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It's from '88, but Harriet Ziefert's A
Clean
House
for
Mole
&
Mouse does have a mouse (& a
mole)
doing housework. Don't remember whether they do laundry.
I am pretty sure that this is not the book because I read it when
I was young (late 70s to early 80s) and I was 13 in 1988. But
thank
you for trying! I have been looking for the book for so long and
I am glad I found your website to help me out.
Enid Blyton , Mary Mouse
series. These were somewhat 'comic-strip-like' books about a
mouse who was a
sort of nanny/ housekeeper in a dolls house.
There are many other possibilities: Alison Uttley's Little
Brown
Mouse books; Rosalind Vallance's Tittymouse and
Tattymouse
books; Jessie Howe's The Mouse Family at Home
and
Michelle Cartlidge's Mouse House and Mousework.
Your website is absolutely fantastic! I've been looking
through
it to see if I knew any of the books and it's so much fun to do
it!
I was very excited that I knew three of them. I'm also the person
who posted "M18 Mouse Housework" quite a while ago and unfortunately,
none
of the listed suggestions, except for Jessie Howe's The Mouse
Family
at Home, have turned out to be the right one. I can't find a
copy of Jessie Howe's book to see if it is the right one. I think
she may also have written books under "Jessie Howe Clark," but I am not
sure. I'll keep checking back and see if anyone else has listed
any
new suggestions!
The Tale of Two Bad Mice by
Beatrix Potter is a book where two mice decide to raid a dollhouse
while the dolls are away. Later on they feel bad and clean up the
house for the dolls. See the last page here.
There is a book called 1 O'Clock in the
Button Factory by Beatty, but I don't know if it's the
same
one referred to. It is blurbed as "if you don't know what the
title
means you have and overdeveloped misery gap!" The cast of characters
includes
Alvin Karpis, a Russian newsman, Haterhton Allen who does business in a
bikini, and Dr. Stookey who is studying humor. It is published by
Macmillan.
Maybe Marie Hall Ets' first Mr
Penny
book? He works in a safety pin factory to support his animals, who
eventually
take up farming to help pay their way. First published by Viking in
1935,
with 2 sequels at least. I
couldn't find much on the first one, though.
Well, the title of this sounds good, too bad
there's no plot description: Heal, Edith, Mr. Pink and
the
House on the Roof illustrated by Cay Ferry, published New
York, Julian Messner, 1941 (ad Horn Book Sep-Oct/41 p.338)
Only because of the title - Mr. Pingle
and Mr. Buttonhouse, by Ellen MacGregor, illustrated by
Paul Galdone, published Whittlesey House 1957, 32 pages "Wonderful
things
happen when Mr. Pingle decides to visit Mr. Buttonhouse - and vice
versa!"
(Horn Book Dec/57 p.439 pub ad) The Heal title sounds like a better bet.
Edith Heal, Mr. Pink and the House on the
Roof, 1941. There's a copy of this
book for sale on ebay right now, #7041522279. The synopsis the
seller
gives is "A very charming story about a rotund Mr. Pink and his button
factory that gave off a lovely glow at night." The book ends with
Mr. Pink's realization that zippers were good for some things, and
buttons
were good for others, and that sometimes people wanted new things, but
sometimes the old things are best.
Title sounds right, pity there's no real plot
description: Merry Mushroom, A Lore Book, translated
from
the Dutch, Wendy Wilkin, Sandle Bros, 1972 [22]pp, hb, 8 x 10
inches.
A woodland story about mushrooms and toadstools, with pretty coloured
illustrations"
Anon, Merry Mushroom.
Elizabeth Goudge, The Valley of Song,1951.
This might well be the one. Though the main character is a little
girl, not a girl and a boy, the adult characters keep turning into
children,
and at one point the girl and her father as a boy go through a wooden
door
to meet Vulcan. They follow this up by a meeting with Taurus, not
Pegasus, but it still sounds plausible.
Donahey, Mary Dickerson, Peter and
Prue, pictures by Harold Gaze. Chicago, Rand McNally
1934.
I wonder if it could be this one? The cover pastedown shows a chariot
with
Mercury leading it. "This story really began when Peter was only six
months
old, and rolled away, and was lost under a sofa for two hours.." A
funny
story about two little runaways with magical illustrations by Harold
Gaze.
Unlike many children's books from this era, Donahey's text still reads
well and paired with Gaze's magical illustrations, this book has
classic
appeal." There's a bit more description on the Solved Page, but the
children
visit the Moon, and Olympus, and Valhalla, apparently. Gaze's
illustration
may strike a chord.
M37 long shot, since I've never seen the book
- Ryerson Johnson "The Mouse and the Moon" E.M.
Hale
& Co, 1968 Lignell, Lois, Illustrator ? Or (still not likely)
"Merry Mouse And His Trip To The Moon", a "Jolly Book". L
Miller & Son, London and Ayer & James Pty. Melbourne &
Sydney.
1953, A mouse and his friends travel to the moon in a space
rocket.
Or (rather old) HOLLEYMAN Jo MOUSE IN THE MOON
Sandle Brothers 1st edn 1947
As for a mouse on the moon, I've been surprised
how many books I've seen with mice and rocketships, etc., both in the
Little
Golden/Rand McNally/Tell-a-Tale/Wonder Books variety, as well as others.
I had this book as a child and I still think
the title is Moon Mouse. It was about a young meadow
mouse
who is fascinated by the moon and sits and looks at it every night from
the opening of his burrow where he lives with his mother. His mother
tells
him the moon is made of green cheese. One night he decides to make a
journey
to find the moon, and he travels until he sees the moon seemingly on
top
of a building. He climbs to the top of the building and looking in a
window,
sees an enormous wheel of cheese upon a table which he believes is the
moon. He eats and eats and eats, and finally climbs down and returns
home.
Then he and his mother sit at the opening of their burrow the next
night
and look up at the sky and the moon is a crescent. The little mouse
believes
it is that way because he ate it very nearly all up. The illustrations
were nice black and white drawings...
Yet another possibility - Gordon, Elizabeth:
THE
TALE OF JOHNNY MOUSE ; Volland, 1920. Paper Covered Boards,
12mo
Little Johnny Mouse, who lives in the attic with the rest of the Gray
Mouse
family, decides to travel to the moon and sample the green cheese
there.
Another lovely fantasy with superb color illustrations by the sister of
Frank Lloyd Wright (Volland's "Sunny Book" series). Maginel Wright
Enright,
illustrator.
Evers,
Helen
and
Alf,
Moonymouse,
1956, copyright. I too have been looking for the same book as the
poster - where the mouse eats the moon and it's made of cheese and the
next night there is a crescent. Today I came across the name of
the Moonymouse. The cover looks so familiar but I am not able to
find out what the inside of the book is about. Maybe this will
help the original poster. The book the OP is talking about was my
absolute favorite when I was 2 and 3.
This could be Miss Osborne-the-Mop
by Wilson Gage. Jody and Dill, cousins who originally aren't
fond
of each other, spend the summer together. They discover Jody has
magical
powers when she says "Oh, shut up and be a squirrel" and Dill turns
into
a squirrel. They make the mop come to life and spend the summer hiding
the mop-lady and keeping her happy. At the end, Jody no longer
needs
the temporary glasses she has been wearing and they discover that's
where
her magical power came from. However, this is not a first or second
grade
book. This a chapter book, probably upper elementary.
M39: there was a book about magic glasses by
Ruth
Chew from the 50's...the housekeeper/nanny had a magic bag and
could
pull things out of it, stare at the object with the magic glasses, and
bring the thing to life. "glasses" were in the title, I'm pretty
sure.
I wouldn't say that Ruth Chew is really
at a grade 1 or 2 reading level, any more than the Wilson Gage
book
is. The Gage book does have a boy turned into a squirrel, at least. At
the right reading level is Katie's Magic Glasses, by Jane
Goodsell, illustrated by Barbara Cooney, published Houghton Mifflin
1965, 42 pages. "When Katie put on her first pair of glasses, 'She
could
see magic! She really could, just as the doctor said she would.' A
story
that almost makes you wish that you needed glasses too. Ages 5-8."
(HB Apr/65 p.134 pub ad) The story is told in rhyme. No decent plot
info,
though.
could this be one of the Miss Pickerell
stories,
by Ellen MacGregor? They were illustrated by Charles Geerand
often
had
science-fiction
elements.
There was another series of books in the
1950's
that was similar to the Little Golden Books and Elf Books called Jolly
Books put out by Avon Publishing. One of their titles was The
Jolly
Book
of
Mother
Goose. A recently solved book
stumper,
The
Magic Key, that was thought to be a Little Golden Book or Elf Book
turned out to be a Jolly Book so this may be worth a try as well.
A number of choices: Wonder Books- #501- Mother
Goose illustrated by Joseph Hirsh(1946). This was produced with
several different covers over the years. Also, Wonder Book of
Favorite
Nursery Tales #730-illustrated by Peller. These were produced
by
Grosset&Dunlap. This company also produced Treasure Books. They
share
some titles.The Treasure Book of Favorite Nursery Tales
#856
illus. by Peller. Tell-a Tale books by Whitman has The Bedtime
Book
# 2475-32 by Mabel Watts (1963). Also: Cradle Rhymes
#894
by Gladys Horn (1949) Humpty Dumpty and Other Nursery
Rhymes
#2610-
by Rod Ruth (197?) Jolly Jingles # 899-by
Florence
Alexander(1959) Little Folks in Mother Goose
#863-
illus. by Rachel (1946) Mother Goose #2572- illus. by
Charles
Clement (1955): Mother Goose #925 illus.by Ellen Fox
Vaughn
(1950) Mother Goose # 2511-illus. by Lucille Wallace
(1958)
Nursery
Rhymes #857-illus by Louise Altson (1945). Sure hope something
in there helps!!
Marguirite de Angeli, Book of Nursery and
Mother Goose Rhymes, 1953.
I,
too, was young in the 50's and had a Mother Goose Book I
treasured.
I have since identified the book as Marguerite de Angeli's Book of
Nursery
and Mother Goose Rhymes. It had a cardboard cover which showed
many
of the nursery rhyme characters including children in period
costume.
Each page includes black & white illustrations (such as a cow on
hind
legs dancing with a bagpipe player or each of the birds of "Who Killed
Cock Robin"). As well there are occasional full-page color
illustrations.
M58 mother dies: the same query is on the
Alibris
list, with no success yet, but suggesting that the boy may have been
named
Beanie as well as wearing one. So, probably not Beany Malone
by Lenora Mattingly Weber, published Crowell 1948, which is
about
a girl, though in the first book, Meet the Malones, the
mother
has been dead for three years. It doesn't really sound like Ruth
and
Latrobe Carroll's Beanie, published Walck 1953 either, with
Beanie and his dog Tough Enough on a bear hunt in the mountains.
There's
another Beanie, by Susan B. Consky, published by
the
Moody Bible Institute, 1951, but that's about Beanie and his dog Scamp
on Grandpa's farm.
Ray Bradbury, I Sing The Body
Electric,
1969. See
Twilight Zone website. It's a long shot, but I think you may
be looking for "I Sing The Body Electric", a short story by Ray
Bradbury
in a book by the same name. Nine year old Timothy, ten year old
Agatha
and thirteen year old Thomas are left without maternal care until their
father buys them an Electric Grandmother. There was another
TV version in 1982 starring Maureen Stapleton. Agatha
resists
bonding with the electrical grandma because she fears grandma will
leave
just like her mother did. Even if it's not the story you're
looking
for, it's well worth reading it's a wonderful story of coming to
terms with grief and loss. There's a very cool part of the story
when the electric grandma flies a kite with the kids using "silk" that
she emits from a fingertip the same way a spider ejects its web.
Also has references to a poem by Walt Whitman by the same name.
Bradbury
borrowed the title and then makes the story his own. Highly
recommended!
John Bellairs, The Figure in the Shadows.
(1985,
approximate)
I
submitted
this
stumper
ages
ago.
I
now
know
that
I
was
describing
two
separate
books.
Unfortunately,
I
still
don't
know
what
the
first
book
was
(the
one
about
the
mother
writing
a
letter
by
the
moon),
but the second book is definitely The Figure in
the
Shadows.
Is there any chance this is Down a Dark Hallway
by Lois Duncan? A young girl successfully applies to a very
select
boarding school (five students, or so) and the teachers are using the
students
to channel great works
by dead artists. The protagonist sleepwalks and channels piano
concertos, which the teachers record and then pass on to the public as
"discovered."
Oh, that sounds very neat! I can't believe I haven't read
that one - I'm a musician and love spooky stuff, so you'd think I'd
have
found it by now! But, I don't think it's this one. I specifically
remember this girl - she's about 16-18 proclaiming her love for the
teacher
and actually trying, in a fairly innocent way, to seduce him, wearing
the
dead wife's flowing robes (a la Rebecca, I guess...). He's
chivalrous
and clever enough to realize what's going on and rejects her
advances.
Is there a love subplot going on in Lois' book? I can't remember
other students being there in my book - this girl was just there to
practice
for 8 hours a day and have constant lessons with him. But I'm
going
to look for the book you mentioned and see if that might be it. I
remember it was a paperback, and the mystery title was written in the
script
reserved for romance novels - all flowy and cascading down the page.
The Inheritor, Marion Zimmer-Bradly,
1980's. This is a similar story. About a psychologist who has a young
17
yo sister called Emily(?)who is training to be concert pianist.They
move
to a new house in San Francisco which wis haunted.They meet Simon
Anstey,
godson of the former owner and famous pianist. He becomes romantically
involved with the elder sister. There are lots of bits about witch
craft,
the occult and sacrifices
There's A Treasure Ship of Old Quebec
by Ethel Hume Bennett, published by Macmillan in the 1930s. "Four
children
with
a
natural
bent
for
history
spend
a
happy
summer
holiday
exploring
old
Quebec,
their
adventures
being
given
a
slight
background
of
mystery
and
excitement
by
the
existence
of
certain
long-lost
heirlooms."
But
no
indication
that
it
was
a
series.
#M63--Montreal Series: Just picked up "Mystery
in
Old
Quebec," by Mary C. Jane, Lippincott,
1955.
Doubtful this is it. The two children, Mark and Kerry, travel to
Canada with their father. Their mother stays home with their
little
brother, Tim, and they don't figure in the story at all. With two
boys, Louis and Edgar, whom Mark and Kerry befriend, it does add up to
four.
Thanks so much for the personal reply!
I haven't checked back on the site for awhile to see if there were any
responses. I don't think that title is right - this was
definitely
a series, and there was a mystery in each one. The heirloom part
sounds familiar though - I may try to get a synopsis of that book and
see
if some other parts of it fit the bill.
M63 Montreal series: more of a description of
one suggestion, but doesn't pin it down much! Mystery of Old
Quebec,
by Mary C. Jane, illustrated by Ray Abel, published Lippincott
1955.
A 1956 Selection of the Weekly Reader Children's Book Club. Hardcover,
123 pages, 8 1/4" x 5 1/2", Contents: A Room with a Fireplace; The
missing
Jacket; A strange Message; A daring decision; Rue Sous Le Cap; The
French
Evening; An exciting Rescue; A New Friend; Voices in the Next Room; At
the Foot of the Elevator; The Big Dog; But They are Indians. (The
whole
story deals with a trip to Quebec City and the adventures following in
this ancient city.)
Hilda Van Stockum?, Canadian Summer,
Friendly
Gables? late '40s, early '50s.
This
is quite a long shot, since I don't remember the mystery part (seems to
me the Mitchell children's problems revolved around school and family,
but in one book one of Peter's classmates was stealing or cheating or
something,
and he and his sister Patsy had to find out who it was because Peter
was
being blamed), but there is a lot of description and atmosphere. A
sample of one book is here.
