. Pretty sure this is it - "The gismo
that Jerry and Ron have found is no ordinary gadget. It's part
of an alien spaceship's radio...and what's more, they must
return it. But how? How do you keep a date with a man from outer
space?" Original title is The Gismo, retitled The Gismo from
Outer Space by Scholastic, and also printed in the Weekly Reader
series. The spelling - gismo instead of gizmo - is what catches
most people.
B313 and B314. Both the gizmo and elephant books (rumpeta
rumpeta!) are spot on. Thanks Harriet, and everyone!
Lois Lowrey, The Giver. You'll probably get lots of solutions naming
this book. The description is pretty bare-bones,
but I can't imagine any other book having the unique combination
of color-seeing as abnormal and the boy and baby leaving the
colorless society in the snow. (Actually, they zoomed out
of there on a sled!)
Lois Lowry, The Giver, 1993. You'll probably have a lot of answers to this
one! It's The Giver by Lois Lowry.
Lois Lowry, The Giver.
---
Story from
childhood (1991-1996) about a young boy who lives in a small
town that has an old wise man. Everyone in the town can only
see in black and white except one day, the young boy starts to
see color. He confronts the old wise man, who also sees color,
and he tells the boy he must go on a journey. The boy leaves
the town and ends up in a world of color.
Lois Lowry, The Giver, 1993. This book fits the story and
publication date. The main character, Jonas, lives in a
world where everything is black and white. When he's a
teenager, he starts to see color and he is sent to work with the
Giver, who gives him the painful memories he is holding to
protect the rest of the people. At the end, Jonas releases
the painful memories so that everyone else has to learn to cope
with them and runs away to a place where there is color.
Lois Lowry, The Giver. Sounds like you're remembering bits of The
Giver by Lois Lowry, in which a young boy
livning in represive utopian society learns, from the wise old
man known as Receiver of Memories, to understand what color,
love, music, etc. are.
Lois Lowry, The Giver, 1993. A few details are a bit different,
but it sounds like this might be the book you're thinking of.
Check it out.
Lois Lowry, The Giver, 1993. I think this young adult
novel must be what you are looking for. Jonas lives in a
futuristic society where everyone is assigned a career when they
are 12. Jonas is chosen to be the Receiver of Memory, and
spends every day with the old man who used to be the Receiver,
but who has now become the Giver. Over time, Jonas
remembers more about what the past was like - including pain,
hunger, and war, but also beauty and color (everyone else sees
the world in black and white, but Jonas starts to see
colors). Eventually, he has to choose between staying in
society and accepting the burden of memories, or escaping
(taking with him a sickly baby who is scheduled to be "released"
via euthanasia). This book now has two companion books,
entitled "Gathering Blue" and "The Messenger".
Lowry, Lois, The giver, 1993. This is definitely the book.
Given his lifetime assignment at the Ceremony of Twelve, Jonas
becomes the receiver of memories shared by only one other in his
community and discovers the terrible truth about the society in
which he lives.
Lois Lowry, The Giver, 1993. This is undoubtedly the one!
Story takes place in a "utopian" society that is, of course,
anything but. Jonas receives his assignment for life at
age twelve, and becomes a Receiver of Memory. It's his job
to hold the memories of his community - because everyone else
has forgotten. He learns to deal with emotions, especially
negative ones, and learns some horrible secrets of his society
that no one else remembers. One of his gifts is the
ability to see color, something no one else can do. He
finally escapes with a small baby that is scheduled to be
"released" (euthanized) because he is smaller than
average. Truely a memorable book. You will also enjoy "The
Messenger" and "Gathering Blue" by Lowry - not sequels, but
connected in theme and a few characters.
Lois Lowry, The Giver. This sounds like it could be "The Giver"
a Newbery winner from the early 90's. Jonas gets called to
be the Reciever of Memory for his entire community. One
reason he is called is because he can "See Beyond" and has seen
flashes of color in his otherwise colorless world. Hope
this helps.
These are all plot elements in The
Giver by Lois Lowry (1993), but there's a
lot more to this dystopian tale...
Lois Lowry, The Giver, 1993. Sounds like this could be it,
unless there are multiple books out there with that plot.
Lois Lowry, The Giver. Jonas lives in a sterile future world.
His ability to see color means he is assigned to carry all of
the memories that the rest of the community is deemed unable to
handle. He is given the memories by the Giver, an old man.
Condition Grades |
Lowry, Lois. The Giver. Random House, 1993. Dell Laurel-Leaf paperback edition, 2002. Newbery Award. New paperback, $6.50 |
|
The tree story certainly sounds like The Giving Tree by Shel Silverstein (1964). I have a nice copy with dust jacket for $10. Can't think of an anthology that contains it, but I'm sure there is one.
Condition Grades |
Silverstein, Shel. The Giving Tree. Harper Collins, 1964. New hardback, $16. |
|
Title |
"Gladys the Glint.": By D.J. Donovan |
Author |
|
Illustrated by |
Edward J. Skrocki |
Publisher |
Spencer Manufacturing Company, the House of
Ideas Division, 1970 |
Length |
40 pages |
Gail Carson Levine, Ella, Enchanted. Could this be Ella Enchanted?
Farjeon, Eleanor, Glass Slipper, 1955. A long shot, but Eleanor
Farjeon's Glass Slipper (which has a dark blue
cover) has a fairy godmother who looks like a dumpy old woman,
with apron, cape, and cane. The day after the ball, Ella's
stepmother chases Ella around the kitchen and tries to hit her
with a broom, then locks her in an alcove the fairy
godmother arrives, frees Ella, and locks the stepmother
in. The accompanying illustration shows a broom
prominently over the stepmother, as if it's chasing her into the
alcove. (If it helps, this version also has a talking
clock and a court jester called the Zany the two stepsisters are
named Araminta and Arethusa.)
Eleanor Farjeon, Glass Slipper 'Thanks for
correcting my memory! I found a copy of the book in an
elementary school library, and the cover was the one I'd been
looking for -- the white illustration is a cutout silhouette of
Cinderella and the fairy godmother. There are also pink
pillows and feathers on the sides.
---
Cinderella was a novel in which her two
stepsisters were named Arathusa and Araminta.
Eleanor Farjeon, The Glass Slipper. This is definitely The Glass
Slipper, one of my favorite Cinderella
retellings. She also did a version of Rumplestiltskin
called The Silver Curlew.
Eleanor Farjeon, The Glass Slipper, 1955, copyright. Based on a play of the
same name, by Eleanor & Herbert Farjeon, this
novelization of the Cinderella story features stepsisters named
Araminta and Arethusa. This book has been reprinted many times,
and there may even be earlier editions out there - the play was
around back in the 1940's.
Farjeon, Eleanor, The Glass Slipper. One of my absolute favorite books!
Illustrated by Ernest H. Shepard, of Winnie-the-Pooh
fame.
Eleanor Farjeon, The Glass Slipper. This is Farjeon's wonderful
pantomime-turned-novel 'The Glass Slipper'. The
prince in this version of Cinderella is accompanied by his
clown, the Zany, and Arethusa and Araminta are read to by their
mother from a book of etiquette.
Eleanor Farjeon, The Glass
Slipper, 1955.
I'm pretty sure this is the book you mean. The sisters are
called Arathusa and Araminta, and Cinderella is friends with all
the things in the kitchen. The grandfather clock, the broom,
etc. I hope this helped.
That's The Glass Slipper
(1944) by Eleanor Farjeon and illustrated by Ernest
Shepard. From elsewhere: "One of the special things about
The Glass Slipper is the enchantment that plays a vital
part of Ella's daily life. The inanimate things she cares for in
her stepmother's basement kitchen come alive for Ella, filling
the void her mother's death has left in her heart. The
illustrations are done with a wonderfully delicate hand and
bring Ella and her world alive for the reader. Also written by
Eleanor (and equally wonderful!) are the classic hymn, Morning
Has Broken (Cat Stevens sang it), The Little Bookroom
and The Silver Curlew (a retelling of the
Rumplestiltskin story." Quote: "The Sisters gathered
themselves up, piled Ella’s arms with towels and soap and
sponges and perfume and rubber ducks and pushed past her to the
bathroom, where she had to scrub their backs for them.
They were much too lazy to do it themselves." Not to be
confused with the funny, offbeat 1955 movie with Leslie Caron!
Eleanor Farjeon, The Glass Slipper, 1946. I think this is what you're
looking for. The step-sisters are Araminta and
Arethusa. It was also produced as a play.
Eleanor Farjeon, The Glass Slipper. How about this? "A well-told story of
Ella and her friendly talking animals, who help her to endure
the nasty stepsisters Arethusa and Araminta and the wicked
stepmother until she finds her happy ending with the Prince, who
had searched long for the Princess from Nowhere. At the ball she
overstays the deadline but the other women simply think she is a
serving girl and pay no attention. The prince likewise ignores
her, until he learns to see better."
I think that my book stumper, C528, is
solved. It is Eleanor Farjeon, The Glass Slipper,
Copyright 1955. If your book store has a copy, please
let me know, and I will buy it from you. Thank you so
much for your help! I have been looking for this book
for years.
Check out the comments under Blowing Wand on the Solved Mysteries page to see if any of
these suggestions are familiar.
Maria Gripe,Glassblower's children. That is the right title, I found it listed in
several libraries online. It does look to be hard to find.
Maria Gripe, Glassblower's
Children, 1960s? Originally published in
Sweden (?or Denmark) but certainly the title is right and I
think I have the correct spelling of the author's name. It's a
long time since I read it, but the story sounds right,
too.
Janice May Udry, Glenda. I
have finally found it!
Thompson, Ruth Plumly, Gnome King of
Oz. The colors
listed in the description match those in the Oz books an
Oz title that includes a boy named Peter is Gnome King. Peter
Brown, a boy from Philadelphia, meets up with Ruggedo, the Gnome
King (who plans to conquer Oz) but soon joins the Patchwork Girl
and travels through various parts of Oz.
Ruth Plumly Thompson, Gnome King of
Oz. I'm not at
all sure however, it does have Peter and a lot of
colors--the red land of the Quadlings, the blue land of the
Munchkins, the yellow of the Winkies, etc.
Patricia Scarry, Animal Friends All
Year Long, 1969,
reprint. I got this book at a yard sale several years ago
and it has become a family favorite. It does not have the
stories about the mother bear or about the hole in the ice but
the other two stories described by the seeker sure are in
there! By the way it is Angelo Squirrel who has the vine
covered house. A note on the title page says "Originally
published under the title The Golden Storybook of River
Bend." Since the cover of my book is also different
from what the seeker describes, perhaps she had an earlier
edition with more stories. The pictures are by Tibor
Gergely. An altogether charming book.
Golden Book of River Bend.
That's it!! Thank you! As soon as I saw the words
River Bend, it brought it all back.
?, Go Tell Aunt Rhodie.
There is a song we used to sing in school as a child. Here's
what I remember of it: "Go tell Aunt Rhodie, go tell Aunt Rhodie
Go tell Aunt Rhode, the old gray goose is dead. The one
she'd been saving, the one she'd been saving, The one she'd been
saving, to make a feather bed. She died in the mill pond,
she died in the mill pond, She died in the mill pond, standing
on her head."
Aliki, Go Tell Aunt Rhody, 1974, 1986. If it's not this particular
book, it's gotta be this folk song.
Would this possibly be a version of the old
song, "Go Tell Aunt Rhody"? "Go tell Aunt Rhody,
go tell Aunt Rhody, go tell Aunt Rhody, the old grey goose is
dead. The one she's been saving (3x) to make a feather
bed. The goslings are crying (3x) because their mother's
dead." I believe it's sometimes called "Go Tell Aunt Patsy"
also.
"Go Tell Aunt Nancy." This is a
traditional song: "Go tell Aunt Nancy (repeated twice)/
Her old grey goose is dead. The one that she'd been saving
(x3)/ To make a feather bed. She died in the duckpond (x3)
Standing on her head. Old gander's weeping (x3) Because
his wife is dead. Goslings are weeping (x3) Because their
mother's dead. Go tell Aunt Nancy (x3) The old grey goose
is dead." There are several versions of this some feature
"Aunt Rhody" rather than "Aunt Nancy".
I don't know the title of it, but doesn't
this refer to the song "Go tell Aunt Rosie/the Old Gray
Goose is dead"? I know there are many verses to
it. The original poster is a little younger than me and I
know we used to sing it all the time.
Well, I did think of this folk song when I
posted this, but how wonderful to receive so many different
answers! I'd forgotten about the Aliki book. Here it
is (see below--)
Go Tell Aunt Rhody: When the Weavers
sang this in concert, they had the audience sing the song as
each person originally learned it. When they reached the
name they got a mix of Sally, Polly, just about every possible
two-syllable female name.
Condition Grades |
Go Tell Aunt Rhody. Illustrated by Aliki. Macmillan, 1974. First edition thus. Ex-library edition in well-read shape: pages are worn and several have small tears. Ready for another read though, and the dust jacket is well preserved. P/VG- <SOLD> |
spotted one more I can chip in on. I have a
little hardback book, packed in a box somewhere so I can't
confirm it right away, that I am pretty sure is called The
Go-to-Sleep Book. It's about 5 inches tall, 4
inches wide, with a purplish-bluish cover featuring (I think) a
sleepy boy with his favorite blanket. I THINK it's a "Jr.
Elf Book." Anyway, the illustrations are in a limited
palette--mostly a kind of rose color. The most important
clue is the text. In the book I'm thinking of, it goes
through a series of animals, e.g. (I'm paraphrasing here):
"And once there was a sleepy little lamb. And she yawned
and she yawned...and she turned around and around...and laid
down and went fast to sleep." The reason it sticks in my
head is that my husband came across it on the shelf and was
amazed at its soporific effect! We used to joke about if
we ever became insomniacs, all we'd need is the copy of this
book to conk out. When/if I get my children's book
collection unpacked and back onto my shelves, I'll double-check.
B379 I ws just able to check Go-to-sleep
book. They don't turn around, but each one ends with
"And he fell fast asleep" Before that, most of them also said
"How sleepy I am" and yawned and yawned. Gilbert,
Helen Earle. Go-to-sleep book. illus by
Marge Opitz. Rand McNally, 1949. Junior Elf.
Just wanted to let you know that the nice person who
contributed information about this stumper solved it for
me! The book she mentioned is the one! Thanks
so much!
W67 witches cat doesn't fit in: Would suggest Gobbolino the Witches Cat, written and illustrated by Ursula Moray Williams, published 1942, reprinted Puffin 1973 "The trouble with Gobbolino was that he had blue eyes and one white paw, so he didn't want to be a witch's cat. He wanted to be a kitchen cat, and sit by the fire and sing like the kettle on the hob, to keep down the mice and mind the baby, and sit in his mistress's lap. His mother Grimalkin didn't like him because he wasn't wicked, but all the other homes he went to mistrusted him..."
C37 probably is a Carl Burke book.
There are several copies of God is Real, Man,
listed on bookfinder.com and the description is quite
similar. 128 pages published in 1966. Ack, I started
this a few days ago-- better send it now, before I forget!
I got the book and yes, it certainly
seems right - the actual name is God is for Real, Man.
The feast is the wedding at Cana. It includes a slang glossary
- it's amusing to remember that in 1966, "long-hairs"
used to mean not hippies so much as classical music-lovers!
Hodgell, P.C., Godstalk, Atheneum 1982. This is the first book in
a series. The others are Dark of the Moon and Seeker's
Mask. Jame, a partially-amnesiac girl, stumbles into
the mazelike city of Tai-tastigon. She is apprenticed to the
master thief Penari (and frequently mistaken for a boy) and
stays at the Res ab'Tyrr tavern where she performs as a dancer.
She rescues an ounce kit from the river where the breeder has
thrown it because it is blind.
Murphy, Shirley Rousseau, Cat in the
Dark, 1999. Doubt
this is it due to the rather recent publication date, but I'll
throw it out here anyway, just in case. The thief is male,
rather than female, but certain other details do fit, most
notably the cat detail. The robber in this book is named
Greeley, and is helped by a magical black cat (who can talk, and
is highly intelligent) named Azrael. Although he is not
blind (I do think I remember his eyes being unusual, however),
Azrael's fur is very dark, which may be where the "opaque"
detail comes from.
Rockwell, Anne, Go Go's Car Breaks
Down,1978. "En
route to a visit with his mother, a little clown becomes
desperate when his car breaks down."
Anne F Rockwell, Gogo's car breaks
down, 1978. "En
route to a visit with his mother, a little clown becomes
desperate when his car breaks down."
Every time I go by this stumper I think Elizabeth
Enright
and either Four Story Mistake of Then
There Were Five! I have not had time to verify this
"feeling" but I thought I would throw out this suggestion.
J49 Skimmed each page of Then there
were five while I ate my supper; didn't see anything
like that. Also checked The Saturdays, but
it's not that either.
Aileen Fisher, Going Barefoot. I found this cached on Google - the querent
must have asked the library service at washington.edu as well as
you folks. I found the original query, quoting the same
line that was quoted here, and then
this answer: "If your interested, it's
a poem in a book of children's poetry, Going Barefoot,
by Aileen Fisher. Our patron had the line wrong,
it actually reads: How soon/ how soon/ is a morning in
June,/ a sunny morning or afternoon/ in the wonderful month/
of the Barefoot Moon?
Jack London & Robert L. Fish, The
Assassination
Bureau, Ltd. Odds are
very high that this is the right book, involving an ethical
murder-for-hire business that only commits "justified" killings
-- and accepts a commission to do in the agency's owner.
The collaboration is an odd one -- London had left a partial
manuscript among his papers after writing himself into a corner,
and detective writer Fish (perhaps best known for his Sherlock
Holmes parodies) found and finished the tale many years
later. There's also a loosely adapted movie.
David Westheimer, Going Public.
I
finally found the answer, but it was pretty clearly *not* Jack
London's The Assassination Bureau.
Anne Emery, Going Steady,1950.O107
is
definitely Going Steady by Anne Emery. It is a Sally
Burnaby story.
Anne Emery, Going Steady,1949.
This
is
definitely
the
Anne
Emery
book
in
which
Sally
Burnaby
gets
secretly engaged to her high school boyfriend, Scotty. She
is working a summer job on campus, buys the vase, and returns it
after she and her boyfriend realize that their parents are right
and they aren't ready for marriage.
Yes -- that's it!! Thank You once
again!
Kathryn Jackson, The New Golden
Almanac, 1952,
copyright. Could this be the book? It was
illustrated by Richard Scarry and was a Big Golden Book.
Richard Scarry, All Year Long, 1976, copyright. Published by Golden
Press. A simple introduction to time, the days of the
week, months and seasons. Yellow cover with title in white
letters on a blue-green triangle at upper left corner.
Cover features pictures of animals doing seasonal things, such
as a bear cub building a sand castle, father and son rabbits
raking/burning leaves, mother and little cat picking flowers,
etc.
Patricia Scarry, The Golden Story
Book of River Bend,
1969, copyright. Reprinted as "Animal Friends All
Year Long" and illustrated by Tibor Gergely. Short
stories about Kenny Pig, Miss Kitty, Jonathan Mouse, and their
neighbors (including a rabbit and some bears) who live in the
small village of River Bend, as they share the joys of different
seasons and holidays. The cover shows father and little
bear and Kenny Pig sitting on the river bank fishing, Miss Kitty
beside them, under a parasol, reading a book, the rabbit lying
beside a bicycle on the bank, also reading, and Jonathan Mouse
driving a wind-up car.
The first reply sounds right....The
Golden Almanac. I can't be sure until I see it. How do I
find a copy of it? Do you have it or access to it?
I just found The Golden Almanac
on eBay and ordered it. I will let you know if it's the
right book. I'm very excited because I've been trying to
figure out and find this book for many years. Your site is
great!
THE FIRST PERSON WAS CORRECT AND I FOUND
THE BOOK ON EBAY!!!! I'm so happy; I've been looking for this
book since 1999!!!!!
Referring to A-36, I am sitting here
holding my copy of what I think may be the correct book.
It is called 365 Bedtime Stories, from Whitman
Publishing Company, Copyright 1944. The cover does indeed
have mostly blue, and shows two young girls propped up on
pillows in a canopy bed, one reading to the other.
However, the book in the cover picture is plain navy blue, no
pictures on it, so I am not certain. Perhaps there was a
later edition, but mine seems to be the earliest. The
story for January 6 is called Twelfth Night, and
is about Tommy and Billy finding a special "bean" in a
cake. Hope this information will be of some help.
A36- I have a 365
Bedtime
Stories by Nan Gilbert that
was published by Whitman in 1955 and 1970. The cover is
blue and shows two children in bed being read to by their
mother, who is holding a blue book. The story for january
sixth is about 12th day. A Mrs. Apricot is telling the
children about how they used to celebrate 12th day.
I hope this will help A36. I have The
Golden Book of 365 Stories, pictures by Richard
Scarry, copyright 1955. This book has a blue cover with a
little boy and girl reading a book with a picture of a little
boy and girl reading a book --they are surrounded by a group of
animals. the story on January 6th is about alittle boy that
recieves a pitcher from his grandmother in Italy and he doesn't
like,but his mother puts it on the table every day and in time
he comes to love it.
A36: I believe you are definitely
looking for the 1944 edition of 365 Bedtime Stories
which had several different covers from 1944 through the early
1950's. Some of the stories do have poems, and there are
Bead Buddies
stories throughout the book (if that rings a
bell). Each page has a black and white, or a color picture
at the top of the page. If you browse the auctions for
this book on EBay you may very well recognize the cover from the
book you had.
A36 anthology: from the description of the
cover, would suggest The Golden Book of 365 Bedtime
Stories: a Story for Every Day of the Year,
illustrated by Richard Scarry, published Golden 1955,
235 pages. The blue cover shows 2 children, in 2 beds pushed
together, surrounded by animals who are apparently being read
to. The children hold a blue book with the same cover.
NOTE! There is another edition? of this same title, the stories
credited to Kathryn Jackson, also illustrated by Scarry,
possibly a 1983 reprint, which has a very similar cover, but the
children in the beds have been replaced by a bear in a chair,
holding a book with a cover of a bear in a chair.
Kathryn Jackson (author), Richard Scarry (illustrator), The Polite Little Boy. This is the story for January 30th on page 26 of The Golden Book of 365 Stories: A Story for Every Day of the Year. The polite little boy won't taste beans because he thought they looked too beany, or carrots because he thought they looked too carroty, and pudding looks too shaky to taste. He always says, "No thank you," and eats peanut butter sandwiches instead. One day, he gets invited to a friend's house for lunch and is told to help himself. Since he cant say, "No thank you," and no peanut butter sandwiches are on the table, he takes a smidgeon of everything on the table, even beans and carrots---and likes everything, even the pudding for dessert! The text is copyright 1955, and I own a very ragged (and much loved) eleventh printing from my childhood (1965). The book was reissued in 1998 as Richard Scarry's A Story A Day: 365 Stories and Rhymes. It's unfortunately out of print again, but used copies are not hard to find.
Kathryn Jackson, The Timid Monkey, (1955). This book is printed in The Golden Book of 365
Stories: A Story for Every Day of the Year (copyright 1955,
reprinted many times) as the entry for January 21st. The
details of the story match your husband's memories exactly, but
the cover of the book is blue with a boy and girl reading a book
in side by side twin beds surrounded by animals in pajamas and
robes. Here is part of the story: "A timid monkey and his
easy-going friend were going on a hiking trip. [The timid monkey
then packs a huge number of things to bring along "just in
case."] "Then he tried to pick up one big bundle, and his
easy-going friend tried to pick up the other. But those
bundles were much too big and clumsy for either one to
lift. "Pshaw!" cried the timid monkey. "We just
can't go then!" "You can't," grinned his friend, reaching
for a gun and one ham sandwich. "You can't, but I
can---because I shall make do with what I find as I go
along!" And away he went, carefree and easy-going as ever,
while the timid monkey stayed home, shaking his head sadly and
putting everything back where it belonged."
Kathryn Jackson, The Golden Book of
365 Stories A Story for Every Day of the Year, 1955. The
story is actually called "The Timid Monkey" and was at one
time printed individually.
Elsa Jane Werner, The Golden Book of
Nursery Tales. 1948.
This book indeed is illustrated by Tibor Gergely.
I have a copy sitting in front of me and it was published in
1948 by Simon and Schuster. It has 127 pp in all and you
are missing the beggining and the last two stories.
---
I am looking for an anthology of fairy tales or "cautionary"
tales for young children which has a chapter about a boy who
learns, the hard way, not top mistreat animals. In a very scary
sequence, each anuimal he has abused or taken for granted visits
him during the night and reclaims the product its species gave
him. The sheep says "I take back my wool!" The boy's woolen
clothing disappears. The goose says "I take back my feathers!"
Down pillows and bed linens vanish. Finally the boy finds
himself outdoors - -cold, terrified half-naked and alone, but
appreciating animals for the first time in his life.
I53 You might want to look into parables,
notably Old Testament [Hebrew] 'You reap what you sow' after
all!
