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O2: Orphaned Baby Bear
Solved: Knobby Boys to the Rescue 
O5: Oliver Owl

This was a book that my mother used to read to my brothers and I.  It is about an owl named Oliver.  One day he looks up in the sky and declares that it is going to snow.  All the other animals doubt him, stating that "how can it snow, it's the middle of July?"   Another line that I recall is something like... "Oliver Owl, who was thought to be wise, looked up to the skies and declared, "It's going to snow." It was a great story and I would love to find a copy for my nieces and nephews.  Thanks for your help.

George Tarry, Animal Stories: Oliver the Owl.  Other possibilities could be:  Alice Crew Gall: Mother McGrew and Oliver Owl  or Edward Holmes: Oliver Owl and the Old Boots
Eliminate Oliver Owl and the Old Boots- those lines do not appear here!
Gall, Alice Crew, Mother McGrew and Oliver Owl.  NY Cupples & Leon 1917.  I don't have a plot description, but I'm going to suggest this one because the stories (there are several in the Mother McGrew and her animal friends series) are told in rhyme, and the excerpts remembered are also in rhyme. "Mother McGrew gave many sharp lessons to our animal friends, and these pictures and stories tell how it happened and why."   One of the Mother McGrew titles (and Tommy Turkey) is online, so here's some quotes from it for a style comparison: "One of the children of Mother McGrew / was young Tommy Turkey of whom I'll tell you / In most ways young Tom was passably good / But he had one fault, he would gobble his food." "You surely will have indigestion one day / Unless you eat slowly now mark what I say."
Gerry Taines, The crow and the snow, 1963, copyright.  what a truly wonderful book!
Gerald Taines, The Crow In The Snow (with Oliver Owl), 1963, copyright.  I am Lauren Taines, the daughter of Gerald Taines.  I happened to find your site mentioning Oliver Owl who was a character in  one of the books my dad originally wrote for me when I was little.  The book was reissued for charity purposes in Tennesse I think a year or two ago, per the request of a family friend.  If someone is interested in obtaining the book, let me know and I'll get the contact information in Tennessee where they can purchase it.  Best Regards, Lauren Taines.  my email is Bandinusa@aol.com



O9: Oregon Trail Story
This has come to be known as the "Abigail on the Oregon Trail" book. I didn't read it at the time because I was working on my own Oregon Trail novel, and I didn't note it as I thought I read about it in "The Writer's Digest" and we kept all our old WD issues. When I was unable to locate it, I wrote WD, and when the bums didn't answer I went through all the issues in a library and wherever I read about it it wasn't there! This article, which most likely appeared in 1985 or 1986, was by the author of the book, a woman who explained how she made her story of ten-year-old Abigail's 1846 journey realistic despite being unable to visit the trail herself as she was living in Kentucky. Incidents included throwing away a plant cutting nurtured by someone who had died, and Abigail scaling the dangerous Snake River cliffs in what is now Idaho to obtain water. I had the Oregon Historical Society on a wild goose chase for this, and NOW HERE'S THE KICKER: a man contacted me who is listing "every" book ever done on the Oregon, California, and Mormon Trails, and he'd never heard of it! He has listed about 200 titles per trail, many with my help, but neither of us has come across this one. I did send him the list of everything under these headings in the Library of Congress online database, and since he was unable to look at every single one it might be among them, but I doubt it. Now OHS wants to know, he wants to know, and I want to know!  (2 answers, both wrong!  I know this has to be obscure but I've been amazed at how hard it has proven to find!)

This may be one of the 2 wrong answers, but Horn Book Sep-Oct '38 has an ad on the back for Junior Press books which includes a line drawing cover of a book by Portia Howe Sperry and Lois Donaldson, illustrated by Zabeth Selover. The book is called Abigail and the cover shows a little girl wit blond braids, holding a doll dressed like herself in one hand and pulling her skirts up with the other. Behind her is a covered wagon.
#O9:  Yes, Abigail was one of the wrong guesses.  In that story, Abigail was the doll's name, not the girl's, and they weren't going to Oregon, but traveling an entirely different trail several years before the Oregon Trail started.  Anyway, I'm sure this book was MUCH more recent than the 1930s!
There have been several books written by and about Abigail Jane Scott (married name Duniway), who traveled the oregon trail around 1852.  She's better known as the first woman to vote in Oregon.  Books about her include "Ladies Were Not Expected" (published 1977) and "Rebel for Rights" (1983).  I don't think either of those is a children's book, unfortunately.
Regarding O9 - Oregon Trail.  Funny thing, one of the books I came here to find was about a girl who traveled with her family on the Oregon Trail.  They traveled in covered wagons, and one of the wagons was full of the saplings that her father was going to plant when they reached Oregon.  There are great descriptions about landmarks on the trail, and also about how to graft an apple tree.  I would love to know what this book was....
#O9--Oregon Trail Story:  Yes, I can identify the query in green, and just about any other Oregon Trail novel EXCEPT this one, which I am STILL looking for!  The green one is Tree Wagon, by Evelyn Sibley Lampman, which I've read twice.  Word of warning:  Lampman was a terrific entertaining writer,
but didn't care much for historical accuracy.  Don't take the book seriously when it says that Indians "killed Dr. Whitman and all the children at his mission."  They did no such thing and not even close.  The only juveniles killed were a boy of 16 (an adult for that day and place) and 14 (practically adult by the standards of that tribe.)  About 60 other kids present were all let go.  I'd venture to say the only people who know more on this subject than me were those present--the last of whom died in 1933--and it's a shame that some people write such things and other people print them.  Another book by the same author, Cayuse Courage, is a great idea but unforgivably inaccurate in places when so much written material is available on this subject.
Lampman, Evelyn Sibley, Tree Wagon. The story of a orchid man and his family bringing their nursery stock by wagon to Oregon.  The little girl is given her own gooseberry bush to care for and has lots of adventures along the way.
Tree Wagon = Lampman.  Thank you - that's it - the gooseberry bush was the clincher.  I'm glad to know more about the history behind it, too, thanks for the update.
I'm afraid this is another wrong answer, but just for the record:  Ketchum, Liza, 1946-, West against the wind.  New York: Holiday House, c1987.  "Fourteen-year-old Abby seeks  both her father and the secret of a handsome but mysterious boy during an  arduous journey by wagon train from the middle of the country to the  Pacific coast in 1850."  I know, wrong age, wrong year.
Bargain bride by Evelyn Sibley Lampman, 1977.  "Because married settlers could claim twice the land of a bachelor, orphaned  Ginny was married when she was ten-years-old.  Now fifteen, her husband  comes to claim her."
Trouble for Lucy by Carla Stevens, 1979.  "As she and her family travel the Oregon Trail in 1843, Lucy's puppies persist in creating trouble."
Brave buffalo fighter by John Dennis Fitzgerald, 1973.  "Ten-year-old Susan relates the adventures and frustrations of her family's wagon train west, culminating when her twelve-year-old brother is asked to turn himself over to the Indians in order to save the lives of the rest of the party."
Abigail goes west by Gladys L. Switzer, 1963.  A kind bookseller has listed the following info about this book:  "The
unexpected news that her own sister Nellie was going way out to California, to  join her husband, was enough of a surprise to Abigail Wheeler.  But then Mother said firmly," Our Nellie's not going to set out for California by herself.  Someone has to go with her, and it had best be Abigail!"  So I guess this cannot be it.
On to Oregon! by Honoré Morrow, 1954 & 1969.  "When their parents die on the way to Oregon in 1843, seven children decide to complete the 2000-mile trek through the wilderness on their own; based on a true story."
Okay, I definitely checked Addie Across the Prairie, Trouble for Lucy, On to Oregon!,  Abigail, and Tree Wagon, which I'd read, but I need to check my Oregon/California Trails titles list again.  It numbers about 150 titles each for Oregon, California, and Mormon Trails, but you STILL seem to have come up with several I never heard of!  Including one by Evelyn Sibley Lampman, who wrote Tree Wagon.
OK, this came out much later, and I can't find the date it takes place, but how about this one: MISSISSIPPI MUD:  THREE PRAIRIE JOURNALS by Ann Warren Turner, 1997.  "As their family travels on a wagon train from Kentucky to Oregon, Amanda and her two brothers keep separate journals, and the journal entries show how they each see the same trip in a different way."  It appears that it was written as poetry??
Thanks, that makes another title I didn't know of, and will be an interesting addition to the list.  If the article I read was written when the book was in pre-publication, there is the possibility that not only might the publisher not have printed it, but that the author decided to rewrite it!  It would mean extensive rewriting.  Some details, such as the death and plant cutting, could apply to almost any trail, but others, such as the treacherous cliffs above the Snake River, are very specific to the Oregon Trail.  If it was rewritten to happen in some other time and place--yikes! But that's not likely, and look at all we're discovering searching for a "non-existent"(?) book.
How about Abigail Goes West by Gladys Switzer. Morrow. 1963??
Mary Jane Carr, The Children of the Covered Wagon, 1934.  Maybe- unfortunately so out of print that I can't find any kind of quote, review, or description. I read this as a child, and actually saw (but did not buy it) at a library book sale a few years ago. Very realistic. Main charater is a young girl although there is an older boy who becomes a friend through the trip. Very fat hard cover book. The typeface was oldfashioned and seemed hard to read when I was a kid.



O10: Outsiders
Solved: Outside 

O11:  Orphans on the frontier
It's great to have a site to go to instead of standing in front of a patient librarian trying to explain a plot to a book with no title or author. I am looking for a book about a family of kids that are orphaned. The older sister is being courted by some guy that she doesn't want to marry. They do a lot of canning and freezing of food for the winter. Must be a pioneer type setting. The kids, 3 or 4 of them manage to survive the winter and the older sister meets some young handsome guy later in the book. Thats all I
remeber. A novel for youth? I read it 25 - 30 years ago.