Hello -- A Google search led me to your
site.
I'm trying to track down a book that sounds like it could be the
same one as M63. Unfortunately, I don't have any additional
clues about the text to offer, but I do remember it had wonderful
black-and-white line drawings. I think there was one of a sleigh
taking everyone home in the snow. I hope this provides an
additional
lead. I absolutely loved this book--I checked it out of my school
library almost every year while in elementary school during the second
half of the 1960s. I never remembered the title, then, either--I
had to go find it on the shelf. Thanks for providing an opportunity to
finally track it down again.
How about the Canadian -Secret Circle
Mysteries
from the 1960's? I have never read them, just came upon a reference and
thought it might be worth a look!
Hello -- A Google search led me to your
site.
I'm trying to track down a book that sounds like it could be the
same one as M63. Unfortunately, I don't have any additional
clues about the text to offer, but I do remember it had wonderful
black-and-white line drawings. I think there was one of a sleigh
taking everyone home in the snow. I hope this provides an
additional
lead. I absolutely loved this book--I checked it out of my
school library almost every year while in elementary school
during
the second half of the 1960s. I never remembered the title,
then, either--I had to go find it on the shelf. Thanks for providing an
opportunity to finally track it down again.
I've checked out all the titles suggested but none of them fit.
M-68 may be A Dream To Touch by
Anne
Emery. In that book the main character--Marya--plays a violin
and is involved in great competition for first chair.
This looks like the same book as G 48: The
Maggie B by Irene Haas. It's recently been
reprinted
and is an adorable book.
This is apparently not The Maggie B, which is described
on the Solved page.
Is this Moonface by Jack
London?
M73 moonface: maybe this one? The Angry
Moon, by William Sleator, illustrated by Blair Lent,
published
Atlantic-Little 1970. "Tlingit motifs and an economy of text tell
this
legend of an Indian boy who, assisted by a grandmother's magic, rescues
an Indian girl being held prisoner by the angry moon because she
laughed
at his ugly face. Ages 7-10." (Picture Books for Children,
Patricia
Cianciolo, ALA 1973 p.91) There is a children's book called Moonface,
by
Gerda Marie Scheidl and Antoni Boratynski, translated from
the
German by Richard Sadler, published Sadler 1971, 31 pages, but I don't
have a plot description yet. The library databases only have a subject
tracing under Painting - Fiction and Moon - Fiction, if that's any help.
There is not a chance that Jack London's Moonface
is the one required. It's a revenge story involving two men, a dog and
a stick of dynamite.
Martin Rafe, the Rough-face Girl.
(1992) Could the name be wrong? This is an Algonquin version of
Cinderella.
Little Scarface. I wonder
if M73 might be the old Indian legend of Scarface which is told by the
Blackfoot, Mi'qmah and many other northern Indian people. It's kind of
like Cinderella. There's a great hunter who is invisible, but very nice
and all the girls want to marry him. His sister Patience vets possible
brides by asking if they can see his bowstring or the shoulder strap on
his carry-bag (or the cord on his sled). (In some versions he's called
Big Moose, in others he's just the Hidden One). Scarface is called that
because her cruel sister throws burning twigs at her when their father
is away. Dad believes all the sister's lies why Scarface is burnt, how
she lost her hair, etc. Sis has a try at Big Moose, makes something up
and loses. Scarface goes in her tattered rags and helps Patience make
dinner.
When Big Moose comes home she cries out that his bowstring is a rainbow
and the shoulder strap on his bag is made of stars. This proves she is
pure of heart, and Big Moose becomes visible and warmly greets her as
his
fiancee. Patience washes her in magic water, curing her injuries, and
renames
her Beautiful.
This one is a bit of a stretch, but I have The
Mystery
of
the
Flying
Skeleton, A Power Boys Mystery. The
brothers help discover mastodon bones during the constuction of a motel
in Florida. Their photographer father is along to take photos.
This
one is probably late '60s.
Maybe, The Mystery of the Dinosaur Bones,
by
Mary Adrian, illustrated by Lloyd Coe, published New York,
Hastings
House 1965 "An easy-reading mystery about two boys and a girl on a
fossil
hunt in Utah. Information on prehistoric animals is woven into the
text,
plus a factual supplement. Ages 9-12, grades 4-6, 128 pages." 'Chris
and
Ken were twins, They had blue eyes, freckles, and bright red hair. This
Friday morning, they were cleaning the house and looking forward to a
letter
from Marty Taylor, their friend down the street, who had gone on a
camping
trip with his parents to dinosaur country in Utah.'
another possible title is Dinosaur Dilemma,
by
Lois Breitmeyer and Gladys Leithauser, illustrated
by
Lois
Malloy, published Golden Gate Junior Books 1964, "Mark Speer and
Tommy
Coleman intended to spend their summer vacation rock hunting until the
unearthed what proved to be a huge dinosaur bone."
Jay Williams and Raymond Abrashkin, Danny
Dunn and the Fossil Cave.
This
is
probably
far
out
in
left
field.
But
Danny
Dunn
and
his
friends
go
on
an
expedition
in
a
cave
with
the
Professor
and
they
find
a
large
intact
skeleton
of
a
dinosaur.
At
one
point,
they use an x-ray
machine
to see through walls and they think the Professor is in a cage when
really
he was standing in the middle of the rib cage of the dinosaur skeleton.
How about Stolen Bones by Joan
Carris?
According to a page I have bookmarked, American
Women
Playwrights
1900-1950, something called Mickey's
Marker
was published in 1930 by a Leota Hulse Black. Sorry that
it
doesn't give any more information, but it might be a clue.
Leota Hulse Black, Mickey's Marker.
Like the requester's father, I also recited Mickey's Marker.
In
my
case,
it
was
for
a
high
school
prize
speaking
contest
in
1958.
The
author
is
Leota
Hulse
Black
and
the
piece
is
a
short
story,
as
I
recall,
not
a
poem.
A
real
tearjerker.
But
who
is Leota Hulse
Black?
Have found very little about her on line.'
Not that I supppose it has much bearing, but
Miss
Bickerton is a character in Jane Austen's Emma.
She
is a boarder at Mrs. Goddard's (along with Harriet Smith).
Couldn't find anything involving bickerton, but
there's Miss Slimmens' Boarding House, by Metta
Victoria
Fuller Victor, published New York, Ogilvie, 1882. No plot
description
available though. Less likely is Jenny Wren's Boarding House: a
Story
of Newsboy Life in New York by James Otis, illustrated
by
W.S. rogers, published Boston, Estes & Lauriat 1893, still no plot
description but the subtitle gives a hint. And just perhaps - Mrs.
Leicester's
school;
or,
the
history
of
several
young
ladies
related
by
themselves by Charles and Mary Lamb, published by
Dent,
1920s? "The experiences of Mrs. Leicester's ten pupils herein
related
differ largely. Miss Louisa Manners, aged seven, tells of a memorable
visit
to her grandmother's farm, while Miss Ann Withers recounts the dramatic
story of how she was changed for the baby of a noble family and how she
herself brought about her own downfall. The immaculateness of the
telling
throughout does Mrs. Leicester great credit." (Books for Boys and
Girls,
1927 Toronto Public Library)
Also possible - Becky's Boarding House:
a Brownie Scout Story, by Eleanor Thomas, illustrated
by
Gertrude Howe, published Scribner 1952, 119 pages "Brownie Scouts
and
their doings make up this story book for girls of 9 to 10." (Book
Review
Digest 1952)
Metta Victoria Victor, Miss Slimmens'
Boarding
House, 1887. Sounds the
most
likely. Other possibilities include L.T. Meade's The Girls of
Mrs.
Pritchard's School (1904 also others by this author) Evelyn
Everett
Green's
Miss Greyshott's Girls (1907) or Mabel
Tyrrell's Miss Pike and Her Pupils (1928).
I vividly remember the "Elevator Operator"
story
from a mid-1970's Scholastic paperback called Strange but True:
(some
number) Amazing Stories. The black-and-white illustration
of the operator terrified me.
This sounds like it could be an answer someone
gave for another stumper, STRANGE BUT TRUE; 22 Amazing Stories
by Donald J. Sobol ~from a librarian
c.b. colby, strangely enough!
I remember a Scholastic paperback of this in my 2nd grade classroom.
Intended
for older than 2nd grade obviously. Lots of ghost stories, some factual
(the "Mary Celeste" incident), some rumor-y (Loch Ness monster)
Definite
"Twilight Zone"/"Ripley's Believe it or Not" feel. Colby was also the
author
of books about military hardware for budding warriors -- many titles of
which "Arms and armor of Our Fighting Men" is the only one I can
remember.
I am also looking for a book
that seems close to this description... The only thing I can recall is
the cover; a painting version of the Bigfoot film taken by Roger
Patterson, and other monsters. I also recall that a number of the
stories inside were of legendary beasts and animals, including the hoop
snake, a weird beast that had legs shorter on one side, and always had
to run on the hillsides; & the Jersey Devil. also "strange being"
stories like Springheel Jack and the Mad Gasser of Matoon. If
this seems to be the same book, I am crazy to find it as it was one of
my favorites between 7th and 9th grades, when I lost it in a move.
David Eddings, Belgariad (series
of 5), 1980s. Some similarities in this series to what is
remembered
by the poster - they are not technically children's books, but when I
worked
in public libraries (until 1990) the series was bought for 'young
adult'
as well as 'adult fiction' sections of the library. Can't remember the
individual titles, and there was a second series called the Malloreon
which too the story further. There is certainly a sword that in the
last
book of the first series (the Belgariad) 'blushes' when put at or
outside
the door of the nuptial chamber when Garath and C'nedra finally
consumate
their marriage.
Eddings, David, Belgariad/ Mallorean,
1980s.
Further info on the two series mentioned: Belgariad: Pawn
of
Prophecy,
Queen
of
Sorcery,
Magician's
Gambit,
Castle
of
Wizardry,
Enchanter's
Endgame.
Mallorean:
Guardians of the West, King of the Murgos, Demon
Lord of Karanda, Sorceress of Darshiva, Seeress of Kell
Rosemary Sutcliffe, The Mark of the Horse
Lord. Don't remember about
the
sword in the bed, but definitely a warrior-like and warring hero and
heroine
in the medieval The Mark of the Horse Lord. Marketed to
teens,
but really bordering on adult rather than young adult. The two
were
betrothed, but as a ritual the man had to hunt the woman on horseback
in
the beginning. Odds are placed in his favor by mounting her on a
tired horse and (???) binding her hands??? Anyway, he catches her
and she tries to knife him, but he disarms her . . . but that's just
how
they get together. They are betrothed as an alliance of clans,
etc.
The focus of the book is on the warring over the kingdoms, etc.
Sound
like your book?
Sorry, this one is NOT David Eddings.
I know those books backwards and forwards. The relationship
sounds
a little similar to the main characters, but those two are never
allowed
to sleep in the same tent, let alone the same bed.
Margaret Weis & Tracy Hickman, Rose
of
the
Prophet trilogy, 1989. I'm not sure if these are
the
books the poster is looking for.They're definitely NOT for children...I
would put them in the mature category, but the two main (human)
characters
are a man and a woman who are betrothed to each other, even though
their
families are enemies. They spend the three books going on a Great
Quest,
and they not only start off sleeping with a naked sword between the two
of them, but Zohra (the girl) tries to kill Khardan...more than once.
The
pantheon of the Gods is involved, as well as Angels, Wizards, Djin (one
of whom is named Pukah) and demons. This person might also be
remembering
a portion of one in Piers Anthony's Incarnations of
Immortality
series. I think in the book about Mars, the man who becomes Mars is
initially
betrothed to a woman he doesn't know, and they are sent to a honeymoon
palace, but spend the first number of nights in the same bed with an
unsheathed
sword between the two of them I think they both loved someone
else.
Of course, they end up falling madly in love. I can't remember
what
happens next, I do know that he becomes the god of War... This
person
is definitely NOT talking the Belgariad or the Mallorean
(although those series certainly merit a reading...or twelve), as
Garion
and Ce'Nedra never actually hate each other.
Tamora Pierce, Alanna.
I don't remember the exact episode described, but could this be one of
the books in the Alanna series by Tamora Pierce? She wants to be
a knight so originally poses as a boy. of course as she grows up
in later books her cover is blown. After that romance does come
into
her relationship with her male companion.
Tamora Pierce, Song of the Lioness (Alanna)
series. This is NOT the answer to this stumper - I just read the
Alanna series and she isn't betrothed to anyone, nor does she sleep
with
a sword between her and soneome else.
Jennifer Roberson, Sword Dancer.Might
this
be
the
first
book
of
Jennifer Roberson's Sword
Dancer
series? The plot involves a female sword dancer
(warrior/duelist)
who hires a male sword dancer to travel with her in search of her
brother.
She doesn''t trust him in the beginning of the story but eventually
they
fall in love. The sword in the middle of the bed rings a bell
with
me, and this is the first book I thought of upon reading that detail in
the summary submitted by the original poster...hopefully I''m not
mixing
it up with some other book!
Rosemary Sutcliff, Song for a Dark
Queen, 1979. Song for a Dark Queen by Rosemary
Sutcliff
doesn't fit this description terribly well, except for
the
fact that Boudicca (Boadicea), married unwillingly, puts her father's
sword
on the bed between herself and her new husband. Eventually, when
she finds that she loves him, the sword is put outside the door.
Perhaps the searcher is mixing this episode with the story from another
book (or not - it may well be in the other book, but I thought it
couldn't
hurt to submit this)
Right on the tip of my tongue. Wonderful
poem.
Anna Maria Pratt, "A Mortifying Mistake"
from Little Rhymes for Little People, 1896.
I studied my tables over and over, / and
backward
and forward, too / But I couldn't remember six times nine, / and I
didn't
know what to do, / Till sister told me to play with my doll, / and not
to bother my head. / "If you call her `Fifty-four' for a while, /
you'll
learn it by heart," she said. / So I took my favorite, Mary Ann /
though
I thought 'twas a dreadful shame / To give such a perfectly lovely
child
/ such a perfectly horrid name), / And I called her my dear little
"Fifty-four"
/ a hundred times, till I knew / The answer of six times nine as well /
as the answer of two times two. / Next day Elizabeth Wigglesworth, /
who
always acts so proud, / Said, "Six times nine is fifty-two," / and I
nearly
laughed aloud! / But I wished I hadn't when teacher said, / "Now,
Dorothy,
tell if you can." / For I thought of my doll and / --sakes alive!--I
answer,
"Mary Ann!"
Well, the date's right, anyway, maybe - Chipper,
by Hortense Flexner, illustrated by Wyncie King, published
Stokes
1941. "Though a real chipmunk sat for his picture in this realistic
story, it is written with charm and a pleasant turn of fancy. Chipper
was
the member of a family who believed in giants and did not trouble to
store
up supplies for winter. That is, until he had tamed his giant animal
who
gave him sunflower seeds to carry away in his pouches. While Chipper
was
sure he had tamed his giant friend, the human giants felt the same way
about him. An entertaining story for pet lovers, well illustrated."
(Horn Book Sep/41 p.369)
M104 my little chipmunk: another possible title
is Cheeky Chipmunk by Helen & Alf Evers,
published
Chicago, Rand-McNally 1945. "The tale of a chimpmunk who loves to tease
but becomes the victim of one of his own pranks."
Could be Scatter the Chipmunk,
by Catherine Cate Coblentz, illustrated by Berta Schwartz,
published
Chicago
Childrens
Press
1946,
with
four
color
illustrations
and
illustrated
endpapers.