The story you are describing is called "Silly
Will", by Lucy Sprague Mitchell. This story
appears in The Golden Book of Nursery Tales (A
Big Golden Book)(c) 1948. In addition to the sheep taking
back his wool, and the goose taking back his feathers, the trees
also take back their wood, the cow takes back its hide
(leather), etc. Illustrated w/ numerous small b&w pencil or
charcoal sketches, plus one full-page color picture of Will
standing naked & shivering in front of what is left of his
house, at night, w/ the trees & animals in the background,
looks sorta like they are laughing at him. I have this book, and
can email scanned picture to original poster, to see if this is
the one he's looking for or not. Book is 146 pgs long, other
stories include 3 Bears, The Magic Pot, 3 Billy Goats Gruff,
3 Little Pigs, Musicians of Bremen, Ugly Duckling, Bobo and
the Roast Pig, City Mouse & Country Mouse, & many
others, all of which are moralistic or cautionary-type tales.
---
Golden Book of Nursery Tales
This 1950s story was in a book with other
very short stories (similar to an anthology). A silly boy is
sent to the store to buy several things. One item was a pound
of butter. It was a hot day, he was afraid it would melt
so he put it on his head. I think he put a hat or leaves
on it to protect it from the sun. By the time he arrived
homw the butter had melted down the sides and front of his
face.
Sara Cone Bryant, Epaminondas and
His Auntie, 1907.
This story from this book has probably appeared in several
anthologies. Epaminondas' Auntie asked him to bring home
several items to his Mammy: cake, a pound of butter, a puppy, a
loaf of bread. Each time he doesn't know how to carry it,
so he uses the method his Mammy told him LAST time (the butter
was wrapped in leaves and carried on his head). Finally,
exasperated, Mammy tells him to "be careful how you step in
those mince pies" with predictable results!
Sara Cone Bryant, Epamanondas and His
Auntie. I'm
certain this is the book - Epamanondas is a very literal
child. When his auntie tells him "watch how you step"
around some pies she's put on the floor, he is very careful to
step right in the center of each one. . .
Epaminondas, Sara Cone Bryant. Might this be one of the versions of
Epaminondas? Check solved stumpers?
B384 The story of the boy and melted butter
is an Epaminondas (or alternate spelling Epaminandas) tale. It
seems that the author Sara Cone Bryant published several
collections containing the tale. STORIES TO TELL TO
CHILDREN, 1920, 1924, EPAMINONDAS AND OTHER
STORIES FOR LITTLE ONES, 1934, BEST STORIES
TO TELL TO CHILDREN, 1912. I'm not sure if one of
these is the one you're looking for. There is also an English
variant, often called "Lazy Jack" that you'll find in various
collections such as CHIMNEY CORNER STORIES;TALES FOR
LITTLE CHILDREN collected and retold by Veronica
S. Hutchinson, 1925 and you might also find it in a Joseph
Jacob's fairy tale collection. Hope this helps~from a librarian
Mark Twain, Huckleberry Finn. There's a very similar situation in
Chapter 40. Huck steals some cornbread with butter on it
and has to hide it in his hat. His Aunt catches him and
makes him sit in the parlor until the butter melts and runs down
his face and head. Maybe this episode was anthologized?
Elsa Jane Werner (editor), Tibor
Gergely (illus), "The Little Boy Who Tried To Obey"
from The Golden Book of Nursery Tales,
1948. This book was published in 1948, but I believe
there were some later editions, too - possibly in the 1950s. The
boy in the story is given various items to carry home to his
mother, but carries each item according to the directions given
him for the previous item. After he brings home a piece of
cake (crushed), his mother tells him he should have wrapped it
in leaves and carried it under his hat. He tries this w/the
butter, which melts (illustration is b&w line drawing of
him, w/ leaves poking out from hat, and melting butter dripping
down his face & leaving a trail behind him.) His mother
tells him the butter should have been put in the brook to cool
it. The next thing his aunt gives him is a puppy - which he puts
in the brook to cool, and drowns it. (I found this awful for a
children's story - probably why I remember it so clearly.) His
mother then tells him he should have tied a string around the
puppy's neck and pulled it behind him, which he does with the
next item his aunt gives him - a loaf of fresh bread. At the
end, his mother warns him to "be careful about stepping in" some
pies she has just baked and is cooling on the doorstep - so he
very carefully steps in the center of each one. This book
includes a number of familiar tales (3 Bears, 3 Billy Goats
Gruff, 3 Little Pigs, Chicken Little, Musicians of Bremen, City
Mouse & Country Mouse, etc.) and some less-common stories,
such as The Magic Pot, The Old Woman and Her Pig, The Lion
Hearted Kitten, Silly Will, Bobo and the Roast Pig, Pelle's New
Suit, and many others.
Childcraft series. This
strongly reminds me of a story in a Childcraft book (pretty sure
it was Childcraft). The little boy visits an aunt and is
given a pound of butter to take home, so he puts it under his
hat, where it melts all over him. His mother tells him he
should have wrapped the butter in leaves and dunked it in the
stream to keep it cool. So when the boy visits his aunt
again, and she gives him a puppy, he wraps it in leaves and
dunks it in the stream. Of course, the poor puppy
drowns. His mother tells him he should have tied a string
around the puppy's neck and led it home. He visits his
aunt again, and she gives him a loaf of bread. He ties a
string around it and drags it home through the dirt.
Mark Twain, The Adventures of
Huckleberry Finn. In
The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, Huck hides butter under his
hat while trying to sneak out of the house. His aunt
thinks his brains are melting.
Sara Cone Bryant, Epaminondas and His
Auntie, 1911. There is
also a book called Epaminondas and His Auntie (1911 -- Sara Cone
Bryant) about a little boy carrying butter home under his hat --
I think it has been frequently anthologized or retold. He
is an African-American boy -- the original drawings are very
dated stereotypes.
Thank you, thank you, thank you. It
is "The Little Boy Who Tried to Obey". I now will search for
the Golden book of Nursery Tales, 1948.
Wow, "The Little Boy Who Tried to
Obey" is the exact same story line as Epaminondas
and His Auntie! I'd be curious to
know who adapted the story, what they renamed the child, and the
style of illustrations....
A more recent version of this story is a
delightful picture book by Colleen Salley and Janet Stevens
entitled Epossumondas. My elementary
school children were delighted when I shared it with them during
library storytime. I was privileged to hear Colleen Salley
tell another version of the story a number of years ago at the
Tennessee Williams festival in New Orleans and was delighted
when she published one I could share with the children.
I don't know who adapted Epaminondas
And His Auntie into "The Little Boy Who Tried to
Obey". The Golden Book of Nursery Tales
does not credit the source for that story. The little boy
was not renamed in the adapted version - no names are mentioned
at all. He is simply "the little boy", and his mother and
auntie are referred to only by those titles. The
interesting thing is that they have changed the characters from
black to white. Perhaps this was an early attempt at
racial sensitivity? Or perhaps the editor (Werner),
illustrator (Gergely) and/or publisher (Golden Press) felt that
white characters would broaden the appeal (and marketability) of
the book? I've attached pictures of the story, if you are
still curious about the style of the illustrations.
I don't know who adapted "Epaminondas
And His Auntie" into "The Little Boy Who Tried to
Obey". The Golden Book of Nursery Tales does
not credit the source for that story. The little boy was
not renamed in the adapted version - no names are mentioned at
all. He is simply "the little boy", and his mother and
auntie are referred to only by those titles. The
interesting thing is that they have changed the characters from
black to white. Perhaps this was an early attempt at
racial sensitivity? Or perhaps the editor (Werner),
illustrator (Gergely) and/or publisher (Golden Press) felt that
white characters would broaden the appeal (and marketability) of
the book? I've attached pictures of the story, if you are
still curious about the style of the illustrations.
---
Late '40s, a young boy lives in a house
in the woods with his mother. She sends him off on
errands, such as to go buy butter somewhere, and he does what
she asks, but makes bad choices. People try and help him
by telling him he should wrap the butter between leaves, and
on the next errand he would try to wrap the next item between
leaves. In the end, the mother and the house and his
clothes are taken away and he is left to shiver naked in the
woods. I don't know WHO takes everything away, and I
don't know if it ends like that. My Mother threw the
book away after it gave me nightmares, saying that it gave my
older sister nightmares also. I COULD be merging a
memory of a book with the classic fairy tale, but I'd be happy
to find out the fairy tale's name in any case...
Elsa Jane Werner (Editor), Tibor
Gergely (illus), The Golden Book of Nursery Tales,
1948. The book you're looking for is probably The
Golden Book of Nursery Tales. The story about
the little boy who makes bad choices is "The Little Boy Who
Tried to Obey." This is a version of an older story by
Sara Cone Bryant, called "Epaminondas and his Auntie." I
hated this story as a child, because the little boy drowned a
puppy his auntie had given him, by wrapping it in leaves and
soaking it in a stream to keep it cool. (These
instructions were given him on a previous trip, in which he
brought home butter under his cap, and it melted all over
him.) The one with the little boy who has his clothes,
house, etc. taken away from him is a different story entirely,
called "Silly Will." In this story, Will doesn't
appreciate anything, until one night when the sheep come and
take away their wool, the cattle take away their hides, the
trees take away their wood, etc. teaching him a badly needed
lesson is gratitude. When he wakes up in the morning, everything
is back as it was before. Other stories in this book
include The Three Bears, Three Billy Goats Gruff, Three Little
Pigs, Chicken Little, Musicians of Bremen, City Mouse &
Country Mouse, The Magic Pot, The Old Woman and Her Pig, The
Lion Hearted Kitten, Silly Will, Bobo and the Roast Pig, Pelle's
New Suit, and many others.
Cone Bryant, Sara, Epaminondas, 1976. Definitely this or one of the
other versions of the Epaminondas tale. See more details
in the solved mysteries
Try the British writer Robert Westall. (website)
Southern Folk Tale, George
Washington Rabbit and His Granny,1928/1946.The story
about a boy who keeps making bad decisions sounds like the story
of George Washington Rabbit and His Granny, which appears in the
Book Trails series. He brings several items home,
including butter and a puppy. After the butter melts all
over his head, his Granny tells him he should have wrapped it in
leaves and cooled it in the stream. So, that's the way he
brings home the puppy he gets the next day. The puppy
arrives home "all shivery and half-drowned," but an illustration
shows it sitting comfortably in the yard the following
day. The story has questionable racist content, but it is
humorous, not frightening. In the amusing ending, Granny
puts some pies on the steps to cool, telling George to, "mind
about those pies, and watch how you step in them." Of
course, he very carefully steps in each one. The story in
which a boy loses everything doesn't ring any bells for me.
B523
Helen Bannerman, Little Black
Sambo,1899. It occurred to me that the story of
Little Black Sambo features a little boy who is left shivering
naked in the woods after his clothes get stolen by tigers.
That story also appears in the Book Trails series, so is it
possible that you'\''ve fused elements of Little Black Sambo and
George Washington Rabbit? Neither story is disturbing, as
the boy in Little Black Sambo defeats the tigers and ends up
eating pancakes with his mother and father, and the worst that
happens to George Washington Rabbit is that his Granny gets
exasperated at his comical mistakes. However, the
illustrations may have had a big impact on you if you saw them
when you were very little. One in Little Black Sambo shows
a naked boy crying at the foot of a tree, and one in George
Washington Rabbit makes it look as though a little boy is
drowning a puppy. Taken at face value, by a toddler, those
images could be disturbing. Hope this helps!
sounds like one of the stories in Zlateh
the
Goat by Isaac Bashevis Singer
You might be blending the
Epimonondas story with another one about a naughty boy who
teased animals and plants. The Epi story does have rather
"racist" pictures, but the emphasis is more on how the little
boy simply did EXACTLY what he'd been told, to the constarnation
of his mammy. the version I saw didn't say the puppy
completely drowned. I do recall the other story, can't recall
where. It may have been his mother who warned the boy, don't
recall her. The boy lost first everything made from animals,
wool blankets, milk, meat, fur jacket, and later everything from
plants, cornmeal, wooden furniture, cotton shirts, etc. leaving
him naked and frightened. It turned out to be a dream.
Quite awhile back I sent in a query (B523: Boy makes
bad decision). At the time I couldn't find the books
suggested, but have now found and read all of them.
The book I was searching for was "The Golden Book of Nursery Tales" edited
by Elsa Jane Werner. I was so pleased to find the book
- and I HAD superimposed 2 stories together (luckily from
the same book!) What a wonderful service you
provide! Thank you so much! Thanks so much for
providing this service and for all the wonderful readers who
share their knowledge.
---
early
1960's, childrens. This is a story in a book that
contained other stories as well. It was about dolls
living in a dollhouse. A little girl came into the store
and wanted to buy some of them (I think). There was a
Penny Doll that would not come out. I seem to remember the
phrase,"Penny Doll, Penny Doll come out and play". Another
story in this book was about an old woman and her pig that would
not jump over the sty so she could get home. I was read
this story as a child about 45 years ago. Whenever I ask
someone in my age group about this story, they have never heard
of it. I have searched off and on for years with no
success. Your help would be greatly appreciated.
Elsa Jane Werner (editor),
Tibor Gergely (illus), The
Golden Book of Nursery Tales, 1948, copyright. A little
girl with only a penny to spend goes to the toy shop, where she
sees a beautiful dolls house. As she can't afford the whole
dolls house, she decides to buy the penny doll she sees in the
window - but the naughty doll refuses to leave the house. The
old lady who keeps the shop orders the dolls house to open its
doors so the doll will come out, but it refuses. The mother doll
then refuses to open the door, and the daddy doll refuses to ask
the mother doll to open the door to make the penny doll come
out. Finally, the old woman declares that if none of them will
be kind or helpful, she does not want them in her shop, so she
asks the broom to sweep them all out - and it swept them right
out the door, up the street, into the little girl's house, and
right up to the nursery, where they all lived happily ever
after. The story of The Old Woman and Her Pig is also here.
While cleaning her house, a woman finds a silver coin with which
she buys a pig, but on the way home from the market, the pig
will not go over the stile. She must then go through a series of
uncooperative people, objects, and creatures. She finally gets
hay from some haymakers, which she trades to a cow for milk for
a cat, who begins to eat the mouse, who gnaws the rope, which
begins to hang the butcher, who begins to kill the ox, which
begins to drink the water, which begins to quench the fire,
which begins to burn the stick, with begins to beat the dog,
which begins to bite the pig, which finally jumps over the
stile. The entire chain of events from cat through jumping pig
can be seen in one full-page color picture at the end of the
story. Other stories in the book include both traditional
favorites (such as The Three Bears, Three Little Pigs, Three
Billy Goats Gruff, Chicken Little, Little Red Riding Hood, The
Gingerbread Boy, The Tortoise and the Hare, The Ugly Duckling,
and The Bremen Town Musicians) and harder-to-find stories (like
The Boasting Bamboo, Bobo and the Roast Pig, Silly Will, The
Little Boy Who Tried to Obey, The Huckabuck Family, The Cap That
Mother Made, Pelle's New Suit, The Little Scarecrow Boy, and The
Hollow Tree Store).
I can't
thank you enough for solving my stumper (P422) about the Penny
Doll!!! As I read through the posted summary of
the story, I felt as though I were that little girl again
sitting in my grandmother's lap while she read to
me. After all those years of searching, it all
came down to a simple click of the mouse. Thank
you for offering such a wonderful service! I feel as
though I have come to the end of a VERY long journey.
I stink at anthologies. But I know the goblin line is from
James Whitcomb Rilley's Orphant Annie. Do you remember the
illustrations?
Jane Werner (ed.), The Golden
Book of Poetry, c1947, 1949, reprint 1971. Subtitled
"85 Childhood Favorites," this book contains all the poems
mentioned, including "Little Orphant Annie." Charmingly
illustrated by Gertrude Elliot. I had a copy as a child in the
50s.
Jane Werner Watson, Golden Book of
the Mysterious, 1976,
copyright. Wow, I hadn'\''t thought about this one in
years! Now I want to buy myself another copy too - it was
a childhood favorite. I'm pretty sure this is the one you're
looking for, and I do think there was a sea monster on the
cover. The book is divided into 5 sections: Creatures of
Mystery (Bigfoot, Loch Ness Monster, etc.), Mysterious Powers of
Mind and Spirit (ghosts, psychic phenomena), Mysteries Science
Can't Explain (UFOs, spontaneous combustion), Witchcraft,
Sorcery and the Occult, and Mysterious Disappearances (Roanoke,
Bermuda Triangle, etc.).
Yes that is it! I knew it was a Golden
book, but I couldn't find it anywhere! Thanks a million!
Jane Werner (editor), The
Golden Books Treasury of Elves and Fairies,
1951,1999. This is definitely Elves and Fairies,
edited by Jane Werner, and beautifully illustrated by Garth
Williams. The style of his illustrations does indeed look
European. The poem mentioned, "When a Ring's Around the
Moon" by Mary Jane Carr, is the very first selection in the
book. The story about the fisherman and the mermaid is "The Lost
Merbaby" by Margaret and Mary Baker. The book was
originally printed in 1951, and was reprinted in 1999.
Unfortunately, even the 1999 copies seem to be both hard to find
and expensive. Good luck!
See more on the Most Requested
page.
Ritchie, Rita, The Golden Hawks of
Genghis Khan,
illustrated by Lorence Bjorklund. NY Dutton 1958. The
first one could be this, here's a plot description: "Jalair
has been told from infancy that Mongols slew his father
Darien, the greatest hawker in the Empire, and stole the
Golden Hawks-a spectacular breed of hunting bird Darien had
perfected. Since then, the Mongols have searched relentlessly
for the son of the slain hawker." Can't ID any of the
others yet, but The Year of the Horse, same
author & illus, Dutton 1957, is "about the nomads of
Mongolia".
We are thrilled and amazed. Yes, we're pretty sure this is the
book! We are horrified at the going price for this book on ebay
and the online book resellers but now we're on a mission to find
it at a reasonable price!! Armed with the actual AUTHOR's name
and the TITLE we're sure to succeed! This is just so GREAT. We
gave you an obscure shot in the dark, and you came back with
what we consider a small miracle. In barely two weeks !! LOL
Thanks so much. Well worth the $2 !!!
F69 falconry genghis khan: Golden
Hawks of Genghis Khan, by Rita Ritchie, NY
Dutton 1958. More on the other titles wanted - some possibles: The
Year of the Horse, by Ritchie, NY Dutton
1957, "Story of a Mongol boy in the year 1211 - The Year of the
Horse. Botokai's father had been an honoured officer in the army
of Genghis Khan, until his conviction as a traitor. Although his
father had died in disgrace, the young boy was
determined to prove his father's innocence
and restore his family honour." "Botokai's restoring of a weak
colt provides him with a swift, half-Mongol half-Persian horse
to help in his search for clues to right that wrong." Secret
Beyond the Mountains, by Ritchie, NY Dutton
1960, 240 pages, "story of the days of Genghis Khan ...
description of the great Mongol hunt. Because Taikal had
violated the law by slaying a mysterious black-and-white
monster to save the life of his superior officer, he lost his
command. Taikal and his friend Yarkut journeyed to Lhasa, and in
discovering the secret of the beast they also uncovered a plot
to overthrow the empire of Genghis Khan."
Jennie Lindquist , The Golden Name
Day.This is a really
long shot, but the cover does have the main character Nancy
standing in her frilly dress with fireflies around her. Nancy
has come to live with her Swedish grandparents because her
mother is ill. She learns about many Swedish customs, including
name days. Since her name isn't Swedish, she doesn't have a name
day and feels left out. She meets a Polish girl and learns
Polish-Americans celebrate name-days and that there is a day for
her middle name--Wanda. There is also a quite a bit on how she
and her cousins decorate their rooms. Nancy chooses yellow rose
wallpaper--some editions of this book have a pattern of yellow
roses on the endpapers.
Jennie Dorothea Lindquist, The Golden
Name Day, 1955.
Wow, now I remember the Name Day stuff
that everyone is talking about, but I wouldn't have made the
connection with this book! This is so great! I
didn't think this one would be solved so quickly. I
looove this web site!
Just a guess - it's the only title I could
find with 'goldenhair'. The golden phoenix, and
other French-Canadian fairy tales, Marius
Barbeau, Michael Hornyansky Art Price / 1958 /
Fiction : Juvenile audience 144 p. illus./New York, H.Z. Walck
"Eight European fairy tales brought from France that have become
part of French-Canadian folklore." Contents: The golden phoenix
-- The princess of Tomboso -- The fairy quite contrary --
Scurvyhead -- Sir Goldenhair -- The fountain of youth -- Jacques
the woodcutter -- The sly thief of Valenciennes -- About the
stories.
Roland Gant, French Fairy Tales. Other possibilities include the "French
Fairy Tales" anthologies of Kara May, and of Jan
Vladislav or possibly a translation of Charles
Perrault.
Marius Barbeau, Michael Hornyansky, The golden
phoenix and other French-Canadian fairy tales, 1958.
I feel sure that this is the book. I am still a little
confused by the multiple entries in the table of contents --
"Scurvyhead" and "Sir Goldenhair" -- because I think these are
two parts of the same story. The boy called himself
"Scurvyhead" to explain why he wore a mop, and only later became
known as "Sir Goldenhair". I think I need to get a copy of
this book! Many thanks to the Internet friend who found
it, and to Harriet for having this great web site!
--
The book was a collection of short
stories, probably published between 1970 and 1988. The title
was something like “The enchanted phoenix and other stories”.
Several of the stories had the same theme of a young man
seeking his fortune…in one story, the boy/young man was forced
to be a servant to a witch of some sort in a castle…there was
one room he was forbidden to enter that had a stream or
fountain that would turn anything dipped in it into gold. He
dips some items in it and tries to hid it, but his hair is
also wet, so the witch finds out and chases him out of the
castle…some point earlier he had been given some items and
instructions from a horse that could talk…he throws a comb
over his shoulder and says the magic words, and a giant hill
of combs springs up, impeding the progress of the witch. He
does this with other items. Eventually they escape and end up
at some other castle with a mean sultan and several daughters.
The boy hides his gold hair and eventually tries to marry one
of the princesses…the horse turns out to be a cursed knight,
who he frees…there are the usual contests, and everything
works out. Another story involves a phoenix captured in
a gold cage, and another boy seeking his fortune. He wants to
marry a princess, but the ruling sultan of the land wants to
play hide and seek…if the boy can find him three times, he
will win the hand of the daughter and the phoenix. He manages,
mostly by luck, to spot the shape changing sultan and makes
off with the princess. The sultan finds out that the princess
was dropping hints for the boy and gets upset…he rallies his
armies and chases the boy and his new bride out of his lands.
You know, never mind! As I was writing
this down and remembering the story, I just googled
“goldenhair” and phoenix. What do you know, the first result
was the book. “The Golden Phoenix” Oxford University Press,
1958, Scholastic 1973.
So, I can verify that the story
described does belong in the book listed in the answer in green
(The golden phoenix, and other French-Canadian fairy tales,
Marius Barbeau, Michael Hornyansky Art Price /
1958 / Fiction : Juvenile audience 144 p. illus./New York, H.Z.
Walck "Eight European fairy tales brought from France that have
become part of French-Canadian folklore." Contents: The golden
phoenix -- The princess of Tomboso -- The fairy quite contrary
-- Scurvyhead -- Sir Goldenhair -- The fountain of youth --
Jacques the woodcutter -- The sly thief of Valenciennes -- About
the stories.). Thank you so much for your service, and
thank you for helping me find the book I had been searching
for.
The book is probably The Golden
Pinecone, by Catherine Clarke. I think it
was published by Clarke Irwin, but if you need the details let
me know as I have a copy at home.
The Golden Pine Cone, by Catharine
Anthony
Clark, illustrated by Clare Bice, published Toronto,
Macmillan 1950, 182 pages. Bren and Lucy live with their parents
in a log cabin in the woods. After Lucy finds a gold pine cone
on its broken chain, and the wise dog Ooshka comes to live with
them, they learn that they have entered Tekontha's kingdom, and
can see the Spirit People and understand the speech of animals.
Nasookin the giant hunter is after the pine cone, because it
holds some of Tekontha's magic, and the children have to flee.
To get the Pine Cone Earring back to Tekontha and to free Ooshka
from the Spirit People, the children go underwater and fight the
Lake Snake, fly with the Canada geese (who carry them in a net),
are captured by Nasookin and escape, meet old Bill Buffer who
made the gold pine cones, ride with the reindeer, and escape
from the Ice Witch on mammoth-back.
This sounds like Rutherford Montgomery's Golden Stallion series
|
See what I have for sale on the Horse Catalog Page. |
Walter Brooks, Freddie the Pig.
Isn't this Fredddie the Pig?
Scarry, Patricia, The Golden Story
Book of River Bend,
1969. Just sold this book on Ebay! It's defiently
right. There is a Kenny Pig, and he does run a general
store, and he and the other residents of River Bend have all
sorts of adventures, including Trick-or-Treating. Is rare
and commands a hefty price, however.