Sounds similar to Where the Lilies Bloom, by Vera Cleaver. Published in 1969.
O11 - Sounds very much like Where The Lilies Bloom by Vera and Bill Cleaver.  At first I thought this books wouldn't be old enough but then I realized that 30 years would only put it back in the early 70's so this one might be possible.
I submitted O11. Orphan story. It is definitely not Where the Lilies Bloom.  (a book I personally dislike very much). It is more of a Little House in the big woods without the parents type of book. Chinking the cabin walls with mud played a part. Frontier/west setting. It was a frontier story. The kids were survivalists in a pioneer setting.
Not frontier, but some other resemblances: Ann Lawrence of Old New York by Gladys Malvern, illustrated by Christine Price, published Messner 1947, 203 pages "Ann Lawrence is the heroine of this story which takes place in the New York City of 1811. Her struggles with the farm and bringing up her orphaned brothers and sisters are the ingredients of the plot."
Another possible - Hannah's Brave Year, by Rhoda Wooldridge, published New York, Bobbs-Merrill 1965, 151 pages. "After a cholera epidemic has orphaned a family of six children, Joel, eighteen, goes off on a winter trapping trip to earn the money needed to prevent foreclosure on their rich Missouri farmland and sturdy cabin, while Hannah, twelve, and Nat, fourteen, work to keep the family together despite avaricious neighbors. Full domestic detail lends compelling vitality to a book that might have been just one more pioneer story." The children are all too young for courtship, though.
Yet another possiblity - The Jumping-off Place by Marion Hurd McNeely, illustrated by William Siegel, published New York, Longmans 1929, grades 6-8 "A genuine home story of the Dakota prairies. A family of children headed by a 17 year old girl and a boy of 15 settle on a homestead to which their uncle has staked a claim." "The four young orphaned Linvilles, ranging in age from 8 to 17, went to Dakota at their uncle's death to take up his claim on the Jumping-off Place. They endured heat, drought, snakes, lizards and vindictive neighbors like the good sports they were, and at the end of 14 months the claim was theirs, as well as the respect and liking of all their neighbors."
O11 orphans on frontier: Yet another possibility: The House in No-End Hollow, by May Justus, illlustrated by Erick Berry, published Doubleday, Doran 1938 "Three orphans living on the homestead in the Applachian mountains attempt to preserve their independence."
another possibility is The Long Valley, by Helen Markley Miller, published New York, Doubleday 1962. "Taking her mother's place and trying to make a home for her family on the Idaho frontier was Marny's first responsibility. She didn't realize that over-shielding her little sisters was not the way of a wise mother but of a
young girl fearful of growing up. Much that is interesting here is typical of many pioneer stories for girls: the hardships of a severe winter, the birth of a baby during a blizzard, the community house-raisings, and pioneer festivities. Marny's persistence in misunderstanding the intentions of John, whom she loves, ..." (HB Feb/62 p.57)
O11 orphans on frontier: they're not orphans and the time-span is shorter, but there's a blizzard - The Children Who Stayed Alone, by Bonnie Bess Worline, illustrated by Walter Barrows, published Scholastic, 1971.
Originally entitled Sod House Winter."Hartley and Phoebe are left to watch their young brothers and sisters while mom visits a sick neighbor and dad goes into town for supplies. They are all alone when an unexpected blizzard strikes leaving the snowbound with the stock animals and their siblings to watch. Will they be able to take care of everything until the storm lets up and their parents can come home?"
O11 orphans on frontier: yet another, Oh Susanna!, by J.R. Williams, illustrated by Albert Orbaan, published Putnam 1964, 223 pages. "17-year-old Susanna, assuming responsibilities beyond her years, trying to take a mother's place with her young brother and sister, enduring with seeming patience life in the inevitable dugout or soddie, cannot help rebelling in her heart. She is fearful that if she marries the young man she loves, life will hold little but more drudgery." (HB Feb/64 p.69)
Catherine Marshall , Christy.  -- I think this one is set in Appalachia rather than on the frontier, but this could be another possibility. I remember Christy had a strong determination to keep her siblings together, even at the expense of her own best interests.
O11 orphans: They're not orphans, but could it be this? Winterbound by Margery Bianco, Viking Press 1962 8vo hardback 234 pages. "Gorgeous decorated endpapers of winter scene by Kate Seredy. Four children have to fend for themselves in a Connecticut farmhouse when their parents are called away. How they survived a tough winter is the basis of this wonderful story."
I wrote yesterday that I thought the book was Seven Alone. I found a copy of that one today and its about  kids on a wagon train who become orphans. The book I meant to refer to was mentioned by a previous poster as the Children who Stayed Alone.
Maybe Stout-Hearted Seven by Neta Lohnes Frazier. I haven't read it but the time frame is right. HBJ (1973)



O12:  Orphan Annie
Solved: Annie

O13:  Oliver Greenwood
Solved: Fifth Form at St. Dominic's

O14: Orphan & aunt in cabin
Solved:  The Long White Month

O15: Old woman is protected by animals
Solved: The Story of Mrs. Tubbs

O16: Odd friendship
An English story (for young adults more than children) about a boy who befriends a homeless "crazy" man, and the bittersweet consequences. It was illustrated with expressive charcoal or pencil drawings, all black-and-white. I browsed through this book once at a Waldenbooks in Kansas City, Missouri, and never got back to it, so my memory is quite scanty. But I recall one segment: the boy buys some fish and chips to bring to the man (who is extremely fond of it), only to find out that he has died or has been taken away. In a rage, the boy flings the packet of fish and chips to the ground and screams "Hell!" or suchlike. This scene was illustrated, as I recall. This is a long shot, but if this triggers a memory with anyone...let me know!

This doesn't exactly match, but I keep thinking of David Almond's Skellig.  The boy brings food to a man he finds living in his garage.  The boy is dealing with a recent move, a very ill younger sister, and a new friendship with an independent-spirited, home-schooled little girl who lives nearby.  The man in the garage is very skeletal and odd (I won't give away the plot) and the boy brings him Chinese takeout food.  I don't remember fish and chips, but it is a haunting story... the format looks like it's for young readers, but the content really makes it more appropriate for young adults.
One possibility - Dark Dreams, by C.L. Rinaldo, published Gollancz 1975, 154 pages. "Carlo, aged about 11, physically not strong, lives with his Italian grandmother in a city alley. Father goes to the war (1943). Mother is dead. Carlo, persecuted by the alley gang, befriends Joey J, a mentally retarded adult. Joey J is sent to a home, let out on condition that he will not act with violence, but does so defending Carlo. He returns to the home and dies." (Junior Bookshelf Jun/75 p.203) Later - saw a copy and checked the ending, the fish & chip scene doesn't occur, so this probably isn't it.
O16 odd friendship: perhaps worth looking at The Nothing Place, by Eleanor Spence, illustrated by Geraldine Spence, published Oxford 1972, 144 pages. Title describes "the Sydney suburb where all the events of the story take place ... There is Reggie, an old meths drinker who befriends the children about whom the story revolves, 'he was old, with sparse grey hair and whiskers, and his face had the roughened texture of bark that had been long shed.' The friendship between him and Glen, the partially deaf 'hero' of the story, is movingly but never sentimentally described." (CRB Jun/72 p.89) Other children are Lyndall, clever, plain and confident, spiky-haired Shane who loves cricket, and his pretty, selfish sister Shelley. Another possibility is The Rare One, by Pamela Rogers, published Hamilton 1973, 96 pages, no illustrations mentioned though. "Unhappy at home with a new stepmother and stepsister, 13-year-old Toby writes an essay for a World Wildlife competition, and takes as his subject an old man, Josh, whom he finds living wild in the woods. He wins the competition but ... reporters harrass the old man, and finally he is put into a Home for Elderly Citizens. Toby visits him, and finds he has died, and realises what his own actions have led to. 'He cried for Josh, who had been big and brave under his many coats. Who had known how to live.'" (CRB Sep/73 p.114)



O17: Other world through a pond
Solved: The Silver Nutmeg
O18:  orphan girl gets adopted

Solved: Adopted Jane
O19: Orphan maybe named Peg

Solved: Heads Up! 
2002

O20: Orphan goes over wall and finds a cottage
Solved: Mandy 

O21: Orphan girl sails to Barbados
Solved: Magic Island 
O22: Old Fairy Tale Book

In the early 70s I was given an already old fairy tale book (ca. 1940s)...red faded hardcover, but missing its illustration plate, and no title page inside. I've never known the title!  The first story was "Marushka and the Twelve Months" and the last was a series of "Dapplegrim" stories. It also had "Farmer Weatherbeard" and, I believe, "The Wild Swans". It had b/w and color illustrations that were very much in the early Maxfield Parrish style.  It is NOT The Red Fairy Book by Andrew Lang...I've tracked that one down, and while similar, and seemingly published around the same time, it just isn't the right one.  I'd so appreciate any leads...I've searched for years and this forum is a great idea! I just wish there was a search engine here on the site to make hunting a lot less painful. :O)

Cinderella Fairy Book, 1890-1899, approximate.  This may be a long shot, and unfortunately this book is so old there's practically no information available about it. I found it listed on Worldcat, but there isn't any author information. The stories in the book include: The glass slipper -- The three dwarfs -- Dapplegrin -- The twelve brothers -- Two little wooden feet -- Little Thumbkin -- Farmer Weatherbeard -- Aladdin and the wonderful lamp.
Old Fairy Tale Book. This sounds very much like the book described in stumper F63/solved "It Must Be Magic."  See the latter entry for author and content details.


O23: Ocean exploration with boy and dog
Solved: Rip Darcy, Adventurer


O24: Owl with love in its eyes
Solved: The Ghost Next Door 
O25:   old lady lives in treehouse

Solved: Miss Twiggley's Tree

2003


O26:   Orphaned Russian boy
Orphaned Russian boy survives war in big city: rescues other orphans

Jaap ter Haar, Boris, 1969.  Seems like a possibility.
I'd read The Wild Children by Felice Holman, 1983, so I looked that up and another name with the same general theme also popped up - Wild Children of the Urals by Floyd Miller, 1965. "The story of 800 children, sent to Siberia from Petrograd during the Russian Revolution because of food shortages, then cut off by the war. They were rescued by the American Red
Cross from Vladivostok and returned to their families two years after their original departure."
Floyd Miller, Wild Children of the Urals , 1965.  Could this be the same book as M197.  It sounds very similar.
Ian Serrillier, The Silver Sword. This is a long shot as the action is set in Poland. Orphan Jan helps three siblings survive in war torn Warsaw until their father returns. There was a Russian soldier somewhere in the story.



O27: Orphan Annie and goblins poem
Solved:  Little Orphant Annie

O28: old cat dies in car
SOLVED: Across the Meadow


O29: Old Saint Mary's
Solved: Restituta Tue


O30: Old Lisette
Solved:  The Birthday


O31: Otho and his brother
A work of romantic fiction, two or three volumes. It concerns two (or three?) brothers, one a sober home-loving man, one a dashing adventurer (named Otho) who eventually loses his life getting a lifeline to shipwrecked sailors. 1933?

O32: orphan girl named Alice
Solved: Runaway Alice


O33: Otter book
Solved: Otter Swims


O34: Orphaned California Girl
Solved: Her Father's Daughter


O35: old man thwarts kids with fence, raspberry patch
My husband remembers this book from the 60s when he was a kid.  This old man (maybe a fox) doesn't want kids around his house, so he builds a fence.  But the kids have fun with walking along the edge of it.  So then the man plants raspberry bushes along the fence hoping the thorns will keep them away, but the kids enjoy the berries instead.  That's all he can remember.   Hope someone can remember it.  Thanks!

O36: Old Woman's House on Hill during a Flood
Solved: Alexander and the Magic Mouse


O37: Orphans of the Sea
Solved: Orphans of the Sea


O38: Old woman bakes cake
All I remember is an old woman who goes into the woods and gathers sticks. Then she goes home and bakes a cake. Idon't remember if there was a younger girl in the book too. But it had nice drawings and I think it was an early reader book- not too many words, or very big words. And just a sense of yellow- on the cover. It may have been a series book?

Patricia Polacco, Thundercake.  Probably not, as it isn't an "easy reader"



O39: orchestra
Solved: The Palace Made Music


O40: Okie Kid Picture book
Solved: Augustus Rides the Border

O41:Omni Magazine
Solved: Unaccompanied Sonata


O42: Old Man Shivers, rabbits' revenge
Solved: The Rabbit's Revenge


O43: Overweight Woman
Fiction Book about a young, overweight woman that wants to become thin. She is aided by a gay, black man.  written by a latin female.