"Story
of
the
adventures
of
three
young
chipmunks
and
how
old
Grey
Cat
tries
to
catch
them
on
their
forays
for
food.
Scatter,
the
baby
in
the
chipmunk
family, is always in trouble. However, a
little
girl looks after him."
This may be too late into the 1940's (1947),
but as a child I had a beautiful book written and illustrated by Marjorie
Torrey called Three Little Chipmunks. Chuffy,
Chirpy
and Cheeky get into trouble for frightening Mr. Wren's chicks.
Cheeky
is wrongly accused and is sent to bed without supper. When the
truth
is learned, Cheeky's mother brings him a big bowl of ice cream, and he
is later asked to "babysit" the Wren chicks.
McElroy
and
Younge
(American
Book
Co.),
Toby
Chipmunk, 1937, copyright. Hope this helps!
Toby Chipmunk is an early reader which I read in a Wisconsin one-room
schoolhouse in the late forties - it's extremely difficult to find (I
finally did get a copy) and not cheap! It's about talking,
clothes-wearing chipmunk children who live with Grandma Chipmunk in her
house in a hollow tree trunk. A delightful little book.
Daniel Cohen,
mid-late
70's.
I
had
that
book
also.
Can't
recall
the
title
offhand,
but
Daniel
Cohen
wrote
several
similar
books
during
this
period
and
they
often
appear
on
eBay.
I
can
tell
you
it
is
NOT
Supermonsters.
If M105 is indeed a Daniel Cohen book,
it's probably his Monsters, Giants and Little Men from Mars
-- the date (1975) is right, and apparently this one does cover
Mothman;
not sure about the other beasties listed in question.
Mabel Esther Allan, The Mills Down Below, 1980. It's a while since I read this, but the girl's age & the place would be right. It was set just before the First World War & she was the daughter of a mill-owner who fought for the mill workers' & womens' rights. I do have vague memories of it starting with finding a diary.
M110 musical notation characters: this is
probably
too early and too long, but just in case, Prince Melody of Music
Land, written by Elizabeth Simpson, illustrated by Mary
Virginia Martin, published by Knopf 1921, 183
pages, hardbound book that measures 5.5" by
8.25",
pictorial binding. I have seen one illustration from this, the picture
shows a witchy type with caption: "My name is Treble Clef" she piped.
M113: Sounds like The Green Isle (1974)
by
Philip Burton, adoptive father of Richard Burton! It's a
romantic fairy tale that takes place in Wales
in the 11th century (the Norman invasion). Two lovers seek a place of
permanent
refuge and there's a beautiful island that they can only see from a
certain
point on the mainland - when they move, the isle magically disappears.
A clever servant figures out that the only way to keep the isle in
sight
and thus reach it is to take the "vantage point" with them!
M113 This is just a guess, but could it be EVER-AFTER
ISLAND by Elizabeth Starr Hill, 1977. A scientific
expedition
goes to an island (with some of the children of the scientists) and all
the stuff of fairytales - elves, mermaids, etc. exist on this island. I
have the hardcover, and it has a pale blue cover. ~from a librarian
Maybe - Fairwater, by Alastair
Reid, illustrated by Walter Lorraine, published Houghton 1957. "Fairwater
was
a
small
island
shaped
like
a
sea
horse
...
a
legend,
a
place
too
good
to
be
true,
too
gay,
too
green,
too
neat, too lovely for anyone in the Seven
Kingdoms
to risk a visit, lest they never come back. The most remarkable thing
about
it was that it was always Today on Fairwater. Scarcely less remarkable
was its Princess Tiran who had suddenly appeared when Lorn the old
magician
was experimenting with a spell called 'How to Make Girls out of Air.'
This
is the story of the lovely Tiran with silky hair the color of wind, of
Garth who loved her, and what happened when Phooph the glassblower of
Croam
put a strange glass curse upon Fairwater. The imaginative pictures make
it a lovely book." (Horn Book Jun/57 p.222)
M113 magical island: More on one suggested -
Ever-after
Island, by Elizabeth Starr Hill, published 1977, 119
Pages.
"Ryan
and Sara Finney were used to exploring remote parts of the world; since
their mother died, their fish-expert father had taken them on a number
of expeditions. But never to an island that was only a dot marked with
an X on a hand-drawn map. And certainly never with as secretive a
leader
as Dr. Moody Murk, who had already found the bones of a little manlike
creature, unknown to science, and who was fanatically looking for the
discovery
of a lifetime. Ryan was especially curious about Dr. Murk's hoped-for
scientific
coup when he saw the ship the old man had chartered---strangely like a
pirate vessel. And even more curious were the scientist's carefully
guarded
research souces---strangely like fairy tale volumes!" (from the
dustjacket)
M113 magical island: also worth looking at is
the Patricia Gordon / Joan Howard book The Oldest
Secret,
published
Viking 1953. The boy in that goes to a magical island with a sunken
forest,
where he meets Robin Goodfellow and Pan, as well as dangers of various
kinds.
M113 magic island: another possible is Children's
Island, written and illustrated by Richard G. Robinson, published
Dent
1971,
160
pages.
"Darley has marigold coloured hair which
seems
on fire and an imagination which is on fire. His teacher puzzles but
his
mother accepts. In the tool shed his mind takes him on a journey to the
island of tigers and children where realism is confined to the
crotchety
old Grumkin who is as far away as can be and where the evil monster
Vambatta
awaits destruction at his hands." (Children's Book Review Jun/71
p.91)
Could this one be Dean Marshall's The
Invisible
Island?
Definitely not Dean Marshall - The
Invisible Island was about children in Connecticut, not a
fantasy
story.
The plot sounds like The Never-ending
Story
by Michael Ende, but the main character in that is a young boy,
Bastien, and it was first published in the US in 1983. It's a common
enough
plot device, though.
Donaldson, Stephen, The Chronicles
of Thomas Covenant The Unbeliever, 1977. Could it be the
Thomas
Covenant series by Stephen Donaldson? The protagonist is
a
leper shunned by his neighbors, cast off by his wife who takes their
baby
son with her. He falls and hits his head and wakes up in "The
Land"
-- a beautiful country with giants and magic, but loomed over by evil
Lord
Foul, whom Thomas is summoned to conquer -- his white gold wedding ring
plays a large part in the series.
A similar story, though perhaps not the one
wanted
is The Toe-Rags: a Story of a Strange Bringing-up in Southern
Rhodesia,
by
Daphne
Anderson, published London, Methuen 1989, 373 pages. The narrator
and
her young brother are taken in by their estranged father's family after
their mother vanishes. The brother is favoured, but Daphne is never
accepted
and is brought up largely by the black servants. Like most Rhodesians
of
the time, the family is more English than the English, and they reject
her partly because they think she may have native blood. It may be too
recent, though.
M119 sounds awfully familiar...could it be
something
by Isak Dinesen? Do we know what the time period is?
Thank you for your prompt response! I really appreciate your help.
The two possible answers given aren't correct. If I remember correctly,
the time period the book was set in would probably be the 1930's, or
there
about. I even emailed CBS, but of course they never responded to my
query.
I'll keep checking back. Thank you again for your wonderful service!
Elspeth Huxley, The Flame Trees of Thika,
1959. This might be it! Memories of an Africa Childhood by
Elspeth
Huxley. A famous book I believe.This was made into a movie in recent
times,
I remember catching a glimpse of it. I thought it was on PBS. Haley
Mills,
an adult, had a part.
This isn't The Flame Trees of Thika.
In
that
memoir,
the
entire
family
goes
to
Africa
(one
parent
is
not
dead)
to
run
a
coffee
plantation.
This is not a solution, but does offer some more
data on the TV episode. I found a description in UNSOLD
TELEVISION
PILOTS: 1955 THROUGH 1988 by Lee Goldberg (McFarland, 1990) it's entry
#2248 there. The saliant bits: TWO WORLDS (a.k.a. MY
AFRICA).
60 minutes. Airdate: 6/21/88. . . Writer: Blanche Hanalis. . .
Aired
as a segment of CBS SUMMER PLAYHOUSE. This pilot, set in 1952,
stars
Carl Weintraub as Dr. Charles Marston, the son of British and American
parents, raised in Africa and educated in America, where he marries and
raises a family. When his wife dies, he brings his two children
(Jaime
McEnnan and Gennie James) to Kenya, where he opens a jungle clinic,
aided
by his Maasai friend (Joseph Mydell) and a woman doctor from an
aristocratic
British family (Jenifer Landor). Shot on location in Kenya. .
.
Note that the entry in the Goldberg book doesn't make any mention of a
book from which the show (the unsold pilot) was derived, if any.
Looking
at other entries, he usually seems to do so when appropriate, at least
for well-known sources, but I did spot at least one other case where
they
missed a book I know, and one or two in which they get such a citation
wrong in some way, so that's not Goldberg's chief focus. Maybe
there's
an ultimate book behind this one and maybe not, but it looks like the
odds
are against it. Blanche Hanalis wrote a lot of screenplays, some
adapted from books and some apparently original stories. I
can'\''t
find her credited in WorldCat with a book under either the MY AFRICA or
TWO WORLDS title, nor do I find a book called TWO WORLDS that seems to
match the premise described. Hope this helps a bit, at least.
Try Patrick Collum....
Oxford Myths and Legends Series?
1950s. Oxford University Press published a series of books like
this
in the '50's: here's one example: Picard, Barbara Leonie FRENCH
LEGENDS,
TALES
&
FAIRY
STORIES
1st edition 1955, Oxford University Press, in
the Myths & Legends series. 5th volume in the series. 216 pages.
Striking
full page colour and black & white illustrations by Joan
Kiddell-Monroe.
Stone coloured cloth. Spine gilt, slightly bumped at tail. (Is
"stone
coloured cloth" close enough?)
I think you may be thinking of The Young
Folks' Shelf of Books put out by P. F. Collier and Sons. The
set
may consist of 10 volumes(?). Each dealing with a different theme. Vol
3- Myths and Legends, vol 4-Hero Tales, vol 5- Stories That Never Grow
Old.etc. May be worth a look!
Ingri D'aulaire, Edgar D'aulaire, D'Aulaires
Book
of
Greek
Myths. I
remember
reading a grey book of greek myths with the drawings on the front being
sort of black lineart. I found it but the cover is different. The one I
read was a big hardcover.
There seems to be another one on Norse myths
so maybe its the series you're looking for?
#M122--Make-believe bear and a boy: A
story
about a boy bringing a bear home is Benny and the Bear,
by
Barbee
Oliver Carleton, but there is no mother in that and the bear is
quite
real! Stories about a boy, his mother, and an imaginary bear are
the
Blackboard Bear series.
Joan Walsh Anglund, Cowboy and His Friend.
This
the story of a little boy and his imaginary bear friend.
Knoche, Norma and Daly, Eileen, A Story
About Me. (1966) I am sure
that
the book you are looking for is A Story About Me, by Norma Knoche and
Eileen
Daly. This is a Whitman Big Tell-a-Tale book, and the plot is
just
as you described: a little boy finds a bear in the woods and brings him
home, only the boy's mother is unable to see the bear. This was a
childhood favorite of mine also, and I enjoy reading it to my children.
A Story About Me. The
book is definitely A Story Bout Me. It is my all-time favorite
children's
book and I still have my original copy. I especially enjoyed the
part where Mom gives them milk and cookies and Me Bear is so shy that
he
doesn'\''t wave to her until he is at the gate at the end of the
walk.
I remember reading this to myself, my younger sister, my two girls and
now I look forward to reading it to my Grandchildren someday.
Although
I think I could recite it from memory, I am glad I have the book.
The illustrations are priceles.
Jerry West, Happy Hollisters,
1960s?? Could the series be the Happy Hollisters by Jerry West?
There
are so many titles in that collection-- HH and the Sea Gull Beach.
HH
and the Sea Turtle Mystery, HH and the Old Clipper Ship are a
few.
Or maybe the Bobbsey Twins by Laura Lee Hope,(I
think)!
BT
at the Seashore,BT at Lakeport, BT at Lighthouse Point, and others.
Honey
Bunch is another old series. I don't know much of this set.
M138 mystery series: this sounds a bit like Captain
Ghost (Solved List) but that wasn't a series.
Could this be The Maida Books by
Inez
Haynes Irwin from the 1940's? The poster gave no indication when
these
books were read! There is Maida's Little Lighthouse, Maida's
Little
Island, Maida's Little Houseboat, etc. In M's Houseboat
the
boat breaks from its dock during a sudden fierce storm and the boat is
adrift. It finally runs aground on the island and the children are
stranded
there for several days. They stay in an old stone house called
Stonehenge
and they discover a stray dog marooned on the island as well. Many of
the
stories in this series take place on the large property owned by
Maida's
father: the Big House where he lives, the Girls House and the Boy's
House
where the children live--they are on the coast of Massachusetts. There
is a dock with the houseboat and the island offshore.The endsheets are
illustrated to depict the Westabrook property and the story settings.
As
a kid I always loved maps and diagrams where I could track the actions
as they unfolded!
Could this be the Hilda Boden books about
the Marlows? Several titles: Marlows at Castle Cliff, Marlows at
the Regatta, Marlows at Newgate, The Two Emeralds. She has
other
stories but I don't know if the Marlow children are in them- House
by
the
Sea,
Treasure
Trove,
Mystery
of
the
Island
Keep. I am
not
familiar with these books but I came upon them recently- since they
were
a series I thought I'd give it a shot!
John and Nancy Rambeau, The Mystery of
Morgan Castle, 1962. This is
the first book in the series of dark purple books called the morgan bay
mysteries. They are about children who live in morgan bay along
the
boardwalk and think the morgan house is haunted. However in it
live
an old lady with a cane and she has a dog. Could be what you are
looking for.
John and Nancy Rambeau, The Morgan Bay
Mysteries. (1962-65) This
sounds
remarkably like the Morgan Bay Mysteries, though you seem to be talking
about scenes from several of the books, not just one. These books
were hardcover with illustrations in shades of purple. The first
book, The Mystery of Morgan Castle, involves Gabby, Bill and Vinny
Summers
who live in the seaside town of Morgan Bay. There is a
vine-covered
castle at the end of the boardwalk and old Mrs. Wellington lives right
next door with her dog (who runs away). In another book in the
series,
The Mystery of the Midnight Visitor, the house is fixed up and is the
site
of a Garden Club party.
ARGH! I've read this one too - and loved
it. It was called something like To Find Your Love,
or
I'll Find My Love - I remember a little snatch of
song
that Mac sings at the end when they realize they were - to quote
Sleepless in Seattle - MFEO (Meant for Each Other)! Maybe
by
Mary Stolz? Maybe not? Now, you've got ME going crazy!!
Joan Dirksen, I'll Find My Love
(1957) I was not the original poster, but when I read this I
remembered
the book perfectly. It drove me crazy for months, but I rooted
around
in my 50+ years of memory to finally remember a title. I ordered
it ILL and it is the one!! I got chills when I read the first
page!
Yes, it is very 50's in tone, but it is really well-written. I am so
excited,
all I can say is: "And now we are so happy, we do the dance of
joy!!!"
This isn't a solution, but rabbit tobacco
(lavender)
is mentioned in Beatrix Potter's stories.
Sally Patrick Johnson (editor), A
Book of Princesses
I sent this stumper in, and I just wanted
to note that the solution is NOT the Princesses book edited by Sally
Patrick
Johnson. There are lots of wonderful stories in there, but no
story
about a princess named Paz, (actually, I wonder why it is not).
Also,
the story about the moon waxing and waning is not in there. It
could
be that the Infanta story wasn't really in the book I'm trying to find
- I may be remembering that wrong. And, the rabbit tobacco detail
was in a story about animals (maybe rabbits, maybe not), but I don't
think
it was a Beatrix Potter story. Thanks for the ideas though!