Patricia Scarry, Animal
Friends All Year Long.The Golden Story Book of River Bend
was republished with the title Animal Friends All Year
Long. Copies under that title are much, much
more affordable
Harbhajan Singh Khalsa, Yogiji and Pawha
Kaur Khalsa, The Golden Temple Vegetarian Cookbook, 1978. Hawthorn Books, 224 pgs., 21 cm, ISBN
0801530679.
Louis and Bryna Untermeyer (eds), Golden
Treasury
of Childrens Literature, 1966. I think this *might* be the one.
It seems The Golden Treasury of
Children's Literature ed- Bryna and Louis
Untermeyer is a very good match. The end papers are as you
describe. Barrie's The Little White Bird is here- which is quite
unusual- among my anthologies, at least! Copyright dates start
in 1947 and there are many editions. My 1966 version matches
your cover- cream/ pale yellow! Please check it out!!
---
This was a children's story collection that contained this
story by JBS Haldane "A Day in the Life of a Magician" from the
children's book My Friend Mr Leakey. (Background)
Now
I think the collection might have been a Louis Untermeyer
collection (Children's Treasury) with an extract from
the first chapter of "The Hobbit" but maybe I'm combining two
books in my head. The book with the Haldane story was a large
(quarto) format hardback, maybe with a silvery cover.
JBS Haldane, Mr Leakey,
1944. I don't know if the searcher is looking for the
anthology or the story, but if it's the latter this might
help. I recently bought a 1944 Puffin copy of My
Friend Mr.Leakey by JBS Haldane
which contains 6 stories including the one
mentioned: Rats; The snake with the golden
teeth; A meal with a magician; A day in the life of a
magician; Mr Leakey's party; and My magic collar stud.
The book was first published in 1937 and then was published in
1944 as one of the earliest 'Puffin' books.
Untermeyer, Bryna & Louis, Golden treasury of
Children's Literature: Volume 6: Unfamiliar Marvels. 1962,
copyright. I posted the stumper originally. I found a copy of
the anthology with the Leakey extract. It didn't have any
Tolkein, so I guess I was thinking of another book for that. The
book store also had 2 copies of the Puffin edition of the entire
Leakey book, although I already had a much earlier edition.
---
When I was a young child, in the mid 70's my parents bought me
an anthology of children's stories at the Mother Earth News
store, wherever that was- I'm sure the book was not sold there
exclusively. The book was large, hardcover, and contained some
memorable stories including Switch On The Night by Ray
Bradbury, Poo- Poo and the Dragons by C.S Forester, Snow
White and Rose Red, and Aesops Fables- these are
the ones I remember best, though I know there were a lot more. I
remember the illustrations were gorgeous. I cannot remember the
name of the book, and I am desperate to have a copy if there is
one to be had!
Bryna and Louis Untermeyer, The
Golden Treasury of Children's Literature. My copy is from 1966 and contains exerpts
from Poo-poo and the Dragons, Snow-White and Rose-Red, Switch on
the Night, and many Aesop's fables as well as dozens of other
stories (it's over 500 pages long!) I think this could be
the one.
can't help identify the book, but the Mother
Earth
News is a magazine (sort of a how-to for hippies, or
at least it was when last I looked at it). The 'store' was
a mail order section in the back. It might be possible to
look through their archives to see if you can find ads for the
book, or get in contact with the magazine and see if they can
help you.
Thank You all for your help!! I am so happy to have found this
book again, and just in time for my son's 2nd birthday! Thisis
an amzing resource, thank you Harriett!
-----------
Children's stories compiled into
multiple volumes - ten or so. Published 1940-60s? Earlier? Each
volume was themed: "Fairy Tales" or "Animal Kingdom." Some
excerpts/stories I remember: Princess and the Goblin,
Moomintroll, Jungle Book, some Kipling stories... Maybe called a
treasury? Maybe not.
SOLVED: Bryna and Louis Untermeyer (Ed), The Golden Treasury of Children's
Literature - Ten Volumes, 1962-1963, approximate. Yay! The ten volumes are: Big & Little
Creatures, Beloved Tales, Fun & Fancy, Old Friends &
Lasting Favorites, Wonder Lands, Unfamiliar Marvels, Creatures
Wild & Tame, Adventurers All, Legendary Animals and Tall Tales.
Morris Schreiber, Stories of Gods
and Heroes, 1960.
This is a large format book (13 inches high). There are
somewhat modern illustrations (by Art Seiden) on every page. The
first two thirds of the book are versions of Greek legends, and
the last third has some legends of other countries, including
"Beowulf and the Dragon" and "The Horn of Roland"
Ann Terry White, The Golden Treasury
of Myths and Legends, 1959.
Wow! I actually found this while skimming through the
Anthology section. I immediately recognized the distinctive
art of the Provensens on the book cover. I am just delighted
to be reacquainted with a childhood favorite. Thank you so
much! This website is quite a boon to baby boomers like me...
Morris Schreiber, Stories of Gods and
Heroes, 1960. It
is 13 inches high and each page has illustrations by Art
Seiden. About two thirds of it is about Greek myths and
the last third contains stories from other cultures, including
Beowulf and the Dragon, and The Horn of Roland
M354 White, Anne Terry, adapter The
Golden
Treasury of myths and legends adapted from the
world’s great classics illus by Alice
Provensen; Martin Provensen Golden Press
c1959, edition printed and distributed by Scott,
Foresman
This may be Joanna Cole, Golly Gump
Swallowed a Fly. Parent's Magazine Press, '82.
Could this be Shel Silverstein, Uncle
Shelby's
Zoo: Don't Bump the Glump and other Fantasies?
It
has drawings and poems of creatures like the "Glub-Toothed
Sline" and the "One-Legged Zantz" ("consider his feelings, don't
ask him to dance"). 1964. Out of print.
Real long shot here - Romper the
Rabbit 1948, illustrated picture book by Ann
Falconer. "This picture book has both the story and the
music. Romper is a little bunny who lives with his family in a
hollow tree. He hops through the pages with his sisters and
brother. But while the other family members all go
hoppity-hop, Romper goes ga-lump, ga-lump! During Romper's
busy day he meets Fannie Field Mouse, Dickie Duck, Pookey Pig,
and Uncle Puff and tries to find someone else who goes
ga-lump, ga-lump!"
This is Gone Away Lake by Elizabeth
Enright. There's a sequel called Return to Gone
Away. The children don't travel back in time--they
go to stay with relatives in the country and while exploring
discover a community of old, deserted summer homes. An elderly
brother and sister live in two of the old homes and wear the old
clothes they've found there. The children become friends with
the old people, who tell them stories of their childhood, when
they would spend their summers in the now-deserted summer
community.
I just have to tell you that I stumbled on
your website completely by accident. I had been thinking about a
book I read as a child. All I could remember was that it was
about a girl on summer vacation and she came across a lake with
old houses, and elderly people lived there still. I believe they
had been forgotten. So I decided to go on my search engine and
punch in the words 'childrens book girl summer lake elderly'.
Much to my surprise up came your website. Someone else had been
looking for Gone Away Lake too! I was thrilled to
find the name! I just wanted to tell you that you made someone's
day without even knowing it! Thank you very much.
this book is readily available. It is one of
the choices on the Accelerated Reading Program on the middle
school level and can be found in any school library or any
bookstore which stocks books for required reading in schools.
---
children's mystery which I read around
1959. I think it was a new book and possibley an award winner.
It concerns two children who meet two elderly people in a
victorian house deep in a forest. The plot somehow involves
the search for ginseng roots also referred to as "sang" in the
book.
Elizabeth Enright, Gone-Away
Lake, 1957.
Almost certainly this book. Cousins Portia and Julian discover
an elderly brother and sister living in old abandoned houses on
the shore of a dried-up lake. I don't remember ginseng but "Aunt
Minnehaha" had a garden in the swamp. They both dressed in
old Victorian era clothing and "Uncle Pin" drove an ancient
automobile. In the sequel, Return to Gone-Away
(1961), Portia's family buys a house at Gone-Away Lake and moves
there.
Elizabeth Enright, Gone Away Lake. 1957. This was, indeed, a Newbery Award
winner.
Elizabeth Enright, Gone Away Lake. Brother and sister on vacation in country
find elderly brother and sister living in a set of abandoned
summer homes by the edge of what was a lake at the turn of the
century and is now a marsh. The elderly gentleman collects and
sells botanicals including ginseng.
---
The Lost Lake????? 1960/61 When I
was in the sixth grade, living in Philadelphia, I
checked a book out of the school library (it was a brand
new book). It was about two children (brother &
sister?) who spend the summer with relatives ( Grandparents?)
at a lakeside home. Only the lake has disappeared, it
has dried up or is drying up. All of these beautiful old
victorian mansions lining a disappearing lake and the children
try to solve the mystery of where the water has gone.
Elizabeth Enright, Gone-Away Lake, 1957. Newbery Honor Book.
Elizabeth Enright, Gone-away Lake. Same as C194
Elizabeth Enright, Gone-Away Lake
Gone-Away Lake. This one sure shows up a lot!
---
I remember a book about childhood friends
in the summer who have adventurers on an island, lagoon or
cove. There was a girl and possibly a couple other children.
They possibly traveled back and forth from their home to the
lagoon. I read it in the 1950's.
Ransome, Arthur, Swallows and
Amazons. Could this
possibly be Swallows and Amazons? In these books
a family of children (the Swallows) camp on a "desert island"
(somewhere in the English Lakes District, but this is no tourist
guide) and have wonderful adventures with their friends, two
sisters who call themselves the Amazons. These books were
originally published in the '30's but have been reissued in
paperback. Great adventures!
Enid Blyton, Island of Adventures.
could be, maybe?
Elizabeth Enright, Gone-Away Lake, 1957.
Elizabeth Enright, Gone-away Lake, 1957. This one is on the Solved
Mysteries page. I'm reasonably sure the poster is thinking of
this book or its sequel--Return to Gone-Away.
K50 There are probably other book that fit
this description. How about THE SECRET ISLAND by
Enid Blyton? ~from a librarian
---
This was a book I read in the late 70s
about 2 kids, a brother and a sister, that move to an area and
while exploring the nearby forest, happen upon a street of
houses that are empty. The houses are old and still most
of their furnishings in them. While exploring the
neighborhood, they come across one old couple who live
there. The couple tell them about all the people who
used to live in the old houses, one of which was a lady killed
in the 1906 San Francisco earthquake. They play dress up
in her attic and have picnics as well. I seem to
remember them fixing up some of the houses and having to stay
away from some due to dangerous conditions. I vaguely
remember their parents find out and the houses are all brought
back to their original splendor and people move back in.
I loved this story as a kid and hope you can help me find it
to read to my kids!
Elizabeth Enright, Gone-Away Lake,
c.1957. This book
sounds like it must be Gone-Away Lake. Gone-Away Lake
is a delightful, beautifully written story, just this side of
fantasy and filled with interesting, likable characters. A
brother and sister from the city take the train to visit their
country cousin. The children discover an old, mostly abandoned
summer colony of houses near a swamp that used to be a lake.
There they meet the most charming people in the book, an elderly
sister and brother, Minnehaha Cheever and Pindar Payton, who are
living happily in the place where they spent summers as
children. The pair wear old-fashioned clothes stored away many
years ago by their family, cultivate a variety of gardens, and
have chickens, goats, a duck, and a cat named Fatly. Once a
month, Pindar cranks up the antique Franklin car and drives into
town for supplies. The children are adventuresome and
imaginative, and have no need of TV to keep themselves amused."
Enright, Elizabeth, Gone-Away Lake. This has got to be it!
Elizabeth Enright, Gone-away Lake. Again!
Enright, Elizabeth, Gone Away Lake. Most of this query matches the plot of Gone
Away
Lake and its sequel, Return to Gone-Away.
Elizabeth Enright, Gone Away Lake. See Solved Mysteries.
Elizabeth Enright, Gone Away Lake, 1957. This is the wonderful Gone
Away Lake by Elizabeth Enright. There is
also an equally superb sequel, called Return to Gone Away
Lake, both still in print.
Enright, Elizabeth, Gone-Away Lake. Portia and Foster discover a derelict community
that dried up when the lake dried up, leaving only one elderly
couple still living there.
Elizabeth Enright, Gone-Away Lake. My 13yo suggests this, although a few of the
details you describe are slightly different. Portia and
her little brother Foster go for a holiday to stay with cousin
Julian. Portia and Julian go exploring and find a lake
surrounded with ancient houses, and there is an old couple
staying in one of them.
Elizabeth Enright, Gone-Away Lake, 1957. Gone-Away Lake and Return
to
Gone-Away (1961) are about the adventures of
children who discover an elderly and eccentric couple, the
Cheevers, living in a row of abandoned summer houses on a lake
that had been reduced to marsh.
Elizabeth Enright (author ), Beth
and Joe Krush (illustrators), Gone-Away Lake, 1957.
Sounds
like
this
one!
Portia
Blake
and
her
cousin
Julian
Jarman
discover
an
abandoned
summer community next to dried up Tarrigo Lake. The
elderly inhabitants are Minnehaha Cheever and her brother Pindar
Payton. Mrs. Brace-Gideon, who owned the large and stately
Villa Caprice, perished in the San Francisco earthquake.
Followed by a sequel, Return to Gone-Away (1961).
Elizabeth Enright, Goneaway Lake,
Return to Goneaway Lake. These are the books in question. They are
still in print and widely available.
Elizabeth Enright, Gone-Away Lake, 1957. Cousins Portia and Julian discover a
row of old abandoned houses on the edge of a swamp that used to
be a lake. An elderly brother and sister still live in two of
the houses, wear the old-fashioned clothes that were left in the
houses, and drive a vintage car from one of the houses. They
tell the kids stories about when they were children and the
houses were part of a lively summer community.
Elizabeth Enright, Gone-Away Lake. A great classic. The most imposing house
is owned by the woman who was killed in the San Francisco
earthquake. There is also a sequel, Return to
Gone-Away.
Enright, Elizabeth, Gone-Away Lake. Surely this is "Gone-Away Lake", Portia and her
brother are staying with their uncle and aunt, Portia and Julian
explore the area and discover Minnehaha Cheever and her brother
Pindar living in a deserted group of houses by a bog, where a
lake had been. A great book.
Elizabeth Enright, Gone-Away Lake. Sounds like this is probably Gone-Away
Lake by Elizabeth Enright. There's also a sequel, Return
to Gone-Away. Both these books are fabulous and
still in print.
Enright Elizabeth, Gone away lake. THis has to be it.
Elizabeth Enright, Gone-Away Lake. I'm sure this has been answered by others
already, but anyway, it's Gone-Away Lake.
The sequel, Return To Gone-Away, is also very
enjoyable.
Elizabeth Enright, Gone-Away Lake, 1957. I'm pretty sure this is the one
you're looking for, along with its sequel, Return to
Gone-Away. I wasn't sure about the earthquake
detail, but I read through my copy, and sure enough.
Elizabeth Enright, Gone-Away Lake, 1957. This sounds like Gone Away
Lake and its sequel Return to Gone Away Lake
by Elizabeth Enright.
Condition Grades |
Enright, Elizabeth. Gone-Away Lake. Scholastic, Inc., 1957, 1985. Trade paperback, new cover art, but original black & white drawings by Beth and Joe Kruch inside. F. $8 |
|
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 |
|
(GREAT SERVICE!! One of my favorite
bookmarks!) I believe the story you are talking about is
in an early 60's Childcraft volume of folk tales. The name of
the story in this collection is Gone is Gone. The
husband puts the cow on the roof to eat and tries to make soup.
He ends up with a disastrous mess. I John 2:4 Look
it up : )
Hi, I was searching for information on
another book on the Children's Picture Book Database at Miami
University website, and came across this book title and
description. I think it might be what you're looking for. The
title is Gone is Gone; or, The story of a man who
wanted to do housework. The description reads: "A man
wishes to trade a day's work with his wife who does 'nothing'
all day. He soon learns he was wrong." Retold and illustrated by
Wanda Gág New York, Coward-McCann, inc. [c1935]
Oh, Wanda Gag (of Millions of Cats fame)! Of
course!
What a wonderful site! I am looking for a
story about a husband and wife who swap places for the day. The
husband stays at home and has to do all the household chores
etc.. I don't remember the title, but it was in a collection of
stories. I used to make my father read it to me every night
before bed. One thing I remember most is that the husband ties
the cow to the roof of the house to graze. Any thoughts??
---
Olaf was a Norwegian farmer who was tired
of working in the fields. He thought his wife had a much
easier time staying at home cooking, cleaning and looking
after the children. He complained so much that one day his
wife said "Alright Olaf, I'll go out into the field. You stay
home and look after the chidlren." Olaf readily agreed.
However, by the end of the first day full of disasters,
including the cow on the roof, Olaf was totally exhausted and
wanted nothing but to return to the fields the next day.
Sounds like Wanda Gag's (of Millions of Cats
fame) classic Gone is Gone, first published in
1935.
------------
Looking for a small 5x5 hardcover
children's book possibly from the '40s, possibly entitled,
What's Done is Done. A boy would do different tasks for a farmer
or woodsman, but would do it wrong or wreck everthing and the
man would simply reply, What's done is done. Woodblock type
illustrations.
SOLVED: Wanda Gag, Gone is Gone,
1935. YAY! I solved my own mystery after doing some more online
research! My memory was a bit off: The book is actually entitled
"Gone is Gone" by Wanda Gag, copyright 1935! But, as I
remembered, it is a small hardcover book with black and white
pen and ink illustrations. It's a Bohemian folk tale about a
farmer husband who trades places with his wife because he thinks
her job keeping house is easier. He proceeds to make a mess and
have one disaster after another while his wife works his job in
the field without a problem. Reading a cherished book after so
many years is just wonderful, so keep searching for yours!
Condition Grades |
Gag, Wanda. Gone is Gone, or, The Story of a Man Who Wanted to Do Housework. Coward McCann, 1935. Library bound and worn. Scarce. G. <SOLD> |
|
#P83--Peanut family: is this the same
as #G27, Goober family? God, I hope so! There are
enough weird books out there now, without TWO peanut family
books running loose!
G27 goober family and P83 peanut family --
This is the closest I've seen so far - The Lively
Adventures of Johnny Ping Wing, by Ethel Calvert
Phillips, published Houghton 192?. "A little peanut
Chinaman presented in an unusually attractive book." It can't be
right, though.
G27 goober family and P83 peanut family:
could this have been a story in an anthology? There's Bedtime
Stories about Cabbages and Peanuts, by Harriet
Boyd, illustrated by Fern Bisel Peat, published Akron,
Saalfield 1929, includes a story about Sally and Sammy Peanut -
no plot description, but this is the closest so far.
G27 goober family: I saw some pages from the
Bedtime Stories book on EBay, and one showed the
little peanut boy and girl working in the garden, with a caption
about them working hard, so it's a possible. The illustrations
were line drawings with a lot of yellow, and the peanut kids
were wearing regular clothes, a plaid shirt and jeans? for the
boy.
Gelett Burgess, The Goops, 1900. This is the story of the goops who
lick their fingers and do all sorts of rude things, they look
sort of like peanuts in my book, The Better Homes &
Gardens Storybook.
Well, The Goops are
certainly moralistic, but rather than a story of a family, they
are little rhyming poems about reckless boys and girls.
madge a. bigham, Goober Village. I loved this book as a child. I am also
looking for this book, with no luck. But I have acquired other
books by the same author.
---
I am looking for a book(s) about some
peanut children, probably published before 1960. Not
sure if the name of the family was Peanut or if the kids were
actually peanuts. There are prisms and rainbows involved
somehow. Any help would be appreciated.
#P83--Peanut family: is this the same
as #G27, Goober family? God, I hope so! There are
enough weird books out there now, without TWO peanut family
books running loose!
Jean Bethel, Petey the Peanut
Man, 1966. This book was listed in a lot of
children's books being offered on
E-Bay so the poster might want to check it
out.
I'm pretty sure that Petey The Peanut
Man is actually about a man who sells peanuts at a
circus or carnival, not an actual "peanut-man." I know I have a
copy of this somewhere, I think it's a Weekly Reader or other
book club book.
G27 goober family and P83 peanut family --
This is the closest I've seen so far - The Lively
Adventures of Johnny Ping Wing, by Ethel Calvert
Phillips, published Houghton 192?. "A little peanut
Chinaman presented in an unusually attractive book." It can't be
right, though.
G27 goober family and P83 peanut family:
could this have been a story in an anthology? There's Bedtime
Stories about Cabbages and Peanuts, by Harriet
Boyd, illustrated by Fern Bisel Peat, published Akron,
Saalfield 1929, includes a story about Sally and Sammy Peanut -
no plot description, but this is the closest so far.
The story mentioned in P83 Peanut family is,
indeed, one of the stories from the didactic collection of tales
about peanut families in the book, GOOBER VILLAGE
(see Goober Family solution). This book was given to my
father when he was a boy in the 1940s. My siblings and I
read and reread the book in the 50's and 60's, and I read it to
my children in the 90's, but unfortunately, it has been lost in
a recent move. We, too, are trying to find a replacement
copy... more for nostalgia's sake than for great literature.
W15: The Good American Witch
by Peggy Bacon.
---
I read this a long, long time ago. A boy
(older maybe teenaged) who lives on a farm and doesn't have
anyone to play with. He hears stories about a mysterious woman
who can appear as anyone and grant a wish. You know it's the
woman because you'll see odd and unusual things and she'll
offer you something strange but delicious to eat. Boy goes to
a neighbor's house and sees a collection of bird's eggs under
glass including an Ostrich egg I think. Has something strange
but good to eat, then realizes this is the woman. He asks her
for a companion because he's so lonely. She grants his wish
but with a twist: he goes home and finds that his dog can now
speak to him in fluent French--a subject he's not very good at
in school. So he really starts to hit the books so he can
converse with his dog. A really good and funny book. Would
love to find it again. Have no clue as to title or author.
Note: This may have been in a collection of short stories. I
don't think it was long enough to be a whole book.
The Good American Witch.
I may have read this story in a book called Witches,
Witches, Witches or else some other anthology.
Peggy Bacon, The Good American Witch, 1957. It's definitely The Good
American Witch. The Good American Witch can do
anything. Her name is Mrs. Manage, a very pleasant person
indeed, but hard to find. Which direction should you start? Just
ask her for one wish, like Rufus wished his French poodle could
talk, ( he did, too...French) and Susan wanted her black hair
changed to gold and she got her wish, too.
Just wanted to confirm the other poster's
answer. I checked my copy of WITCHES, WITCHES, WITCHES
(selected by Helen Hoke, illustrated by W.R. Lohse,
1958) and the selection "About the Good American Witch" by
Peggy Bacon (which the acknowledgments state is an excerpt
from THE GOOD AMERICAN WITCH, 1957) does match
the description of the dog speaking French.~from a librarian
Condition Grades |
Bacon, Peggy. The Good American Witch. Franklin Watts, 1957. First edition. Corners bumped, otherwise VG. <SOLD> |
Cicely Mary Barker, Flower Fairy Books. I bet you're
thinking of the Flower Fairies, by Cecil Mary Barker. The
books I had separated them by season--Spring Fairies, Summer
Fairies, Winter Fairies and Autumn Fairies--but I think there
were other books published.
Very likely it's The Good and Bad Berries (1936) by Austria's Ida
Bohatta Morpurgo.
Translated by June Head. The cover shows the bilberry and
the similar but inedible trillium. (Unfortunately, while
there are two drawings of both of those inside the book, the
B&W drawing has them mislabeled!) BTW, when searching
for the author's other books, it's often best to search
under just "Bohatta." Other great ones she wrote and
illustrated were The Gnome's Almanack and The Flower Book.
Many of her other books have somewhat dull writing, however.
Carol Beach York, Good
Charlotte, 1994. I am sure this is the book you are
looking for. It's a great book.
This is probably the reading series known as The Good-Companion Books, by Arthur I. Gates, Franklin T. Baker and Celeste Peardon; illustrated by Florence McAnelly. New York: Macmillan, 1930's. There were at least four volumes: Nick and Dick, Fun with Nick and Dick, The story book of Nick and Dick, and The Caravan of Nick and Dick. Probably just as hard to find as Dick and Jane!
no plot, but maybe this one? Though '63
seems late for blocks of ice: Rutherford, Bonnie and Bill.
A Good, Good Morning (A Tip Top Tales Book)
Racine: Whitman 1963, illustrated boards, gorgeous color
illustrations, This title is closer, but it's a boy
character: Polgreen, John and Cathleen. Good
Morning Mr Sun (A Little Owl Book) NY Holt, Rinehart
and Winston 1963, illustrated boards, "story about sun, shadows
and a little boy"
#G11--Good Morning, Sun: I thought of
A Good, Good Morning too. It does indeed
feature a little blond girl, but looking through my copy I see
it takes place in summer--so no school books and certainly no
ice trucks!
Thanks. This book IS called A
Good, Good Morning. I have been looking for it for
years. Thank you for your contributions!
This book may have been "Grimms
Fairy Tales." Check it out, and compare the stories
in it to the ones you remember. I know "Puss and Boots" and "The
Frog Prince" are in the copy I have from the 1960's, although my
copy is a green hardback, not a gray one. Good luck!