I recall additional information that may help.  Not only did the two gay men befriend the overweight woman, but helped her to lose weight through diet and exercise, e.g., she would eat only hard boiled eggs and, gradually, toast was added to the menu.  Also, one of the gay men, I believe the black one, contracted an intestinal parasite.   The book was written by a female with both a Spanish and Anglo name, e.g., Consuela Brown.  This book was written between 1970 and 1998.  I originally found and read this book from a hodgepodge of stored, unused books in the storage area of the Shreve Memorial Library.   I have perused various library and online bibliographic databases, e.g.,  World Cat and Library of Congress for this with no luck.  Perhaps this additional information will jog someone's memory.   I certainly appreciate any assistance in locating this book.


O44: Original fairy tales
Solved: A Dream of Dragons


O45:  Organ Grinder Monkey and Woman
Solved: Along Cherry Street


O46: outer-space fiction
A young girl is one of the main characters. The only scene I remember involves two young people looking up into the sky and there are either two moons or two suns in the sky (I don't remember which). This may be at the end of the book. I also seem to remember some sort of trial or some controversy involving travelling to other worlds. Telekinesis and/or ESP might have been involved. There may have been something about a Federation, inter-planetary  organization, or something like it, but I could be confusing this with Enchantress from the Stars by Sylvia Engdahl. (This is not a book by Sylvia Engdahl  I wrote to her and asked.) I think the book was off-size. I read this book when I was young in the early 70's. I would love to be able to read it again.

Robert A. Heinlein, Have Space Suit, Will Travel.  Just a guess...one of the characters is a girl, and some details match  interplanetary travel, telepathy, the trial at the end.
Karl, Jean, Turning Place, 1976.  A long shot -- it's a collection of linked short stories that begin with an alien attack on earth and move forward through millenia, tracking changes in humans and galactic relations.  Some stories involve
interplanetary organizations one story deals with being able to project one's mind to different places girls are main characters in some of the tales. (And it's about the same period as Engdahl.)
Pamela Reynolds, Earth Times Two, 1970.  The other planet, in a double sun system, is much like earth, but without television, which the evil scientist hopes to use to control people. Two girls (one is the E. scientist's daughter) who look alike switch places back and forth between the planets.
Earth Times Two, maybe?
Isaac Asimov, Foundation Trilogy.  Several things about this description remind me of the Foundation Trilogy by Isaac Asimov, though I haven't read it for years, and I don't remember whether there are any children who play significant roles.
Robert A. Heinlein, Have Space Suit - Will Travel. (1958)   There are other similarities. Near the end of the book Peewee (a young girl) and Kip (teenage boy) are standing on the planet Lanador in the Lesser Magellanic Cloud. They look up and see, not two planets or two stars, but two galaxies - the Greater Magellanic Cloud and the Milky Way. Also, the book had a Federation-style interplanetary organization called "The Three Galaxies".  If you go here you can read the original story and see if it's the one you remember.
Alexi Panshi, Rite of Passage, 60s?? The heroine of this book must survive a rite of passage. Her society lives on a massive space ship.  After training, all children are dropped on a planet, where they must survive until picked up.  This time, something goes wrong - The humans on the planet have enslaved a native race, and they capture/kill many of the children.  At the end of the book, when the girl is back on her asteroid home, her society votes to destroy the planet & its inhabitants. This could be the book that you remember.
Hoover, Children of Morrow,1972.I read a book when I was a kid about a pair of children (Tia, Rabbit) who escape from their "colony" for lack of a better word- and travel to the sea where they are met with other telepathics like themselves. This book is set in the future. Tia (the girl) can physically hurt people with her thoughts. It turns out that they belonged to a more civilized race of people, not just the ones who "worshipped the missile.
Key, Alexander, The Forgotten Door. Sounds like it could be this.  An injured telepathic boy with amnesia meets with a farm family who take care of him.  He can communicate with animals and 'make himself light'\'' so he can run.  Bigoted neighbors find out and go after him.  He finally remembers that he's from another planet, and he and the family go to his home through the forgotten door.  His home has two moons which are in the nighttime sky when they get there.
Barbara Bartholomew, The Timekeeper.
Madeleine L'Engle, A Wrinkle In Time, 1962, approximate.



O47: over the big hill
Solved: Betsy and Tacy Go Over the Big Hill


O48: old lady's house gets moved to top of highrise
Solved: Mrs Tortino's Return to the Sun


O49: Outhouse infested with bees
Solved: Two Sisters and Some Hornets


O50: Orphan's Christmas wish is for mother
I am searching for book of Christmas stories published in the late 1970's, early 1980's which included a touching story about a young orphan whose deepest wish at Christmas is for a/his mother. There is a portrait of Mary and the Christmas child over the mantle at the orphanage that moves him deeply, showing him a mother's love. The child becomes ill, dies and is taken to heaven to be with Mary, the mother he never had.

Marcelino Pan E Vino.
  Sounds like the plot of Marcelino, which is shown on EWTN from time to time. The boy had been left in infancy with the monks who found him at the convent, who have raised him. He is shown to be rather naughty, but out of loneliness for his mother, presumed dead. Marcelino seems to make a friend, later presumed to be Christ, who is hidden in the attic, the little boy brings him food in secret. When Christ asks the boy what he want, he only wants to be with his mother, it could be Mary. At the end he joins her in death. It's a sad, sweet story, the monks weep at the end over the "little saint". There must be a book about this somewhere.


O51: Outside fun in the Fall
Soap box car fun?, early 1960s.  The only thing I can remember is that a young boy and girl are riding in a (red) soap
box car down a sidewalk, and autumn leaves are falling down around them. It's a little book, and I thought it could be one of those Little Golden books or Elf books. I'm not sure. Please let me know if you do find it. Thank you.

Could be Now It's Fall by Lois Lenski (1948), from a small format series on the seasons.  Some have been reprinted, including this one (Random House, 2000, $12).
RIDE AWAY,1953. Ride Away has exactly the picture you describe, with a boy and girl riding down a sidewalk in a red wagon with red and yellow leaves falling-but the picture is inside the book on the first page. page. The cover picture is similar-yellow, with a boy and girl riding a red bike and scooter and orange leaves falling around them.



O52: Order vs. Chaos
This was a Science Fiction book I read a long time ago. I think it was part of a trilogy but I’m not sure. The premise was Order Verses Chaos. Order had won out thinking that this was the best way to function in the society, but it was out of balance however this one man who was a pretty high individual in the Order had the soul of chaos the very thing they were all trying to repress. His soul was kept in his ring but he did not discover this until later on in the book. The only other thing I remember is they were able to travel long distances on these tornado kind of black holes that would carry you to some other place, I think those tornado’s were part of the chaos element that the order was trying to destroy or control. Hope someone can find this for me, Thanks

Could this possibly be Roger Zelazny's Amber SF series? The first book is Nine Princes in Amber and the books do deal quite a bit with the conflict between order and chaos - and there is a very unusual mode of travel, too. Just a thought.
Cooper, Louise, TIME MASTER (trilogy), 1984.  Another very good possibility is Louise Cooper's TIME MASTER trilogy (THE INITIATE, followed by THE OUTCAST and THE MASTER), published in the US by Tor Books back in the 1980s.  The Order/Chaos conflict, very much as described by the poster, is the focal element of that trilogy.
L. E. Modesitt Jr, Magic of Recluse Series, 1991. Sounds like this could be the series you are looking for.  This series of fantasy books is about order and chaos with a male protagonist, Lerris.  First book is The Magic of Recluse, second book is The Towers of the Sunset. Don'\''t remember the name of the next one, but I have copies of the first two.



O53: One Hundred Years of Sailing
A British Press.  Owners Sailing Buffs.  Photos and descriptions of various sailing vessels by the publishers.  Approximately '96.
2004


O54: Orphan Train
I don't know if that book is a biography, or if that book is an autobiography. It was published approximately 25 years ago. It is about a boy approximately 8 years old, or approximately 10 years old.  Perhaps there was an Orphan Train connection.  Perhaps his parents sold him to that farmer, or perhaps he was adopted by that farmer. Perhaps that farm was in Missouri, or perhaps that farm was in Arkansas, or perhaps that farm was in Alabama. That boy worked on that farm.  That farmer was very mean to him, including the sale of that boy's teeth.  He was forbidden to go to school - but he learned to read and write with the help of that farmer's son. Later, that boy became a minister, or a preacher. If I remember correctly, that black and white book jacket included a black and white photo of that white boy.  He was wearing a cap, a shirt, and knickers...likened to the kind of clothes the boys wore during the 1920's.  I don't know the title, and I don't know the name of the author of that book.

O55: old woman fools wolf while sitting in rocking chair
I am looking for a book (I thought it was a Little Golden Book) that is about an old woman who tricks a wolf and stops him from eating her. (I think it is a wolf--I suppose it could be a man/thief). She tells him things like "I'm up here on the roof looking at the stars" and when he goes up there to eat her, he falls off into a bush of briars,etc. Eventually, something finishes him off--can't remember what. I remember the drawings had brightly colored fall leaves.

O56: Once in a Blue Moon
Solved: Once in a Blue Moon


O57: Older brother loves blueberry blintzes
Solved: The Remarkable Return of Winston Potter Crisply


O57: Oops, I forgot
Solved: I Just Forgot


O58: Old man in cave on small island
Every time I drive past a small pond with a small island I think about this book, or probably really a short story.  In this story a man returns to the home of his youth, which is an English manor house I believe.  As I recall the property is being sold off and he is making a last pilgrimage.  On this property is a small pond with a small island.  He has this fuzzy recollection of an adventure on this island (about as fuzzy as my recollection of this story).  In his memory he went to this island as a young boy, where he encountered a raffish old man who lives in a tunnel or cave on the island.  He stays for days or weeks in this cave with this old man, who wears a pot on his head as a surrogate crown.  He wakes up on the island and all evidence of his adventure is gone, and apparently only hours have passed.  He is unable to repeat the adventure and spends his life wondering about it.  On his return to the island as an adult it is of course much smaller than he remembers, etc.  Anyone ever heard this story?

O59: oversized crown
I saw a character when I was in Germany and they told me it was a book about a lion cub who did not want to be king. He had on a red robe with some dots and crown that was too big and covering his eyes.  I am so curious about the book but I can't find information on it anywhere.  Please help, it will be the best $2 I have spent in a long time:)

The Lion King.  I know this is probably too obvious to be correct, but could it be the one that Walt Disney made famous?  I'm not sure if Disney is the one who wrote it or someone else, but it's about a lion cub who is the son of the King of the jungle, and he has to learn to be King.  But he keeps getting into trouble and doesn't really want to do it because he wants to play with his friends all day instead.  Then something happens, a fire I think, and he grows up fast and helps his friends to get away from the fire. 



O60: Olaf  stays home
Solved: Gone is Gone


O61: one person plays apocalypse
This was a book of one person plays that I think had apocalypse in the title.  The play I remember is one where a person is trapped in a box and it is getting smaller and smaller.