George Macdonald , Little Daylight.
Could the 'waxing and waning of the moon' refer to George Macdonald's
short
story "Little Daylight" about a princess who is cursed by an evil hag
at
her christening to 'wax and wane with the moon"? I read this as a child
in an anthology I thought it was the 'Princesses' book that I
suggested
earlier, but could be wrong.
This is the original poster again. Nope,
it's not The Princesses. In my edition of The Princesses
(copyright
1962) edited by Sally Patrick Johnson, the George Macdonald story is
called
The
Light Princess. Her evil aunt curses her to have no gravity
(both
lack of physical weight and emotional seriousness). Her Prince
must
allow himself to be drowned to fill up a sinking lake that the Princess
loves to swim in. So, that is not it - nothing to do with the moon
waxing and waning. Can you remember
which anthology it was where you might have read a different version of
the story? And really, I'm hoping that the "princess named Paz"
clue
might ring a bell with someone. As I remember it, the very first
line of the story gave her name and explained that Paz meant
peace.
But I have had no success in searching for it. Does anyone out
there
remember a princess named Paz?
Rina Singh, Moon tales : myths of the moon
from around the world, 1999.
This
is
just
a
possibility,
since
I
don't
actually
have
the
book
to
check
the
details,
but
I
thought
it
was
worth
mentioning.
It
may
be
too
recent.
When
did
you
read
it?
The
contents
list
includes
stories
about
rabbits, the moon, and a princess no Oscar Wilde,
though.
"The greedy man (Chinese) -- The thieves of Chelm (Jewish) -- Anansi
(West
African) -- Hina (Polynesian) -- The daughter of the moon and the son
of
the sun (Siberian) -- The rabbit and the moon man (Canadian) -- The
sun,
wind and the moon (Indian) -- The buried moon (English) -- The moon
princess
(Japanese) -- Why the moon waxes and wanes (Australian)"
No, it is not Moon Tales by Rina
Singh.
Great suggestion, though! I checked through it thoroughly. I also
checked similar books of stories about the moon like Sun, Moon and
Stars
by Mary Huffman and Jane Ray, and The Buried Moon and Other Stories
by Molly Bang. No luck. I would have read this collection
of
stories in the late 1960's to early 1970's. But I think even
books
with recent copyrights might have old stories that ring a bell.
But
none of these did.
THE BEDSIDE BOOK OF FAMOUS BRITISH STORIES
maybe?
1956
Elsie Spicer Eells, Tales of enchantment
from Spain, 1950, copyright.
Paz is Spanish for peace, so perhaps at least the princess story was a
Spanish folktale. This collection includes: White parrot -- Carnation
youth
-- Wood cutter's son and the two turtles -- Luck fairies -- Bird which
laid diamonds -- Enchanted castle in the sea -- Princess who was dumb
--
King who slept -- Prince Fernando -- Lily and the bear -- Sun, moon,
and
morning star -- Frog and his clothes -- White dove of the city of the
Swinging
Gate -- Flower of beauty -- Magician palermo.
Not quite, but worth a mention: Barrett, Judy. Cloudy
with
a
Chance
of
Meatballs. Illustrated by Ron
Barrett.
Atheneum Books, 1978.
Tom Glazer, On Top of Spaghetti. It
sure sounds like the storyline, though I can't vouch for the strange
detailed
pictures. Be sure to check out the ones with illustrations by Art
Seiden (1966), Tom Garcia (1982), or Jackie Snider (1982) - which would
be the ones around in the time period you remember. Newer
versions
in print have a different illustrator.
This one may be a long shot. Perhaps it was not
a meatball that rolled underground. Perhaps it was a rice dumpling from
the book THE FUNNY LITTLE WOMAN retold by Arlene
Mosel.
A
rice dumpling falls through a crack in the old woman's house and leads
her underground. It definitely would seem scary to a child because
there
were statues and monsters down there. ~from a librarian
On Top of Spaghetti sounds like
your best bet, since the song is a parody of "On Top of Old
Smokey"
and generally starts "On top of spaghetti/All covered with cheese/I
lost my poor meatball/When somebody sneezed." The meatball
goes
on rolling out the door and I believe it eventually gets mushed or
smushed.
I'm voting for The Funny Little Woman because of the
hill, the underground city and scariness. Versions I've seen of On
Top
of
Spaghetti don't have the underground sequence or the
frightening
factor.
Sounds like a version of Seven Blind Mice, except
it's
usually an elephant they're describing. There's a nice modern
version
of that by Ed Young.
Thanks for the suggestion. Seven
Blind Mice is similar in theme, but it's not the book I'm looking
for.
M160 Have you tried consulting A to Zoo?
Most
public
&
school
libraries
have
this
reference
book
that
lists
picture
books
categorized
by
animals.
Worth
a
shot!
Thanks for the advice. Sadly, I've checked two different
directories
of children's literature -- but to no avail. Surely
SOMEONE must remember this book!?!
M186: Sounds like Walter the Lazy Mouse
by Marjorie Flack. See F72. It also reminds me of the movie An
American
Tail, though I never saw it.
The Grocery Mouse. The plot
involves a young mouse who lives in a grocery store with his large
family
but is anxious to see the outside world. His mother warns him of
the dangers of the outside. He is accidently swept outside and
travels
around searching for food and a place to live. He meets a girl mouse
and
moves into a tree eventually taking her back to see his family. This is
a very cute book-at one point they follow a trail of ants to find food.
It was very "vintage" when I received it in the mid-sixties. I have it
up in the attic somewhere-if this sounds right, let me know and I will
look for it to find the author.
I just found the book. It is not the one I am looking
for.
Thanks.
Could this be Mouse House by Rumer
Godden??
Thanks, but it's not the Mouse House either.
Elsa Jane Werner, Patrick the Fuzziest
Bunny, 1946. Could this be
the
book, it is about a rabbit though not a mouse who gets separated from
his
family when they go on a picnic, he gets lost and goes through many
adventures.
It is a fuzzy wuzzy book? I had it as a child in the early 50's
Thank you very much, but Patrick The
Fuzziest
Bunny is not the book I am searching for. There were no
fuzzies
and I am sure it was a mouse that was lost.
I seem to remember a series of 2in1 books from
1954 that included My Mother is the Most Beautiful Woman in the
World,
unfortunately
the reverse side of that is not the mouse book I am struggling to
remember.
There is one about a mouse (I believe he is dressed russian style) and
he has to go out into the snow searching for something? Which made me
think
of the description for M186. My memory of this series gets alittle
vague,
perhaps someone else remembers this series better?
I have THE DANDELION LIBRARY,which
includes
My Mother is the Most Beautiful Woman in the World, as well as
the Russian tale about Trubloff-the Mouse Who Wanted to Play the
Balalaika. The watercolor illustrations of Trubloff
traveling
with a band of musicians show him cross-country skiing against vast
wintery
sunsets and starry night skies.There are many wonderfully moving
stories
and pictures in this collection, including The Three Little
Horses,
and Johnny Crow's Garden.
Russell & Lillian Hoban, Bedtime
for
Frances. Long shot, but
could
be Bedtime for Frances. The illustrations are in shades of grey
(and
green in *some* editions). While the story does not center
entirely
around things looking scary in the dark, there are parts about this,
and
then Frances will turn on her light and see what they really are.
Hoellwarth, Cathryn, The Underbed,
'90's. Can't remember if this book shows the entire bedroom.
Mercer Mayer, Nightmare in my Closet.
Speaking of Mercer Mayer, could the scary 'thing' have been in his
closet
instead of under the bed [alligator]
The book is definitely from the 70s--when I was a child. And
I do remember that the format was dark room monster, light room
objects,
dark room monster, light room objects, etc. I'm excited to see
that
people have read and considered my entry--and am holding out hope that
it will be solved. Thanks.
#M189--Monsters are really ordinary
objects:
Could this be by Judith Viorst?
The Flat Man or The Ankle
Grabber. These are both very short books about the fun of
scaring yourself, but not to get to upset because "I know that sound
isn't
really the flat man scratching at my window to get in, it is just the
branches
from the tree outside, but I like to pretend."
Ellen Raskin, Spectacles,
'70s. Not monsters in a room, but a child who doesn't like to
wear
her glasses, but you see, in grey, what she thinks she sees and then,
in
full color, what it is that the things really are. A favorite of mine!
are you absolutely positive this was a book?
because I remember the same thing, except it was on television-- one of
those educational kids shows. it was presented like a book-- there was
no motion, every camera shot was of a drawing, like the page of a book.
the child was afraid of the dark, and made drawings of what all the
"monsters"
really were and put them on her bedside table so that she could look at
the drawings at night.
Munro Leaf, Boo - Who Used to Be Scared
Of The Dark. (1948) In this
story illustrated by Frances Hunter, Boo is taught by his cat Alexander
to overcome his fear of the dark and other things. When Boo is
looking
at things in the dark the pictures are black and gray when he
turns
on his flashlight they are colored. As a child I thought it was a
wonderful book perhaps because Boo looked like my little brother!
Ann Hellie, Once I had a Monster,1969.
Ellen Raskin, Spectacles. I think that the poster that
suggested Spectacles is on to something as I just recently found that
book for
my daughter and read it again. There is a gray picture tha looks like a
dragon,
but when she puts her glassses on, she
can see it is something else entirely and the picture switches to
color. Just
try to find the book at the library to see if it is what you remember.
Carolyn Ruth Eger, Rimskittle's Book(1926)
It was on your stumpers archives page, under
MN (for monkey, I assume). How I came across it, by the way, was by
googling
the "little yellow monkey" etc. phrase, hoping to find the complete
poem.
It was the unique hit, unfortunately. But I can't imagine how the
customer
saw it in a 4-5" book in the fifties--the original was a small folio.
Maybe
what he saw was an anthology of some sort? I am awestruck by the number
of mysteries you solve, by the way; and your store looks
wonderful.
These are juvenile novels about the
Russo-Finnish
War published before 1970. Do any of them sound right?
Sorry
for all the choices, but I couldn't find summaries for most of them. Dave
Dawson
on
the
Russian
Front, by Robert Sidney Bowen,
1943.
Comrades
in the Snow, by Julian David [a.k.a. David Loring
MacKaye
and Julia Josephine Gunther MacKaye] 1941. Ski Patrol,
by
Roy
J. Snell, 1940. I'll Know My Love, by
Pearl
Bucklen Bentel, 1955. Summary: A story about the
courage
of the Finns when Russia gobbled up a thick slice of Finland. It
is based on the experiences of a young Finnish drama student at the
Playhouse
in Pittsburgh whom Mrs. Bentel came to know.
Floyd Miller, Wild Children of the Urals
, 1965. Could this be the same book as O26. It sounds very
similar.
#M199--Mountains/Alps (Swiss?) Boy rescues
friend
from mystic force: There is a very similar situation in the short
story The Dead Valley, by Ralph Adams Cram.
There
are
two
boys
who
are
friends,
but
nothing
about
holding
hands,
and
you
would
definitely
remember
the
part
about
the
dog.
If
you
don't
remember
any
dog,
this
is
not
your
story.
Mollie Hunter, The Haunted Mountain,
1972. This wasn't about two boys, but about a boy and his
father.
It also wasn't set in the Alps. The boy's father had been missing
and the boy up the mountain to save him from a magical force.
#M200--Mysery of the Topaz Necklace:
Hmmm,
doesn't seem to be this one: Secret of the Tiger's Eye,
by
Phyllis
A. Whitney. All right, so tigers don't live in
Africa.
How can you explain Benita Dustin's terrifying experience with one in
the
garden of her aunt's house in Cape Town? Of course, this daughter of a
journalist has considerable imagination,
the kind you'd expect of a girl who likes to
read and aspires to authorship herself. It's not the kind of
imagination
Joel Monroe appreciates. He's a fact-loving soul, the last boy on
earth probably to believe in ghosts or in disappearing faces at the
window,
or to feel there's anything odd in a man's thumb being blue. He's
the last boy, certainly, whom Benita wants as companion on the trip she
and her younger brother have made with their father, who is writing a
book
about South Africa. Oh, once in a while Benita and the guest, son
of Mr. Dustin's editor back in New York, do see eye to eye -- on the
ugly
injustice of apartheid, for instance. But
when it comes to Aunt Persis' exciting house with its cave and romantic
towers and frightening prowlers, or to the mystery surrounding the
death
of Aunt Persis' adopted son, why, then, the sparks fly. Logical
Joel
scoffs at the "notions " of imaginative Benita. He scoffs on the
other side of his face, so to speak, when her writer's
intuition turns out to be only too true
concerning
the sinister intentions of Mr. Blue Thumb, otherwise known in
questionable
quarters as Tom Kettle -- a grinning, greasy-haired, sidling sailor
whom
sensible Joel wants to befriend! Friendship, though, friendship, trust,
and respect are the clues to the really big secret in this book.
Here, against the breath-taking background of a highly dramatic
country,
is a story full of drama as well as of meaning, with scarcely a slack
in
the sleuthing thrills young mystery fans love.
Possibilities -- Mystery of the Missing
Necklace by Enid Blyton (May Fair Books, 1963), or Mystery
of
the
Carrowell
Necklace by Eugenie C Reid, (Young
Readers
Press, 1967).
Betty Cavanna. It sounds like the
kind of plot she sometimes used, though I can't think of a specific
book.
How about Mystery in the Museum
by Betty Cavanna? I believe the young girl works in the museum
shop
and I think the mystery revolves around a very valuable missing
bracelet.
Might be worth a look!
Hi, I posted a stumper a while back called Mystery of the Topaz
Necklace. You guys solved it as Mystery in the Museum by Betty
Cavanna.
I've read it, and while it was good, it's not the book I'm looking for.
Mine takes place in a natural history museum in the 40's or 50's or so
and is more of a teenage story, Cavanna's is set in the Boston Museum
of
Fine Arts (I'm from Boston, so I especially enjoyed it) among college
kids
in the 70's. I think this book has fallen off the face of the earth
since
I know Topaz Necklace is in the title and there are on hits on that
phrase
anywhere (I wish I'd stolen it from my library when I was reading it 10
years ago before it got weeded! LOL) but if you get a chance at some
point
I'd appreciate it if you could stick it back into the unsolved
archive--hey,
you never know! :)
Might this be the Trixie Belden
series? As I recall, Trixie solved mysteries along with her
brother
and her friend and her friend's brother. There were also other
siblings
involved I believe, as well as friends. I *think,* but am not
sure,
that these were originally published in the 30's or 40's? And
they
did always have happy endings, with Trixie (and company) returned
safely
to her big loving family.
Laura Lee Hope, Bobbsey Twins
series. Perhaps another possibility
Old series?? Curly Tops by Howard
R.
Garis, (1920-30?) Penny Nichols by Joan
Clark,
(1930's), Honey Bunch and Norman by Helen Louise
Thorndyke,
(1940-50's), Happy Hollisters by Jerry West,
(1950-60's)
My first thought was Moon Bear
by
Frank
Asch but that wasn't published till 1978, maybe a little late for
your
book. Here are two other possibilities: #1- Bobby Bear's
Rocket
Ride by Marilyn Olear Helmrath (1968) "Bobby Bear wants
to fly like a robin so he gets a ride on a rocket to the moon and other
planets in our solar system." #2- Lorenzo Bear &
Company
by Jan Wahl (1971) "Lorenzo Bear launches a space program for
animals
by building a moon rocket."
This is a very long shot, but maybe the reader
is remembering Barbapapa's Ark that is on the solved
mysteries
page. Barbapapas are blobby creatures (one of them is rather
hairy)
who take animals into space in a rocket-type vehicle. It's from
the
right time period, too.