A16 is NOT Child's World gray
series.
Well, if I knew when the seeker was young
(70s? 80s?) it would help. However, it has to be an anthology
not limited to Grimm or Andersen, so possible are: Opie, Iona
and Peter A NURSERY COMPANION Oxford University
Press, 1980. Gray Cloth, Folio 400 color illustrations, a
collection of the old fairy tales and children's stories
beautifully illustrated. THE ARTHUR RACKHAM FAIRY BOOK
A Book Of Old Favourites With New Illustrations
Philadelphia, Lippincott c.1950 8vo 286 pp. Gray cloth, maroon
stamping, 8 full-color plates and over 50 black & white
illustrations by Arthur Rackham.
The Good Housekeeping Best Book of
Bedtime Stories, edited by Pauline Rush Evans
(1957) has a gray cover. It is a thick volume with
384 pages. It is not lavishly illustrated, rather there is one
black and white picture per story. The tales you mentioned
are here as well as a smattering of many other stories: Androcles
and the Lion, The Brownie of Blednock, Winnie the Pooh,
The Lost Merbaby, Sudden Mary: many stories are excerpted
from larger stories. There are some poems as well.
Sounds like it could be the same book as
A15. Dean's Gift Book of Fairy Tales.
A Good Knight for Dragons
I'm looking for a children's book from the
late 60's. Something about a dragon and a prince and the
dragon didn't really want to burn people and/or the prince
didn't really feel compelled to rescue damsels? I remember
there were few colors used in the illustrations: pink,
chartuese, and black?
Kenneth Grahame, E.H.
Shepard (illus), The
Reluctant Dragon,
1938, copyright. A shepherd discovers a dragon living in a
cave. His son knows from his reading of natural history and
fairy tales that some dragons are reasonable and nonthreatening.
He approaches the creature, who proves to be a gentle,
noncombative sort. The villagers, however, see him as a menace,
and St. George is sent for. The boy goes to visit St. George
(who turns out to be not quite the fearless dragon slayer he is
reputed to be) and is able to convince him that this is a good
dragon. The three of them devise a plan that will give everyone
a fine show, by faking a fight in which George "defeats" and
"tames" the dragon, allowing the dragon to stay on in the
village, writing poetry and singing. The story was first
published in 1898, as part of Grahame's short story collection
"Dream Days." Shepard, the beloved illustrator of the Winnie The
Pooh stories, provided the ink drawings for the 1938 edition,
which has since been reprinted many times. The cover of at least
one edition is a hot pink, except for a white block featuring
one of Shepard's ink drawings of the boy talking to the dragon.
While the rest of this illustration is b&w, the dragon has
been colored blue-green.
dePaola, Tomie, The
Knight and the Dragon. Could it be "The Knight
and the Dragon"? Most of the book (if not all)
is wordless, but it shows a knight preparing to battle a
dragon, while a dragon practices defeating a knight. Neither
is too happy when the inevitable confrontation comes...until
the castle librarian pulls a cart of books in--teaching the
knight how to build a barbeque and the dragon how to roast
food. It's a great book!
Grahame, Kenneth, The Reluctant Dragon. Could
this classic be what you are looking for? I seem to
remember a Scholastic paperback edition with the colors
mentioned.
SOLVED: Jolly Roger Bradfield, A Good Knight for Dragons.
THANK YOU! I found the answer to my stumper request quite
accidentally. I was looking under "most requested books"
and found a picture of the book I was looking for. While
I'm not sure that I remembered the plot correctly when I sent in
my stumper, I did remember the colors quite precisely and
recognized the cover of the book immediately. I'm
purchasing a copy for sale on Ebay today! I've been
looking for this book for the past 20 years. Thank you!
You are right in thinking that this is a Little Golden Book. It was written in 1951 by Esther Wilkin and illustrated by Eloise Wilkin.
As a child (1970's)I remember reading a book about a good little girl and a bad little girl. I think it was a Golden Book, but it may not have been. At the end of the book the two girls turn out to be the same little girl. I remember a couple of illustrations where the girl is having a tea party outdoors, and one where she is standing on a fence. I do not know the actual title or the author. Any ideas?
G41 could possibly by , What the
Moon Sees What the Sun Sees by Nancy Tafuri.
It was published within the last several years.
this book is a flip flop book i think thats
what it is called. any help in locating this one or even
the title would sure be a great help
[related message] Around 1913, Rand McNally
published The Goody-Naughty Book by Sarah
Cory Rippey, illustrated by Branchel Fisher Wright.
On one side are the goody stories -- featuring Rose-Red, Polly,
Teddy & Betty -- on the other side the naughty stories --
with Willie, Molly, Jean & P'rapsy. It was reprinted
several times through 1935. Originally published in tan,
there are also (at least) green and light blue covers.
They also published by the same author The Sunny-Sulky
Book. Rand McNally also published another book
called The Goody Naughty Book. It was
a tip-top elf book, published 1956 by Mabel Watts,
illustrated by Helen Prickett. It also has a
"Goody Side" and a "Naughty Side". The "Goody" cover shown
in Santi's collectors' guide has a broadly smiling boy and a
demonically smirking -- er, smiling little girl in pigtails.
thanks though that is not the book it's
an up-side down book about a girl and boy i remember how the
girl gets to take a bubbly bath and the boy has a plain bath.
one side was all yellow andthe other was blue with stars and
the title thanks again. this book would have come out
beofre 1970 since im 30 now thanks
On the Good Morning, Good Night
book, there is a Little Golden Book of that title by Jane
Werner, illustrated by Eloise Wilkin, 1948. Not a
flipover book, but seems to fit the description in other ways.
This sounds possible: Luther, Frank,
Good Morning and Good Night: a Two-in-One Wonder Book
Wonder Books 1952, illustrated by Beatrice Derwinski "Read a
story then turn upside down for another story. Tells about two
children, what they do when they wake up and what they do when
they go to bed." color illustratrions.
thanks so much that is the book and i was
able to find it and now a have a copy of it again!!!!! thank
you for all your help this is a great site and i hope to use
it again!!!!!
Betty Ren Wright, Good Morning Farm, c. 1965. Published by Golden Press.
Betty Ren Wright, Good Morning, Farm,
1964. Illustrated by
Fred Weinman. Seems a likely candidate, mixing drawings
and photos. May be a few different printings: 1964 Whitman giant
tell-a-tale book. 1971, 1974 Golden
S220 Wright, Betty Ren. Good
morning, farm. illus by Fred Weinman, Whitman
c1964. collie? sheltie? dog goes around the farm saying
"Good morning" to all the animals. photos mixed with colored
art. 11 1/2 x 14; glossy boards, Giant Tell-a-Tale.
R27 - I have the vaguest memory of
having read this, too. I don't remember the name of it,
but are you sure it was a separate book? I almost think it
was one of the stories in a larger collection.
R27 ratty and mousie: this seems very likely
- Good Neighbors, written and illustrated in
color by Diane Redfield Massie, published McGraw Hill
Weekly Readers 1972, 32 pages. "An enchanting exploration of
neighborliness, and how two friends, Mouse and Ratty,
learn its true meaning and application. Ages 4-8." (HB
Oct/72 p.504 pub ad) "Story of a pocket mouse that lives in
the desert in a nice cozy little home underground. Then a
packrat moves in next door & imposes himself."
---
A childs book I read to my children in 1985 - 1990 about a
mouse that had a nice neat front door and its nieghbor, Ratty,
who had a messy front door. The mouse realizes why when a badger
reaches into the mouses house and the rat saves the mouse. The
messy front door was so badgers would not see it. I think the
title was something like "Good Nieghbors"
Massie, Diane Redfield, Good
Neighbors, 1972.
"A hungry badger helps Ratty and Mouse come to terms about what
a good neighbor should be."
---
I'm looking for a children's book about two mice - one is neat
and tidy and the other is a mess. They are neighbors and
the messy one decides they should be friends. I seem to
remember him borrowing stuff without returning it and eating the
neat one's food. Then one day the messy mouse digs a
tunnel to the neat mouse's house so that they can visit more
often. The new tunnel gets dirt all over the neat mouse's
couch so he throws a fit and sends the messy mouse home (and
hurts the messy mouse's feelings I think). The neat mouse
hides the entrance to the tunnel with a painting on his
wall. One night a badger tries to claw its way into the
neat mouse's house scaring him badly and the messy mouse crawls
through the tunnel and rescues him. Together they escape
to the messy mouse's house in a cactus patch where the Badger
can't follow and the neat mouse decides he really likes the
messy mouse.
Thanks so much for your service! I have been trying to
come up with the name of this book for months and have searched
Google, Amazon and Yahoo without any luck. The good news
is I solved the mystery over lunch today - sitting down and
writing out the details of the story for the first time as I was
entering the Paypal form allowed me to remember a lot more of
the story than I had previously, and the name of the book
occured to me a couple of hours later: Good Neighbors
by Diane Redfield Massie. That's the best $2 I've spent in
a long time. That doesn't leave you with much challenge,
but its great for me. Thanks again!
Diane Redfield Massie, Good Neighbors, 1972. Mouse is the neat and tidy
one his neighbor is Ratty, a packrat. This book was
a Weekly Reader Children's Book Club selection.
_______________________________
Hardcover, large-format,
illustrated children's book from the 1970s or early 1980s about
two animal friends (a pack rat and a mouse or vole?) who eat
cactus fruit and build their homes. They run from a badger (?)
at the end, and I believe the pack rat's home is destroyed.
Diane
Redfern Massie, Good
Neighbors, 1972, copyright. Wanted to add that this
book had beautiful drawn and colored illustrations of the desert
setting. There were detailed drawings of the pack rat's "house"
interior in a tunnel in the ground.
Byrd Baylor, The Desert is Theirs, 1975, copyright.Talk to the Papago Indians.
They're Desert People. They know desert secrets no one else
knows"--how the spider people "sewed earth and sky together. . .
Buzzard made mountains with his wings. . . and Gopher burrowed a
path to lead people out of the underworld and up/ up/ up/into
the fierce white sunlight." So--beginning with the Papago myths
and going on to praise the Saguaro and Yucca, the Kangaroo Rat
and the "doves dipping down for the juicy red fruit that grows
high on a cactus"--Baylor's spare lyricism recreates the
intimate relationship between Desert People and their land. The
message is kinship with the environment and all living things
("Papagos try not to anger their animal brothers. . . They say,
"We share. . . we only share"), and Parnall's delicate line
drawings, layered like sand paintings with brigh color,
reverberate with peace and harmony. Ready and waiting for that
special, receptive moment. (Kirkus Reviews, September 1, 1975).
Diane
Redfield Massie, Good
Neighbors.
The animals in question are a pocket mouse and a pack rat.
(Sent this in before, but I don't see it, so I'm re-sending).
Demarest,
Christ
L., Benedict Finds a Home, 1982, copyright.Thank you SO
much for the service! Do you think you could find a copy
for me?
Diane Redfield Massie, Good Neighbors, 1972, copyright. Thanks! Good Neighbors is the book I was looking for. I am so happy to see copies of it on ebay. I LOVE this book!!!
G255 How about Margaret Wise Brown's Goodnight
moon? [Maybe not]
Could it be the classic Goodnight
Moon? It's still easily found in almost any
bookstore. Margaret Wise Brown and Clement Hurd are the
authors.
Lynn and Mandy Wells, The Goodnight
Book, 1974. I
have the book in front of me. We read it to our daughter
every night for years. You remember the words very well.
It is "A Whitman Book," Western Publishing co, Inc, Racine,
Wisconsin. Published as "A Tell-A-Tale Book" 1974.
Illustrated by Pat and Paul Karch. Tell-A-Tale is copyrighted by
Walt Disney Productions.
Y29 This is GOOD NIGHT, RICHARD
RABBIT by Robert Kraus, illustrated by N.M.
Bodecker. The version I have is small, no more than 6 inches
tall, and when you flip the book, it has the book GOOD
NIGHT, LITTLE ABC (goes through the alphabet with
animal parent(s) tucking their children into bed). However, it
seems that they were published separately at one point.~from a
librarian
Hoban, Russell, Bedtime for Frances. Frances is a badger, not a rabbit, but
the other details fit.
Kraus Robert, Good night, Richard
Rabbit, 1972.
This is the one. Richard Rabbit can find any excuse to
avoid going to bed.
Christopher Rawson, The Good Spy
Guide, Disguise and Make-Up,1978. I suspect the series you're
thinking of is the "The Good Spy Guide" series, which
has books in it called Tracking and Trailing and
Secret Messages. They were published by
Usborne, and not all by the same author, from what I can
tell. This particular one I happen to own, and does indeed
have cartoon pictures and discuss good disguises. It was
one of my favourites as a child.
Good Times on Our Street
Several stories in '40s
reader, red cover with a child riding on a merry-go-round.
Favorite: old lady gets cold in the winter but has one old red
blanket. She cuts the holes out of the blanket, uses her goose
feathers to make herself a featherbed, & makes her geese red
jackets from the old blanket.
The
Little Old Woman Who Used Her Head, Sounds like it, I do remember that the old woman first
used the feathers to make a quilt
for herself, then worried about her geese getting cold so she
used her old red blanket to make them warm jackets. The old
woman always sat down to think about how to solve problems, with
the line, "She used her head and used her head and used her
head," until she had an idea. There were two books based on the
little old woman hope this helps.
The story about the geese is
How She Kept Her Geese Warm, or The Little Old Woman and How She Kept Her Geese Warm, by Hope Newell.
The search for the actual reader is listed in the archives, but
was never definitely solved.
Gates, Huber, Peardon, Salisbury,
Good
Times on Our Street,
1950, reprint. SUCCESS! I could not have found this primer if it
hadn't been for your Stumper. I am so thrilled and have been
able to purchase a copy... I have tried to find this book for
ten years, and now my quest is over. Thank you, thank you.
Around 1913, Rand McNally published The
Goody-Naughty
Book by Sarah Cory Rippey, illustrated by Branchel
Fisher Wright. On one side are the goody stories --
featuring Rose-Red, Polly, Teddy & Betty -- on the other
side the naughty stories -- with Willie, Molly, Jean &
P'rapsy. It was reprinted several times through
1935. Originally published in tan, there are also (at
least) green and light blue covers. They also published by
the same author The Sunny-Sulky Book. Rand
McNally also published another book called The Goody
Naughty Book. It was a tip-top elf book,
published 1956 by Mabel Watts, illustrated by Helen
Prickett. It also has a "Goody Side" and a "Naughty
Side". The "Goody" cover shown in Santi's collectors'
guide has a broadly smiling boy and a demonically smirking --
er, smiling little girl in pigtails.
One possibility is: Millicent At the
Shopping Mall. I don't know the author. It is not in
a grocery store, but she is shopping with her mother. The first
half she begs and misbehaves. The second half she minds her
manners. This is a Christian book with a little prayer at the
end to (1) ask forgiveness for misbehaving, and then (2) thanks
God for helping her behave.
Rand McNally, Goody Naughty Book. This is the Goody Naughty Book by
Rand McNally that you are looking for. I have a copy in my
hands right now - the one with the light greenish blue
cover. One side is "goody" and you flip it over to the
'naughty' side for the other story. The girl you remember in the
store is 'Patty Potts' who went shopping with her mother.
I think I remember seeing this in two
storybooks - at any rate, you can also read it in Goops
and How to Be
Them (1900, Gelett
Burgess). They were Better Homes and Gardens
Storybook, Vol 1 (1950s) and The
Illustrated Treasury of Children's
Literature (1970s?). The second one, when you removed the
dust jacket, had a pale blue cover with tiny reproductions of
the drawings of Alice, Humpty Dumpty, Toad and maybe another
famous character, all repeated constantly over the cover.
G36: Goops Try GHASTLIES, GOOPS
& PINCUSHIONS; NONSENSE VERSE by X.J.
Kennedy
G36 - I'm sure you'll get numerous answers
for this one. Has to be one of the Goops books by Gelett
Burgess (e.g.,The Goops and How To Be Them).
This is an old traditional book that is
still in print in paperback & audio cassette. The
title is (yes, all of this if you want to include the subtitle):
Goops and How to Be Them: A Manual of Manners for Polite
Children Inculcating Many Juvenile Virtues Both By Precept
and Example. To add to all of that, there was also
a sequel that's also in print & with a similarly long title:
More Goops and How Not to Be Them: A Manual of Manners for
Impolite Infants, Depicting the Characteristics of Many
Naughty and Thoughtless Children. Note that
the 1st title says HOW TO BE THEM while the sequel says
HOW NOT TO BE THEM. Both are by Gelett Burgess.
The Goops is a poem about a
messy family.... I remember this, as does my fiance, and we're
pretty sure that it was an entire book, not just a single poem.
It had as its goal demonstrating to youngsters how gross and
rude it was to do nasty things like pick one's nose or burp. My
fiance's in his late thirties, I'm in my early thirties, so it
has to at least be a 1950 or 1960 publication. I seem to
remember it as something that might have been read to my father,
as I recall reading it at my grandmother's house. Hope this
helps. If I can find it, I'll send more info.
The Goops give some good book advice
too: I have a notion / The Books on the shelves / Are
just as much persons / As we are, Ourselves. // When you are
older, / You'll find this is true; / You'd better be careful /
To make Books like you!
This is one of the grimmer Grimm tales
called "The Goosegirl." Not
exactly an intuitive title, as everyone who reads the story
remembers Falada's head nailed to the wall. The
deliciously nasty beginning involves the princess and her maid
traveling to a new household, and during the trip, the
princess's maid assumes the princess's identity. **Want a
copy? We have a number of cool Grimm's collections.
Just e-mail!
Thank you for your help in solving the
mystery! I re-read it and it was therapeutic -- for some
reason, I was horrified at the thought of passing a dead
horse's head (not to mention having it speak to me) when I was
little.
There are at least three! Patty Cake by Elizabeth Moody, 80 pp., published 1974. Gorilla Baby: the Story of Patty Cake by Pearl Wolf, 32 pp., published 1974. Gentle Gorilla: the Story of Patty Cake by Susan Kohn Green, 303 pp., published 1978. The book by Wolf says it is illustrated with black and white photographs.
Lilian Garis, Outdoor Girls, 1910. There's an incident in this series when
the girls are on a hike and a passerby yells out asking if
they're suffragettes.
Lilian Garis (Laura Lee Hope), The
Outdoor Girls, 1913-1920. Thanks for this
suggestion of The Outdoor Girls series, but I'm not sure about
it. I've checked on this series (which I did encounter as a
child) but thus far haven't found the elements of the school
story that I recall. I realize increasingly that I may have
two series conflated in my mind, although I now also know that
Beverly Gray isn't one of them.
One detail I remember clearly is that the
mean teacher was identified as part of an unpleasant prank (at
Hallowe'en?) by a scrap of yellow-green cloth from her scarf or
blouse, tied on to a little effigy or doll that was supposed to
be frightening. She was in cahoots with one or more students.
There is a counterpart for the hostile students in The
Outdoor Girls of Deepdale, but not a counterpart of
the nasty teacher.
Apparently The Motor Girls series
also
involves the girls being mistaken for suffragettes, but I
haven't been able to check those texts.
Jessie Graham Flower, Grace Harlowe series, 1910+
I now think that the school part of the series I am looking for
is almost certainly the Grace Harlowe series (or rather, the
first part of the four Grace Harlowe series--the books that have
the characters in high school.) I'm still not at all certain
about the journey where the girls are mistaken for
suffragettes--that may indeed be the Outdoor Girls, as
was suggested, or another series from the same time. I haven't
been able to locate it specifically in any series I've been able
to check, but then I haven't been able to look at actual texts
of many of the possible books.
The British Library has a record for Elfin
Cobbler,
and other stories of Connaught, retold by Monica
Cosens, illustrated by Elsie Ann Wood, published by Thomas
Nelson & Sons, London [1914]. It says "Grandfather
Stories #4", but I don't find a series listing for any other
items.
Retold by F. E. Melton, Dick
Whittington and Other Stories of London,
c.1909. This is shown as "Grandfather Stories #3",
illustrated by Malcolm Patterson, Innes Fripp &
Skinner. Same publisher as #4.
Buckley, Helen Elizabeth, Grandmother
and
I, 1961.
"A child considers how Grandmother's lap is just right for those
times when lightning is coming in the window or the cat is
missing."
Buckley, Helen Elizabeth, Grandmother
and I, 1961. Wow-that was easy! Thank you so, so
much! When I first looked up that title, the image of the book
had different illustrations, and it didn't occur to me that
there might be a modernized version.Now I can look for an old
copy with the pictures I remember.
Grandmother and Machek
Manachek prob. misspelled. About
1900. The grandmother is telling her 3 grandchildren how she met
their grandfather. As a child she is left alone and
threatened by a tiger? The brave village boy tries to save her.
She wedges a wooden spoon in it's mouth. "And the boy grew up to
be your Grandfather"
Phyllis Green, Grandmother Orphan. This was also released at "It's me, Christy" I'm certain this is it. Here's the description: "Christy's "adopted blues" are cured by her truck-driving grandmother's surprising revelations"
Could be The Golden Egg Book by Margaret Wise
Brown, illus by Leonard Weisgard. A Big Golden Book, 1947.
No, it's not The Golden Egg Book
- that one is about a little bunny who was all alone, and found
an egg. He wondered what was inside the egg. Then it
cracked, and out popped a baby chick. And they lived
happily ever after.
Grandpa Bunny (Walt Disney
Golden Book), 1951.
I must be getting confused in my old age (or
with all these stumpers!): yes, it's definately Grandpa
Bunny Bunny. There's both a Little Golden Book
and a Big Golden Book version of it. Check out the Most Requested Page.
---
My "Stumper" is a children's book (I think it was a Golden
Book) about bunny rabbits who were Easter Bunnies. One of
the characters was Grandpa Bunny Bunny. It had pictures of
the bunnies coloring beautiful easter eggs. Then one of the
bunnies, a girl bunny, delivered the eggs. Can you help me? It
was a book I read to my little brother and then to my kids in
the 60's. I would like to read the story to my
grandchildren but I lost the book.
I think you're confusing two books, actually. Your keyword,
Easter Bunny magic shoes, refers to Dubois
Heywood's
The Country Bunny and The Little Gold Shoes.
But the description you write is definately for Grandpa Bunny Bunny.
Both have more info on other Loganberry pages, follow the links
for each.
---
Grandfather Bunny teaches his grandbunnies to paint, first it
is the spring flowers, then the Easter eggs, then the colors of
fall and the shadows of winter. When he dies, there is a
beautiful sunset, and everyone knows that Grandfather Bunny has
now been teaching the angels to paint. This is a
children's picture book, with beautiful illustrations. I
read it for my children in the 70's but my sister remembers it
from her childhood in the 50's. Have no idea about the title or
author, any help would be most appreciated, because I want my
grandchildren to share this wonderful story.
Just in time for Easter: Jane Werner's Grandpa
Bunny Bunny, published as both a Little Golden Book
and as a Big Golden Book. See more on the Most Requested Books page.
---
it's about a children's book about
bunnies and how they paint the skies the painted the sky for
Easter sunrise. I don't know the name or anything, but I loved
this -- and read it in the 50's -- it might have been a golden
book, not sure.
Sounds like Grampa Bunny Bunny... see both
the Solved Mysteries and Most Requested page for Jane Werner.
C91 The book is GRANDPA'S FARM
written and illustrated by James Flora, 1965. Grandpa
tells tall tales about his farm. One of them is "The Terrible
Winter '36". There is indeed a picture of a man, his gun, his
bullet and a bear all being frozen in mid-air. ~from a
librarian
There are several 'tall tales' about cold
days in the mountains, including the frozen bullet and frozen
shout stories. I believe I've seen a children's book similar to
the one described, but I'm not sure if it was a single story or
collection of tall tales. It might be this one - McBroom's
Ghost, by Sid Fleischman, illustrated by
Robert Frankenberg, published New York, Grosset & Dunlap,
1971 Weekly Reader, unpaginated, "The ghost comes
a-haunting when an "uncommon cold winter"
sets in, though it is "not so cold that an honest man would tell
fibs about it." That being said, farmer Josh McBroom does have a
tendency to stretch the truth quite a bit. He, his
wife and eleven children are amusing
characters."
Grandpa's Farm, written and
illustrated by James Flora, published Harcourt 1965, 32
pages. "Grandpa, the farmer, is almost as tall as a tree, but
not quite so tall as the wildly preposterous tales he spins
for little boys. He tells of the great wind of '34 that blew
him a fine blue barn; of Grandma's cow salve that could make
anything grow, from cows' tails to cornstalks; of the
miraculous productions of Little Hatchy Hen; and of the
terrible winter when conversation froze in the air and
remained unheard until summer." (Horn Book Oct/65 p.498)
---
My mohter used to read me a book, published before 1972.
I remember character named Cowboy Bob, I think he had a paint
horse. He told a lot of tall tales, this story involved a
big wind storm. He lost the door from his house, but when he fed
his chicken a doorknob, she laid a new door. The last
lines are something about another tall tale (possibly a
snowstorm?) and it ends: "But that's another story." The
illustrations are cartoonish. Appreciate any assistance.