O62: old German kids book
Solved: Struwwelpeter


O63: Old Lady Who Won't Get Out of Bed on Fridays
Solved: A Christmas Memory


O64: Old Church Ghost Story
Solved: Wait Till Helen Comes


O65: Old Childrens Treasury illustated
Solved: Young Years

2005


O66: Obedence moon - maiden moon
Historical fiction read in 1975-1980?  Indian maiden moon -- traces her life from young age to trail of tears - she becomes a woman leader at young age goes meetings and talks.  on trail of tears meets a doctor (anti-slavery) named Nicols?  they marry - settle in Okla.  Back of book contains bio. references and mentions a US President who grants her and heirs land?  Not sure why any more.  Also in back is list of children and records cited.

O67: Orphan becomes milliner's apprentice
Solved: Faraway Dream


O68: Orphan boy has nightlight shaped like globe
Solved: The Secret Life of Dilly McBean


O69: Object  found under arctic ice
Solved: Deception Point


O70: Old Lady with yak
Solved: Alexander and the Magic Mouse


O71: Otter
Solved: Follow My Leader


O72: Orange and Blue book with line drawing of boy and old woman
Solved: The Dream Watcher


O73:  Owl walks with moon
Solved: Owl at Home


O74:  Old fashioned games
Hi.  I'm looking for a book that shows approx 4 or 5 girls / children on the front cover playing ring o ring o roses or skipping.  I think it is about children playing old fashioned games.  The photos were taken in and around St Aidans school in Bamber bridge Lancashire around 1982 and the book was published at a similar time. My daughter is one of the children and I would like to buy it as a surprise for her 30th birthday, this year. Hope someone can help.  Thanks very much.

Could it be one of Iona and Peter Opie's books? I remember a copy of the Opie's The Lore and Language of School Children had a group of children playing on the cover. I think that this book first came out in the 50's, so it might be too early, but perhaps they reissued it with a new cover later on.
I am pretty sure this is an Iona Opie title, The People in the Playground.  It is her journal of a year or so observing the games the children are playing at a particular school in England, and does feature a photo section in the middle showing the school and some of the children.  My paperback copy does have cover art with a few kids (girls?) playing a game (marbles or rope?) on it.  It's a marvelous book and generally available (used).
Hi thanks for comments but its not one of the Opie books. Can anyone else help? Thanks



O75:  Orchard to Oregon
A family crossed the plains to Oregon in a covered wagon, but this family was unique because they also took an orchard with them.  The father planted a bunch of fruit tree seedlings in a wagon bed and hauled it across the plains.  Because of this the Indians did not bother them as they crossed.  Their biggest worry was finding enough water all the time.

Lampham, Evelyn , Tree Wagon.  See Solved mysteries
O75 typo   Lampman, not Lampham



O76: Orphan, Scotland, Wordsworth
Solved:  Run Away Home


O77: Oil-Painted Yellow Hippopotamuses
The book I'm thinking of has full-page, highly detailed oil-painted illustrations of little creatures that look like yellow hippopotamuses.  They are about as tall as a blade of grass, or about the size of a dragonfly.  In each picture, there are tons of hidden objects to find, and an answer key in the back of the book.  I believe the creatures wear clothes -- more like some sort of medieval garb than any contemporary style.  Each illustration had a caption, and I can only remember one -- this was an underwater scene and the title was "Subterfuge!"  The book I had was hardcover, and had glossy pages. I assume it's from the 1980s because when I had it in the 1980s it was new.  I have searched on Google for all search terms I can think of associated with my memories of this book and come up with nothing -- it's very frustrating.  I may be wrong, but I think the book had a one word title, the name of the place where these creatures lived.  It might have started with a T, M, or P.  I'm not entirely sure about this though.  Any help would be appreciated!

Is this the same as Stumper #T198?



O78: Old woman; salesman; mischevious, hiding monsters; and a boarding house
I had a children's book in the 1970's about a vacuum cleaner salesman (I think) who came to stay at a boarding house of an old woman (I think she turned out to be a witch).  I remember the man having a really large, beak-like nose.  At night, little monsters would come out and antagonize him while he slept.  I remember them looking at, tickling, or putting things in his nose. He would wake up and get really annoyed. There were other mischevious incidences as well. I think he eventually realized there were monsters in the house and I think he eventually got used to them.  The illistrations in the book were really detailed and sort of creepy- reminiscent of the illistrations in Mercer Mayers books, but even creepier.

Sounds like THE WIZARD COMES TO TOWN by Mercer Mayer~from a librarian
Mercer Mayer, Mrs Beggs and the Wizard, 1973.  My sister discovered this book the day before I posted it.  The original book was entitled Mrs.Beggs and the Wizard (1973).  The 1980 reprint was called The Wizard comes to town



O79: Old people steal youth of lazy children
My sister and I read a story in 6th or 7th grade in our school reader in the mid/late 70’s.  It began with a little boy (perhaps named Peter) who arrives at school late and is turned away because the teacher doesn’t recognize him.  He then looks in the hallway mirror and realizes he is no longer a boy but an old man.  He later meets other children who wasted time and woke to find themselves old people.  I don’t recall how they learned that old people were stealing the youth of lazy, wasteful children but they did, and they worked together to recapture their youth.  I think that a glass ball and hidden room may have been involved.  I remember the illustrations included the boy in school looking in the mirror and seeing an old face and an old woman sitting on a bench throwing a ball into the air.  I think there was also a picture of young children dancing in a hidden room.  We always talk about this book and have tried to remember the title to no avail.  We have been searching for this book for years.  You’ll be our hero if you could get us a title and perhaps even a copy of this story.

Check out New Stumper B441.  Does any of this sound familiar?
Schwartz, Evgeny, A Tale of Stolen. (1963) OK, I think I've got it! Title: A tale of stolen time, Author(s): Shvarts, Evgenii, 1896-1958.
 Hogrogian, Nonny,  (Illustrator - ill.) Publication: Englewood Cliffs, N.J., Prentice-Hall, Year: 1966 Description: 1 v. (unpaged) col. illus. 16 x 21 cm.
Language: English Standard No: LCCN: 66-10817   SUBJECT(S)  Descriptor: Tales -- Soviet Union.  Note(s): Translation of Skazka o poteriannom vremeni. Class Descriptors: LC: PZ8.S3454 Dewey: 398 Responsibility: by Evgeny Schwartz. Translated from the Russian by Lila Pargment and Estelle Titiev. Illustrated and designed by Nonny Hogrogian. Note that the author listed above with the yellow highlighting is the standardized way libraries are supposed to use his name.  The title page of the book apparently spells it as seen under "Responsibility."  What this means is that you may find it attributed to Shvarts or Schwartz depending on who is listing it for sale.One bookseller provided this summary: "Evil sorcerers change children who waste time into old people--but the children are given the opportunity to change back into children. "  Here'\''s another description from the Children'\''s Picture Book Database at Miami University: "Peter is a lazy boy that never does his homework. He soon falls behind all the other students. Peter always thinks he will have time to catch up. Until one day, he becomes an old man."Makes sense that Prentice-Hall published it -- they are one of the big textbook publishers, and O79 remembered it from a textbook.'



O80: Optical device
Solved: Asimov's Mysteries


O81: old man
Solved: Mr. Pudgins


O82: Old claytoon(?)/3D looking childrens book with moon, elf/fairy & owl
I am looking for a book I had around 1965.  I believe the illustrations were claytoons??? (Similar to the "Pointers for Little Persons" series from the 1940's) or they may have just been drawn to look three dimensional.  The book may have originally been my fathers so it could have been from the 1930's or later.  I don't remember what the story was but I specifically remember a crescent moon with a face, an owl, and one illustration where an elf or fairy was standing beside a bed looking at a (sleeping?) child and behind the elf/fairy was the bedroom window.  The illustrations in this book were very detailed and almost life like...almost scary if that makes any sense.  Any and all help greatly appreciated and Thank You in advance!

O83: Ookpik visits the USA
Ookpik  visits the USA.  Not sure if this is the exact title but it is about a little Canadian (I believe he's Canadian) owl who travels in his car to see the United States.  The owl OOkpik  actually is in a little car with a magnet on the back of it;  each page of the book has a winding road that takes him to different places in the USA.  As he winds through the different areas a cutout in each page (a hole) allows him to 'drive' from page to page without ever being lifted off the page.  A large magnet on the entire back cover of the book holds him onto every page all the time.  As for content I remember that he talks to different people and I believe animals on each page and they repeatedly ask him "little owl where are you going?"  and he responds over and over, "I'm on my way to see the USA!" and drives around a bend or through a tunnel which takes him to the next page or place on his journey.  Does anyone else recall this super sweet unique book?

O83 Ookpik is the Inuit word for snowy owl.  There are a  number of Ookpik titles by different authors.
Kent Salisbury, Ookpik Visits the U.S.A., 1968.  Found this description on an online auction:   "Ookpik Visits the U.S.A. by Kent Salisbury and illustrated by Beverly Edwards. This classic hardback book measures 9 ½ inches by 13 inches... Comes with a small magnetic owl (Ookpik) figure that you move through out the story as you read. OOKPIK is the Eskimo name for the Snowy Owl of the Arctic. In Eskimo stories, he is a friendly, furry creature who enjoys living among people."



O84: Otto
Solved: The Silver Crown
2006


O85a: Ordinary Street
This is a vintage book about an ordinary boy on an Ordinary street, (goes on and on about his ordinary life) and at the end of the book he flies.  Maybe from the 60's?  Little black/white illustrations?  Thanks!

Raskin, Ellen, Nothing ever happens on my block, 1966.  Could it be this one? Little boy who thinks nothing ever happens on his block, while in illustrations many fantastic things are occurring. 



O85b:  Orthodox Jewish boy
Solved: The Chosen
2006


O86a: Orphan
Solved: Adopted Jane


O86b: Out of place items in a picture book
Solved: Odd One Out

O87: Old man and boat
Here's the general plot of the book as I can recall it.  My teacher read this story to us in the closing weeks of the 4th grade (1978).  It was about a boy who spent his summer days at the boat docks.  A white haired man was busy refurbishing some sort of boat and befriended the boy who in turn helped out with chores and tasks on the boat.  Despite the white hair the man was portrayed as being strong and athletic.  One day the boy was upset to find a group of young men arguing and fighting with the white haired man.  The man reassured the boy that it was nothing to worry about.  The next day the boy arrived at the boat to find the man dead on his boat in what appeared to have been a murder.  Unfortunately, that's all I know of the book and I was never able to hear the end of it.  There was a death in the family that week and I missed the last few days of school as we traveled to the funeral.  As much as anything I'm curious to find the book so that I can finally know the ending.
O88: Orphan gives voice lessons

Solved: Emmy Keeps a Promise
Girl and older sister orphans who must earn a living - sister is a singer?, gives voice lessons and they end up staying in a student's home when the sister gets sick.  Some romantic element involving music student's uncle?brother? with older sister. Think one is named Arabel but not sure.  Some ongoing thing with pickled clams and the younger sister not brave enough to try new things. Set in New York or Boston in the late 1800's to early 1900's, I think.  Any help greatly appreciated - driving me nuts to not remember this!