Wildsmith, Brian, Professor Noah's
Spaceship,
1980, copyright. Picture book with Wildsmith's characteristic
semi-abstract
colorful pictures, maybe too recent.
M213 I think this must be it. I haven't
located
it yet, but now that I see it is only 24 pages, I'll look again in the
morning in the stacks of zoology. Watts, Barrie. House
mouse. photos. Silver Burdett, 1990 [British]
1998
life cycle illustrated with life-size color photos.
M213 No luck finding my copy of Mouse
House.
In the search, I ran across 2 other photographic mouse books: Burton
The
mouse
in
the
barn, Oxford Scientific Films in a
series
on Animal habitats, and it shows all kind of mice around the world, so
that is not it. Mouse and Company by Lilo Hess
is
closer: The photos show the life of a deer mouse, including nest
building and baby-raising. "and company " apparently refers to all the
other species discussed and depicted.
M213 It might be THE MOUSE BOOK
by Helen Piers, published in England in 1966, published by
F.Watts
in 1968, and by Scholastic in paperback in 1970. It is divided into 3
chapters
(and I may not have the chapter headings 100% correct - I'll check my
copy)
"Mouse Finds a House" "Mouse Finds a Friend" "Mouse Finds Food". If
this
is the book you're thinking
of, than you may recall that the text goes
something
like this - Mouse was looking for a house that was not too hot, not too
cold, not too dirty, not too wet...etc. And you may recall that Mouse
finds
a dollhouse to live in, finds a mouse friend, and when they run out of
food, a human finds them and puts them in a mouse house with plenty of
good things for mice. It is really adorable, and a fun read-aloud. Just
be careful that it's by Helen Piers - there's another book by the same
title. ~from a librarian
Mouse and Company- story and
photographs
by Lili Hess. Charles Scribner's Sons (1972) It was a Junior
Literary
Guild Selection. This might be it!
Check the description of Wishing Penny
and
Other Fantasy Stories on the Solved Mysteries pages to see if
it
sounds familiar.
I checked The Wishing Penny and the description of The
Sand Castle; it's close but not quite the story I'm looking
for...The
little girl definitely constructs the mermaid herself and decorates her
with objects she finds on the beach (no sand castle involvement).
I don't think the mermaid ever speaks, either. Queen Anne's Lace
(the flower) is one of the things the little girl uses to make her
mermaid
beautiful. Thanks!
Eleanor Farjeon, Martin Pippin in the
Daisy
Field. I may be totally off
base here, but I think this *might* be an Eleanor Farjeon story,
possibly
'The Mermaid of Ryle' in the above book.
I haven't been able to find The Mermaid of Ryle, but I
managed
to read some of Martin Pippin on-line; it doesn't have the same
feel as the mermaid story I remember. The story was fairly
contemporary
(1960s or 70s). I know it's out there somewhere and
somebody
remembers it...
Ainsworth, Ruth, The Talking Rock,
London, Deutsch 1979.
M218 The description made me think of MILLICENT
THE
MONSTER by Mary lystad, illustrated by Victoria
Chess,
1968. It is a picture book, the illustrations are distinctive, and are
set in Victorian? time period. Millicent is friends with her next door
neighbor (I'm pretty sure that they do handstands together) but she's
sick
of being a good girl. She decides to become a monster and terrorizes
everyone
with mean faces, words and behavior. But when her best friend can't
stand
her, she decides to stop being a monster. However, there's no magic
involved.
If this doesn't sound right, then I did come across a listing for THE
MAGIC
OF
MILLICENT
MUSGRAVE by Brinton Turkle, 1967. The
summaries
say that Millicent wants a white rabbit but gets tricked by a magician
and gets a doll (named Melinda Melee) instead. Millicent and her father
travel the world to track down the magician. So, the description
doesn't
really match, but just in case... ~from a librarian
Sachs, Marilyn, Dorrie's Book.
Checked my copy of Millicent the Monster, and the
previous
person posting on this was
right--Millicent does do handstands in the book.
If it's _not_ Millicent the Monster that the requester
is
thinking of, it might be Dorrie's Book. It is a
quirky
novel written in diary format, and I could swear that Dorrie moves in
next
to a family with a bizarre daughter named Millicent.
Unofrtunately,
I don't have a copy in which to check it, and any of the bib records
that
I've looked at don't mention the neighbor.
M218 Darn! I thought I had found it, but it is
NOT The magic of Millicent Musgrave by Brinton
Turkle.
Astrid Lindgren, Emil series
I do not think it is the Emil books by Lindgren, as Emil
only has a little sister and not an older one who could be dating a
boy.
Thank you for the suggestion though.
Maybe Bill Bergson stories by Lindgren!?
Edith Unnerstad, The Urchin.
(Translated from Swedish 'Pysen'.) I don't remember whether there was
such
a spying episode, but the hero was a mischievous small Scandinavian
boy,
and did have teenage sisters.
Gunilla Norris, A Time for
Watching,
1969.
Could this be it? It takes place in Sweden. Joachim's best
friend is gone for the summer, and Joachim gets into a lot of mischief
and trouble. He is fascinated by a neighbor who doesn't like
children,
and is a watch and clock repairer. Near the end, there is a
Midsummer
celebration, with a dance around a May Day-type pole. Joachim did
have an older sister who went on a date. I hope this is it - it
was
one of my favorites as a child. Good luck!
Illustrated by Janet and Anne Grahame Johnstone, Dean's A Book of Fairytales, 1977. The 1977 edition of this book has a greyish blue cover.
Any relation to T149? (Still unsolved).
Definitely not related to T149, but I confess that one intrigued
me when I was browsing the stumpers and I tried to find it
online.
I have a copy of Futility the Tapir. It is a very simple
ink
drawing picture book with only a few lines. Cute art but not the
answer to my M223 nor T149. I'll not give up hope!
thanks....
There are also tapirs in South America. I vaguely recall there
being something about crops and irrigation or watering of the crops,
too.
Also a small building (house?) made of natural materials. Maybe I
have the setting wrong - perhaps it is not Malaysia after all?
This
one is driving me nuts because I have so little to go on. But
this
story is completely responsible for me even knowing what tapirs are in
the first place. Today I try to help support tapir preservation
whenever
I can. There are four species left, all endangered.
On M223, I wonder if maybe it was a story in my childcraft
books.
I have a set now, 1966 edition, and it is not in that, but neither is Little
Black
Sambo, and I seem to remember LBS being in my set as a child
in the 1960s. Our old family set was gray binding/different color
stripes for each volume, but may have been a couple of years older than
1966. Maybe your readers can look in their childcrafts and
check for a story with a tapir illustration? If Little Black
Sambo
was removed, maybe the editors removed and added other stories as
well...?
Thanks!
M225: This isn't quite a match, but it reminds
me of the short spy story by The Three Investigators
author
Robert
Arthur - I believe it's called The Midnight Visitor.
I read it in the middle-school textbook Impressions from the 1970s. It
takes place in a hotel in France and the man who goes onto the balcony
is a Russian spy. However, there is no blizzard - just a very well
set-up
ending. I won't spoil it.
Additional note: The Midnight Visitor
is from Arthur's 1964 book: Mystery & More Mystery.
king, stephen, collection of short stories.
this is one of the stories from skeleton crew or another
of king's anthologies.
I couldn't help but think of Dean Koontz'
The
Face of Fear when I read this stumper. It is no short
story,
nor for children, but the stumper poster may enjoy reading it, even if
it's not what is being searched for. There is a tall building, a
killer, a blizzard, and a chase. I won't spoil the ending of this
one either!
Stephen King, Night Shift (collection
of short stories). Thjs should be easy to find at any library or
used book store. I don't know which story it is but I am sure it's one
in this collection. Neither the story nor the collection is for
children.
I checked out the story "The Ledge" in Stephen
King's NIGHT SHIFT, and that is definitely NOT the story. In
the
Stephen King story, There's a bet involved and the man is aware that
his
goal is to walk around the ledge even before he goes out there. The
story
I read is definitely about a man unexpectedly getting locked out of his
apt. in a murder attempt, simply to be left out there on his balcony to
die in freezing temps, and his need to survive the ordeal. The King
story
is about a man agreeing ahead of time to walk around the high ledge to
win a bet. Any other ideas would be appreciated, I haven't checked out
any of the other suggestions yet. Thanks!
William Irish (Cornell Woolrich), Maybe
in Phantom Lady collection. Very definitely a
Cornell
Woolrich story written under the name William Irish. It may be in the
Phantom
Lady collection which was a book club selection. William Irish is a key
figure in the noir genre. Really fun stuff, scary and chilling. Most of
his settings are 30-50s Manhattan. He also wrote the short story "Rear
Window" upon which the Hitchcock movie is based.
william irish a.k.a. cornell woolrich,
story
in
AFTER-DINNER STORY collection, 1944. I
don't
recall the story, but I agree that it sounds like it could be
Woolrich.
One respondent thought it was in PHANTOM LADY "omnibus," and the only
Woolrich
omnibus to include his novel PHANTOM LADY is also one that includes his
novel DEADLINE AT DAWN and the contents of one of his story
collections,
AFTER DINNER STORY. So, if the story in question is in said
omnibus,
it should also be in any edition of that story collection--the
original,
the omnibus, and/or the pb reprint of the original collection, which
was
retitled SIX TIMES DEATH. Unfortunately I don't have any of those
handy to check contents right now.
Thanks so much! I have done some research
now on Cornell Woolrich, and think the story I read may well be his.
Another
story of his was described as being about a man who knows that a bomb
is
going to go off in an apartment building at a certain time
however,
he is trapped in the basement of the building and can't warn anyone...
I now remember reading this story as well, around the same time I read
the one described in my stumper, so I really think that it's cornell
woolrich,
I just need to find the collection of stories and check it out, I
understand
that much of his work is now out-of-print. Thanks again.
My high-school lit book had
something close to what you're talking about: there wasn't any killer,
the man crawled out onto the ledge to retreive some vital business
paper that had blown outside and accidentally slams the window shut.
His wife had gone off for the evening and he wasn't sure he could wait
for her to get home. Ending would be as you remember.
Re:
M225.
The
high
school
lit
book
mentioned
by
one
of
the
responders
is
probably
"Adventures
in
Appreciation,"
Harcourt,
Brace
and
World.
The
short
story
about
the
man
on
a
ledge
is
almost
certainly
Jack
Finney's
"An
Untitled
Story." I first read it
freshman year in high school. Heart-poundingly suspenseful; I
recommend it!
I just remembered something else
about M225. The way the hero got off the apartment building roof
-- was it by disconnecting everyone's TV antenna so someone would come
up and investigate? If so, try searching issues of "Alfred
Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine" from the 1980's. I'm sure I read a
story like that, and that's most likely where.
M227 have you tried this spelling: Merrimac
Nursery Rhyme?, Mary Mack. Found a nursery
rhyme, nothing to do with a train, though: Miss Mary
Mack,
Mack, Mack /
All dressed in black, black, black / With
silver buttons, buttons, buttons / All down her back, back, back / She
asked her mother, mother, mother / For fifty cents, cents, cents / To
see
the elephant, elephant, elephant / Jump over the fence, fence, fence /
He jumped so high, high, high / He reached the sky, sky, sky / And he
never
came back, back, back / ‘Till the end of July, ‘ly, ‘ly.
Marian Potter, The Little Red Caboose,
1953. I'm not certain about this, but it's a possibility.
(It's
part of the Little
Golden Book series.)
William Baring-Gould, The Annotated Mother Goose. This seems like a strong possibility some of the illustrators included in this collection are Parrish, Caldecott, Rackham and Greenaway.
Well, this isn't a perfect fit, since Peter
Pauper
Press books are pretty small, but it sounds like Turkish Fairy
Tales.
That one story sounds like "The Fish-Peri." When I searched in abebooks
under TFT, I found at least four different translations of such fairy
tales,
so maybe one of them would fit!
Wow--this description sounds like a bunch of
fairy tales got in a train wreck! At any rate, the fish (usually
a seal) transforming into a woman is normally known as a "selkie"
in these tales, burning the selkie skin is usually intended to keep the
woman trapped in her human form.
Ivo Duka, Secret of the Two Feathers.
I only vaguely remember this but it's possibly The Secret of the
Two Feathers, although I think it was published in 1954.
Secret of the Two
Feathers. I remember the first chapter from my
grade-school reader, sometime before 1973; the feathers were black with
white symbols on them. The feathers were symbols of rival pirates who
died in a duel; anybody who found both could make wishes.
A long shot, but Munro Leaf did
etiquette
books -- Manners Can Be Fun, How To Behave and Why --
with
very simple line drawings (almost stick figures) and minimal
text.
They were published in the 1940s and 1950s and were still in libraries
in the 1960s. How to Behave has recently been
reissued
if the person who posted the request wants to see Leaf's drawing style.
Sesyle Joslin, What Do You Say, Dear? OR
What Do You Do, Dear? 1960s. Could one of these
classic
children's books on manners be what's meant? Without a dust
jacket,
one of them could easily match the description, right down to to the
illustration
of the "little long-haired in dress sitting down."
Marjabelle Young Stewart, White
Gloves and Party Manners. The description reminds me of this
book,
including the illustrations. Good luck!
Anything else to add on this memory? There are two books
featuring
Chinese dolls by Eleanor Frances Lattimore called Little
Pear
(1931) and Peachblossom (1943) ...
Rumer Godden, Miss Happiness and
Miss Flower. and the little boy doll called Little Plum,
in the sequel? Just a thought.
Rumer Godden, Little Plum.
This book includes dolls called Little Plum and Little Peach (not Mrs.)
Rumer Godden, Miss Happiness and Miss
Flower.
England is the last place Nona Fells wants to be. No one asked her if
she
wanted to leave sunny India to live in a chilly English village with
her
aunt's family -- and her cousin, Belinda, just hates her! But when two
dainty Japanese dolls arrive at Nona's doorstep, everything begins to
change.
Like Nona, Miss Happiness and Miss Flower are lonely and homesick, so
Nona
decides to build them their own traditional Japanese house. Over time,
not only does Nona create a home for the dolls, but one for herself as
well.
There is also a sequel, Little Plum.
M243 Godden, Rumer. Miss Happiness
and Miss Flower. illus by Jean Primrose. Viking,
1961.
Japanese dolls, last pages of book are dollhouse plans
I wonder if M248 & C267 refer to the same book?
Florence Parry Heide, Roxanne Heide Pierce,
Sylvia Worth Van Clief, The Spotlight Club Series: The
Mystery at Keyhole Carnival as well as several others,
1977.
I only read one of this series, The Mystery of the Whispering
Voice,
by F. P. Heide and Van Clief, published in 1983. There
are
several titles, and the ones published in the 1970s were by Heide and
Heide
Pierce. There are about 3 kids who form the club, and even though
they are such a small group, they are very formal about club procedure,
including, I believe, several rules they recall from prior adventures.
Other titles all follow "The Mystery of the" formula, and are The
Mystery
of
the
Forgotten
Island (1983),
Midnight Message
(1977), Bewitched Bookmobile (1975), and others.
E. W. Hildick, The McGurk Mysteriesseries
Wells, Rosemary, Through the Hidden Door. NY, Dial Books 1987. "Two boys at a boarding school find and explore a cave that contains some inexplicable artifacts - dollhouse-sized remains of a large city. Are they what's left of a giant hoax or could they be the remnants of a miniature race of people? Suspense builds as they excavate the cave in secret and try to solve the mystery of the artifacts." "Barney's life is a mess. Everyone thinks he's a snitch. His former friends want to kill him. Even the headmaster of his school wants him gone. No one but secretive little Snowy Cobb will speak to him. But after Snowy and Barney discover the hidden cave deep below the earth, the promise of ancient treasures wipe away the threats from above. And when they uncover strange artifacts untouched for centuries, a web of unknowable danger begins to unravel-and Snowy and Barney may not survive."