Reminds me of Glen Rounds, but I can't think of a title
that fits.
C154. I don't suppose it could be any of the
bks abt Pecos Bill. This is the only one I have: Blassingame,
Wyatt. Pecos Bill rides a tornado.
Schroeder,
Ted
Reader's Digest Services, 1973.
Yeah, I was thinking this sounded an awful lot like Pecos Bill
myself (there are a _lot_ of versions of stories about him
available, and he's also supposed to have told a great many tall
tales). In one story he's supposed to have tamed and
ridden a cyclone (big windstorm?). You might try hunting
under that name and see what you turn up.
C154 I hope the person who wants this
book can take a leap of faith. I am almost 100% sure that the
book is GRANDPA'S FARM by James Flora.
It contains 4 tall tales: "The Big Wind of '34" "Grandma's Cow
Salve" "Terrible Winter of '36" and "Little Hatchy Hen". The
leap is that there isn't a Cowboy Bob (I will double check my
copy, but I don't remember a cowboy). But the wind storm
matches, the hen hatching a door from a doorknob, and even the
"that's another story". The illustrations are very distinctive.
And you might also be interested in GRANDPA'S GHOST
STORIES and the hen gets a book of her own in LITTLE
HATCHY HEN. ~from a librarian
---------------
Childrens illustrated book from
1970s. Farmer possibly going through the seasons where events
that happen to him are exagerated & funny (puts salve on
pumpkin making it grow huge & freezing while doing chores
with icicles growing from beard). Book had words & colored
pictures. From elementary school library.
Sid
Fleischman, McBroom series (McBroom's
Ghost, McBroom Tells the Truth). Sounds like some of the tall tales from
Fleischman's McBroom series. The icicles are probably from McBroom's Ghost.
The pumpkins are probably from McBroom Tells the Truth. There
are a number of books in the series. They've been reprinted many
times, with different illustrators, so if the pictures don't
quite look like the ones you remember, look for a different
printing.
James
Flora, Grandpa's Farm,
1965, approximate.
Though the tall tale elements of the McBroom farm
tales are similar, I think the person is looking for GRANDPA'S FARM
by James Flora.
Also see James
Flora's 1965
book, Grandpa's Farm: Four Tall
Tales. I don't
remember a pumpkin, but when a house lands on and breaks off a
cow's tail, the salve makes the tail grow back - and when put on
the other part of the tail, it grows a new cow! Also, there's a
big wind that blows a well out of the ground.
SOLVED: James Flora, Grandpa's Farm. I am so
grateful to have found this web site. After years of
searching for my favorite childhood book, my quest has finally
come to an end. Thank you so much for your assistance and
to the solver who got it right!
Childrens almanac called something like grandfather groundhog's almanac, tho I have had no luck with that title. Illustrated versions of seasons, weights & measures. Story about lucky bugs (water skating bugs) Endpapers in front have variousous animals doing summer activities, back endpapers have same with winter activities. C. 1960. I would love to find this it sparked a life-long fascination with the rhythyms of nature.
V29 GRANDPA'S GHOST STORIES
by James Flora, 1978~from a librarian
Thanks! that was a quick problem solved!
---
This is a book I used to borrow from my school library when I
was about 6-8 (1981-1983). It was a small school, with a
closet for a library, so most of the books were old. It
was most likely written in the 70's (maybe the 60's). It
was a slightly diturbing book about a boy who runs away and ends
up in the house with a monster in it. The book is fully
illustrated, but the only colors used are black, white, and
blue. There is a storm outside (I remember rain and
lightning), and in one scene there is a room (maybe in a
shed/garage) filled with bones. I think the author's or
illustrator's last name might be James. That's all I can
remember. Thank you.
This definitely GRANDPA'S GHOST
STORIES by James Flora, 1978. The
illustrations are black, white and blue. The grandfather is
telling his grandson what happened to him when he was a kid,
including getting trapped in a witch's cave full of spiders,
being kidnapped to a ghost's home, and
finding a haunted bag of bones.~from a
librarian
---
I am trying to locate a book from my past, unfortunately
I don't know the title or the author. The story starts out
on a rainy night, a boy staying at his grandparent's house is
scared by the lightning. The grandfather decides to calm
the boy down by telling him the story of how he met the
grandmother. The grandfather's story begins with him as a
young boy walking through the woods on his way home from a day
of ice skating. He gets chased by some monsters (I think –
memory's a bit fuzzy) and runs into the house of a witch (I
remember the house was on legs). Inside the house, there
is an owl who used to be a girl. The witch comes out and
(I believe) turns the boy into an animal. The boy and the
owl somehow escape and turn back to normal. The girl turns
out to be the grandmother, although the grandmother denies the
story in the end. The illustrations for this book were
incredible. I remember they were not only creepy, but
there was always a lot going on in the picture (there was always
something to see in the background). I have been searching
every library for the last twenty years with no luck.
Not a solution, but the house on legs
suggests Baba Yega. Perhaps a search among
the many Baba Yega stories will turn up the one
you seek.
This isn't a solution, I just have a
question regarding one of the comments left. Someone
mentioned I should check Baba Yega - is he the author?
The illustrator? Does anyone know any titles by him that
might push me in the right direction? I also remembered
that the witch turns the boy into a pig. Any small bits
of information brings me that much closer to the book.
Thanks!
Baba Yega was an Russian witch character in
many many folk tales. She lived in a house on chicken
legs!
James Flora, Grandpa's Ghost Stories. Not sure if the details match, but this
one does have the Grandpa telling ghost stories, the
thunderstorm and the detailed illustrations. The boy gets
turned into a spider (but it kind of looks like a pig, with
pointy ears and a snub nose) and escapes from the Warty Witch.
Joan Aitken, A necklace of raindrops. Not sure if this is any help, but I
remember a house that layed an egg in this collection of stories
with lovely illustrations.
Baba Yaga is the name of a witch who appears
in many stories, she lives in a house on legs.
Not a solution at all, but a suggestion. The
Baba Yaga (at least, that's how I spell it) is a witch from
Russian folklore. She lives in a house that stands up on
chicken legs, and flies around in a mortar and pestle.
There are LOTS of stories about Baba Yaga, but at least it may
be a starting point for your search.
James Flora, Grandpa's
Ghost Stories, 1978, copyright. Thank you for
solving this mystery!!! I have been searching for the
title of this book for the past ten years!!! I can't
thank you enough for all of your help! Thank you!
Thank you! Thank you!!!
---
I read this book
about 15 years ago. I can't remember the title, but the
stylized illustrations were in black, white and blue. A
little boy experiences the scary stories he hears - he gets
stuck in a cave with huge spiders, and sees a witch in her home
watching a commercial for elbow grease.
L243 This is
definitely GRANDPA'S
GHOST STORIES by James
Flora. I think S611 may be thinking of the same
book~from a librarian
James Flora, Grandpa's
Ghost Stories. Thank you!!! This is
definitely it. I found an image of the cover online
and memories just rushed back. I remember now that the
illustrations reminded me a little of Maurice Sendak.
---
I don't
have a title. The book was from 1983/84 - I was 7. It had to do
with a little boy who gets out of bed and encounters creepy
monsters. I remember the boy was eaten by a monster and
there was a picture from inside the stomach showing the boy.
somehow he escapes and makes it back to bed.
S611 I think this
person may be thinking of the same book as L243: GRANDPA'S GHOST STORIES by James Flora. Grandpa tells his grandson some
scary stories that supposedly happened to him when he was a kid.
There's a bag full of bones that becomes a hungry skeleton, a
warty witch in a cave full of spiders (the spiders were once
children) and a ghost with a werewolf as a pet. The werewolf
swallows the boy, and there's a picture of the boy in the
stomach with the rest of the stomach contents, and a diagram of
other body "parts" like hiccups, etc. Memorable illustrations
with lots of creepy detail.~from a librarian
Nightmare in My Closet.
Sounds
close to Nightmare
in
My Closet, where a small boy wakes up, noticing a big
hideous monster hiding in the aforesaid closet. The boy is not
very happy about this and goes after the monster with a
popgun, I don't remember him being eaten, instead he subdues
the monster who is really just a big crybaby. In the end the
boy lets the poor monster sleep in the bed with him, the last
page has several other monsters peering out of the closet and
grinning. Hope this helps.
Book Stumper # S611 is solved, the answer is 'Grandpa's ghost stories'
. Thank You so much for offering this wonderful
service.
Philip Turner, The Grange at High
Force Colonel Sheperton's Clock. Philip Turner wrote these and
possibly others, published by Oxford University Press. I think
they may be the ones
You might try CHORISTER'S CAKE
and A SWARM IN MAY by William Mayne. I
haven't read them for a long time, but they definitely take
place in a choristers' school.
Philip Turner, Colonel Sheperton's
Clock, The Grange at High Force, Sea Peril, War on the
Darnel, Skull Island. The
series referred to is definitely by Philip Turner. It is called
Darnley Mills. Details can be found on the web by
using a search engine and typing in "Philip Turner Darnley
Mills". There are 9 books in all
I sent in the query about choirboys and
their adventures. As soon as I saw the note that they
were The Grange at High Force and Colonel
Sheperton's Clock by Philip Turner I knew that was the
answer (somebody has suggested another alternative as
well). Thanks again, it's a great idea and
service! And my colleague tells me you will be featured
on NPR tomorrow morning, so I hope it goes well and you
enjoy the experience.
V9: Easy as pie. It's The Story of
Fairyfoot by Frances Browne from her book Granny's
Wonderful
Chair (1857). You can read the whole book online,
and the Fairyfoot
story. Prince Fairyfoot is made an outcast because of his
small feet, he falls in with the fairies and discovers a
princess from another land who is burdened with magically
overgrown feet. They both discover the magic as to how to change
back and forth according to which country they're
in. I know it well because I have the My
Book House Series (ed. Olive Beaupre Miller) and the
story is in vol. 2 or 3 - at least in that particular edition.
They kept changing. Very beautifully designed books, though not
with a lot of color in the illustrations - they didn't need it
that much.
Finaly, V9 - This story is actually by Frances
Hodgson
Burnett, not Frances Browne and is available in The
Racketty-Packetty House and Other Stories.
Re the last entry - I didn't read Racketty-Packetty
House, but Frances Hodgson Burnett was born
in 1849
and the above link will tell you that Granny's
Wonderful
Chair was written in 1857, and My Book House
also claims the Fairyfoot story comes from GWC.
(Frances Browne died in 1879.) What this says about RPH,
I don't know - maybe Burnett wrote some of it and helped pick
the rest of the stories?
V9: Mystery solved. In the preface to RPH,
it says: "Fairyfoot came from a story Mrs. Burnett read and
loved as a child, in a book called Granny's
Wonderful
Chair, written by a blind Irishwoman, Frances
Browne, in 1856. Being unable to find a copy she rewrote
it from memory, adding many delightful touches of her own". So far, I've only skimmed the Burnett -
but I think the original is better, IMHO.
Thank you, very much! It has been such a relief to put a
name to that story.
This may be it: Ruth Reuther, Gray
C
Circus Horse (Houghton Mifflin, 1970)
I finally got a copy of Gray C:
Circus Horse by Ruth Reuther off the web (question C61)
and you nailed it on the head! Thanks so much!
I've been trying to remember that one and get a copy for
years! Thank again!
Helen Griffiths, The
Greyhound, 1968,
copyright. I remember this Scholastic book
very well! It was post-WWII London, though, not Warsaw. A
beautiful story.
Hi there. I sent in a stumper
regarding an injured greyhound in WWII taken care of by a boy,
and the answer by Helen Griffiths (who may be the
author???? WOW!!!) is correct, I just saw the cover
of the book, practically made me cry. DECADES of looking,
you'd think I'd find a book entitled "The Greyhound," huh, ha
ha! Thank you so much!!!!!!!!!!! FANTASTIC
service!!! Worth every penny and more. Every child
should read this book. Because of the influence of this
book, I rescued over five thousand animals for a non-kill
shelter over 25 years, so the author should not wonder why all
those animals are greeting her in heaven when she goes!
I'd forgotten all about this book until I
read the query, but this sounds like one I read when I was
younger. It was
probably Scholastic Book Service, and it had
three friends or siblings. They turned into animals, and
their quests
made them face their worst fears. One
of the girls turned into a cat, and I remember she found a magic
ring and had to carry it in her mouth because she had no
hands. I think it was called STONE MAGIC. Aha!
It was Gray Magic by Andre Norton (and on
the cover it said, original title Steel Magic).
And here I never knew I had read Andre Norton!
Here are a few possibilities: The
Gray
Wolf and Other Stories by George Macdonald
( but the stories listed don't sound like Indian tales.)
Or more probably: Gray Wolf Stories Indian
mystery tales of Coyote, animals and men by Bernard
Sexton/Peter Gray Wolf, illus. by Gwenyth Waugh, published
by Macmillan in 1921, 1923, 1927 and by Caxton (Caldwell, Idaho)
in 1941 & 1946.
Lurline Bowles Mayol, The Talking
Totem Pole, 1930,
1943. There's no reference to "Gray Wolf", but the
reference to
a yellow-covered book of Indian legends from
the West Coast might posibly be to this one. The stories
are children's retellings, with a framing story, of Northwest
and Northwest Coast myths and legends, and quite engaging.
There have been several editions of the book -- mine is a 1943
printing from Binfords & Mort (Portland, OR), but the
copyright page indicates a prior edition (1930, Saalfield
Publishing Co.). Most I have seen feature the same
full-color cover, a predominantly yellow background with an
illustration of a wooden cabin flanked by several totem poles,
and an evergreen forest behind it. Even if this is not the right
book, it's worth a look.
Peter Gray Wolf (ps of Bernard
Sexton), Gray Wolf Stories: Mystery legends of grey wolf,
coyote and other Idaho Indian folk heros, 1941,
approximately. I have not read the book, but I just want
to note that I saw a 1943 second edition of this book on
eBay, and it has a bright yellow cover, with black and red
printing and artwork. I'd say we're getting warm...
Peter Graywolf, Gray Wolf
Stories, Indian Mystery Tales,1948.I have a copy,
yellow as you say. 1948 published by Wells Gardner, Darton &
Co, Redhill, Surrey. Various tales from several tribes.
Illustrated by Gwenyth Waugh. Coverplate illustration
red/black/white, rest are black/white ink drawings.
Campbell, Janet, The Great Alphabet
Race. Golden,
1972. "Each event in the great animal race is described
using words that stress a different letter of the alphabet."
The answer given in blue is definitely the book I
remember. I wonder why it never came up in my previous
searches on animals, races and alphabet books. Thanks so
much.
Margaret Lovett, The Great and
Terrible Quest, 1967.
This is a wonderful story that I've kept since my
childhood. The jacket blurb starts: "Silver hidden in
the gold, young man hidden in the old, laughing lord with
weeping eyes"--a few lines of this mysterious verse and a
golden ring are the only cludes the boy and the old man have as
they set out on the great and terrible quest in a moving and
suspenseful tale representing the finest tradition of
fantasy. There are various copies for sale online, and to
my surprise they are mostly very expensive! Others must
treasure this book too! Enjoy. Now I'll read my copy
through for the umpteenth time. <g>
LOVETT Margaret, Great and terrible
quest. Complete
rhyme is - Silver hidden in the gold/ Young man hidden in
the old/ Laughing lord with weeping eyes/ Bring king and ring
before sunrise.
S131 silver hidden in gold: could this be The
Great
and Terrible Quest, by Margaret Lovett? (See
R36 for details) It is set in a medievaloid world and features a
lost heir and a mysterious verse that provides clues.
---
I can't remember the title, author, etc. I used to borrow
it from the library and I know the alphabetical section I got it
from meant the author was between G and L in the
alphabet... It was about a boy who went on some kind of
journey to find a ring which had to be matched with another
ring, the whereabouts of which he didn't know, but in the end
turned out to be hidden in the inlay of the musical instrument
(lute?) which he carried with him. I seem to remember some
of the decoration on the lute (?) was an ivory rose. The
setting was kind of mediaeval, I think. The book must have
been written before the mid-70s, was hardback and I have the
vague remembrance of the cover being pale in colour, with a
dustjacket, and a musical instrument as its illustration, just a
line drawing, maybe.
Not 100% sure because I'm just going with
the book summary, but maybe the title or details will ring a
bell. THE GREAT & TERRIBLE QUEST by Margaret
Lovett, 1967, 107 pages. Summary reads that a young boy
mistreated by his grandfather goes off on a quest with a man who
has lost his memory. All they have as clues to help them are a
ring and a verse.
A slightly different summary of the Lovett
book: "Set in the middle ages, a quick-witted orphan, abused
by his grandfather, risks his life to care for a wounded knight
who is on a quest but can't remember what he is searching
for."
I saw the cover of Great and Terrible
Quest on Ebay, and it is a sketchy drawing of a
lute, in white, on a brown background, which does seem to match
the description.
More info on the suggested title The
Great and Terrible Quest, by Margaret Lovett,
published Faber 1967, 170 pages. "A boy of ten, abusively
treated by a robber-baronish grandfather and his band of hired
killers, manages to escape with a dog and an injured knight, and
all make their way to the City. The reader gradually realises,
long before young Trad, that the boy is the true heir to the
throne which must be claimed by entering the City gates between
sunset and sunrise within a week of the old king's death. He is
a nice child and his adventures should hold young readers, being
a sort of endurance test of gruelling marches, climbs, struggles
to keep the wounded man going and ending with a grand fight near
the close. Lighter moments are provided by the fearful juggler
the pair pick up while disguised as a minstrel and his
granddaughter. The ingredients are familiar: wicked Lords
Regent, a kind Wise Woman, an unfinished verse which provides a
clue to those seeking the heir, a lost
ring - but they are well handled." (JB
Apr/67 p.125)
Margaret Lovett, The Great and
Terrible Quest. I
concur with the other "answerers." This book is a favorite of
mine, which I have read and re-read. The boy is named
Trad, and early on he finds the ring and fits it into the
inlay in an old lute he's found and repaired. The
significance of both ring and lute become apparent toward the
end of the story.
I put a request in regarding this book
ages ago and had wondered if anyone had found out what it was
- all I could remember were bare details about the plot and
the appearance of the book - indeed I had forgotten which
website I had left the question on! However, I see that
your "sleuths" have been busy and solved the mystery!
This book and "The House called Hadlows" by Victoria Walker
are two which really stood out from my childhood - and now I
see that they are both eminently collectible, which confirms
what good books they both are! Thank you so much - I
shall keep the details safe, incase I stumble upon the book in
a junk shop!
Traditional (Illustrator Wallace Tripp), A great Big Ugly Man Came Up and
Tied his Horse to Me, 1974. The
wonderful illustrator Wallace Tripp complied two volumes of
lesser-known traditional nursery rhymes and populated them with
animal characters. The second volume is Granfa Grigg had a pig.
One of these two is absolutely your book!You can find a cover
image here:
http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51vKa0t-f9L._SL500_AA240_.jpg
I was standing in the street, as quiet as could be, when a great
big ugly man came up and tied his horse to me!
Yes .. this is it .... Thanks for
providing the forum!!!
A similar theme to Mr. Pine's Purple House, except
in that book it's house painting, not town painting. Still,
the era is right, so check the Most
Requested Page for Leonard Kessler, just in case.
Lobel, Arnold, The Great Blueness and
Other Predicaments,
Harper & Row, 1968. Is this the one you're looking
for? At the beginning of the book, there was no color in
the world and they called it The Great Greyness. Then a
wizard invented the color blue and gave some to his neighbors
who painted everything blue - that was The Great Blueness - but
it was too depressing. So he invented yellow and they
painted everything yellow - but it was too bright and blinding
and everyone got headaches. The Great Redness made
everyone angry. But then the pots of color overflowed and
the colors mixed together. The people were excited by all the
new colors, and "after a short time they found good places for
each one.....At last the world was too beautiful ever to be
changed again."
---
I am 35 and read this
children's book in the late 70s early 80s. It tells the
story of a boy or a man who lives in a town with no colour ie
the town is black and white. I think he is a painter and
decides to paint the town but can't decide which colour to use
so he starts with red but this colour makes the people in the
town too angry so then he decides to paint the town blue but
this makes the town's people very sad and on he goes, trying
green, yellow and so forth and he can't seem to get it right
because people experience different moods depending on the
colour he chooses. One day as he is carrying his paints or
pallet, he takes a tumble and all his paint mixes together and
then he realizes he has found the perfect colour combination
comprising of blue, green, red etc, so he paints the grass
green, the sky blue and so forth. I am on the hunt for two
other childhood books. I am an avid children's book collector
and finding the three elusive books would mean so much to me!
Arnold Lobel, The Great Blueness. This is a favorite of mine
too! A Wizard invents blue, which makes people sad, then red,
making people angry, then yellow, which gives everyone a
headache. He tries to invent other colors, but just keeps coming
up with those three until his pots overflow and mix together,
creating all the colors. People then paint the world with all
different colors and everyone is happy!
Arnold Lobel, The
Great Blueness and other Predicaments, 1968, copyright. One of my favorite
read-a-louds, children love seeing the town come alive with
color, even though the wizard has trouble getting the colors
just right.
Lobel, Arnold, The Great Blueness and other
Predicaments, 1968. When a wizard
discovered that each color he invented for the colorless
world had a different emotional effect on people, he luckily
had an accident which resulted in red apples, green leaves,
and yellow bananas.
Arnold Lobel, The Great Blueness and
Other Predicaments. Is it Arnold Lobel's book The Great
Blueness? A wizard lives in a gray
world. He makes blue paint and the villagers use it
to paint EVERYTHING blue, but that makes people sad.
It goes through the spectrum of colors and no color by
itself works until the wizard accidentally mixes the
paints and then the villagers paint the world in all
different colors.
Arnold Lobel, The Great Blueness.
Incredible! I never dreamed that I would find this
book. It's equivalent to winning the
lottery. I am going to hunt down a first
edition. Thank you so much, I can't even begin
to explain how happy and grateful I am.
John D. Fitzgerald, Great Brain at
the Academy. A
possibility. Boarding school, candy store and elementary reading
level might be from the Great Brain series. See the solved
mysteries page G for more info.
John D. Fitzgerald, The Great Brain
at the Academy.
Could be this one if candy was not allowed.
This might possibly be The Great
Brain at the Academy, by Fitzgerald, which
is in the Solved section.
I just wanted to let you know that you
solved my mystery of a beloved book from my childhood Great
Brain at the Academy. I loved this book as a child and I
credit this book for fostering my love of books. I am
now the mother of a 5-month-old little boy, Jacob Ryan, and I
was desperately trying to remember the name of this book so I
could share it with my son when I read to him at night. I
hoped this book would be something I could pass on to him and
with your website, I was able to do just this. Thank you so
much for having this amazing resource! I have let everyone I
know in on your site. Again, many thanks for enabling me to
remember the name of the book.
#F55--Frontier brothers' adventures:
I would suggest a look at Magical Melons, the
sequel to Caddie Woodlawn, by Carol Ryrie
Brink. Set in Wisconsin in the 1860s, some of the
adventures do concentrate on Caddie's two brothers, Warren and
Tom, and it's a wonderful book written at the same time as the Little
House series and very much in that vein.
John D. Fitzgerald, The Great Brain,
Me and My Little Brain,
etc. 1967 - 1974, reprinted early 1980's as Dell
paperbacks. Could the poster be thinking of the "Great
Brain" series? They were set in frontier Utah in the
1890's, and although there were actually 3 brothers in the
family (plus one adopted), the main characters were the
narrator, John or "J.D." and his brother Tom. (Their older
brother was away at school.) They had a lot of adventurous
episodes in each book. I think some public libraries still
have these around.
---
1950-1960? I remember a mischievious boy who was in an
orphanage or boarding school. He carved keys out of wood
to try to get out of school. Soap may have somehow been
involved. He used candy to trade for things. He
might have hid something by the stairs. His name may be
Tom or Thomas.
Aldridge's Story of a Bad Boy?
John D Fitzgerald, The Great Brain at
the Academy
JD Fitzgerald, The Great Brain at the
Academy. This is
undoubtedly the book! Great Mercer Mayer illustrations. Also
recommended: Me and My Little Brain, from the
same series - they have been reissued recently.
---
It was a series I read in early 80's
about a boy telling stories of his big brother's ( I think)
shenanigans. He would say that his brother's mind "was
going like 60mph" i.e. as fast as the trains. I
seem to remember that all the stories involved them trying to
make money. One of the stories involved the
brothers building a wooden rollercoaster from the barn and
then charging all the kids in the neighborhood for a ride.
John D Fitzgerald, The Great Brain
at the Academy
I was looking at your website and my answer is B341
!!!!!!!!!! I have been trying to locate these books
for YEARS! THank you so much!
---
I didn't look to see if its one of your
stumpers or not, I paid first, before I figured out how to add
a stumper..but the book was The Great Brain. All
I remembered was there were three brothers, one of them got
the chicken pox/measles on purpose so he'd be the first one
over something for once, and his punishment was the silent
treatment. Also, I knew I associated the words "Great"
and Fitzgerald (I thought Fitzgerald was in the title..)