L,M. Montgomery, Marcella's Reward, collected in Akin to Anne.  This is a long shot, but I thought I would suggest it-- Marcella and her sister are orphans, younger sister is sick, they end up going to stay in the country with their new friend. Although there are no voice lessons, a DIFFERENT short story in the collection does involve an orphan who takes voice lessons...just thought I would suggest it in case.
This could be Dicey's Song, by Cynthia Voight.
Sorry to disagree, but this is definitely not Dicey's Song: the plot elements don't match at all.  Dicey's Song features four siblings who are not orphans, and it is set in contemporary Maryland.  There are no voice lessons, pickled clams, sick sisters, or romantic elements.
Madye L. Chastain, Emmy Keeps a Promise, 1956. Just spending a few idle minutes browsing through the archives and I saw O88.  This sounds like it's probably Emmy Keeps a Promise. Everything matches right down to the pickled clams.  I don't know how long ago someone was looking for this but perhaps she is still interested.


O89: Orphaned peasant boy singing to the moon
Solved: The Moon Singer

O90: Old lady, alligator/crocodile in old Victorian house
Solved: Alexander and the Magic Mouse

O91: Owl says "tu wit tu woo"
Solved: Peter Puckle and Other Fairy Tales


O92: Orphan girl
Solved: No Flying in the House


O93: Orangina
The book was I think called "Orangeena" or "Orangina".  It was about an orange that rolls off a boat and falls into the hands of a little girl who is sick.  The orange sacrifices itself to the little girl to drink so that she can be cured. It is a children's story and maybe Swiss/European and is probably about 15 years old.


O94: Old couple spruces up house for sale
Children’s book, early 70’s at the latest, possibly much earlier.  An old man and woman live in an old, tumble-down shack.  They want to sell it and move somewhere nicer, but no one wants to buy it.  They decide to paint it, then plant flowers, then do another and another improvement….at the end of the book they like their spruced up house so much that they want to live there after all.
O95: One room schoolhouse

Chapter book from late 50's or early 60's - possibly scholastic or weekly readers book club.  featured children who lived in a rural area in late 1800's or early 1900's and attended a one room school house.  described walking mile to school and getting summer break to bring in the crops.

Could this one be one of the Lois Lenski series?  Two titles come to mind:  Strawberry Girl and Cotton in my Sack.
Could this be Caddie Woodlawn by Carol Ryrie Brink? Caddie and her siblings walk a long distance to school and then spend part of their summer breaks tending to crops.
Could this be the series by Rebecca Caudill?  I don't think it had a collective title, but some of the books were Schoolhouse in the Woods, The Happy Little Family, The Saturday Cousins, Schoolroom in the Parlor and Up and Down the River.  They're about Bonnie, her siblings and her cousins "in the days of copper toed shoes".  I believe they were originally published in the 1940s.
Helen Fuller Orton, Mystery at the Little Red Schoolhouse, 1942.  maybe this or one of her other books?
Laura Ingalls Wilder, Farmer Boy. Could it be this part of the Little House On The Prairie series. In it Laura describes her husband Almanzo's childhood. Almanzo was the youngest of four siblings, and they only went to school when there was nothing more important to do on the farm. The school was definitely a one room (and one teacher) school.



O96: Orphan girls
Solved: The Wolves of Willoughby Chase


O97: Oral Report
 Cleary? Pre 1990 Childrens book - A children's story centers about a 3rd grader(?) having to give an oral report which demontrates something. It concludes with the principal getting a hair cut.

Beverley Cleary, Ramona the Pest, 1968.  Tracy Dockray (Illustrator)  All about Ramona Quimby, I learnt how to spell secretary throught this book, hope its this one or one of the others, Ramona the Brave, Ramona Forever
Suzy Kline, Horrible Harry and the Green Slime, 1989.  Is this the book you're looking for? It has some similarities to what you described, but I don't think the principal gets his hair cut. However, he does get his hair spiked and his office is slimed.



O98:  orphan potscrubber in castle kitchen
Solved: The Book of Atrix Wolfe

2007


O99: Old West boy - riverboat captain grandfatehr
Solved: Humbug Mountain


O100: Our earth as an setting
Solved: Heaven Eyes


O101: Oomah (a Husky Pup)
Solved: Oomah


O102: Oregon by Train - Children travel alone
Solved: A Head on Her Shoulders


O103: Orphan/foster girl
Solved: Sally


O104: Onion Soup for Dinner
The book I am searching for is most likely from the 70’s, probably mid to late 70’s.  The story was about a man who lived alone and ate the same thing every night for supper – for some reason French onion soup is what I remember, but it could be any type of soup.  I also remember the man being short and bald with a moustache and possibly owning a dog.  The man would go to the grocery store and always buy the same items.  I wish that I had more details, but this is all that sticks out in my mind other than my fond memories of this book from the 3rd grade.  I’ve even contacted my elementary school library for assistance, but the librarian wasn’t able to locate anything.  I would greatly appreciate any suggestions or comments that might help in solving this mystery.

Black, Irma Simonton, The Little Old Man Who Could Not Read. The plot as remembered is a bit different, but I'm just about sure this is your book.  He went shopping, but he couldn't read, so he bought things based on the shapes of the boxes, so he wound up with onion soup that he hated, waxed paper instead of spaghetti, salt instead of oatmeal, etc.
Jack Kent, Socks for Supper,1978.This title came to my mind when you mentioned the little bald man with the moustache.  The book is about a poor older couple who have no food and no money.  So the wife knits socks with thread from the husbands sweater for the husband to barter for cheese and milk from a younger, richer farmer and his wife.  This happens repeatedly, with the husband's sweater shrinking with each transaction.  As it turns out, the rich farmer's wife had been using the thread from the socks to make a sweater for the farmer, which turns out too big, and which they then give to the little bald man.  Very cute book.



O105: Older Brother, Younger Sister
The book or story i am looking for is where There was an older brother and a younger sister who were bestfriends and from a poor family. They lived in a place where their country was being attacked. The sister made the brother promise that he wouldn't go to war. A while lator he felt that he had to. She and he were out having fun under an old tree one evening. The boy had decied that it was the evening that he had to go. The sister told him that he couldn't and hugged him. He told her a story looking up through the tree branches about a great place where the stars were diamonds and all he had to do was shake the tree and they would fall out and everything would be okay in the world. She didn't believe him but after a few minutes was convinced to close her eyes and trust him. She closed her eyes and let go. Holding out her hands her brother said that it would be just a minute. He then walks away while her eyes are closed. She waits and asks him to shake the tree. She knows that he's gone but refuses to open her eyes, just wishing for the good world to come.

Ellen Byron, Asleep on the Wind, 1998. This is the plot of the one-act play Asleep on the Wind by Ellen Byron.  The girl is Rootie.  She doesn't want her brother to go to war (Vietnam, I think).  They live in the south, and their family life is bad.  Her brother is her friend, also.  She (or he or both) is obsessed with Elvis Presley.  At the end of the play, the brother tells Rootie to close her eyes, and when she opens them he is gone.  The action all takes place under a special tree.  The sequel, Graceland (also a one act) tells the brother's fate, and in it Rootie is a young woman.  I don't know if Asleep on the Wind is a book, but this is definitely the plot to that play.  I knew as soon as I read the plot description.  My daughter was in it a few years ago and played Rootie.  It's a tearjerker.


O106: ostrich
Hi, I am looking for a book that was read to me as a child . I believe it was published between the early 1950's-1990's (Im not sure of the exact date ) It was about an ostrich that thought she was not pretty enough ,and thought by trading different animal parts it would make her more beautiful. At the end she looked quite ridiculous and realized that she was beautiful just the way she was . I am not sure if it was an ostrich or a different bird,but im pretty confident that it was an ostrich . If you find this book for me , I will be VERY grateful. I have been looking for this book for years . PLEASE HELP . Thanks

Ginsburg, Mirra, What Kind Of Bird Is That? Crown, 1973.There are several books with this theme, but in this book it is a goose that envies everybody else and trades parts - swan's neck, pelican's beak, crane's legs, crow's little black wings, peacocks's tail, rooster's comb/wattle/crow.  But these other bird's parts don't work too well for him and a fox almost catches him because he can't fly with the little wings.  Some geese fly to save him and he realizes what he has to do - give back all the other bird's parts so he can be a goose like all the other geese, except now he's not envious anymore.
Mirra Ginsburg, What Kind of Bird is That?,1973. A silly goose trades body parts with many other animals, but in the end (after a narrow escape from a wolf) realizes that she prefers her original, wonderful self!
Arnold, Katya, Duck, Duck, Goose?, 1997. I didn't suggest this title before since it's a relatively recent copyright date, but since there's no confirmation on the other title, I figured I'd send this along.  The back of the book says that it's inspired by an animated film called Who Is This Bird?, which was directed by the great Russian director, Vladimir Grigorievich Suteev.  From the flyleaf: "Goose is miserable.  Being a goose is so ordinary, but our vain heroine craves glamour and style.  Tired of being just one of the gaggle, she wants to shine!  This headstrong goose is convinced that she can be just as lovely as the other birds she envies, if only she could have Swan's graceful neck, or Stork's long, shapely legs, or....  When this silly goose gets her wish, she discovers that looks aren't everything.  This hilarious tale reminds us all that beauty has its price."  After Goose gave back Swan's neck, Pelican's beak, Stork's long legs, Rooster's red comb and cock-a-doodle-doo, and Peacock's tail, it ends with, "Now she looked like every other goose.  Only she was smarter, kinder, and happier.  And still prettier than a duck!"
Could be "Heather's Feathers"?  Library of Congress entry here: http://tinyurl.com/cxcfen.  There are several copies on abebooks - one going for $65 - eep!  I don't remember whether she "traded parts", but it was about an ostrich that had to learn to love herself/her looks.  I loved that book as a kid.  I would have read it in the early '80s.  Thanks for hosting such an amazing service!  I'm sure I'll be using it soon.



O107: Orrefors crystal vase
Soved: Going Steady


O108: Our town
Solved: This is Our Town


O109: Orphans, foster home, Communist Czechoslovakia
Love your site!  I am loking for a book I read back in the 1970's.  It was about a group of orphans in a foster home in Communist Czechoslovakia in the late 1940's, early 1950's.  The authorities are about to close the home and disperse the children, so the oldest boy decides to steal a train to escape with all of them to the west.

Nevil Shute, Pied Piper, 1941. Homeless, refugee children are traveling in a small band through Europe during World War II. As they travel, they keep picking up more children who are alone and also orphaned. Eventually a man attempts to lead them to safety. The book was originally published in 1941 but was reissued in paperback in 1963. Although it may not be the book being sought, the plot is similar, and it is a wonderful novel!
Not the Neville Shute book (great author, though).  It was definitely Czechoslovakia in the late 40's.  A boy teams up with the Engineer on the train to escape with his foster family to the West.  The story was supposedly inspired by an actual event in the early years of the Cold War.
Marie McSwigan, All Aboard for Freedom, 1954. A group of orphans escape via train from their country, and pick up a few other kids along the way.  I don''t remember if it was Czechoslovakia, but it was definitely in the wake of WWII.  I don't believe they steal the train, but they aren't on it with permission.  (I read this a long time ago!)