Shot in the dark, but could this person be thinking of the books by Mary Norton that were later made into the Disney movie "Bedknobs and Broomsticks"? The books were THE MAGIC BED-KNOB and BONFIRES AND BROOMSTICKS and were also combined into BED-KNOB AND BROOMSTICK. However, the witch is not related to them.~from a librarian
Pease, Howard, The Secret Cargo,
illustrated by Paul Forster. NY Dial 1931. Could be this
one,
from the title. Subtitle: the Story of Larry Mathews and His Dog Sambo,
Forecastle Mates on the Tramp Steamer "creole trader", New Orleans To
the
South Seas. {Blurb} A padlocked chest on a ship in the South Seas!
"Larry
Mathews and his dog Sambo stow away and ship off to Tahiti on the
freighter
Creole Trader. The tramp steamer carries a mysterious padlocked chest
that
gives rise to Larry's curiosity."
Thanks for that solution, but it isn't the right one. I don't
remember
any tramp steamers. I'll pursue the Dolphin Readers for the other one
though
- thanks!
Jean Bothwell, The Mystery Cargo
Sheridan Cain, Good Night, Little Hare. Baby's First Book Club, 1998. "Mother Hare watches as Little Hare settles down to sleep. For his blanket he has the sky, and for his bed he has the soft grass. But Mole warns Mother Hare that Farmer Brown will cut the grass at dawn, so she must find another bed for her baby. As she searches for a safe place, she is warned by her friends of the countryside's many dangers. Will she ever find a safe bed for Little Hare?"
John F. Carson, The Boys Who Vanished
Williams, Jay & Raymond Abrashkin, Danny
Dunn
and
the
Smallifying
Machine,
1969. The timing is about right for this to be a good candidate,
though it's been a long time since I've actually read the book.
The
"miniaturized people" plot has been done fairly often (an even more
serious
treatment, though with few insects that I recall, would be that done by
Jane
Louise Curry in the series of which MINDY'S MYSTERIOUS
MINIATURE
is a part).
Lucy Maria Boston, The castle of
Yew,1965.
Just a guess-- Origin of Michigan City and Town Names, compiled by Frances Wood, 1952. "Scrapbooks consist of newspaper clippings, postmarked envelopes addressed to Frances Wood of Grand Rapids, Michigan, photographs of local postal buildings, and postcards of various cities, towns, bridges, and wildlife in Michigan." (Also, Michigan Place Names, Frances Wood, 1954.)
Disney, Dumbo.
The elephant with the giant ears who flies is certainly Dumbo.
The
Disney movie was released in 1941, and there have been countless Disney
book versions of the story ever since. It does indeed take place
at the circus, and there is chaos when a stunt involving a burning
tower
that the clowns (who are dressed as firemen) are performing goes wrong
and Dumbo has to save the day, so I wonder if this is not the only
story
you are thinking of. Unfortunately, I don't have a copy of any of
the versions to look at, so I cannot say if one of the characters eats
peas with a knife.
Maud and Miska Petersham, The Circus Baby.
I know this is a long shot...it's a picture book about a mother
elephant
in the circus who wants her baby elephant to sit up on a chair and eat
like her favourite clown family. There are several mentions of the
mother's
big floppy ears. The elephants go into the clowns tent, mother elephant
tries to get baby to eat a bowl of beans with a spoon, and they end up
destroying the place. You might be remembering a drawing of the
clown
family eating...just maybe the father clown might be your fireman?
I'm around the same age and can tell you the
rhyme. "I eat my peas with honey./ I've done it all my life./It
makes
the peas taste funny,/But it keeps them on the knife." I
think
(maybe) it was in one of those children's hardcover digests that came
every
other month. I'll look at the one's I still have and see if I can trace
it further. Anyway, maybe you can trace it with the whole rhyme.
I remember the poem too. I had it in a
book of rhymes and/or stories for kids. I can'\t remember the
name
though. I think it was hardbound, maybe an inch thick and had a
pink
cover. It also had the Fuzzy Wuzzy was a bear rhyme, and another
that started with "Peanut sitting on a railroad track" and ended with
"Toot
toot peanut butter." Hope this helps!
Golden
Press,
Golden Funny Book,
early 1950's, approximate. My brother and I loved this book as
children; several of the poems in it are by Edward Lear, including the
one about eating peas with honey. There are also several TERRIBLY
CORNY jokes which we used to think were hilarious!! Your other
book is most likely a Golden Book also; in Disney's DUMBO there is a
frantic scene where baby Dumbo is dressed as a baby clown and is to be
rescued by clowns dressed as firemen who do all sorts of outlandish
things, e.g. spray gasoline on the flames instead of water. Later
on the baby elephant tries to fly, trips over his ears, and upsets the
pyramid of bigger elephants. I think these must be the 2 books
you are looking for. I actually own 2 copies of the Golden Funny Book if you are
interested. DUMBO should not be that hard to find. Good
luck.
Maud and Miska
Petersham,
The Rooster Crows : A Book of
American Rhymes and Jingles, 1945. This book has the poem about
eating
peas and honey on a knife, as well as Miss Mary Mack, with a picture of
an
elephant jumping. It sounds like the book you remember. I hope this
helped!
Marguerite Vance, Song for a Lute,
1958. This book has a similar plot -- the young noblewoman who
befriends
the two princes in the Tower.
Shirley Nagel
Shirley Nagel, Escape from the Tower,
1978. A description I found of this one says it is fiction about
a mistreated servant girl to the head jailer of the Tower of London,
and
how she became involved in a daring escape plan. But I could not
find anything that said who she helps escape, so I have no idea if this
is about the little princes or not. It may have been retitled
"Escape
from the Tower of London" in a later edition.
Margaret Campbell Barnes, The Tudor
Rose, 1953. Margaret Campbell Barnes'The Tudor Rose
is about Elizabeth of York, who was the sister of the two "Princes in
the
Tower," Edward V and Richard Duke of York.
"The Tudor Rose" by Barnes is
unfortunately not the correct book. I was able to check it out from the
library to confirm that. The book I remember was more of a YA book.
Thank you!
Nathaniel and Betty Jo Charnley, Martha
Ann and the Mother Store,
1973.
Martha Ann thinks her mother is too bossy, so she exchanges her at the
Mother Store. Illustrated by Jerome Snyder.
Nancy Burns Brelis, The Mommy Market,
1970. This book did have moms set up in booths. The kids
try
several different moms before realizing theirs was the best for them.
For some reason, I remember the kids singing
"ta-ra-ra boom de-ay" in this.
I believe The Mommy Market was
the Americanized title. Possibly published in the UK as The
Mummy
Market.
Now there are three great possibilities... we need the original
stumper requester to confirm which one she remembers!
Nancy Brelsis, The Mummy Market,1966.
I have seen
the movie"Trading Moms" based on the book The Mummy Market
by Nancy Brelsis. It is about three children (a girl and
two
boys) who talk to their friend, who is an old lady, about how they
think
their mom is too strict and they wish they had a new mom and she tells
them about this old place she remembers called the mommy market. The
kids
go to find it and they go through an ally to get to it. When they get
there,
moms of every kind are all over the place like at little stations
(cooking
moms, singing moms ect.) and the children get three coins and find out
they have three chances to get the mom that they want. They start out
getting
a mom that loves nature and camping, then a snappy french mom, and then
a circus performer. They end up not liking any of them and want their
own
mom back but they have used up their three coins so they try several
plans
of get her back, but none of them work. They end up getting her back in
the end. I researched the book and it is out of print. I hope
some
of this helps.
The Mummy Market.
I
only
recall
the
English
title,
the
American
one
is
either
the
Mommy
or
Mother Market.
The
kids
actually
have
a
caretaker
they
can't stand, who they are able
to trade in for a series of mothers, Mimsy, who's chirpy and foolish,
Mom, an outdoors enthusiast, and a child psychologist with a series of
books. In the end they seem to get their real mother back (tho they
don't recall her leaving), and wonder if all the others were a dream.
Sorry I can't find the title yet, but my children and I recall reading this within the last year or so. More plot details -- the man makes some kind of deal with the devil that he can go three ? places before the devil takes him. He tries to go to places where the devil has no influence. One is Rome, but the devil tricks him and sends him to the Rome Tavern or Pub. At last he goes to the moon, where the devil can' t interfere with him because he has no jurisdiction in the heavens. We can't remember the name of the book, but it is probably filed under folklore. I can tell you that the Richmond, CA public library owns it, so maybe you could get lucky searching their online catalog.
Tom Feelings, Panther's Moon,
1969. Perhaps? "Bismu, a Himalayan boy, loses his dog to a
man-eating
panther, is hunted himself, and sees his home and sister threatened by
the animal before it is finally killed."
Willard Price. 50s - 60s.
Could this be from the "Adventure" series? Two brothers, Hal and
Roger travel the world capturing wild animals for their father's
business.
I remember reading one with a man-eating animal...but I thought it was
a lion. There is a Lion Adventure and a Tiger Adventure though,
so
both may be worth checking out.
Corbett, Jim, Man Eaters of Kumaon.
Or you could try The man-eating leopard of Rudraprayag also
by
Corbett
I found a copy of Panther Moon, and that's not the book I'm
looking for so please keep those thinking caps on.
Winifred Mantle, The Hiding Place,
1962. There's not much to go on here, but Winifred Mantle, who is
British, came into my mind when reading this stumper. The Hiding
Place is a mystery/adventure story. However the "hiding place" of
the book's title is not exactly a cave, but a rocky enclosure on a lake
shore, reachable only by a causeway. Mantle also wrote a book
about
the same characters (who are neighbors, not cousins) called Chateau
Holiday,
which maybe is the castle the poster is thinking of.
ENID BLYTON, THE CASTLE OF ADVENTURE,
1946. You may be thinking of Enid Blyton's 'adventure' series -
they
featured 4 children who I think were cousins - Jack, Philip, Lucy-Ann
and
Dinah - also a pet parrot called (I think) Kiki. All the books are set
in the UK and include 'Castle of Adventure' Valley of Adventure' etc.
Blyton, Enid, Famous Five Series,
1942- 1963. There were 21 books in this series (Five Go to
Mystery Moor, etc.).
Enid Blyton, The Castle of Adventure,
etc. It sounds as though it could be Enid Blyton's "Adventure"
series
- The Island of Adventure, The Castle of Adventure, The River of
Adventure. Another possibility is the same author's Famous
Five series, featuring the adventures of four cousins and Timmy
the dog. But I don't think any of those has "Castle" in the title.
Enid Blyton, Adventure Series,
1940s. This sounds like Enid Blyton. It could be the Adventure
series.
There are four children, two boys and two girls. There are smuggler's
caves
in the Island of Adventure. And one of the books is
called
Castle
of Adventure.
M306 Blyton, Enid. The castle of
adventure. no illus Pan
Macmillan
c1946 revised 1988
Laura Lee Hope, Bobbsey Twins Series.
Two sets of twins, one set older, one set younger, both consisting of
one
boy and one girl each(not identical.) All four come from the same
family
and have the last name Bobbsey. Might be cousins but I always thought
their
parents just had twins twice. Many books of mystries and adventures,
dont
recall anything more.
It certainly sounds like the Enid Blyton "Adventure"
series.
Was
there
a
parrot
named
Kiki?
If
so,
it
is
certainly
these.
Cresswell, Helen, The secret world of Polly Flint, 1983. Polly has to go and stay with her aunt Emily after her father is injured in an accident. On May Day she sees children appear first as shadows and mist, becoming more real as they dance around the maypole, and then disappear. A village has vanished and she goes to find it.
Fritz Muhlenweg, Big Tiger and
Christian.
About two boys, one Chinese and one Europaean, who travel together
through
the Mongolian desert.
Rita Richie, The Golden Hawks of Ghengis
Khan, 1960s. I think this might be
the book you are looking for. It'\''s one of my favorites two boys, an
Arab and a Mongol, journey across Mongolia to the headquarters of
Ghengis
Khan, having many adventures along the way the sport of hawking is very
much involved as well as the Arab boys search for his identity. I think
there is another book with these characters, but I'\''ve never been
able
to find it.
M313 The seeker might look at this
website, especially near the end of its summary of a British
series which has a Marjorie and an Esme.
Lorna Hill, Marjorie
series, 1948-1952. This sounds like the Marjorie books
written
by Lorna Hill (better known for her ballet books), the charaters
include
two girls called Marjorie and Esme and horse riding is one of their
activities.
For more information see
this website.
Lorna Hill, Marjorie & Patience series.
These are still available, there is a series of them. Some have
been
reprinted by Girls Gone By.
Lorna Hill, Marjorie and Co.
And a number of other books in the same series e.g Stolen
Holiday,
The Secret, No Medals for Guy. They have long been
out-of-print,
but some are being or have been published by the small British
publishing
company, "Girls Gone By". Here is a link to the publishers'
website, which gives details of how to get Stolen Holiday,
and
possible
sources
for
a
couple
of
out-of-print
books.
I cannot bring up any title right now, but I
read a whole series of mysteries back in the 1960's about a group of
children
who had a riding club. Set somewhere in Tennessee or Indiana or
Virginia-
there where "hollers" and creeks. Two characters were a teenage boy and
his younger sister. Kids in the club were from different socio/economic
families and this occasionally figured in. Stories were told from the
points
of view of different kids at different times. I will keep trying to
call
up a name for any of these books.
Mary Lasswell, Wait for the Wagon, 1951.
This is just a guess, but the description sounds a bit like Wait for
the
Wagon, one of a series of books about three older friends, Miss
Tinkham,
Mrs. Rasmussen, and Mrs. Feeley, written by Mary Lasswell. Some
of
the others were Suds in Your Eye, One on the House, High Time, and
Le''s
Go for Broke. In Wait for the Wagon, the ladies and Old Timer
were
driving from New Jersey to California in an old restored
Cadillac.
They stayed in a motor court and got involved with gangsters. It
is also a slim hardback book, a bit smaller all around than most
hardbacks.
The books are hilarious, so even if this guess isn't correct, the
inquirer
can console herself/himself with these.
M322 On Google, there are many mentions of a
Finnish
classic abt a Mr. Boo. Try
this
one. I rather doubt it is the one, but it has been
translated
worldwide.
Yogi Bear, 1950.I
know Yogi Bear was a cartoon but could it possibly been a book
also?
The only reason I ask is that Yogi Bear'\''s sidekick was Boo-Boo. In
one
of the yogi bear songs it says: Yogi has a best friend/Boo-boo,
boo-boo/Yogi
has a best friend/Boo-boo, boo-boo bear/Boo-boo, boo-boo bear, Boo-boo,
boo-boo bear/Yogi has a best friend/Boo-boo, boo-boo bear.Could you
have
been thinking of a comic book? Because they made comic books
also.
Hope this helps.
Marion Zimmer Bradley, The Colors of
Space,
1961. "The story revolves around Bart being co-opted to find the
secret of the Lhari warp-drive fueling material by surgically changing
his appearance so he could pass as a Lhari and having him ship out as a
crew member on a Lhari ship that is home world bound."
Marion Zimmer Bradley, the Colors of Space.
This is defininetly The Colors of Space. But the
original
poster is right - the last part is from a different book, and not any
MZB
book I know of.
C.S. Lewis, Out of the Silent
Planet,
1965.
First in a remarkable trilogy. The hero, Ransom, is kidnapped in order
to trade him for wealth from the planet. Not sure where the black
buildings might come in, but there are various inhabitants of the
planet,
living in differing communities. No wire or telemetry in this
one,
so it may be the wrong book or you may be confusing a different book,
as
you suggest.