Anyway, it was a favorite book of mine as an upper elementary
student, but then I lost it, and could never remember the
title to look for it again. Thanks for jigging my memory
with your great service.
---
I read a book back in the 70's about a
boy attending boarding school. The only vivid memory I
can recall is the boy made a model of a key. Then he
carved the key out of wood. He kept the key hidden in
his room. I can't remember why he needed the key.
It may have been a mystery book? This book has been on
my mind for several years. Please help!
John D. Fitzgerald, The Great Brain
at the Academy
J.D. Fitzgerald, The Great Brain at
the Academy. I
seem to remember that in this book the boy makes an impression
of a key with soap and then makes a wooden one based on the
impression.
John D. Fitzgerald (author), Mercer
Mayer (illustrator), The Great Brain at the Academy,
1972. This is the fourth book in the eight book Great
Brain series: The Great Brain, More Adventures of the
Great Brain, Me and My Little Brain, The Great Brain at the
Academy, The Great Brain Reforms, The Return of the Great
Brain, The Great Brain Does it Again, and The
Great Brain is Back. From the publisher:
"Everyone knew that Tom Fitzgerald, alias The Great Brain, would
get into trouble when he went off to school at the strict
Catholic Academy for Boys in Salt Lake City. But no
one--including Tom--knew just how much. His tongue got him into
fifteen demerits worth of difficulty the very first day, but his
great brain refused to be defeated as Tom set out to outwit the
eighth grade, the superintendent, and finally the bishop of the
state of Utah. Whether it's running an illegal candy store or
earning a reputation as the fastest potato peeler in the world
or introducing the newfangled sport of basketball at the
academy, Tom's great brain never falters. And his money-making
schemes rise to new heights--or depths--faced with the challenge
of rigorous boarding-school life." For more information,
see The Great Brain Series on the Solved Mysteries "G" page.
John D. Fitzgerald, The Great Brain
at the Academy,
1970's. This sounds like the Great Brain series. In one of
them (at the Academy) the Great Brain figures out a way to get
into town to buy candy. He makes a wooden key by first pressing
the key into soap, and then carving a key out of wood in that
likeness. Could this be it? It's not a mystery, more of an
adventure story.
John D Fitzgerald, The Great Brain At
The Academy. It's
possible this could be The Great Brain At The Academy,
one in the series by Fitzgerald, about a kid named Tom, aka the
"Great Brain" who was very smart, and his siblings. I
don't remember it too well, but I think there was a storyline in
the Academy book, when Tom is off at a Catholic boarding school,
in which Tom manufactures a duplicate key to out of wood.
I think maybe he made a duplicate key to the kitchen, so that he
could swipe food on the nights they served liver, because he
hated liver and was always hungry on the nights they served
it. The books were set in either the late 1800s or early
1900s, as best I can recall.
J.D. Fitzgerald, The Great Brain at
the Academy.
Sounds like The Great Brain again. The 'Great Brain', Tom,
carves a key out of wood to help him sneak in and out of school.
John D. Fitzgerald, The Great Brain
at the Academy.
Tom, known as The Great Brain, joins his older brother at a
Jesuit boarding school. Tom operates an illegal candy
store at the academy. I think he does this by making a
model of a key -- pressing it into soap, then using the soap to
make a wooden model -- and keeping his candy behind the locked
door. Also in this book, Tom gets fifteen demerits on his
first day and spends the rest of the semester trying not to get
caught for any of his swindles (20 demerits would get him kicked
out), and Tom pretends to have gotten a letter from the Pope
approving a basketball tournament at the school.
This might be The Great Brain At The
Academy, one of the Great Brain series by John
D. Fitzgerald. The narrator's brother, Tom (a/k/a
The Great Brain), attends a Catholic boarding school for boys in
Provo, Utah and gets into his usual mischief. At one point
he steals a key, makes an impression of it in soap, and uses the
soap impression to carve a duplicate key out of wood. I
think the key lets him into an unused storage room so that he
can lower himself down the academy wall from the storage room
window to go buy candy in the town (which he then sells to the
boys back at the academy at a huge profit). Hope this
helps!
John D. Fitzgerald, The Great Brain
at the Academy. I
think there's a scene with Tom making a key in The Great Brain
at the Academy. It's been a while, but I think he was either
trying to use it to open the kitchen (because he hated the food
they served) or to get out of the building to run his candy
store.
B372: Almost certainly The Great
Brain at the Academy. See Solved Mysteries.
John D. Fitzgerald, The Great Brain at the Academy,
1972. That is it! The mystery has been solved. This
website is terrific! Thank you!
---
Hi, Back in the very early 80's I think, I read a series of
books set in the late 1800's (I think.) They were mostly
about 2 brothers, the older one (Seth?) always getting into
trouble. The younger brother narrated the story (?) Some
scenes I remember: Some one builds a wooden chute-the
chute roller coaster thingy in the town, a watch on a chain is
in one story, and someone is usually getting "swindled".
No titles, author in my memory at all!!! Help.
B409: Certainly the Great Brain
series (illustrated by Mercer Mayer) by John D. Fitzgerald,
also the author of the 1950s book Papa Married a Mormon
- a must-read, since it's revealed, among other things, that Tom
actually became a Mormon and later, a missionary to the Far
East! There are eight books in the series. See Solved Mysteries.
Oh, and they didn't live as long ago as the books say - John was
born either in 1906 or 1907. I'd love to know why he changed the
time frame.
Fitzgerald, John D., The Great Brain, 1967. I suspect that this is the series
you are thinking of. They are narrated by the younger brother
and take place in the time period you remember. The older
brother is always using his "great brain" to figure out ways to
make a buck, usually with disasterous results.
Fitzgerald, John D. This is probably
one of the Great Brain books. It's not the first
one, but other than that, I'm not sure which it is.
John D. Fitzgerald, The Great Brain
Does It Again (+ others
in series), 1975. This has to be the Great Brain book
series, by John D. Fitzgerald, illustrated by Mercer
Mayer. These books are set in Utah, in the late 1800's -
early 1900's, and follow the adventures of three Mormon
brothers, Sweyn (the oldest), Tom (aka The Great Brain), and JD
(the youngest, who also serves as narrator). The boys do have a
friend named Seth. Tom is typically the main character of the
stories, and is often swindling someone, embarking on some money
making scheme, or just getting into trouble. The Great
Brain Does it Again contains the story in which Tom builds a
chute-the-chute (from the barn roof to the ground). He charges
other kids to ride on it, until one kid breaks his leg and Tom's
father makes him tear it down. Other titles in the series
include The Great Brain, The Return of the Great Brain,
The Great Brain Reforms, The Great Brain at the Academy,
More Adventures of the Great Brain, and Me
and My Little Brain.
John D. Fitzgerald, The Great Brain. This is the Great Brain series. There are
three brothers, and the exploits of middle brother Tom, a
juvenile con-man, are narrated by his younger brother J.D.
John D. Fitzgerald, The Great Brain
Does It Again.
You must be thinking of The Great Brain Does It Again?
I think that is the book in The Great Brain Series that has the
"shoot the chute" episode...???
John D. Fitzgerald, The Great
Brain series.
This sounds like The Great Brain series, which begins with The
Great Brain and has several other books about the
same characters. Set in Utah, the stories have three brothers,
Seth, T.D., and J.D. T.D. is The Great Brain and drags his
brothers, especially J.D. into all kinds of schemes, including
various ways of swindling neighbor kids out of their belongings.
These might be the Soup and Me
series by Robert Newton Peck. Two boys and their Tom
Sawyerish adventures in a small town in Vermont.
John Fitzgerald, The Great
Brain. This
sounds very much like the "Great Brain" series. It's a
series of 7 or 8 books about a family. Tom is the
"swindler" brother that is always thinking up schemes-
J.D. is the younger brother who is the narrator.
John D. Fitzgerald. This is the
Great Brain series! I used to love these
books as a kid! Largely autobiographical, told from the
younger brother's perspective, all about his swindling older
brother ... who does build a rollercoaster in their yard
and charge people for rides in one of the books, but I don't
recall which one.
John Fitzgerald, The Great Brain Does
It Again. I know
that someone was named Seth, but not one of the main
characters. The Great Brain was about a younger brother
describing the adventures of his scheming older brother,
Tom. Tom liked swindling people for money or candy.
B409 Sounds like the GREAT BRAIN
books by John Dennis Fitzgerald~from a librarian
---
Childrens books I read in early 1970's about young boy and his
adventures in late 1800's in western U.S. (maybe Utah) He was
always scheming ways to trick people and make money. Kind of
like Tom Sawyer. I remember a camping trip into the hills.
John Fitzgerald, The Great Brain. I would guess the "Great Brain"
series. They were all published between 1967 and 1976 and
take place in Utah in the late 1800s. The concept sounds
the same.
John D. Fitzgerald, The Great Brain. Fitzgerald wrote seven
semi-autographical fiction books about Tom, the Great Brain,
whose adventures (centered on making money) are narrated by his
brother J.D. An eighth book in the series was compiled
from completed chapters found after his death.
Fitzgerald, John, The Great Brain
(series). This is
definitely the series you are looking for - I don't know which
book in particular you remember.
U40: The Great Brain series.
See Solved Mysteries. The author John D. Fitzgerald's
100th anniversary is, reportedly, in 2007.
John D. Fitzgerald , The Great Brain
Series, 1967-??.
J.D. narrates the tales of his older brother's great amazing
brain. Among other adventures, the boys are sent to a
Catholic boarding school, have the first toilet in town, teach a
Greek boy to fit in, and catch fish using phosphoresence.
Fitzgerald, John, The Great Brain, 1967. This has to be The Great Brain
series. "The exploits of the Great Brain of Adenville,
Utah are described by his younger brother, frequently the victim
of the Great Brain's schemes for gaining prestige or
money." Some of the other titles are Me and My
Little Brain, The Great Brain Does it Again, The Great Brain
is Back, The Great Brain Reforms, and The
Great Brain Robbery. An excellent series!
The Great Brain by Fitzgerald is correct! Thank you so
much for helping me find this series after so many years. Your
website and readers are awesome.
Condition Grades |
Fitzgerald, John D. Me and My Little Brain. illus by Mercer Mayer. Dell Yearling, 1971. Fourth Paperback printing, 1976. VG. $5 |
|
Stan McMurtry, Great Bungee Venture, 1977. 100% sure
No chance this is L. Frank Baum's A
Kidnapped Santa Claus (1904), is there? I
never actually read it, so I
can't compare the storylines.
I don't think I've read A Kidnapped
Santa Claus either but I don't think that's it because
I remember the book I'm looking for being reasonably modern -
cars, escalators, etc etc. Thanks anyway!
Jean Van Leeuwen,The Great Christmas
Kidnapping Caper,
1975. I don't believe I've read this since circa the time
it was first published, but it's still on my shelf next to its
precursor, The Great Cheese Conspiracy, and still
prominent enough in my psyche for me to instantaneously know
exactly to what the inquiry was referring! Here's the blurb for
The Great Christmas Kidnapping Caper (my edition,
incidentally, spells it Kidnaping, which is
apparently a valid variant): "Settled in a toy department
dollhouse for the winter, Marvin the Magnificent and his gang
of mice, Fats and Raymond, make friends with the store's Santa
Claus. The months ahead promise to be cozy and plentiful for
the three mice--until one morning Santa disappears. Marvin
suspects foul play, and he's right! In the rollicking tale
that follows, he and his gang undertake the dangerous mission
of solving the great Christmas kidnapping. Whether they're
collecting clues, setting booby traps or embarking on zany
rescue missions, Marvin, Fats and Raymond are a hilarious
trio." Now I'm going to have to reread this!
Fantastic website, by the way! I'm not being hyperbolic in
saying it's an invaluable service to humankind. These books
helped form us, and finding them again is to rediscover a
long-lost part of ourselves.
Fabulous - that definitely sounds like it! I found one
copy for $150 (Australian) so if you can find something cheaper
that would be nice! Thanks a lot.
---
mouse lives in department store, weekly reader book club,
early 70's. I DONT REMEMBER MUCH BUT YOURE SO GOOD AT
THIS! THERE WAS A MOUSE WHO LIVED IN A DEPARTMENT STORE-MACY'S?
DOLLHOUSE. IT MIGHT HAVE TAKEN PLACE AT CHRISTMAS TIME. ANY
IDEAS?
How about Charley the Mouse Finds
Christmas by Wayne Carley (c1972, Garrard
Pub. Co.). "On Christmas Eve a mouse is lonesome in his empty
department store home." Another mouse/store book isThe
Great Diamond Robbery by Leon Harris (c1985,
Antheneum) but it's much later that the one you described.
Russell Hoban, The Mouse and His
Child. This one
is about a set of windup mice, a father and son, who begin
their lives living in a shop window in a dollhouse. They
are sold at Christmastime, quickly broken and discarded. The two
of them begin to live the life of tramps, eventually battling
some real rats who live in the dump.
Van Leeuwen, Jean, The Great
Christmas Kidnaping Caper, 1975. I loved this one too! Santa Claus
has been kidnaped! It's one of a series of books about the mice
who live at Macy's.
thanks so much! I'm going to check the library now. the carly
book sounds familiar but i defititely remember gimbels and a
rival santa so my guess is the van leeuwen book will be it.
thanks again.
The book I'm looking for (there may have been more than one
with the same author and characters) was one I read when I was
little in Cambridge, Mass. in the mid- to late 70s. I remember
it being a somewhat smaller-size book (maybe 6" x 8", for
example, rather than a full-size picture book). This book is
about a boy, accompanied by his dog, who is enticed into a very
appealing bakery / pastry shop full of cream puffs and cakes.
The owner of the shop is a guy with a big white beard and
glasses who is some kind of evil magician. Once they get inside,
they become trapped, I think. In the illustrations, the shapes
and people have sort of round edges with a lot of contour, and
at least the way I'm remembering them now, were a little like R.
Crumb's drawings (without the black lines or edges, and I think
with softer colors.) I especially remember that the
illustrations made the clothes the characters wore look slightly
puffy and soft (I think the boy wore bell-bottom jeans, and the
evil magician / baker might have worn a robe with stars on it at
one point). The characters' eyes and faces were very expressive,
and the cakes and pastries looked extremely tempting and
fascinating. The appeal of the confections / cakes were the
focus at the beginning. I can almost remember the boy's name; I
know it was something very common and probably had 2 syllables
(like 'Andy' or something). Anyway, I hope there's someone else
that remembers these books!
This is THE GREAT CUSTARD PIE PANIC
by Scott Corbett, 1974. You might also be interested
there are two more books about Nick, his dog, and the evil Dr.
Merlin. There's DR. MERLIN'S MAGIC SHOP, 1973 and
THE FOOLISH DINOSAUR FIASCO, 1978.~from a
librarian.
Corbett, Scott, The Great Custard Pie
Panic, 1974. "On
a walk through the fog, Nick and his dog discover a wonderful
bakery but the owner turns out to be the magician, Dr. Merlin."
This may be Harold Goodwin, Top
Secret:
Alligators (NY:Bradbury Press, 1975). My favorite
appearance of this urban legend is in Pynchon's V.
I was wrong in guessing that this is Top
Secret:
Alligators; it's probably Peter Lipman's The
Great
Escape or the Sewer Story (NY: Golden, '73), which
is notably tall (12-15"). But I still say Pynchon's V has
the
best NYC alligators. (And I'm a NYC native.)
Wonderful! Thank you for your
help. I did a quick web search on the titles that you
suggested and found a site with a picture of the cover.
The book is Peter Lipman's The
Great Escape or the Sewer Story (NY: Golden, '73). Next logical
question, do you have one or know where I can get one and at
what cost?
Top Secret: Alligators! written
and
illustrated by Harold Goodwin, published Bradury Press
1974. "A comic escape story with the most unlikely heroes
and heroines - the fabled alligators that live in the city
sewers! Beneath the warm humor is a lightly handled plea for
all wild creaturs in these polluted times. Black and white
illustrations. Ages 7-10." (HB Oct/74 p.17 pub ad)
---
1973. I came upon this book in the
Western Michigan University Library as an undergraduate.The
book was about oppressed alligators who had been discarded by
pet owners who purchased them when they were small and could
no longer accomodate them as they grew larger. Supporting the
urban myth of alligators in the sewer systems of New York,
these unsuspecting creatures were flushed down toilets where
they grew to be an adult oppressed minority. The savvy adult
alligators, who, by the way, educated, clothed and fed
themselves from human throw-aways, decided to organize in
union fashion, in order to make their way out of the sewers.
This book is a left wing organizer's dream. I'm looking for
it, not only for myself, but for a friend's upcoming 50th
birthday. (She is a union negotiator). It would be great to
find this book. It was really entertaining and very well
written.
I had not submitted the $2 payment yet when, after going
through about 400 books on Amazon's website, I came accross a
book from the right time period which may be it. The book is
named Top Secret Alligators. I sent for it hoping that
this is the one. I am sending out my $2 payment, however, just
because I think what you are doing is a truly great
service and I want to support your work. So, if you choose
to hold back on the posting of "ANYS", feel free to do so. I
will let you know if I found it once the book arrives.
Thank you.
HRL: Actually, I think it's the Giant Golden Book by Peter
Lipman called The Great Escape or the Sewer Story,
1973. Let me know.
H35 humphrey the horrible: there is a
character of this name in The Great Ghost Rescue,
by Eva Ibbotson, illustrated by Giulio Maestro,
published Walck 1975, 135 pages. "The stately haunted homes
of England are being transformed by real estate developers
into holiday camps and skating rinks, and the unhappy,
dispossessed ghosts are desperately in need of new haunting
grounds. A young ghost, Humphrey the Horrible (he is called
the Horrible to encourage him, since unfortunately his
ectoplasm is pink and fluffy and he has difficulty
disappearing completely), seeks help and finds it in Rick, a
sympathetic schoolboy. Rick and Humphrey lead a gaggle of
ghosts - including Humphrey's mother, a Hag whose specialty is
horrible smells; his father, a Gliding Kilt; his brother
George, a Screaming Skull; and his sister, Wailing Winifred -
to the Prime Minister to ask for sanctuary. A nasty nobleman
attempts to have them exorcised, but they are rescued by
Humphrey, now the Heroic." (HB Dec/75 p.593)
Ibbotson, Eve., The Great Ghost
Rescue. Macmillan
1975. Could be this one - the date is right. "When your
father is
the legless ghost of a fierce Scottish
soldier and your mother is a malodorous hag, you would surely be
the most horrible specter to haunt a ruin. But sadly, the only
thing horrible about Humphrey the Horrible is his name. Humphrey
has a great destiny, involving all the ghosts of Britain."
Samuel & Zoa Swayne, Great-Grandfather
in
the Honey Tree, 1949. A
tall tale of how Great-Grandfather went out to net some geese,
and came home with a barrel of honey, a bear, a fish, a
partridge, a deer, seven wild turkeys, as well as the net of
geese.
Yes! That's it. I'd forgotten 90% and had
half the other 10% wrong but you nailed it. I found a copy and
there's no doubt. Thanks for helping to scratch an old man's
nostalgic itch.
This poster is describing Great
Swedish Fairy Tales illustrated by John Bauer.
The book was translated by Holger Lundbergh and the
tales were compiled by Elsa Olenius. It was published in
1973 by Delacorte Press/Seymour Lawrence.
Ha, the trolls should have tipped me off. (Not to mention the
gloomy mood of the stories.) Maybe the moose (actually an elk)
misguided me since I read it in Maine and thought maybe it had
been written there! I see I was way off from the original dates
- John Bauer died in 1918!
A6 - I guess it's always hard to find a specific anthology, but not so hard to find individual stories. The writer is looking for Leiningen Versus the Ants, a thriller that I remember anthologized in a high school collection. My local library has it in a collection called Great Tales of Terror and the Supernatural, ed by H.A Wise and Phyllis Fraser. The author is listed as Carol Stephenson. Thank you for a delightful website.
S53 Shark headed boy
This sounds like it could be THE
GREAT WHITE MAN-EATING SHARK: A CAUTIONARY TALE by Margaret
Mahy, 1990 The boy wants the cove to himself so he
pretends to be a shark, but then a female shark comes along...
Thank you for thinking of me! I'm not
certain this is the book, as I recall the boy didn't want to
be a
shark, but his head was shaped like a
shark. I'm going to try to interlibrary loan it to see
if it is the one. Thank you so much for giving me this
title.
The Great White Man Eating Shark: a
Cautionary Tale by Margaret Mahy, published
Scholastic, "Norvin is a boy who looks like a shark. When he
straps a homemade dorsal fin to his back, all the other
swimmers run for the beach. He loves having the water to
himself - until a real man eating shark comes along!"
hoover, helen, great wolf and the
good woodsman.Could
this be it? The words to the story are available on the web. The
cover illustration that comes up when you do an internet search
is of a recent reprint - the original cover was much different.
I just can't remember if the trees in the original illustrations
are birch or not. But anything by Helen Hoover is worth reading
anyway.
I submitted this one a couple of weeks
ago and forgot about it. Someone answered it, and it is
CORRECT, thank you so much for your help
Jill Paton Walsh, The Green Book, 1982. I am positive this is the book you are
looking for. It is one of my favorites.
Jill Paton Walsh, The Green
Book. Absolutely the book you're looking for-
a young girl travels with her father and siblings to a new
planet, humanity's last hope. The colonists work together
to build houses and try to grow food on this strange planet, but
the wheat comes up brittle like glass. She keeps a diary
of what happens.
---
Children's or Middle Grade
Sci-Fi/Fantasy novel about humans colonizing or fleeing to a new
world. The new world's grass was not really grass; it was like
glass, and cut the feet of the first people (children, I think)
off of the ship because they were wearing thin paper ship-shoes.
Jill Paton Walsh, The Green Book, 1985, approximate. I believe
this is the book you are looking for. "When
a group of Britons leave a dying Earth to live on the planet
Shine, the adults find it inhospitable. Through the courage of
the children, they are able to survive."
Jill Paton
Walsh, The Green Book. This one comes up so often (with the exact same detail
recalled) that I know it without ever having seen a copy.
Jill Paton Walsh , The Green Book, 1982, approximate. I found it! The
blurb reads: When a group of Britons leave a dying Earth to live
on the planet Shine, the adults find it inhospitable. Through
the courage of the children, they are able to survive.
it would be too easy for G7 to be Go
Away
Big Green Monster by Ed Emberley. A color
concept picture book with cut outs and the monster that appears
and disappears piece by piece.
Thanks for your response...I might not
have been too specific with my request. Green-eyed Monster is about a young girl working at a fish
cannery for a summer (assuming Pacific Northwest) and some of
her adventures. I also seem to remember she is helping
care for some younger children, and they come down with
diptheria, and how she nurses them back to health! (This part
I'm not to sure of, could be confusing it with another
story!) I loved this story...I'm sure when I got it, as
most of my favorite
books from my youth, the book fair from
Weekly Reader! (also where I found Magic Elizabeth, The
Velvet Room, and On Your Toes Suzy!) And you can still
by reprints in paperback of Magic Elizabeth. Once
again, your website is a real treasure! I thank you for
trying to help me restore memories of a very happy childhood,
made complete by these wonderful stories! There is a
special place in heaven's library for you!
This has to be Green Eyes by
Jean Nielsen. It is about a high school senior in
the Pacific Northwest who wants to be a journalist. She
works for the town paper, babysits for kids, and nurses one
through diphtheria. There wasn't a fish cannery in the
story, but her dad did work at a logging camp. The green
eyes in the title did refer to jealousy. It is a good book
and did come out in a Scholastic paperback or one of those other
paperback series.
That sounds like the story...any ideas
where I can find it?
If the poster is looking for the other book
she might have confused with Green Eyes, it could
be A Girl Called Chris by Marg Nelson,
in which Chris spends her summer working at a fish
cannery. This was a book-fair paperback of the same era.
Change the green egg to a green ring, and
this sounds very much like The Magician's Nephew
by CS Lewis.
R8 is definetely The Magician's
Nephew. This book isn't remotely like The
Magician's Nephew.
Green Egg may be The Green Futures of
Tycho by William Sleator, E.P. Dutton,
1981. In this book, Tycho Tithonus finds a silver egg in
his garden that transports him through time, where he meets his
frightening future self.
I just wanted to write to you and tell you
how much I appreciate your site of Solved Mysteries. Normally, I
don't send emails to webmasters unless I have problems with
their page, but I am just so ecstatic about finding the
title and author of a book I have been
searching the internet for hours trying to locate. Apparently I
have been searching for the book the Green Futures of
Tycho by William Sleator. I have spent
roughly 5 hours each week for the last two weeks looking for
this book I was really getting frustrated and depressed about
not finding a book I knew I had read in grade school. I finally
happened to type in the right phrase on NorthernLight.com and up
popped your website (I tried the same phrase on Yahoo later and
it didn't come up there, so I am glad I was on NL.com). Also, I
have done a little research and discovered I have read 3 or 4
more of his books and remember enjoying them greatly too.
Thanks so much for the help! Very soon I'll be off to the
bookstore to see if I can buy these books.