O110: Orphan girl, red braids
Solved: Sensible Kate


O111: Opal Duncan, pickles
Solved: Double Trouble for Rupert


O112: Others think girl is boy
Solved: Nice Little Girls


O113: Overweight Elsa competes for boy's attention
I read a typical coming of age book back in 1987, 1988, or 1989.  I believe the main female character was in a rivalry with this perfect girl over a boy's attention, but don't remember many details about that.  I remember that an overweight girl, Elsa, joined the class after the schoolyear had already  started and  befriended the main character.  Elsa's mother was very mean to her about her weight and made comments to her and forced her to diet.  Elsa's sister was  thin and perfect, which made her situation worse.   I believe their father had left the family and Elsa associated that with her weight also.  Halfway through the school year, Elsa begins to lose weight but her mother hardly notices and won't buy her any new clothes, so Elsa pins her clothes to make them smaller.  One day, a boy bully steps on her skirt and it falls off, the whole class laughs and calls her fat.  The main character stands up for Elsa and points out that the reason her skirt fell off is because she has lost so much weight that her clothes are much too big. I always thought the message was good and would like my niece to read it.  Please help me find it!

Bartha DeClements, Nothing's Fair in Fifth Grade. This is definitely it. There's no boy but other than that every detail is identical.
Barthe De Clements, Nothing's Fair in Fifth Grade. Yes, this is Nothing's Fair in Fifth Grade.  The overweight girl's name is Elsie, though, not Elsa.



O114: orphans dance around  maypole, illustration
Solved: The Giraffe Who Went to School


O115: old harlequin romance, cherry ripe female surgeon
This is an older Harlequin Romance. I remember no names, no title, no author. However I know it was 50-60s. The plot was about a female doctor studying to be a surgeon. She was working with a brilliant surgeon who she did not like at first, but then fell in love with him. I remember she kind of pushed him away until she had completed her training or whatever. The characters used the Campion poem, there is a garden in her face, to signal she was ready to continue with their relationship. It took place in England, and the heroine had a father that lived near by and I want to say she lived with him, he may have been a vicar, not sure. Both the main characters had dark hair. The thing I remember most about it is, Cherry Ripe. As I said this was used quite a bit, he promises her he will leave her alone until her lips, cherry ripe themselves do cry. I always called the book Cherry Ripe, although I know that is not the right title. I have tried several search forums already to try and find this book, I do not know if ever I will find it, but I really want to. Also, I have ruled out Betty Neels and Anne Vinton (Juliet Shore) even though they both wrote in the same subject matter at the same time. Good luck!!

You might try browsing through this collection: http://www.tinypineapple.com/nursebooks/  There are photos of all the covers and brief summaries of each book.  Something might jog your memory.



O116: Orphaned mountain lion cub
Solved: Yellow Eyes


O117: Old man who lived in a shack
Late 1960s to early 1970s. It was about an old man who could not sleep because of all the noises, his shutters banged against the house, the trees blew in the wind ect. He went to a wise man who told him to get an elephant which made it worse; Then the wise man told him to get a bird, then a donkey ect. Then he went back to the wise man and told him it was worse the ever so the wise man told him to get rid of all the animals. Then he was able to sleep because it was so quite and peaceful with just the wind blowing the trees and the shutters banging on the house.

Ann McGovern, Too Much Noise, 1967. Peter complains that his house is too noisy, until the wise man teaches him a lesson in perspective by advising him to obtain some rather unusual house guests.



O118: Og  gorilla football
1960-70's (or earlier?).  This was a favorite book of a son's friends.  She recalls that the gorilla named Og played on a football team and knew only one pass.

Gault, Clare & Frank, A Super Fullback for the Superbowl, 1977, Scholastic.  illus. - Syd Hoff.  I don't have the book so I can't check the plot, but the subjects are 'gorillas' & 'football'.'



O119: Orphan girl, witch
Childrens, 1955?  Little girl that is a witch.  Lives with grandmother or foster parent.  Always dirty, kids make fun of, wants to be a princess and at the end she gets her wish.

Probably Anne Bennet's "Little Witch".  See Solved Mysteries.



O120: Overweight Girl & Thin Girl - Love Horses, Become Friends
Solved: Panky and William


O121: Ori
I am looking for a children's book that my mother read to me in the early 80s. From what I remember it was about 2 young Asian siblings, possibly twins that went for a magic teacup ride one night. I think their names were Ori & Dori and the adventure may have been a dream. They ride in a teacup and explore space. Finding this book would mean the World to me, as it is a very fond memory of my mother and I named my child after my memory of this book. Please Help!


O122: "Ouch you naughty lion"
A girl sticks her finger in a crib and says "Ouch you naughty lion.  You mustn't bite."  May have been a board book.

Edward Fenton, Fierce John, 1959?, approximate.  Possibly this one? See a picture on the Loganberry site under "Mother's Druthers."
Patricia Scarry, my teddy bear, 1953.  illus by Eloise Wilkins.



2008


O123: Ohio - Young Adult - New Girl
Solved: Best Friend


O124: Overweight woman wants to enjoy life
the story is about an overweight woman, who wanted to enjoy her life.  the book is fiction, funny and with some romance in it.  cover is blue with the top of a woman's head, her eyes looking up.  I believe the author is a female.  2002-2004.

Wally Lamb, She's Come Undone.  Your description of the cover sounds a lot like this book -- not written by a woman, but very convincingly in a woman's voice.
Wally Lamb, She's Come Undone, 1998, copyright.  Definitely not a children's story, but an excellent novel.  Here's a synopsis from the B&N website: "Meet Dolores Price. She's 13, wise-mouthed but wounded, having bid her childhood goodbye. Beached like a whale in front of her bedroom TV, she spends the next few years nourishing herself with the Mallmomars, potato chips, and Pepsi her anxious mother supplies. When she finally rolls into young womanhood at 257 pounds, Dolores is no stronger and life is no kinder. But this time she's determined to rise to the occasion and give herself one more chance before really going belly up." The cover is blue, rather surreal-Dali-ish, with the woman's head on a sea, surrounded by clouds.  The author, Wally Lamb, is not a woman but you would swear this book had been written by one.
This might be EVERY INCH OF HER by Peter Sheridan, 2004. Overweight Philomena is running away from her abusive husband (and leaves her 5 children with him) and ends up taking refuge in a convent. Though her smoking, swearing and tattoos startle the nuns, they take her in and put her in charge of entertainment for the senior citizens. Though unconvential, she is a breath of fresh air, and soon makes a positive change in not only their lives, but her own. The cover doesn't match the description exactly, but is close.~from a librarian
Helen Fielding, Bridget Jones's Diary, 1998.  Have you considered Bridget Jones's Diary? The cover isn't blue, but it does have the woman's face looking up. The sequel, Bridget Jones: The Edge of Reason, has just the eyes looking up. Most of your details fit, other than the date and the cover being blue.


O125: Oz book
I had several OZ books when I was a child but can’t remember the titles. There was a part of one that I just loved, and have been trying to figure out which book it is in.  I can’t remember who the characters were, but I do remember them walking on a long journey and being very hungry.  As they passed by trees, the foods they were thinking of would appear on the branches and they would pick and eat them.  I know this was a very small part of the book, but it was my favorite!

L. Frank Baum, Ozma of Oz, 1907, approximate.  You may be thinking of this one, in which Dorothy and a hen named Billina are swept off a ship during a storm and wash up on a strange beach. Dorothy, who is hungry, finds two trees, one bearing lunch-boxes, the other dinner pails, both filled with good things to eat. All the food items are attached to the insides of the containers with little stems. Other memorable characters from this book include the vicious Wheelers, who wish to kill Dorothy after she has plucked the food, Tiktok, the machine man, The Princess Langwidere, who keeps a cabinet full of heads so that she can change her face at will, and who wants to add Dorothy's head to her collection, the Nome King, who has transformed the Royal Family of Ev into small ornaments and bric-a-brac to decorate his palace, and threatens to do the same to Dorothy and her friends, should they fail in their attempts to correctly identify & restore them, and of course, Ozma, the young and beautiful ruler of Oz.



O126: Old woman who stops getting up in the morning
I read this book in the 70s.  It's a picture book with text.  It's about an old woman who lives alone, in a high-rise, it seems.  One morning, she decides she isn't going to get up - she doesn't see the point.  All day long, people come knocking on her door to say what happened.  One person was late to work because he/she depended upon the old woman's tea kettle going off at 7:00 a.m. (or so) like clockwork.  Since the old woman didn't get up and make the tea, the neighbor didn't get up either.  And so it went until there was a line of people at the door who had gotten messed up because the old woman hadn't gotten up and gone about her daily routine.

Mildred Kantrowitz, Maxie, 1970, copyright.  Maxie lives in three small rooms on the top floor of an old brownstone house on Orange Street where she feels rather unnecessary until the day she stays abed.
Mildred Kantrowitz, Emily A. McCully (illus), Maxie, 1970, copyright.  "Maxie lived in three small rooms on the top floor of an old brownstone house on Orange Street. She lived there for many years, and every day was the same for Maxie. Every morning, seven days a week, at exactly seven o'clock, Maxie raised the shades on her three front windows. Every morning at exactly 7:10, Maxie's large, orange cat jumped up onto the middle windowsill and sprawled there in the morning sun. At 7:20, if you were watching Maxie's back window, you could see her raise the shade to the very top. Then she uncovered a bird cage. On the perch inside the cage was a yellow canary. He was waiting for his water dish to be filled, and it always was, if you were still watching, at 7:22..." In fact, Maxie did everything at exactly the same time and in the same way every day. When her tea kettle whistled, she let it whistle for exactly one full minute. One day, feeling lonely and unneeded, Maxie decided to stay in bed. She didn't raise her front shades at 7:00. Her cat did not jump onto the middle windowsill. Her teakettle did not whistle. Maxie soon found out that the sounds coming from her apartment each morning kept the neighborhood running like clockwork.


O127: Old woman and cow pat
Solved: The Old Woman and the Rice Thief


O128: Orphan sisters/Mean Headmistress/Boarding School/Uninformed-Neglectful Uncle with a Kind Heart
This is a book that our school librarian read to us in 4th grade (mid-70s). Since the other book I remember her reading was the Lion the Witch and the Wardrobe, I'm surprised that I'm having such difficulty tracking it down as children's literature. (I was and am a voracious reader and read for myself as soon as she finished it). The plot details I recall include two orphaned sisters who have been placed in a boarding school by their guardian uncle. The sisters and other girls in the school are forced to wear shabby old clothes, eat less than desirable food (I specifically recall mentions of stewed fruit), and have no toys while the Headmistress's daughter or granddaughter is decked out in beautifl silks and ribbons, has gorgeous dolls and eats cake and ice cream (she's also very snooty to the other girls). One day the sisters discover opened crates in the attic that indicate that the dolls and clothes that the snooty girl has were originally sent by their uncle and other girls' relatives to them and the headmistress has taken them to give to her child/grandchild. The girls somehow run away or something and make contact with their uncle who was unaware of the true state of things and the boarding house. It ends happily, but I can't remember the details. I'm trying to establish a children's library or reading list for my own two small children and would love to share with them some of the stories that I enjoyed--even if I can't remember the name of the book!

Betty MacDonald, Nancy and Plum.   I'm pretty sure this is Nancy and Plum by Betty MacDonald, who also wrote the Mrs. Piggle-Wiggle books. It was one of my favorites growing up.
Oops!  I inadvertently posted the answer for O128 as O125.  The answer to O128 about the evil headmistress and the benignly neglectful uncle is most definitely Nancy and Plum by Betty MacDonald.  Sorry about the mix-up!
Betty Macdonald, Nancy and Plum
   This is definitely the book you are seeking.