Beryl Bainbridge, An Awfully Big
Adventure.
I am pretty sure that this is An Awfully Big Adventure.
The
girl's name is Stella, but there is a character (male) named Meredith.
A few years ago this book was made into a movie with Hugh Grant and
Alan
Rickman. Here is a review: "This spare little (205 pages) novel
doesn't
waste a word, yet signifies volumes. The highly honored Ms. Bainbridge,
winner of the prestigious Whitbread Prize and short-listed (six times!)
for the Booker Prize amply displays what all the fuss is about. She is
that good. The book is hard to categorize. It isn't a
coming-of-age,
a psychological thriller, a dazzling Peter Pan parable it is all these
things and more. Stella raised in blue-collar, post WWII
Liverpool
is a troubled and troubling 15-year old who determinedly washed out of
school and has been fixed up as a "student" (read gofer) at a
provincial
repertory company. She has no particular acting ambitions, but is
certain
she would be very good at it. We get a many-sided view of Stella
as she sees herself and as she is perceived by the people around her.
Every
scene and every word of dialogue interlocks like a jeweled timepiece.
The
reader is almost unaware of the ever-increasing momentum until it
crashes
upon you in a chilling finale. You think Ms. Bainbridge is through with
you, but not quite. Just when you think you are utterly and completely
emotionally drained, Ms. Bainbridge delivers a final twist, and now you
know you are. I was left stunned." An excellent example of fine
prose.
Highly recommended.
I think this might be Decorations in a
Ruined Cemetery by John G. Brown.
Description:
..."Years ago, when his daughter Meredith was young, Dr. Thomas Eagen
abruptly
left his wife and children in an incident that still haunts Meredith
well
into adulthood. She longs to discover the truth behind her father's
disappearance."
No mention of an incestuous relationship, though. Another
possibility
that came up when searching just on the name "Meredith" was: Gatheringsby
Marina
Rust. Description: ..."novel centers around Meredith, a
wealthy young woman who is trying to overcome a childhood spent in a
dysfunctional
family plagued by drug addiction, alcoholism, and insanity. Haunted by
the untimely death of her mother, who deserted Meredith and her father,
she shuttles between a South Carolina plantation and a Maine vacation
home
owned by her mother's family." Again, no incest, but both books
have
a "Meredith" and a plot about being abandoned by the father. The
only book that I found with a sexual relationship between father and
daughter
was The Favourite. I only mention it because the
AUTHOR'S
name was MEREDITH Daneman. Description: ..."A woman whose
childhood
was marked by the awareness of being her wayward father's favourite
must
come to grips with her obsessions and incestuous fantasies when the
circumstances
of his death are revealed." Could the person asking about this
book
have possibly confused the author's name with a character's name?
Bainbridge, An Awfully Big Adventure.
oops- didn't say this before, but this book does have the incest issue
in it. I think it is accidental- because he abandoned them years
before,
neither of them realize until too late that they are father and
daughter.
But I cannot remember for sure. It is possible that one or the other of
the characters knew.
James Leo Herlihy, Season of the Witch.
The M329 seeker may be interested in James Leo Herlihy's "Season of the
Witch". The story is vaguely similar. Smart-ass hippieish Gloria, 15,
lives
with vulgar, avaricious, shallow mother. Gloria has never met her real
father, a Jewish political science prof, Dr. Glyzwycz. She reverses the
syllables to call herself Witch Gliz. Best friend John gets his draft
notice
and plans to run away, taking Gloria along to look for her dad. They go
to NYC, move into a very idealistic communal apartment and Gloria meets
her real dad and comes very close to sleeping with him. 60s style
naivete
is overplayed and a bit caricatured but a fun read nonetheless.
M330 A Google entry shows a sold copy of
Our New Friends, 1946-47 by Gray and Arbuthnot as having
a Merry-Go-Round story in it. Cover has boy and girl w
umbrella
in the rain
Lois Maloy, Arabella of the Merry-Go-Round,
1935.
Alison Uttley, Magic In My Pocket,
c.1969. I seem to remember there being a chapter in Alison
Uttley's
collection Magic in my Pocket which was about a
merry-go-round
horse that comes to life. Don't remember what he was called, though.
Janet and Ann Grahame Johnstone. could
this
be
one
of
the
books
illustrated
by
the
Grahame
Johnstone
sisters?
There
are
many
nursery
rhyme
books
by
them
and
they
have
a
very
distinctive
style.
Rather
OTT
period
costumes
and
lots
of
gorgeous
little
details.
M332 Since there are so many MG books, would
it help the solvers if the searcher gave us a few more unusual
titles
from the segment she still owns?
Patty Wolcott, The Marvelous
Mud-Washing
Machine. Well, the cover
isn't
really brown, and there aren't any monsters, but I thought I'd throw
this
out there because it's an unusual story from the right time, it's very
thin, and easy to read (only 10 different words in it!) The boy
in
this book is playing, gets muddy, and his mother calls him in to
eat.
Rather than go take a bath or wash up, he goes through this large
car-wash
style contraption that hoses him down and buffs him up. He comes
out shiny and beaming, and his mother praises him endlessly. The
writing is similar to this: "Beautiful marvelous mud.
Marvelous
beautiful mud. Marvelous beautiful, beautiful marvelous,
marvelous
beautiful mud!" Etc.
Robert Munsch, Mud Puddle, 1982.
I'm sure there are MANY books about mud, but here's another one.
Julie Ann keeps getting into the mud, despite her mother's attempts to
clean her up.
Robert Munsch, Mud Puddle.
Any chance that this is Munsch's The Mud Puddle?
A
little girl just can't seem to stay clean - when ever she goes outside
the mud puddle jumps on her and makes her dirty again. There are
a couple of different versions of this one - if the cover doesn't seem
familiar, you may be remembering the old illustrations.
Brock Cole, No More Baths,
1980. Just a possibility.
Judith Vigna, The Little Boy Who
Loved Dirt and Almost Became a Superslob,1975.I think this is
the
one you're looking for. I remember reading it myself multiple
times
when I was in about 2nd grade and I loved it! It's about little boy
named
Jonathan James who doesn't want to take a bath but instead runs away in
fantasy to the secret land of the Superslobs (which kind of look like
brown
mud blobs) where he does't need clothes, does't have to wash his hair
or
behind his ears. He can throw rotten eggs and write on the walls with
greasy
pegs, however after too much of this dirty fun, he misses his home, his
clean room and the smell of his mother's hair and wants to go home
again,
even if it means taking a bath. There is a similar story called Dirt
Boy by Eric Jon Slangerup but that wasn't published
until
2003 so I'm not sure if that's what you're after here.Good luck!
M340 This is THE MITTEN TREE by
Candace
Christiansen~from a librarian
Jan Brett, The Mitten: A
Ukrainian Folktale, 1996
Florence&Louis Slobodkin, Too Many
Mittens. Just a
possibility-
this book has red mittens hanging everywhere!
Candace Christiansen, The Mitten
Tree,1997.This is definitely what you are looking for. An
old lady knits mittens for kids at a bus stop, and every time she runs
out of yarn, she finds a basket of yarn on her porch. It's a
Scholastic
book.
Candace Christiansen, The Mitten
Tree,1997.This is definitely The Mitten Tree, illustrated by
Elaine
Greenstein. The edition I have is a Scholastic book
Nichoals Stuart Gray, OVer The Hills to
Fabylon (maybe). This one
might
be Grey's Over the Hills to Fabylon. Or Mainly
in
the
Moonlight. The character named Bracken is a
shepherd
who loves the princess Rosetta of Fabylon. Gray put a lot of
poetry
in his books. Over The Hills to Fabylon is a collection of linked
stories about the people who live in the magical city of Fabylon (it
can
be instantly transported over the mountains at need) & environs,
Mainly
in the Moonlight is a collection containing one Fabylon-set story,
about
the princess' lady who has a message to take to Bracken, and runs into
trouble. Original poster, does any of this ring a bell?
I think you may be right about the book being Over the hills
to Fabylon (or Mainly in Moonlight). I don't remember
enough to be sure without seeing the book again. I've found
copies of Mainly in Moonlight on the internet, but copies of Fabylon
are really expensive (over $100). I'm thinking of buying Mainly
in
Moonlight since it's affordable, and the title does sound really
familiar. Then I can see if it's what I remember. Thanks for your
help. I've been wondering about this book for many years and glad
to finally have a possible answer. Your website is great.
created and illustrated by Roy Doty,
story
by David R. Preston, Uncle Pockets, 1951.
I
haven't seen this book, and can't find an online description, so I'm
not
sure it's the one you're looking for, but it seems promising! The
title is close, the date is within your limits, and Roy Doty has
written
and or illustrated numerous children's books. To find out more
about
Roy Doty, visit his website.
Roy
Doty,
Uncle Pockets,
1951, reprint. Just wanted to add to the previous post. Uncle
Pockets, the character in Doty's first book, led the 1948 Macy's
Thanksgiving Day Parade and was the subject of a hit record by Danny
Kaye. You can listen to it by visiting this site:
http://www.last.fm/music/Sylvia+Fine/_/Uncle+Pockets. Just click
the "Play Sylvia Fine Radio." You might have to click on the
little arrows of the player til you find the right song. From the
lyrics, it sounds like the right book.
William J. Kerr, Zany
Zoo,
1955, might be a possibility. The subtitle is animal
rhymes,
and the lines that the reader remembers seems to be that. The
publication
date 1955 also fits.
Bridwell, Norman, Zany Zoo,
1963, Scholastic. Another possibility. It was also
released
with the title Crazy Zoo.
Dean Walley, The Zany Zoo, 1972/1973,
approximate. The only
way to find it is to type hallmark after the title...otherwise it
doesnt show
up anywhere...amazon has a few for sale too.
I found a story online titled "Seventeen -
A Belated Response to Maureen Daly's Sixteen" by Ahmed A.
Khan.
But it's c.2005 so if you're looking for an older story, this isn't it.
Charles Brodie, Eighteen.
(1949) This is a Scholastic Magazine short story. I have it
(in reprinted form) in front of me as I type. It was reprinted as a
part
of a Scholastic short story collection entitled First Love
(copyright
1966.) I also remember it from an anthology from middle/high
school
(although the text was an older one even in the mid-70's), so I'm sure
it was reprinted any number of times.
PK Roche, Dollhouse Magic,
1980. Maybe this one? It has a white cover that looks like
a cross section of a dollhouse, and gives instructions for making
simple
dollhouse furniture and accessories from household odds and ends.
A sponge becomes a sofa and a broken watch a clock. A spool can be a
table
base and a toothpaste cap a lampshade. In simply written
chapters,
lavishly illustrated with photos and easy-to-follow drawings, the
author
tells how to start making and finding wonderful things to furnish any
dollhouse.
They do use bears in the photos.
John Peterson, The Littles Give a Party,
1972. If they were little people rather than babies, as you
remember,
this book might be worth a look. It's about small people who live
in houses, unknown to the big people. (Just like The Borrowers,
probably
the inspiration) They use a tin can as an elevator to ride between the
walls of the house in which they live , and Tom falls into a jar of
peanut
butter left open in the kitchen. For Granny's 80th bithday, she is
given
a thimble to use as a wastebasket.
Patricia Clapp, King of the Dollhouse.
This could be what you're looking for... I loved this book as a kid and
the mention of peanut butter brought it to my mind immediately. A King
and his family (which includes several babies) move into a little
girl's
dollhouse. She feeds the babies peanut butter which they love. I think
the Queen rides around on a mouse! See the solved page for more
details.
I don't know the answer, but if the coin is a
50 pence piece, the book presumably is from after February 1971, when
decimalized
coinage was introduced in the UK.
Dick King-Smith, The Queen's Nose,
1985. I think this may be the book you're thinking of. The wishes
come true when you rub the queen's nose on the 50p coin. The
protagonist
is called Harmony, and I think she has at least one brother or sister.
More recently the book was made into a TV series and I belive that a
sequel
was written, too.
Edward Eager, Half Magic.
Could Half Magic have been printed in England with the
coin
a 50 pence piece? (In the US, it seems at first to be a nickel.)
It really does sound like that book--only it's the mother who wishes to
be home from a visit, and finds herself halfway home, with no
car.
And there are numerous instances of publishers' changing details like
that.
Ray Bradbury, The Martian Chronicles. For context, also recommend Bradbury's Martian Chronicles. Bradbury returned to this fantasy Mars in other stories not included in this volume ("The Exiles," "The Fire Balloons" and "The Other Foot" in The Illustrated Man, "Night Call, Collect" and "The Lost City of Mars" in I Sing the Body Electric, and "Dark They Were, and Golden-Eyed" in A Medicine for Melancholy). All are a loosely connected series of stories, but together they paint a world.
Jane Carruth, Adventure in the Dark. Tippu the mouse gets lost in the dark after chasing Bully Shrew, who has taken his hula hoop. After a frightening night outside, a neighbor rabbit finds Tippu and shows him that scary-looking tree stumps aren't so scary in the daytime. In the end, Tippu and his father go fishing, and find the hula hoop in the water. The version I have has a purple cover, and while the mother isn't wearing a patchwork apron on the cover, she is wearing it throughout the book and on the title page.
Miriam Clark Potter, Mrs. Goose series.
The story "Hatbox Cake" is anthologized in Let's Hear a Story - 30
Stories
and Poems for Today's Boys and Girls, ed. by Sidonie Matsner Grunberg,
c. 1961. The story if from one of Miriam Clark Potter's "Mrs.
Goose"
books, but I'm not sure which one. Titles in the series include
"Mrs.
Goose of Animal Town" (1939), "Hello Mrs. Goose" (1947), "Here Comes
Mrs.
Goose" (1953), "Our Friend Mrs. Goose" (1956), "Mrs. Goose's Green
Trailer"
(1956), "Just Mrs. Goose" (1957), "Queer, Dear Mrs. Goose" (1959),
"Goodness,
Mrs. Goose!" (1960), "No, No, Mrs. Goose!" (1962), "Goofy Mrs. Goose"
(1963),
"Mrs. Goose and Three-Ducks" (1964), and "Mrs. Goose and her Funny
Friends"
(1964). "Hello Mrs. Goose" was reprinted in 2000, and "Just Mrs. Goose"
was reprinted in 2004.
You're looking for John Bellairs' mystery series that begins with The House with a Clock in its Walls.
Edward Eager. I am wondering if this were one of the Edward Eager books. Unfortunately, none of the titles contains the word "Saturday," and I don't remember anything about a paper bag, either.
Jean Bothwell, The Borrowed Monkey.
(1953) A long shot, but could this be the one you're looking
for?
"Dickon had always wanted a pet and was thrilled when he spied a monkey
that nobody seemed to want in a shop window. Dickon was allowed to
borrow
him for a time but when it was time to return him .....well, there is
just
enough suspense and excitement before the very satisfactory solution
arrives."
Illustrated by Margaret Ayer'
M385:
Magic
oven
Okay, this one had something to do with a
magic old-fashioned oven which these kids found in a secret (magic?)
playhouse.
They made a cookie from a mysterious cookbook for the bully-kid and he
turned into a (goat?) At the end I believe the playhouse
disappeared...It
was an interesting book - I think the kids were new in the
country/beighborhood
and I just remember it - my 8 year old would love it! Any help - please!
Parker, Richard, M is for Mischief.
(1966)
Three children find a magic oven, with two settings "O" for ordinary
and
"M" for mischief. They cook eggs whose shells turn them invisible, make
sugar cookies that turn the bully into either a goat or a donkey and
their
mother into a chicken.