---
I am looking for an older child book
featuring a character named Tycko. He was named after a famous
scientist and has several siblings named Ludwig and other
famous names. Does this sound familiar?
This is William Sleator's Green
Futures of Tycho (NY:Dutton,1981). Sleator's son,
Tycho, grew up to be a physicist.
Zilpha Keatley Snyder, Green Sky
Trilogy, 1971, 1976,
1977. It's just a _different_ fine children's author.
:) Below the Root: "When
thirteen-year-old Raamo is surprisingly chosen to join the
priestly class of Ol-zhaan rulers, he uses his telepathic
abilities to discover some dangerous secrets about the governing
body to the land of Green-sky" And All Between:
"When her father asks her to give up her pet laban for food,
Terra, one of the Erdlings who live underground, flees, falling
into the hands of the Ol'zhaan, who take her to the world above
ground" Until the Celebration:
"Resistant to their forced union, the Kindar of Green-sky and
the Erdlings are shocked when their disappointment and misery is
capped off by the disappearance of the Holy Children, Pomma and
Teera."
Sounds like Below the Root by
Zilpha Keatley Snyder. The people lived in a magic
land underground and were able to fly from tree to tree.
Very beautiful and surreal. I believe there may be more than one
in the series.
#F106--Flying people living in trees:
Below the Root, by Zilpha Keatley Snyder.
Sequels are And All Between and Until the
Celebration.
---
1970's-early 80's. It was fantasy series of three books
for young adults or juveniles - I think - there were little
people who lived in trees and had forgotten how to fly and
needed to remember in order to save their society...there were
some genetics involved and a lot of discussion about the culture
Zilpha Keatley Snyder, Green Sky
Trilogy. Sounds
likely I think that this may be in 'Solved Stumpers'. 1.Below
the Root
2.And All Between 3.Until the Celebration.
Terry Pratchett, The Bromeliad
Trilogy: Truckers, Diggers, and Wings, c.1990. The Bromeliad Trilogy of
Truckers, Diggers and Wings comes to mind, although
the copyright date is early 90s, not 80s. The Bromeliads are
little people, some of whom live in the wild, although not in
trees. There are extensive references to bromeliad trees,
though, and they do have to figure out how to fly to Cape
Canaveral (I think) to hijack a rocket ship. It's hard to
summarize three books, but that was what it made me think of.
Madeline L'Engle, A Wind in the Door. Could this be it? Part of this story is
about Meg going inside the mirco-world of her brother's cells,
and finding out the reason he is so sick. The mitochondria
in his cells (tree-like creatures) have forgotten how to
dance. She teaches them how to dance again and his health
is restored. This has both micro and macro effect on the
universe. Good luck!
Pretty positive this is NOT the Green
Sky trilogy. The Kindar (tree-dwellers) in
Green Sky glide due to low gravity, which has nothing to do with
the breakdown (and salvation) of their society.
Zylpha Keatley Snyder, Green Sky
Trilogy,
1970s. I think this *is* the Green Sky Trilogy. The
tree-dwellers have various paranormal abilities (such as
levitating objects) which they are gradually losing. The
solution to the loss of their powers turns out to be reuniting
with the dispossessed people who've been living in exile
underground.
---
I am looking for a young adult fantasy series (3 books?) that I
believe is from the early or mid 1900s (as my older neighbor had
also read the same series as a child). The story is about two
groups of people (one lives above the earth in the trees and one
lives underground and they are enemies - no one lives on the
ground). One girl ventures below the earth and meets another
girl and they share some sort of magic or telepathic powers. The
only other striking feature I remember is that the tree people
eat somesort of intoxicating/hallucinogentic berries. Help
please! I've been trying to find out the name of this
series/author for years - what a great site! Thank you!
Zilpha Keatley Snyder, Green Sky Trilogy, 1971, 1976, 1977. Below the Root: "When thirteen-year-old Raamo is surprisingly chosen to join the priestly class of Ol-zhaan rulers, he uses his telepathic abilities to discover some dangerous secrets about the governing body to the land of Green-sky" And All Between: "When her father asks her to give up her pet laban for food, Terra, one of the Erdlings who live underground, flees, falling into the hands of the Ol'zhaan, who take her to the world above ground" Until the Celebration: "Resistant to their forced union, the Kindar of Green-sky and the Erdlings are shocked when their disappointment and misery is capped off by the disappearance of the Holy Children, Pomma and Teera."
Condition Grades |
Snyder, Zilpha Keatley. Below the Root. cover by James E. Christensen. Tor, 1975, 1985. paperback, very minor wear; some yellowing. Green-Sky series #1 VG $10 |
|
G35 is definitely The Green Ginger
Jar by Clara Ingram Judson.
Clara Ingram Judson wrote The
Green Ginger Jar, a mystery set in Chicago's
Chinatown concerning the contents of a ginger jar. I
haven't read it, but if you can't find a copy I do have one and
can look to see if it's anything like the story described.
There is a book The Green Ginger Jar,
A Chinatown Mystery by Clara Judson,
Houghton Mifflin, 1949. I was thinking of a Phylis
Whitney, but this might be the one.
How about The Green Ginger Jar
by Clara Ingram Judson, illustrated by Paul Brown,
published Houghton Mifflin, 1949, 210 pages. "A story of
modern Chinatown in Chicago. Ai-Mei and her brother, Lu Chen,
feel themselves to be Americans first and Chinese second. In
their conflicts with the older members of the family
(particularly their grandmother), the reader gets a good
picture of the traditional Chinese way of living ..."
(cited in Good Books for Children, 1946-61 Eakins, 1962)
I know this is on Solved Mysteries somewhere...
Zilpha Keatley Synder, Below the Root. Your
comment on thinking it was already solved inspired me to be more
diligent in searching. Thanks! I am sure to send you
more.
Zilpha Keatley Snyder, The Green Sky
Trilogy: Below the Root, And All Between, Until the
Celebration
---
I read this book sometime between
79-81. I think there is an illustration of the top of a
tree on the front. Its about a community that lives in
the tops of the trees. The main character is a boy that
has an adventure or goes on a quest. I read it several
times but I can't remember the name of it. Any help
would be appreciated.
Zilpha Keatley Snider, And
All Between, This might be the Green-Sky trilogy
(it has three books, but the one whose title I alway remembered
was And All Between). Some of the
characters, the Kindar, live in treetops, while others, the
Erdlings, live underground ("below the root").
Zilpha Keatley Snyder, Below
the Root, 1975. I think this may be the book you
remember. I have a vague memory of a tree on the cover of the
mid-80s era hardback I first read, and the plot matches.
The Kindar live in the tree-tops and fear the Pash-shan who live
below the roots of the trees, which are withering. Raamo
is chosen for his mental abilities and goes on a quest to cure
the root. It's the first in a children's fantasy trilogy.
I have an answer to G8 in your Stump the
Bookseller page. The book *is* titled Green Smoke
and is by Rosemary Manning. Originally published by
Constable in 1957. My paperback is a Puffin published in England
in 1967 and reprinted at least 4 times. The flyleaf also
mentions "Dragon in Danger" and "The Dragon's Quest" which I
assume are part of the series.
Could this be Rosemary Manning's Green
Smoke (c1957)? It's listed in an online
library catalogue with the subject headings "Dragons" and
"England--Fiction".
I remember this book quite vividly from my
childhood. It is indeed called Green Smoke. It
was written by Elizabeth Manning, and has a copyright
date of 1957.
---
G8: Just to confirm this book is definitely Green Smoke
by Rosemary Manning, and it's a wonderful book it's
actually set in Cornwall - the dragon lives at Constantine Bay,
which is a real place the other 2 books in the series are
Dragon in Danger (1959), which involves the dragon being
kidnapped and The Dragon's Quest (1961), where the
dragon tells a story about his life at the court of King
Arthur. I have these in Puffin editions (1971/1974), but
my copy of Green Smoke is languishing somewhere with an
ex-girlfriend.
---
The book I’m looking for came out around 1980, it’s about a
young girl who goes on holiday to her aunt’s house in Cornwall
for the summer. I distinctly remember her playing tennis and
eating cream teas. In a cave on the beach she meets a dragon,
who was alive during the time of King Arthur, and was a great
friend of the King’s. He flies the girl around Cornwall on his
back, tells her old tales and also takes her to meet a mermaid.
That’s all I remember.
D175 If no answer on this, may be you could
email www.cornwallbooks.com
Rosemary Manning, Green Smoke, 1957. "An eight year old girl
meets a friendly dragon while on a beach vacation in England,
and he tells her stories about his past as one of the companions
of King Arthur."
Rosemary Manning, Green Smoke.
Yes,
you are correct. It is Green Smoke! The dragon blows
Green Smoke out of his cave. Thanks heaps, I've been looking
for this for ages.
---
King Arthur's Dragon. This may have been a series from England,
I borrowed it from the Brooklyn Public Library in the late
sixties, but I don't know how long it had been on the shelves
there. A young girl on holiday goes down to the beach where she
finds a dragon who tells her about King Arthur and Morgan LeFay.
This was the first time I was introduced to the concept of going
counterclockwise. There were a few black and white illustrations
I think. The girl may have looked like Eloise.
Manning Rosemary, Green Smoke, 1961. This is definitely it...sequels Dragon
in
Danger, The Dragon's quest, Dragon in the Harbour.
While
on holiday Susan meets a dragon in a cave at Constantine
Bay. He tells her exciting stories about his life with
Arthur and even takes her on a couple of adventures.
Rosemary Manning, Green Smoke, 1957. This one is on the Solved
Mysteries "G" page. Followed by at least two sequels: Dragon
in Danger (1959) and The Dragon's Quest (1961).
I've also seen an online listing for Rosemary Manning's Dragon
in the Harbour, which is described as "the scarcest
of the Dragon books."
Manning, Rosemary, The Dragon's Quest, 1961. "To compensate for his absence
during her summer at the beach, Susan's friend R. Dragon leaves
her a special book recalling his life and adventures at the
court of King Arthur."
---
1960s. This was a british book, about a girl who makes
friends with a dragon, who would not tell her his name.
Said if she knew his name, she would have control over
him. There was a second book also, where i think he told
her his name
Rosemary Manning, Green Smoke. It's on the solved pages so look there
for more details.
---
King Arthur's Dragon. This may have been a series from England,
I borrowed it from the Brooklyn Public Library in the late
sixties, but I don't know how long it had been on the shelves
there. A young girl on holiday goes down to the beach where she
finds a dragon who tells her about King Arthur and Morgan LeFay.
This was the first time I was introduced to the concept of going
counterclockwise. There were a few black and white illustrations
I think. The girl may have looked like Eloise.
Manning Rosemary, Green Smoke, 1961. This is definitely it...sequels Dragon
in
Danger, The Dragon's quest, Dragon in the Harbour.
While
on holiday Susan meets a dragon in a cave at Constantine
Bay. He tells her exciting stories about his life with
Arthur and even takes her on a couple of adventures.
Rosemary Manning, Green Smoke, 1957. This one is on the Solved
Mysteries "G" page. Followed by at least two sequels: Dragon
in Danger (1959) and The Dragon's Quest (1961).
I've also seen an online listing for Rosemary Manning's Dragon
in the Harbour, which is described as "the scarcest
of the Dragon books."
Manning, Rosemary, The Dragon's Quest, 1961. "To compensate for his absence
during her summer at the beach, Susan's friend R. Dragon leaves
her a special book recalling his life and adventures at the
court of King Arthur."
A162: Most likely one of Thornton W.
Burgess' many books about the Green Woods and the Green
Meadows.
Albert Bigelow Paine, The Hollow Tree
and Deep Woods Book,
ca. 1900. This may be the book (or at least the author --
there were a number of chapter books written about the same set
of animal characters). The main characters are a 'Coon, a
'Possum, and an Old Black Crow, and they
live together in the branches of a Hollow Tree located in the
middle of the Deep Woods. Each chapter is basically a
stand-alone story, but with definite connections. (One of
the books I think is called the Hollow Tree Snowed-In Book, and
the gist basically is that a number of friends of the Hollow
Tree "people" visit for Christmas dinner, end up snowed in, and
pass the time telling stories to one another.) Mr. Rabbit
is one of the recurring characters. I don't recall a fox
or a badger, though. Still, the memory of something to do
with woods makes me think this might be the book/series.
I wrote this stumper and it IS the Thornton Burgess book
series. I recently came across one online "Reddy Fox" and
this is the right series of books. Thanks for all the help!
Bright, Robert, Gregory, the Noisest
and Strongest Boy in Grangers Grove, 1969. Sounds like it could be this
Gregory. It's the same author and illustrator as the Georgie
the little ghost series.
Robert Bright, Gregory. YES!!! This is it. Thank
you, thank you, thank you to whoever posted this. I have
found the book and purhased it right away.
Roald Dahl, The Gremlins, 1943. Here you go! Read the complete
text online
here.
Not a solution, but a suggestion for another
path to explore. I distinctly remember Walt Disney
short cartoons with little gremlins (cute little critters with
short airplane ears) crawling around planes causing
mischief. Perhaps the book you remember came from Disney.
Roald Dahl, The Gremlins, 1943. How about this for a possiblilty:
The Gremlins, A Royal Air Force Story by Flight Lieutenant
Roald Dahl for Walt Disney. I haven't read the book
myself, so I can't attest to the details.
Roald Dahl. I don't know the
title but I belive that Roald Dahl origianlly came up with the
idea and name (Gremlins) to explain the problems encountered by
pilots in the war - could it be a short story or magazine
artical by him?
Sounds very much like The Gremlins,
by Roald Dahl! Very rare and expensive. The
illustrations are by Disney - they planned to film it as a
cartoon, but it never went through, partly because it was about
the RAF and not the US Air Force. Dahl said he thought his was
the first use of the term.
The Gremlins was the book I was thinking about.
Reading it again after all these years brings back lots of old
memories. Thanks all very much....
Susan Cooper, The Grey King. The fourth book in Susan Cooper's
classic Dark is Rising series---"The Grey King"--depicts
Will's trip to Wales, where he meets Bran, an albino boy, and
his dog Cafall. Will is one of the Old Ones there's
a strong King Arthur theme mixed with Welsh mythology in this
books. If it isn't this one, more plot description might
help--there's lots of Celtic/Gaelic fantasy out there.
You'll probably get this a lot, but maybe
this is Susan Cooper's The Dark Is Rising
series?
Susan Cooper, The dark is Rising
series, 1975. A series of
five books based on Celtic/Arthurian Myth.
Perhaps this is book 4, The Grey King,
where the lead character, Will Stanton, stays in a Welsh
farmhouse and meets Bran, who teaches him some Welsh
prounounciation.
Susan Cooper, The Grey King. The details could fit with this book, which is
part of a series, The Dark is Rising.
Sounds like one of the 5 in the Darkness
Rising Series. I can not remember the author but I
actually have the set at home. It was recommended to me
for my nephew who loves the Harry Potter books.
Cooper, Susan, The Grey King, 1975. Possibly "The Grey King" from
Susan Cooper's The Dark is Rising series? Its about a
boy who falls ill and is sent to a relative's farm in Wales to
recover. There is a lot of welsh language used in the book and
definitely some magic.
Alan Garner, The Owl Service. Just a mention, in case it's NOT The
Grey
King.
I just wanted to say THANK YOU for
figuring this out for me. I tried many times doing a
google search to get the title to no avail. You guys hit
the nail right on the head! Thanks again!
This sounds vaguely like The Grey
King, by Susan Cooper. That does
involve a boy on a farm in Wales, with Welsh spoken (and magic,
of course), and the age seems about right.
---
YA fiction, mid-/late '80s, early '90s. Protag is YA
male. At start, town is paralyzed by freak snowstorm, longest in
memory; protag senses that something sinister/otherworldly is
going on. I think wolves are involved, and maybe
ravens/crows; phrase "grey wolf" sticks in mind. I
suspect, but don't know, that it's part of a series.
Rediscovered it in the library a few years ago, but now I've
forgotten again. Many, many thanks!
I posted this question, but then I remembered: nothing about
wolves, necessarily, but *The Grey King*, by Susan
Cooper, part of her *The Dark Is Rising* series.
Thanks! "While recovering from hepatitis, Will Stanton is sent
to a farm in Wales where he is soon caught up in the battle
against "the Dark." He struggles to recall the prophetic lines
he once memorized and gradually, as he learns the local place
names of the geographic features around him, the meaning of the
lines becomes clear to him. Through Bran, a young boy with
mysterious origins who becomes Will's friend, Will fulfills the
prophecies and once again defeats the Dark."
---
There was a book assigned for an 8th grade book report.
It had some kind of poetry riddle in it and was set in
Wales. The fog meant something, but I don't know what.
Susan Cooper, The Grey King. Maybe? In Wales ... and the
mountain was foggy around the Grey King's area ... pretty sure
is on solved mystery pages already.
Cooper, Susan, The Grey King. Will, a young boy Old One, is given a
rhyme to remember something, but after getting very sick, can't
remember what it is that's important. He's sent to Wales to
recover, where he meets Bran, who after some time travel
revelations, is the solution to the riddle. It was a Newberry
book, so would be a good choice to have been an assigned reading
project.
Susan Cooper, The Grey King. This is probably The Grey King,
part of Susan Cooper's The Dark is Rising series. It has
the wolves, the fog, and the poem/riddle.
Susan Cooper, The Grey King. This might be what you're looking for- it's set
in Wales.But with grey foxes, not wolves. My copy has one on the
cover it looks like a wolf. Otherwise, the details match.
Susan Cooper, The Grey King. This sounds as though it may be from
Susan Cooper's Dark Is Rising series, and the mention of
a mountain and fog seems to point to The Grey King.
Susan Cooper, The Grey King. Could this be it? I think there were foxes, not
wolves, but I do seem to remember fog. The age level sounds
right as well.
Susan Cooper, The Grey King, 1975. This fits the poster's description.
Will Stanton is sent to a farm in Wales where he is soon caught
up in the battle against "the Dark." He struggles to recall the
prophetic lines he once memorized and gradually, as he learns
the local place names of the geographic features around him, the
meaning of the lines becomes clear to him. Through Bran, a young
boy with mysterious origins who becomes Will's friend, Will
fulfills the prophecies and once again defeats the Dark.
Nancy Bond, String in the Harp, 1976. This sounds like Nancy Bond's
Newbery Honor book "String in the Harp"...here's a short plot
description: "Published in 1976, A String in the
Harp tells the story of Jen, Peter, Becky, and David
Morgan. The Morgan family has been separated by their mother’s
death and their father’s decision to take a university teaching
job in Wales, taking his two youngest children along. The book
opens with Jen traveling to visit her family for the first time
since the move. During her visit, her brother, Peter, finds a
harp tuning key. This key, and the visions that it brings, will
lead the family down an unexpected road in the months to
come." The fog the poster mentions comes up when Peter is
seeing "between" times to the time of Taliesin, the Welsh harper
who's tuning key Peter has found
Susan Cooper, The Grey King. It sounds like The Grey King and the Dark is
Rising series. One of my favorites! See Solved Mysteries.
Susan Cooper, The Grey King. See Solved Mysteries. This person
is thinking og the wolves and mist in The Grey King,
part of the Dark Is Rising.
Joan Aiken, The Whispering Mountain. Could this be The Whispering
Mountain? It's a very atmospheric fantasy/mystery
set in 18th century Wales. Owen and his gypsy friend Arabis try
to rescue a stolen gold harp and get involved in a very
complicated mystery involving an evil lord, a steam-filled
mountain, and a tribe of little furry displaced folks. There's a
riddle poem running through the whole book, something like "When
the whispering mountain shall scream aloud and Fig-hat Ben shall
wear a cloud..."
Susan Cooper, The Grey King. This sounds like one of the books in the
"Dark is Rising" series by Susan Cooper. The Grey
King is set in Wales and does have poetry that is a
sort of puzzle. It is a Newbery book so is likely to be
used in school reading programs. Fog features heavily
- it is the breath of the Grey King. There's a King Arthur
element to the tale as well.
susan cooper, the grey king. this is a pretty famous book, but it does match
your description so i thought i'd give it a shot.
Madeleine L'Engle, A Swiftly Tilting
Planet, 1978,
approximately. Well, I'm not sure this is your book, but
the Grey King description reminded me of A
Swiftly Tilting Planet. It's not set in Wales, but
there are constant references to Wales. There is an Irish
Rune, which Charles Wallace must use to save the world from
nuclear destruction. He experiences fog when mystical
events are occuring. I don't recall wolves - but there may
have been.
Thank you, The mystery was solved - I appreciate it.
Condition Grades |
Cooper, Susan. The Grey King. Illus. by Michael Heslop. Atheneum, 1975, 1st ed. Ex-library with usual marks, dust jacket and book frayed at edges. G/G. $12 |
|
Eleanor Atkinson, Greyfriar's Bobby
Eleanor Atkinson, Greyfriars Bobby. I don't know whether it's still in print,
but this sounds like Greyfriars Bobby, the (somewhat
fictionalized) story of a real dog who, in the late 1800s,
refused to leave his master's grave in Greyfriars Churchyard,
Edinburgh. Since dogs were not allowed in thecemetery, the
caretaker had to turn a blind eye to this, and other people
helped "wee Bobby" too.I think the book was first published
about 1930.
Macgregor Forbes, Greyfriars Bobby, 1990. The stumper is definitely looking
for an account of the true story of Greyfriars Bobby, a very
famous Edinburgh Skye terrier The Macregor version was
released in 1990, and published by Gordon Wright. For
details and pictures of this and other books about Greyfriars
Bobby, visit the website at www.greyfriarsbobby.co.uk
Greyfriars Bobby. There
is a film version, too.
I believe this story is called Greyfriar's
Bobby. It is a true story that took place somewhere
in the UK. There is a statue of the dog in the graveyard.
I read this in an anthology or book about dogs. I've never seen
this as a book by itself.
Greyfriars Bobby. This
sounds a lot like the true story of Greyfriars Bobby.
There are a lot of books about him (and a movie). Eleanor
Atkinson's version may be the one in question, since it cameout
in 1991. There's a website devoted to Greyfriars Bobby:
http://www.greyfriarsbobby.co.uk/
S284 Depending on the length of the book the
person remembers... Greyfriar's Bobby by Eleanor
Atkinson, 1912, 291 pages or The Ghost of
Greyfriar's Bobby retold and illustrated by Ruth
Brown, 1996, picture book length. Also, Disney made a
movie out of it around 1961.~from a librarian
Eleanor Atkinson, Greyfriars Bobby. Bobby was a Skye Terrier. The book is
probably still available in many editions, and I think there is
a Disney movie of the same name.
I don't know what book you read, but the
story is that of a dog called Greyfriars Bobby, in Edinburgh,
Scotland, who visited his master's grave every day after the
master's death, and until the dog's own death. The dog is
commemorated with a "portrait" sculpture, I believe at the
gravesite, in Edinburgh. Googling "Greyfriars Bobby" gives a
number of hits.
Eleanor Atkinson , Greyfriars Bobby. He was a Skye Terrier, actually, and a
movie about his story was released in 1961.
There are many version of this story.
I found one that was published in 1990 - Greyfriar's
Bobby by Forbes Macgregor. Other
versions include: Ghost of Greyfriar's Bobby (Ruth
Brown, 1996), Greyfriar's Bobby (Eleanor
Atkinson, 1940, 1996), Tale of Greyfriar's Bobby
(Lavinia Derwent, 1985). Try checking your local
library to see which version is the one you're looking for.
This is a true story and the dog was called
Auld Jock. That's all I know.
Oops. My mistake. Bobby was the dog's name.
Auld Jock was the shepherd he was attached to. The dog died
around 1870.
Greyfriars Bobby. I
looked up the title, and it looks like a couple people wrote
books with the same title. Not sure which one the
requestor would want...
I don't know which book you're talking
about, but there was an actual Scottish dog named "Greyfriars
Bobby" who was equally loyal to his master's grave.
There's a statue of him in the cemetery he visited. You
can find more information at
http://www.greyfriarsbobby.co.uk/
.
Apparently, there's a Disney movie about
this.
Eleanor Atkinson, Greyfriars
Bobby. There
might be other versions of this story, but could this be the
one?
Eleanor Atkinson, Greyfriars Bobby, 1940. Tagline: "The true story of the
little Skye terrier who was faithful to his master even in
death." On the back of the book: "For fourteen years the little
Skye terrier returned every night to the shepherd's grave in
Greyfriars churchyard, Edinburgh - so dearly had he loved his
master."
Atkinson, Eleanor, Greyfriars Bobby. This story takes place in
Scotland (dog is not a Scottie) - but story line sounds
right. Disney made a movie based on this story in the 50's
or 60's.
Eleanor Atkinson, Greyfriars Bobby. Sounds like the story of
Greyfriars Bobby. There have been several versions,
probably the one by Eleanor Atkinson. It's based on a true
story.
New stumper S284- A variation of an English
ghost story called Greyfriars Bobby?
Something tells me this might be Greyfriar's
Bobbie by Atkinson(?) Maybe??