O129: Orrefors crystal mystery
I have a vague memory of a mystery story as a child which involved, at its resolution, an Orrefors crystal vase, possibly decorated with an etched dolphin.  This would have been in the mid sixties, no later than about 1967.   Then, I read a lot of Nancy Drew, some Dana Girls, and other "girl sleuth" books (I think there was a series about a camp counselor).  It's not Dana Girls "Secret of the Silver Dolphin," although the title suggested to me that it might have been.  I have a feeling it was one of the series books, but which of the series, I don't know.  Do you have a clue?

Anne Emery, Going Steady, 1949, approximate.  I'm only throwing this out there because of the Orrefors crystal vase, but you might look at this one in the Solved Mysteries section. Part of a series of books about Sally Burnaby.


O130: Old Man on Apple Pie island
Solved: Mother Goose: A Treasury of Best Loved Rhymes


O131: Old-fashioned girl lives with modern cousins, sees ghost Alice
Solved: Mirror of Danger


O132: orphan
Solved: They Loved to Laugh


O133: Old Mr. Rivers
A friend remembers the line, "Old Mr. Rivers, caught in a flood," from a book read to him, aged 4 or 5, about 194l.  The illustrations were in blues and browns.  I thought the source might be Thornton Burgess but have had no success finding it.  Help!  Thanks very much.


O134: Old Lady in Upside-down House
Solved: Mrs. Piggle-Wiggle


O135: "Oh, Stanley"
Solved: And I Mean It, Stanley

O136: Orphan boy rescued by girl and captain father
Solved: Trina Finds a Brother


O137: Orphan lives with old aunts who eat peppermint candy
Solved: Peppermints in the Parlor


O138: Old doll cast aside for new doll
A little girl has a favorite old doll and gets a beautiful new doll as a gift, casting her old doll aside (I think leaving her outside in the rain). When she begins to miss her old favorite doll friend, she realizes that beauty doesn't matter, and rescues her old doll. Large flat book, 1940's.

Clara Grant, Ukelele And Her New Doll,
1951, copyright.  This seems like such an obvious suggestion that I almost hesitate to offer it, but is it possible the little girl lived on a Polynesian island? Ukelele has a wooden doll that she loves, but casts it aside when visiting sailors give her a beautiful store-bought china doll. However, after realizing that she can't really play with the china doll as she would like, for fear of breaking it or getting it dirty, she goes back to her beloved wooden doll.
Jean O'Neill, Cotton Top, 1953, copyright.  Rare and expensive book about a little girl named Sarah Jane (but called "Cotton Top" because her hair was as white as cotton) growing up in the Blue Ridge Mountains of North Carolina. When someone gives her a beautiful store-bought china doll, she discards her beloved home-made doll (made by her mother). She discovers that the new doll can't be played with the way the old one can, and learns the value of the old doll.

2009


O139: Old man helps boy survive on mountain
It's not Hatchet, even though that book sounds almost dead on. Late 70's/Early 80's. City boy has to survive in the wilderness and gets help from an old hermit, who teaches him survival skills, including hunting, trapping, and making your own jerkey. The old man dies and he stays until rescued.

If the wilderness is actually an island in the Caribbean, then you may be thinking of The Cay, by Theodore Taylor.  Phillip is shipwrecked and blind, and has to rely on an old black hermit named Timothy for survival.  The book was published in 1969.
It does not take place in the Caribbean. It's definitely in North American in the mountains. Everything about the book Hatchet sounds exactly right (including the plane crash), EXCEPT the absence of the old man. The book I remember definitely had a hermit old man who took in the boy and taught him how to survive in the wilderness. After the old man dies, the boy is totally equipped to live on his own. When he's eventually rescued, I think the boy even contemplates staying in the mountains.
Robert Newton Peck, Kirk's Law
.  I'm pretty sure this is the book you want.
Jean Craighead George, My Side of the Mountain, 1959, copyright.  Possibly this one?  Description:  Every kid thinks about running away at one point or another; few get farther than the end of the block. Young Sam Gribley gets to the end of the block and keeps going--all the way to the Catskill Mountains of upstate New York. There he sets up house in a huge hollowed-out tree, with a falcon and a weasel for companions and his wits as his tool for survival. In a spellbinding, touching, funny account, Sam learns to live off the land, and grows up a little in the process. Blizzards, hunters, loneliness, and fear all battle to drive Sam back to city life. But his desire for freedom, independence, and adventure is stronger. No reader will be immune to the compulsion to go right out and start whittling fishhooks and befriending raccoons.
Lanny Cotler (screenplay), The Earthling, 1980.  Just wanted to comment that this sounds so much like the film "The Earthling" that starred Ricky Schroeder and William Holden, except that the boy's parents die in an RV that goes over a cliff in a very remote area of Australia.  He is found by a man who is dying and resolves to teach the boy everything he can about survival so that the boy has a chance.  I wonder if there may have been a movie tie-in type book.
Morey, Walt, Canyon Winter, 1972, copyright.  (Walt Morey is also the author of Gentle Ben.)  Here's the synopsis from the inside dust jacket:  "When the private plane carrying fifteen year old Peter Grayson crashed in the Rockies, the pilot was killed, and Peter, a complete tenderfoot, was stranded alone in a wilderness canyon.  When he was unable to find his way out, and had lost almost all hope of rescue, he followed a deer through the dense terrain to the cabin where Omar Pickett, an old 'canyon rat,' lived with his wild animal companions.  Begrudgingly, Omar took Peter in for the long six months before spring would bring boats from 'outside.'..."
Walt Morey, Canyon Winter, 1972, copyright.  I knew I had read this book just a few months ago and looked through my books for 1 1/2 hours to find it.  It is Canyon Winter and I found the synopsis on the internet: The private plane taking Peter to his wealthy father's ranch crashes in the Rockies, and its pilot is killed. Struggling to survive, and sure that no one will rescue him, Peter stumbles across rough and unforgiving Omar Pickett, who has lived in the mountains for years. Peter must rely on Omar--and learn to rely on himself.


O140: One footed hopping creature
author: hyphenated name ?Spanish, 1975,  childrens.  Imaginative colourful children's book that featured a creature that hopped on one giant foot.  We loved this book which we borrowed many times from our Public Library in the suburbs of Toronto.

You might be describing Medio Polito, the Half-Chick. He is a chicken with only one eye, one wing, and one leg, going hoppity-kick down the road on his one foot. He is very boastful about going to Madrid to visit the King, but his misadventures land him on top of the highest steeple in Madrid, where he's now a weathercock. Hope this helps.
Stephen Cosgrove.  I would suggest taking a look at books by Stephen Cosgrove.  He wrote many books about colorful creatures around this time.  Many were translated into the Spanish language.  If your book had a moral to it, Stephen Cosgrove just might be the author.


O141: Oriental children's book with colorful kites
@1958, childrens.  I remember Oriental children flying kites that were dragons, open boxes (I think) and very colorful. I don't remember the story but as a burgeoning artist it was powerfully visual and exotic for me. I still have an avid interest in anything Oriental!

Kurt Wiese, Fish in the Air
, 1948.  Could this be the 1949 Caldecott Honor book, FISH IN THE AIR?  Little Fish, who because of his name had fish-shaped shoes and a lantern decorated with a fish, wanted the biggest kite that looked like a fish for kite flying season.  When he got it, however, a Big Wind blew it - and him - away.  Eventually, a fish hawk attacked the kite, and sends Little Fish, buoyed up by his starched gown, down into the net of a fisherman.  Little Fish decided that he wanted a very small fish kite.  The colors are very vivid.
Possibly Children of Foreign Lands by Elizabeth F. McCrady, 1936? Long shot, I know. Be sure to look in Solved Mysteries under Ching Ling and Ting Ling (that was one story from the book, which was originally published as several 8-page books in "linenette format").
Mildred Whatley Wright, A Sky Full of Dragons, 1969, copyright.  I hope this is it!  It was one of my childhood favorites.  Lee Chow wished he had some marbles so that he could play with the other boys in the park, so one night he and his grandfather set to work with rice paper and paints and from their efforts emerged a sky full of dragons that brought marbles (including the yellow one that looked like the eye of a cat) and friends to Lee Chow.

Leo Politi, Moy Moy. A long shot, but does have some beautiful illustrations of oriental children and kites, dragons. 
O142: Old Gray the cowpony
Solved: Old Blue the Cowboy

O143: Old Woman Repairs Dolls
Solved: Mystery at the Doll Hospital

O144: ORPHAN RUSSIAN TWIN GIRL COLD War Era

LOOKING FOR NOVEL I READ AND LOST THE BOOK. THE PLOT STARTS OUT IN MOSCOW DURING THE COLD WAR ERA. A LITTLE TWIN  GIRL IS STANDING IN FRONT OF A ORPHANAGE GATE. A YOUNG AMERICAN BOY TAKES HER PICTURE. THE BOY WINS A PHOTO CONTEST WITH THIS PICTURE. SHE IS A ORPHAN BECAUSE HER PARENTS WERE KILLED THEY WERE SPYS. SHE HAS A TWIN SISTER A DANCER WHO SEEKS ASSYLUM IN THE US. THEY FIND EACH OTHER YEARS LATER.THE PAPER BACK COVER HAS A PICTURE OF THIS LITTLE GIRL STANDING BEHIND A GATE OF THE ORPHANAGE IN MOSCOW. 


O145: Old man in winter turns into tree in summer and kids transform into birds after falling into the tree's hallow
Solved: Magic in the Park


O146: Orphan girl with doll and locket
This book featured an orphan girl post-Civil War era who received a trunk with a doll and a locket - I remember that parts of the book were told from the dolls POV. I think the trunk held a missing will. The girls father was a Yankee soldier - picture of him in the locket in blue uniform.

Friedman, Tracy, Orphan and the Doll, 1988. Amanda was the orphan and Henriette was the doll. I think I remember there being something about a will, though I'm not sure.


O147: Orphan Girl Alien
An orphan girl is an alient turns into a bird.  Parents died in a car accident; lives in an orphanage. One day gets a visit  from strangers; turns out her parent were from another planet and alients came to take her back. At the end she decides to stay, turns into a birg and flies back over the sea

Kris Neville, Bettyann,1951, approximate. This is a classic. There is a sequel, Bettyann's Children.


O148: Old Grey House
A short children's book: a woman decides to move from her old house. She packs her stuff in a mule? cart, looks for a new house, turning right at each road and ends up in front of her old house being painted.  The painter says "Certainly, certainly, come right in". She now likes it and moves back in.
O149: An Orphan and Her Horse

I need the name of a book about a girl who lives in orphanage and who loves horses. She runs away with one of the horses and stops at a creek. People are looking for her. She runs away to other towns and works on farms. The book is a grade school reading level.