Richard Parker, M is for Mischief.
(1966) I remember this one from my childhood! Three
children
find an odd stove and cookbook in a summer house behind their new home.
The stove has two settings on it: O and M. The most adventurous
child
decides to try out a recipe for boiled eggs that will make whoever eats
them invisible. An old man appears from nowhere to adjust the stove and
explains that O and M mean ordinary and mischief. The food the
stove
produces is either ordinary or magical depending on the stove's
setting.
The kids discover that the boy next door is a bully. They decide to
make
a "mischief" recipe for the bully, but his mother eats it instead. She
turns into a hen, the bully becomes a donkey, and the mysterious old
man
(who doesn't know that the neighbors have been transformed) decides to
make the stove a normal one. The original hardcover edition had
illustrations
by Charles Geer. It was then released in 1968 in a Scholastic
paperback
edition with illustrations by Carol Wilde. Out of print, bu not
hard
to find or terribly expensive. See the Solved Mysteries "M" page
for more information.
The title is actually M for Mischief.
M386:
Mechanical
horse wins Grand national
Solved: Mylor, the Most
Powerful
Horse in the World
M387:
Mismatched
socks
Solved: Bamboozled
ROBERT WESTALL, The devil on the Road.
(1978,
approx) I'm pretty sure this is the one you're thinking of. The main
character
is a student called John Webster - he stays in a barn while travelling
around Suffolk on his motorbike and gets involved with time travel - he
goes back and forth to 1647 - the story involves Matthew Hopkins,
witchfinder
general, a woman called Johanna and a cat/kitten named News. Hope this
helps.
M389:
Magic
teacher calms class
Solved: They're Torturing
Teachers in Room 104
Willis, Fritz, Me Too.
(1945) Here's a
link
where you can check out the cover to see if it's the right book.
This is not really a solution, but I can remember
owning a record as a young child, which told the story of Me-Too the
duckling
- it sounds as though it was based on the book that you mention. I
think
it might have been one of the Little Golden Records, but am not sure.
This
would have been in the mid-1960s, but the record might have come out
much
earlier.
C.S. Lewis, The Voyage of the Dawn
Treader.This
is just a guess, but The Voyage of the Dawn Treader, one of the books
in
the Chronicles of Narnia series, begins with a group of children
falling
into a picture frame. The picture in the frame is that of a ship,
and, of course, the children land in the ocean, are rescued by the
people
on the ship, and so off they go on their adventures.
I submitted M398 (Magic Picture Frame) and
someone has suggested that it could be C. S. Lewis's Voyage of the
Dawn
Treader. However, I am familiar with that book and it isn't
the
one I'm after.
Jane Langton, The
Astonishing Stereoscope. I'm wondering if perhaps rather
than a picture frame it's a stereoscope, and the children in question
enter
the pictures that are put into it?
Eleanor and Edward Hall would be two of the main characters, if this is
the right book.
H. Allen Smith, The Age of the Tail, 1955.
This is definitely THE AGE OF THE TAIL by H. Allen Smith. 1955 hc
from Little, Brown there was a pb reprint from Bantam the
following
year. No isbn, since the isbn system wasn't operating back then,
and the book hasn't been reprinted since the 1950s as far as I can
determine.
Are you thinking of Babapapa?
Check
the link to the website.
Hope
this
helps
Could this be one of the many Curious George books? It definately sounds like one, and George's owner "the man in the yellow hat" always did look like a fireman to me!
M406: The Sword in the Tree by
the
prolific Clyde Robert Bulla? A lord's evil brother seizes a
castle,
and the lord's wife and son flee, but not before the son (Shan Weldon)
hides a sword in a hollow tree nearby so he can have proof, later on,
that
the castle is his. Illustrated by Bruce Bowles and/or Paul Galdone.
Possibly
from 1956.
Robert Silverberg, Lost Race of Mars.
This is a long shot, since some of your details don't match my memory
of
the book, but you might want to check out Lost Race of Mars
by Robert Silverberg.
This is a wild guess, but could this book be
Lost
Race of Mars by Robert Silverberg?
M408: Lost Race of Mars by Robert
Silverberg? See Solved Mysteries. "1960. Illustrated by Leonard
Kessler.
Do the Old Martians really exisit? Sally & Jim must find out as
their
father's life work as a sceintist is at stake. But it's not easy. They
are the only earth people on Mars in the year 2017. And no one really
wants
them there." I remember this sentiment extends to the conceited
schoolkids,
who are mean and snobbish towards any humans not born on Mars. There's
a Mars kitten named Mitten. In Martian newspapers, human ages are
converted
to Martian years.
Unfortunately (mainly because I appreciate
the fast response) but it's not Silverberg's Lost Race Of Mars.
Good
guess,
though.
I
should
mention
that
there
was
no
animosity
or
indifference
shown
towards
the
family
by
the
other
colonists.
It's a long shot, but have you looked at the
science fiction books by Jean and Jeff Sutton? They were
originally
published in the late 50s through the early 70s and, as I remember,
there
are a couple titles that feature a brother and sister. The
Beyond,
Alien
from
the
Stars and The Man Who Had the
Power
are
the titles I remember, although I can't remember the plots, they were
good.
CS Lewis, The Lion the Witch and the
Wardrobe.
Part of me thinks that everyone must have heard of this book, what with
the recent film and all...so perhaps you have already considered this.
But this description sounds so like The Lion the Witch and the Wardrobe
where four children stumble through the back of a wardrobe into another
magical world. It is dark and snowing the first time they go.
Sorry, but I don't think that this is the answer. The book that
I remember did not involve winter at all...just twilight
Do you have any idea what period the book was
set in?
LeGuin, Ursula, The Beginning
Place.
A
few details are different, but The Beginning Place is
definitely
about a magical land where it is always twilight. Two young adults
(20-ish)
both find a way into the magical land (Tebrabrezi, I think) by crossing
a stream in a forest. They meet there in the village, and help the
villagers
with a problem they are having. My favorite book.
This book is definately from a school reader, I've read it as a child too, but I don't remember the title. Sorry, and good luck.
Thornton Burgess, The Burgess Animal
Book
for Children. This book is
still
in print at Dover Publications. It's also available as a free
e-text.
M412: I had this years ago, but the title will
be tricky to remember. That's because, in all likelihood, you're
thinking
of one of Thornton W. Burgess' (1874 - 1965) books, and he
wrote
at least 170! Mother Nature is the "teacher." The animals tell about
themselves
in class, but it's clearly more for the reader's benefit than for the
characters'.
Your best bet is to go to the Burgess
website and email them with your question, since the booklist there
doesn't make the answer quite clear. Burgess was best known for his Adventures
of... series and his Mother West Wind series.
What's
unusual about the book is that Mother Nature usually appears as a
character
only in the Mother West Wind series, which consisted of short stories,
while this book was a full-length "story."
Thornton Burgess, Looks like you haven't
had a confirmation on this from the original poster, but my suggestion
(the
Animal Book) is definitely the book that has the animals going
to Mother Nature's school, learning about each others' habits, and not
being allowed to hurt each other in class.
This sounds just like Seven Spells to Sunday by Andre Norton.
dan billany, the magic door. the book you are thinking of is, I'm sure the magic door. Dan Billany was my uncle and my mother, Joan illustrated it.I still have the original manuscript and drawings but sadly only one copy of the book.
The full book is by Kathryn Jackson,
as
well as the story.
Cornelia Meigs, Mystery of the Red House, 1961. Not the right era, but this book is about a family that comes across a mysterious empty house in the middle of the woods while on a picnic. There's even a table, laid out for dinner, that looks like people just walked away. The kids find a note that leads them on a treasure hunt to solve the mystery. The author wrote her more famous books between the 20s and the 40s, so maybe this is actually a reprint or reworking of an older title?
Jean Van Leeuwen, Steven Kellogg illus., The great Christmas kidnaping caper. Dial, 1975. "In comfortable residence at Macy's during the Christmas season, Merciless Marvin the Magnificent and his gang are convinced that the store's Santa Claus has been kidnapped and determine to save him."
Eleanor Farjeon, Mrs. Malone,
1950. Farjeon published this story-poem as a picture-book in
1950.
I'm not sure if the poem is included in her collection "Poems for
Children",
published in 1951, but it may well be. The poem is also in
Eleanor
Graham's "A Puffin Quartet of Poets", published in 1958. The poets are
Farjeon, Ian Serraillier, James Reeves and E.V. Rieu. But that may be
just
a little late for you.
Mr. Tibbets, I recall a
book
called The Terrible Mr. Tibbetts (or Tibbets?),
one
of
the
TAB/Scholastic
offerings
in
the
60's,
but
I
can't
find
anything
listed
in
WorldCat.
Was your Mr. Tibbit/Tibbet/Tibbets an English
book? My sister (ca. late '70's?) had an English book (Enid
Blyton-type
mass- produced W.H.Smith-kind of thing) with the everyday adventures of
a middle-aged man who lived in your typical small English place.
I think the Scholastic edition someone suggested
is THE TERRIBLE MR. TWITMEYER by Lilian Moore,
but
I don't think that's the book requested (the WorldCat subject heading
record
reads "Dogs - Fiction"). Moore's book was originally
published
in 1952.
Keith Laumer, Combat Unit,
1960. This short story is about a Bolo tank reactivated for
combat
after 300 years. It was originally published as 'Dinochrome' in The
Magazine of F&SF in November 1960. It has been reprinted in the
book Odyssey by Keith Laumer, edited by Eric
Flint.
A free sample of the book that includes the story can be found here.
Theodore Sturgeon, Killdozer,
1944. I agree it's probably the Laumer story someone has already
suggested, but the mention of "years as a construction machine" makes
me
wonder if the requestor is (also?) thinking of Theodore Sturgeon's
story
"Killdozer," in which a bulldozer is taken over by a hostile mental
force
from a long-dead civilization (not another planet). If so, that
one
has been anthologized several times.
Wright, Betty Ren, Snowball, 1952.
Could this be it? The only synopsis I can find: Story about
a white Poodle, Snowball, and how he goes from white as snow to black
as
coal. The cover is red with a picture of the poodle, Snowball, white on
head and back and black on feet and underparts. Not sure what
turned
him to this coloring. It is a Whitman Tell a Tale (Fuzzy Wuzzy)
book,
which means that there was flocking on some of the pictures.
I remember Snowball. He turned black after
sliding down a coal chute.
DIRTY HARRY,
1965??, approximate. Harry is a white dog with black spots who
does not like to bathe; he goes on a big adventure and gets so dirty
that he turns into a black dog with white spots. When he gets
home, his family doesn't recognize him, so he runs to get the scrubbing
brush for a bath...you know the rest!! Sound familiar?
(Children's book) Good luck!
Patricia Coombs, Mouse Cafe.In
Mouse Cafe, there is a mouse waitress, I can't remember her name -
something
like Lollimops. She works very hard and one day meets a handsome
gentleman
mouse that asks her to marry him. The size and color of the book
match your description. Might be this!
Celeste Mouse. I think that the
book that you are looking for is called Celeste Mouse.
It
was
a
picture
book
published
in
the
70's
or
80's,
in
it
Celeste
Mouse
goes
about
her
day,
and
makes
tea.
She
was
wearing
a
pink
dress.
I
don't
remember
much
else
about
it
,though.
Evelyn Sibley Lampman, The City Under
the
Back Steps, 1960. A boy and
his cousin are playing on the back steps when they are bitten by a
queen
ant and "shrunk" to ant size. When they are found by the ants, they are
initially taken as "pets" and then they are found to have special
talents
that can be used by the ants--the girl is wearing a pinafore and the
pockets
can be used to carry the eggs from place to place. The boy has a pocket
knife and can save the scout ants from the deadly antlions. The book
takes
you through the "day-to-day" life of an ant colony from foraging for
food,
to taking care of the "nursery".The children forge friendships and help
save the colony from an enemy camp. The queen grants their wish to
become
large again. They are grateful and when they return to natural size,
they
remember the experience, and quit stepping on ants.
Johm F. Carson, The Boys Who Vanished.
Here's another possibility. This one is about two boys who drink
an experimental drug, are reduced to insect size, and must trek across
a vacant lot to find their way home. Details people usually
remember
are: the boys dress in tunics made from leaves, they eat
dried
insects found in spiderwebs, when they get home they grow back
gradually
to normal size over a period of weeks, and there's a rather memorable
cover
picture of them being threatened by a giant spider.
Sheila Moon, Knee-Deep in Thunder,
1967. Another possibility is Knee-Deep in Thunder.
The
very
short
CIP
data
reads:
"An
unusual
stone
provokes
a
journey
into
an
underground
world
of
fantasy
where
Maris
is
guided
by
a
dog-sized
beetle."
Maris
is
joined
by
several
other
insects
on
the
quest
though...there's
a
red
ant and a brown ant, another beetle, and (if I recall correctly)
a caterpillar. A boy also joins them. I think that one group of ants
were
the enemy though, and were trying to stop the group. In the end,
Maris returns to normal size...but there was a sequel!
jay Williams, Danny Dunn and the
Smallfying
Machine. There is an entry
on
the D page about the Danny Dunn series, although this one is not
mentioned.
Danny and his friends Joe and Irene get shrunk by the professor's new
machine
and have adventure's in Danny's back yard. I read this in the 70's. A
possibility.
George Mendoza, Need a House? Call Ms.
Mouse!,
1981. Illustrated by Doris Smith. Also published as "House by
Mouse"
in UK. Long out of print and highly sought after. I have a friend who
has
one and she won't even let me borrow it!
George Mendoza, Need a house? call Ms.
Mouse!, 1980. This is
definitely
the book you are looking for "Henrietta Mouse designs houses to fit the
special needs of her animal friends."
I am responding to the M440 stumper about "3 Modern Musketeers"... "little to go on" with... little to go on! I am sorry I cannot provide author and title, but I do very faintly recall reading a wonderful series of books about a group of men, and I think there were 3 of them, who had been through the French Resistance together. They had done many brave things and one of them had been tortured (his fingernails had been removed). I think they called themselves the Animals or had animal nicknames. One of them I think was called the Tiger. Anyway, the books were very well written and they covered what happens AFTER the men reach retirement age. The men end up helping the French chief of police in solving various crimes/mysteries. they also embark on some adventures themselves. The humor is often dark and the writing is suspensful and "gritty" at times. Even if this is not the answer to the stumper, I highly recommend these books.
I can't remember the title of this book
either,
but the plot sounds really familliar, perhaps I can shed some more
light
on this. I remember that the boy made a pot, and wanted to trade
it for a parrot in a cage, but the merchant wanted more than just the
pot,
so he pushed the merry-go-round for money. He ended up making
several
trades, eventually having something nice enough to trade for the
parrot,
but ended up buying a serape for his grandfather instead.
Paul Gallico, The Man Who Was
Magic,1966.
Perhaps? The edition I saw had a rose on the cover.I haven't read it in
ages, so I can't be certain of the details.
Rosamund Pilcher, Shell Seekers,1987.
A
long
shot
but
perhaps
this
adult
book.
Penelope
and
Richard
have
a
wartime
affair.
He
dies
in
the
Allied
invasion
of
Normandy
on
D-Day.
After
she
finds
out,
she
remembers
him
reading
to
her
about
"there
will
be
sunlight later". After the chapter flashback she realizes that
she is content and grateful for having known him. There are
passages
about meals (roast lamb!) but no recipes that I recall. The Shell
Seekers is a painting by her father, Lawrence Stern.
Reichl, Ruth, Comfort Me With
Apples,
2001.
This reminds me of Ruth Reichl's memoirs, most likely the second
one,
Comfort Me With Apples. It's a little newer than
you remember, but it does have the affair and