A39 sound like the version of the Grimm
tales I had in the 50s
A39 (again!) the Grimm story about
the old woman who lives at the bottom of the well and shakes out
her eiderdown to make it snow is 'Mother Holly'
(or 'Frau Holle'). Two sisters (or possibly half
or step-sisters) visit the well, the good one is kind and does
everything right and comes back dropping gold coind every time
she speaks or combs her hair, the bad sister is sent by her
mother to get rich too and is rude and lazy and when she comes
back nasty things come out of her hair or mouth (some aspects of
this are similar to 'Diamonds and Toads' another
Grimm tale with slightly different begining but ending with the
2 sisters speaking diamonds and other jewels (the good one, of
course!) or toads and other nasty creatures.
The following GRIPS plays
have been translated into English, according to the London
Goethe-Institut.
All in Stitches (Heile, heile
Segen). Tr. Roy Kift; Alles
Plastik Von Volker Ludwig and Detlef
Michel; Banana By Rainer
Hachfeld and Reiner Lücker. Tr. Jack Zipes; Bizzy,
Dizzy, Daffy and Arthur(Balle, Malle, Hupe und Artur);
Boy oh Boy(Mannomann) By Volker Ludwig; Don't
Be Daft(Mensch Mädchen) Tr. Roy Kift; Don't
Lump It (Mannomann) Tr. Peter Gilbert; Herbie
and the Broken Robot (Trummi kaputt) Tr. and
adapted by Baerbel and Ken Rugg; Julie, What is
Wrong?(Jule was ist los?) By Jörg Friedrich and
Thomas Ahrens. Tr. Peter Gilbert; Line One (Linie
eins) The Magic Grandad(Kannst du
zaubern, Opa?) by Stefan Reisner and Rainer
Hachfeld. Tr. Roy Kift; Man oh Man (Mannomann);
Mister Robinson's Party (Ein Fest bei
Papadakis) By Volker Ludwig and Christian Sorge. Tr. Roy
Kift. Mugnog (Mugnog-Kinder); The Mugnog
Kids (Mugnog-Kinder) By Rainer Hachfeld. Tr.
Roy Kift. Operation Pollpoppa Tr. Roy Kift;
Papadakis Throws a Party(Ein Fest bei Papadakis)
Tr. Gerhard Fischer and Olav Reinhardt. Shtockerlock and
Millipilli (Stokkerlok und Millipilli) By Rainer
Hachfeld and Volker Ludwig. Tr. Helen Mayer-Hajek; Stronger
than Superman(Stärker als Supermann) By Roy Kift; Things
That Go Bump in the Night. Tr. Roy Kift.
Trummi Kaput;What Can Be Done(Mannomann) By Volker
Ludwig. Tr. Norbert J. Mayer and Chris Westwood.
G29 sounds as if it is Nicholas Fisk
- Grinny - fairly sure Grinny is an alien 'nanny'
G29 I've got Grinny by Nicholas
Fisk (London, Heinemann, 1973) at my desk here. It's
written in diary format. Grinny is Great Aunt Emma, who smiles
all the time. She comes to stay with the family without warning.
Grinny
avoids electricity. Beth sees her break a
wrist, revealing steel bones and skin that heals over while she
watches. They see a UFO and find Grinny lying in bed with open
eyes, grinning and glowing. Eventually they discover
that she is an alien "wearing" an artificial
human body, come to prepare for an invasion. Couldn't find a
scene where she takes off her face, though her whole body is
disassembled right at the end. She does purposely break a finger
to show the narrator how she heals.
Finally I was able to get this book
through our inter library loan system and it is the right one,
Thank you very much!!! My friend was really excited.
Hoff, Syd, Grizzwold, New York, Harper & Row [1963]
Hoff, Syd, Grizzwold. Harper & Row, 1963. It's an I
Can Read Book, similar in format and size to the Cat In The Hat
Beginner Books series.
Hoff, Syd, Grizzwold, 1963. Could it have been Grizzwold? An "I
Can Read" book.
Sounds like Grizzwold by Syd
Hoff, written in 1964! The forest gets cut down and the
bear needs a new home. Some people assume he's wearing a
costume. Hoff turned 90 recently and is the author of Danny and
the Dinosaur and The Witch, the Cat and the Baseball Bat and
many more.
B287 Hoff, Syd Grizzwold. Darn,
I
thought
I
prob
had
at
least
one.
It
IS
an
I
Can Read Book.
Burke, Anne Parks, A Groovy Guide to
Decorating Your Room,
Signet/NAL, 1969. My copy is a paperback cover shows
a girl in bell-bottoms standing on a ladder putting up some type
of rectangular pattern (shape similar to a door) over flowered
wallpaper. Interior has line drawings. First section
discusses four types of rooms -- "way out," "romantic and
feminine" (four-poster with flowered spread and curtains, a
flowered cloth over a circular table, even a hanging wicker seat
with flowered pillows), a studio (black-and-white stripes and
designs, including zebra wall-hanging), or "vivaciously
Victorian." Various sections of the book tell how to make
pillows, stencils, wall plaques, etc. Illustrator is Luciana.
possibly Lone Hunter's Gray Pony
by Donald Worcester, New York, Oxford University Press
1956, later Fort Worth, Texas Christian University Press 1985,
Illustrated by Paige Pauley. 8vo., "Lone Hunter's pony is stolen
by Kiowas. Risking his life, Lone Eagle stalks the Kiowas to
their camp and reclaims his beloved pony and as he flees home he
is able to warn his people of an ambush." Nothing about another
boy, but in one of the sequels "Lone Hunter and the Cheyennes":
"After capture Lone Hunter and friend Buffalo Boy escape and
make their way home, being confronted by a grizzly and many
hardships."
#B75--Brave, his pony and his friend:
Lone Hunter's Gray Pony, by Donald Worcester
(1956) does include a stolen horse, but not so sure about any of
the other plot elements. Definitely not Indian Two
Feet and His Horse, by Margaret Friskey, to
save you the trouble of even trying that one.
#B75--Brave,
his pony, and his friend: Sanderson, William E.
Horses are for Warriors. Caldwell, ID:
Caxton, 1954. 1st. The dustwrapper art, pictorial
endpapers, full color frontispiece & 15 black & white
interiors are by Pers Crowell. A tale of the Shoshone
& the Nez Perce before the arrival of Lewis &
Clark. This portrait of the horse-oriented plains culture
is one of the best. This is the story of a Nez Perce boy living
in the Wallowa Valley (now Oregon) concerned that his horse
would be stolen by Shoshones. Since the above url (see
camera icon above) shows the dustwrapper, it could be useful in
determining if this is NOT the book you seek.
Another possibility is Groundhog's
Horse, by Joyce Rockwood, drawings by Victor
Kalin, published by Holt, Rinehart and Winston 1978, 114 pages.
From dustjacket: Joyce Rockwood has written vividly and
beautifully about the Cherokees before. This warm,
amusing novel, which takes place in 1750, shows the same
brilliance, but with a lighter touch. It is about Groundhog, a
young Cherokee boy, and his horse, Midnight. Midnight is a
most unusual horse, so Groundhog tells everyone. But since
Midnight is neither a fast runner nor seems remarkable in any
way, everyone in Frogtown laughs at him. One day, Midnight is
stolen by the Creeks in a raid on Frogtown. No one thinks
Midnight is worth rescuing so Groundhog decides to find him by
himself. This is the story of Groundhog's adventures as he
makes his way to and from Rabbit-town over enemy terrain and
Dismal Places... Joyce Rockwood is from Georgia and is married
to an anthropologist (she studied anthropology as well). She
and her husband have immersed themselves in the culture and
history of the Indians of the South. Her previous novels about
Cherokees - Long Man's Songand To Spoil the
Sun, won acclaim. The latter was an ALA Notable book of
1976 and an International Reading Association honor book.
A little more information on the 1978 title
Groundhog's Horse, by J.Rockwood,
illustrated by V. Kalin, 116 pages. "Groundhog is a Cherokee
Indian who has to try to rescue his own horse from the Creek
Indians when it is stolen because everyone else refuses to do
so. Groundhog is greatly helped in his attempt by Duck,
another Cherokee, who has been stolen from his tribe and
adopted by a Creek family. Against great odds they finally win
through and are re-united with their families." (Junior
Bookshelf Dec/80 p.297)
Julian Thompson, Grounding of Group 6, 1992. The plot matches Thompson's book, and there is, indeed, a character named Marigold.
The Growing Summer, Noel
Streatfeild, May 1994,
reprint. Did a simple search on Google and found it. Here
is the Synopsis: The Gareth children are shipped off to Great
Aunt Dymphna, who lives wild in an extraordinary half-ruin in
Ireland. Here they are not only expected to look after
themselves, they also discover that they have company - a
mysterious boy who announces that he is on the run. The children
hide him from his pursuers - but who are they? And who is the
boy? The children are determined to find out...
Streatfeild, Noel, Magic Summer
In the Big Golden Book of Poetry (1947)
the
poem "Growing Up" appears. The poet's name appears as
MARCHETTE GAYLORD CHUTE. In the acknowledgements it is stated
the poem was taken from Child Life.
This isn't really a book stumper, is it? I have no advice
about obtaining copyrights other than contacting the publisher or
author, if you can track them down...
That is the title itself!. It is very
hard to find, but I have had it before. The text is in
green ink....
Coffin, Patricia. Gruesome
Green Witch.
Illustrated by Peter Parnall.
---
hi, i've been trying to find a book that
i read in 6th grade. my friend and i can only
remember a few things, we dont know the author or the title
but this is what we do know. the characters went thru a
closet, there was a witch in this forest and if the characters
looked at her back they would turn into
something and the last thing we remember
is that the book was printed in green. i know this is not alot
to go on but i would appreciate any ideas you may have.
Wow, I think of several different books with the closet and witch
theme, but the only one I know printed in green is Patricia
Coffin's Gruesome Green Witch.
More on The Gruesome Green Witch,
by Patricia Coffin, illustrated by Peter Parnall,
published by Walker 1969, 85 pages, text printed in green ink,
illustrations in black, white and green. "Two schoolgirls,
Puffin and Mole, discover a magic land entered through a
closet. They have various adventures, do their homework in
Merlin's concentration cave, where answers are caught as they
bounce off walls, attend an undersea party presided over by
Neptune, with Cinderella, Meg, Jo, Beth and Amy among the
revellers, then Puffin incurs the wrath of the villainous,
gruesome green witch (who turns her enemies into statues) by
seeing her back, and Puffin's brother is captured when the
girls bring him into the land so he can profit from the
concentration cave. But eventually the witch is conquered by a
magic brew which Puffin slips into her tea, and melts down
into a pile of green rags." (School Library Journal Book
Review 1969-70 p.49) This does seem to match what's recalled.
---
i think two kids go into a room to study
and they get very woozy. they come out of the room into a
wooded world. and there is a beautiful green woman (a witch?)
who never shows her back. but one day they see her back
reflected in a mirror hanging on one of the trees and her back
is rotten filled with crawling maggots and worms and insects.
Definitely The Gruesome Green Witchby
Patricia Coffin (1969). Please see the Solved
Mysteries "G" page for more information. An uncommon
title, and unfortunately expensive!
S188 Spencer, Louise Reid. Guerrilla
wife. pictorial endpapers of couple in jungle,
People's Book Club, 1945.
Philippines - guerrillas; World War 2 -
Pacific; WW2
The book this person is thinking of is THE
GUNNIWOLF retold by Willhelmina Harper and
illustrated by William Wiesner, 1967. It is out of
print. (Just in case the person is interested, another version THE
GUNNYWOLF [note the spelling difference in title]
retold and illustrated by A. Delaney, 1988 is available
in print. The little girl doesn't sing the "kumquat" song, but
instead sings the alphabet.) ~from a librarian
Wilhelmina Harper, Gunniwolf, 1967.
I read a question and answer exchange in
your "Solved Mysteries" feature to which I want to add some
information. I recently illustrated a new edition of The
Gunniwolf by Wilhelmina Harper and it was
released by Dutton in June of this year, 2003. I'm happy to say
that Harper's classic version of this tale is no longer out of
print.
---
I have been looking for years for an
illustrated short storybook I remember reading over and over
in kindergarten (1969-70) about a little girl who lives on the
edge of a forest and is warned not to go into the forest -
danger lies there. But she is drawn in by brightly
colored flowers, and becomes lost. That's about all I
remember of the storyline. The illustrations are in
color and are very simple, from what little I remember.
Ring any bells out there? Thanks!
Harper, Willhelmina, The Gunniwolf,
1967. This sounds likes
The Gunniwolf. The girl is warned to stay out of the
forest because of the Gunniwolf but is lured in, deeper and
eeper, by the flowers that are growing there.
This sounds an awful lot like Gunniwolf
from the solved mysteries page. "A little girl is told
not to go into the forest. She sees a very pretty flower just a
little bit in the forest, and goes and picks it, she sees
another just a little bit further in, and then another, until
she is lost. "
Harper, Wilhelmina, Gunniwolf. Not positive about this one. The girl goes into
the "jungle" after flowers, despite warnings of danger, then
repeatedly sings the Gunniwolf to sleep so that she can escape.
The story has been illustrated by more than one artist.
Harper, Wilhemina, Gunniwolf. Little girl living on edge of forest is drawn
into the woods by the flowers. She has been warned to stay
away because of the Gunniwolf. The Gunniwolf finds
her wants her to sing, he falls asleep and she runs, this
happens several times until she is safely out of the
forest. Recently rereleased.
Condition Grades |
Harper, Wilhemina. The Gunniwolf. Illus by Barbara Upton. Dutton Children's Books, 1918, 2003. New edition with new illustrations. Harback. New, $15.99 |
|
That's an easy one for me; I liked it as a kid too. In
fact, when the wind gets strong here and blows open the door open,
I generally say "Hello, Gus." Although sometimes I say
"Hello, Casper." There's a series of them:
Gus and the Baby Ghost, by Jane Thayer.
Illustratedby Seymour Fleishman. Morrow, 1972.
Gus Loved his Happy Home, Jane Thayer ; Illustrated
by Seymour Fleishman. Linnet Books, 1989.
Gus was a Christmas Ghost, by Jane Thayer.
Illustrated by Seymour Fleishman. Morrow, 1969.
Gus was a Friendly Ghost, by Jane Thayer.
Illustrated by Seymour Fleishman. Morrow, 1962.
Gus was a Gorgeous Ghost, by Jane Thayer.
Illustrated by Seymour Fleishman. Morrow, 1978.
Gus was a Mexican Ghost, by Jane Thayer.
Illustrated by Seymour Fleishman. Morrow, 1974.
Gus was a Real Dumb Ghost, by Jane Thayer.
Illustrated by Joyce Audy dos Santos. Morrow, 1982.
What's a ghost going to do! by Jane Thayer.
Illustrated by Seymour Fleishman. Morrow, 1966.
---
Gus Was a Friendly
Ghost
Ghost and rat live together in the attic.
One of them may be named Chester. I'm not sure about the plot,
but I remember scenes. At one point, the ghost bakes cheese
croquettes for the rat. The ghost is very quiet and well
behaved. He rattles a chain and the people downstairs look up
and say, "Oh, that's just our ghost." The rat tries to drive
people out of the house by gnawing through cereal boxes and
making a mess. 1970s.
Robert Bright, Georgie (or another in series). This sounds so
familiar. Might it be one of Robert Bright's Georgie
books? Georgie is a gentle, quiet, well-mannered ghost who
lives in the attic of the Whittaker family. Every night he
creaks the loose floorboards and squeaks the parlor door,
letting the family know that it is time for bed. Other
characters include Miss Oliver, the owl, and Herman, the cat.
Georgie was orig. published in 1944, but reprinted in the 60's
and 70's. Hope this helps.
Jane Thayer, Gus Was a Friendly Ghost, 1962. I'm positive that this is Gus Was a
Friendly Ghost by Jane Thayer. It was one of my favorites when I
was a child.
Thayer, Jane, Gus was a Friendly
Ghost
---
I read a book
as a child (had the book around 1965-1969)-- it was purple and
orange -- and was about a Ghost that lived in the attic of a
home and made friendly noises that the family joked about -- and
the ghost had a sort of crush on the mom of the house. The
family goes on vacation (maybe -- I think they are away for a
while) and the Ghost allows his mouse friend who also lives in
the attic to come in the house -- the mouse gets carried away
and when the family comes home and the mouse continues to cause
problems and when he scares the mom -- that is it -- the ghost
puts his foot down... the family sets traps all through the
attic etc... Anyway -- it all works out in the end -- but I am
about to become a grandmother -- and I would LOVE LOVE LOVE to
find this book for my granddaughter!
Jane Thayer, Gus Was a Friendly Ghost.
Jane Thayer, Gus was a Friendly Ghost.
JANE THAYER, GUS WAS A FRIENDLY GHOST,
1961, copyright.
Jane Thayer, Gus Was a Friendly Ghost.
Sounds like Gus Was a Friendly Ghost, the first in
the Gus the Ghost series. Gus lives in an old house where
he likes to playfully scare the Scott family, shaking his
Bang-Clank equipment and squeaking boards: they enjoy the
fact the house is haunted. Gus is a very gentle
ghost, only getting angry when his friend Rat really does
frighten Mrs. Scott. Later books have Gus'
home turned into a museum, a haunted one of course.
Jane Thayer, Seymour
Fleishman (illus), Gus
Was a Friendly Ghost, 1961,
copyright. Definitely this one. Gus lives alone in
the attic of an abandoned house, until the Scott family
moves in. The family is not afraid of Gus (who isn't a
particularly scary ghost - he sometimes wears colored
sheets on laundry day). When the Scotts leave for a
while, Gus is lonely until he befriends a mouse (or
rat?) who moves in with him. Problems arise when the
family (who do not like rodents) return. Other titles in
the series include Gus
Goes to School (orig. Gus Was a Real Dumb Ghost), Gus And The Baby Ghost,
Gus Was a Christmas
Ghost, Gus
Was a Mexican Ghost, Gus Was a Gorgeous Ghost, Gus Loved His Happy Home,
and What's A Ghost To
Do?
Thayer, Jane, Gus was a friendly
ghost, 1962, copyright. A
ghost and a mouse have a summer house all to
themselves while the folks are away for the winter.
Jane Thayer, Gus was a Friendly
Ghost, 1962, copyright. I
think this might be the book you're looking
for. The Scott family only lives in the house
in the summer and goes away in the winter. So
the ghost befriends a mouse to stay with him so he
won't be lonely.
Jane Thayer, Gus Was a Friendly
Ghost, 1962, copyright.
Jane Thayer, Gus Was A
Friendly Ghost, 1962.
Condition Grades |
Thayer, Jane. Gus Goes to School. Illustrated by Joyce
Audy dos Santos. Original title: Gus Was a
Real Dumb Ghost. NY: William Morrow, 1982. A
Weekly Reader Book Club edition. VG. $10
Thayer, Jane. What's a Ghost Going to Do? Illustrated by Seymour Fleishman. Morrow, 1966. A Weekly Reader Book Club edition. VG. $10 |
|
Hello! I have a copy of it right here.
Sherman, Nancy. Gwendolyn the Miracle
Hen.Illustrated by Edward Sorel. Golden
Press, 1961. It's an ex-library copy, in library binding,
with one ripped and taped page, but otherwise just as you remember
it.
I've been a longtime fan of your website,
and just wanted to share a little tidbit I came across
today. I'm the proud owner of my childhood copy of Gwendolyn
the Miracle Henby Nancy Sherman, but today I
discovered that there is ANOTHER book about Gwendolyn, called Gwendolyn
and the Weathercock! I can't believe I've
lived all these years without knowing there was another tale of
Gwendolyn's adventures!
---
1960's. Beginning page: "Out in the country far from
town / There lived a man named Farmer Brown / Between the
fences he had built / His pastures made a patchwork quilt. /
From dawn to dusk with plough and hoe / He worked his fields
to make things grow."
Would you believe that my husband has just remembered a
crucial line that includes, Henrietta, the Miracle Hen.
I think that is the name of the book!
HRL: Not quite right, but enough to finish this stumper: how 'bout
Gwendolyn the Miracle Hen by Nancy Sherman,
and illustrated by Edward Sorel, Golden Press 1961. A hard
one to find. See Solved Mysteries for more.
Possibly Once There Was a Kitten,
by Janet Konkle, published Chicago, Children's Press
1951, 28 pages, illustrated with photographs. LC plot
description is "Little Kitten tries to be a young lady but
keeps ending up
in trouble."
I recently saw a copy of Once There Was a Kitten.
It is not the book I remember. (There are so many cat
books!)
C77 cat story: The Silent Miaow:
a manual for strays, translated from the Feline by Paul
Gallico, photographs by Suzanne Szasz, published Crown
1964, 159 pages, has a similar feature. Alongside the regular
text of advice to cats, there is a series of photographs of a
kitten exploring and learning, with captions like 'these must be
for me to play with' and so on. Might be worth having a look at.
I just discovered the book I had in
mind.It is Gypsy,wriiten and illustrated by Kate
Seredy,copywright 1951.I feel great because I just happened to
be browsing among old books-and actually saw the book I was
looking for!
C W Anderson, Afraid to Ride. I read this as a child don't remember any
of the names of the characters but the plot sounds right.
Sharon Wagner, Gypsy From Nowhere,1960. Girl named Wendy, short for
Gwendolyn, Gets hit by a car while horseback riding. Is sent to
her Uncle Art's ranch to recover and finds a filly who she names
Gypsy.
It was solved, but it isn't Afraid to Ride, it's Gypsy
from
Nowhere by Sharon Wagner (the 2nd entry on the
page). Do you have that one?
---
I'm looking for a YA or midgrade horse trilogy published in the
early 1980s. The first book begins with the main character
(possibly named Wendy) arriving at her aunt and uncle's ranch
for the summer; she's just recovered from a riding accident
where she took a horse out onto the road and the horse got
killed and she broke her leg. She is afraid to ride again. She
is paired with a pinto horse that is scared by something and
also with a palomino filly who is very smart. At the end of the
story, she must ride the pinto into a gulch in order to lead
back some of her uncle's cattle which are in danger of being
caught in a flood. In the second story, all I can remember
is that she teaches the palomino filly tricks, and that she and
the pinto do tricks in a rodeo (there's a long description of
how to do a keyhole race, but the horse is scared of the chalk
filling the keyhole outline.) I remember nothing about the third
book. I believe the books had pastel colored spines (the
first one pinkish, the second greenish) but I'm not sure about
that.
Sharon Wagner, Gypsy and Nimblefoot, 1980s. I just finished reading this the
other day, and loved it! The other two in the set are Gypsy
from Nowhere and Gypsy and the Moonstone
Stallion.
Sharon Wagner, Gypsy From Nowhere (and related
stories). That's exactly it! Thanks so much. :-)
Sharon Wagner, Gypsy and the
Moonstone Stallion, 1978-1984? Maybe these are the "Gypsy" books?
Overall, the series of 3 books (Gypsy from Nowhere, Gypsy and
the Moonstone Stallion, Gypsy and Nimblefoot) is about a girl
whose horse died when it was hit by a truck on a trail
ride. The girl is initially relunctant to ride again, but
she eventually does. Gypsy and the Moonstone Stallion
particularly deals with barrel racing and a wild horse (the
Moonstone Stallion) although I forget if the girl ever manages
to ride the wild stallion.
Wagner, Sharon, Gypsy from Nowhere, 1960s. Its possible you are mixing up
the plots from the Gypsy series. In the first book the girl,
named Gwen, finds a stray filly . In the second book Gypsy
and Nimblefoot, She has to figure out why a black
and white pinto is terrified of rocky surfaces. The third book
is Gypsy and the Moonstone Stallion which is
about an indian legend involving a white horse. There are more
details on the solved pages.
Marguerite Henry, Misty of
Chincoteague,
1947. This sounds like the Misty of Chincoteague
stories. There was also, Stormy Misty's Foal and
Misty's Twilight. The story was based on a
real pony, and the other ponies of Chincoteague.
Henry, Marguerite. Are you
talking about Henry's Misty series - Misty of
Chincoteague, Misty the Wonder Horse, Misty's Twilight, and
Stormy, Misty's Foal?? Though I don't
remember barrel racing, so this may night be the right series.
Sharon Wagner , Gypsy series. It could be this series: In the
first book, Gypsy from Nowhere, the girl Wendy
befriends a horse named Gypsy. The second book is Gypsy
and Nimblefoot, and there is barrel racing in it. I
also remember one of these horses being black and white. The
third book is called Gypsy and the Moonstone Stallion.
I never read it, but it does sound similar to the title you
remember.
Sharon Wagner, Gypsy and the
Moonstone Stallion, 1972-1984?. Could these be the "Gypsy" books?
Overall, this series of 3 books, (Gypsy from Nowhere, Gypsy and
the Moonstone Stallion, Gypsy and Nimblefoot) is about a girl
whose horse dies after being hit by a truck on a trail
ride. The girl eventually overcomes her reluctance to ride
again. The second book specifically deals with a wild
horse (the Moonstone Stallion) and barrel racing, although I
forget if the girl ever ends up actually riding the stallion.
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