Pam Munoz Ryan, Riding Freedom, 1998, copyright. Based on a true story. At two, Charlotte Parkhurst survives the wagon crash that kills her parents, but is placed in an orphanage where she is the only girl. Ten years later, she is kept out of sight when prospective adoptive parents come to visit and must work hard in the kitchens. She can't sew, hates cooking, and doesn't want to be like other girls, but she has a deep love and understanding for horses. Her friends are a former slave, Vern, who cares for the horses and allows her to ride them, and a boy named Hayward. She is already an accomplished rider, winning races against the boys regularly, when she suffers a series of losses: the death of Freedom, her favorite horse  the adoption of her friend Hayward  and a ban on riding or being around the horses (because it isn't ladylike). Faced with the prospect of spending the next six years slaving away in the orphanage's kitchen, she runs away. She stops by a river, where she cuts off her hair and dons boy's clothing. She throws her old clothes into the river so that people will assume she has drowned. Using the name "Charley" and passing as a boy, she finds a job as a stable hand and learns to drive a coach, eventually becoming a highly sought-after driver. She later moves out West to California, where she must overcome the loss of her left eye (while shoeing a wild horse) and prove herself capable of riding and driving a stagecoach again. Still living as a man, she becomes the first woman to vote in a US presidential election (in 1868). It wasn't until after her death that people discovered that she was really a woman.
O150: The Old Castle

Children find an old castle in the woods. Later, the whole village has a festival in the shadow of the castle. Children's picture book with story, approx 5th grade level, poss. 1980s. Animal characters? Possibly part of a series that had a map in the front of the book of the village they lived in.


Additional details: The book was thin, maybe 30 pages. The book was a picture book with words, very richly illustrated.


O151: Otter canal boat UK England
Picture book about an otter who obtains a houseboat, and sails it up and down the canals of England with a crew of friends. He plays the accordion at one point, wearing a jaunty sailor's outfit, and I remember their having to use a boat hook to maneuver through a brick-lined tunnel. Thanks!

Cynthia and Brian Paterson, The Foxwood Regatta, 1986. The big Regatta is coming up, and the cheating rats are up to their old tricks. With the help of Captain Otter, Harvey Mouse, Willie Hedgehog, and Rue Rabbit build a paddle steamer and foil the rats' scheme to win dishonestly. Part of the series of Foxwood Tales. Other books include The Foxwood Kidnap, The Foxwood Smugglers, and The Foxwood Surprise.


 O152: Obelisk German Novella/Story
Pre-1950's anthology. Husbands and wives die in succession and their names are placed on the obelisk (they may have been buried there). I read it in German and don't know if it was actually translated into English but want to find an English copy.

 O153: Olive, star, sun, moon, bracelet
Childs book about child Olivia (think that name is correct) that cant’ sleep so goes out and dances with the moon and stars and watches the sun come up, they give her a bracelet to remember her night, she wakes up thinking it was a dream but finds a real bracelet on her wrist, I think it was written in the 90’s or so.

Armand Eisen, Wish Upon a Star: A Tale of Bedtime Magic, 1993. After wishing that she did not have to go to bed, Olivia embarks on a magical nighttime journey through the heavens. She spends the night frolicking with the stars, riding on Saturn's rings, and chatting with the Man in the Moon. In the morning, she awakes to find the perfect memento of her adventure - a beautiful bracelet with charms depicting a star, the moon, and the sun. The book comes with a real charm bracelet for the young reader.


 O154: Old Woman Who Lived in a Shoe variation
A children's book based on The Old Woman Who Lived in a Shoe.  "There was an old woman who lived in a house and the house fell down on her head.  She took her twelve children up under her arms and went to live in a shed.  But the wind blew up and the shed blew down and the children blew far and wide.

Jessica Nelson North, The Giant's Shoe. Rand McNally Start-Right Elf Series 1967, reprint. It was originally published as "A Long Story" in The Children's Treasury, ed. by Marjorie Barrows (Consolidated Book Publishers, Chicago, 1947).

2011

O155: Orphaned Greek siblings go to Israel with other orphans after Holocaust
No memory of the title or author of this book.   Leo and Mia are orphaned in the Holocaust.  They are taken with other children to live on a kibbutz in Israel.  There was an English girl whose name might have been Judy and a Dutch boy who was a good farmer as well.  Would love to find this!

Sally Watson, To Build a Land, 1957. In 1947, Leo and Mia Morelli, young orphaned Italian Jews, are smuggled by boat to a kibbutz in Palestine, and deal with events leading to the establishment of Israel.

O156: Old Crock car
Date  approx 1930.  Story of a little racing car. I am looking for a book that was my fathers favourite as a child.  He was born in 1930 and I imagine this book was for a young child.  He recalls it as being called The Old Croak Car or maybe crock. It was about a little racing car.

O157: One Day on One City Block
This was a wordless book but not for toddlers. It would be from the 60s or early 70s. Every page depicts the same corner of a city block (all on white background with black pencil/pen sketches – no color) and shows the residents in various activities across one day. It begins in the morning with everyone waking up and getting ready for school/work, and on the last page everyone is sleeping. I remember that the children could be seen in school in the background, while the parents could be seen at home (e.g. the mother in one apartment cleans, cooks, etc., and teaches a ballet class to children after school) or at work (one family runs the grocery store on the ground floor of the corner building). Please help – I ache to see this again!

Tibor Gergely, Busy Day, Busy People. Sounds like it could be Busy Day, Busy People by Tibor Gergely.
I noticed that someone posted a possible title to my stumper, Busy Day, Busy People. I checked it out, and that's not it. It doesn't seem like I can post on the webpage, so I just wanted to let you know and perhaps offer some more details that might help: The book I'm referring to shows the *exact* same view of one block/ city street at different times of day. There's no text, no color. Just sketches. Probably sounds boring, but it wasn't at all!
Goodall, John S. I don't know your book, but here is a suggestion:  This description is similar to the work of John S. Goodall.  It doesn't seem likely that your book is actually by Goodall because he typically illustrated change over seasons or centuries.  But if you look him up, there might be references to other illustrators who do similar work, which could eventually lead to the book you're looking for. 

O158:Orphan sisters Peace, Charity, Hope
Orphaned sisters Peace, Charity, Hope living on a farm. Peace is a tomboy who gets into trouble. Charity is the oldest sister raising the others. Peace eats a neighbor's watermelon. In sequel she is adopted and falls off a roof, paralyzed. Old, maybe 1930's.

O159: Old children's story collection in ten (ish) volumes
SOLVED: Bryna and Louis Untermeyer (Ed), The Golden Treasury of Children's Literature - Ten Volumes, 1962-1963, approximate.

O160: Overweight girl has a magical summer
I read this book about twenty years ago. A lonely overweight girl falls in love with a nice boy and has a wonderful summer. When she goes back to high school she loses him out of her own foolishness. I really loved this book. Hope you can help! Thanks!

Nan Gilbert, The Unchosen,
1963. Ellen, who is overweight, decided that she and her other two social outcast high school friends will change their lives by trying to get dates.  Ellen does find a boyfriend whose name I think is Norman but there is a misunderstanding that comes between them.  The book is set in England was one of my favorite young adult books.
Elisabeth Ogilvie, Blueberry Summer, 1956. My copy of this book about Cass, an overweight teenager who is, at the beginning of the book, daydreaming of the perfect summer, is a Scholastic reprint from 1968.  This might be your book.

O161: Otto hates his hat and trades it to mermaids
I loved this book as a kid because of its pictures and somewhat quirky story. Otto (?) is made to wear this hat when he goes out, and at some point he and his grandpa are being chased and he trades it to mermaids who give them a ride away. The mermaids also have a comb and a bubble pipe. Thanks!


2012

O162: Orphaned girl lives in attic
The story is about a little girl orphaned and sent to live with her very depressed ?Uncle? in an old house.  She lives in the attic and he is fairly mean.  The plot is involved: a rescued grey kitten she hides in attic, a ghost in a garden in back and ultimately hidden treasure buried in a stream.

A Sound of Crying, Rodie Sudbery
, 1970. aka The House in the Wood. See solved stumpers.
Rodie Sudbery, The house in the woods, 1968. I think this is Rodie Sudbery House in the woods (US edition A sound of crying) Modern day child Polly and siblings go to stay with cousin Frederick. Polly dreams about Sarah, who used to live in the house. She tells the others Sarah's story day by day as she dreams. Sarah is an orphan badly treated by her uncle, he has an Alsatian called Thugdon. She has a grey kitten called Grey One. Polly finds the "treasure" in the lake - a chest which contained paper money, which crumbles as they open it.  
Rodie Sudbery, A Sound of Crying. Polly comes to stay in a house and has dreams about a girl who used to live there, Sarah.  Sarah Gray is living with her uncle Simon, who treats her as a servant.  She finds a cat and keeps it secretly, naming it Gray One.

O163: Old lady makes goose featherbed
SOLVED: Gates, Huber, Peardon, Salisbury, Good Times on Our Street, 1950, reprint.





P1: Mr. Pig
I work in a public library, and a customer has come in looking for these two stories/books. A librarian suggested your web site as one of the best for this stumper. Please help. Customer read these two stories about 30 years ago(at least) to her nephew. No author, no title, but she thinks they are "Golden Books." First one has a plot where a little pig does things without thinking. Another character cautions him with, "You must think, Mr. Pig." That's all she remembers.  We've tried sources, and so far, we have nothing. She's flexible on when she wants the info too. Thanks for any help you can give!

This wouldn't be one of the Sweet Pickles series, would it?  We had these in the very late 70's or early 80's.
P1 I went back to the list of pig books.  No book with the title Mr Pig, but you could email her at niresk@hotmail and see if she happens to know a book , besides Mr & Mrs Pig, that has a Mr Pig in it.
P4.5   P55  P73 P79  P80  Ditto
If it is a Sweet Pickles book, it might be this one - Pig Thinks Pink, written and illustrated by Richard Hefter, (Sweet Pickles Series) edited by Jacquelyn Reinach and Ruth L. Perle, Weekly Reader, New York, Henry Holt Books for Young Readers, 1979 ISBN:0-03-042051-2. However, the publication date looks too late for the book wanted.
P1 mr pig: another possible is Pigs in the Pantry, story by Amy Axelrod and pictures by Sharon McGinley-Nally. "Poor Mrs. Pig has the sniffles. What can Mr. Pig and the piglets do to make her feel better? Cook her favorite snack (five alarm chili) of course! But the Pigs Mess up the kitchen, and to top it off, they don't know how to follow the recipe and measure the ingredients. Call in the fire department! These Pigs are headed for Big Pig Trouble!"  However, given that it's remembered as a Golden Book, could it possibly be Poor Frightened Mr. Pig, by Dorothy Kunhardt, illustrated by Garth Williams, published Golden 1949 as Tiny Golden Book #14? No plot information, but maybe one of the Golden Book collectors might know?
I have the Tiny Nonsense Stories here, and volume titled Poor Frightened Mr. Pig is a Halloween story, and does not contain the desired refrain.
Series-Freddy the Pig.  There are a great many Freddy stories and I would not be surprised to learn that he has rose colored glasses in one of them! They are available now as reprints. Don't recall the author, but they are very popular old chapter books.
Freddy the Pig series is written by Walter R. Brooks, but again, I didn't find the desired refrain.
P1 mr pig: not a Golden Book, but perhaps Mr. Pig and Sonny Too, an I Can Read Book, written and illustrated by Lillian Hoban, published Harper 1977, 64 pages, would be worth looking at. "Four short stories relate Sonny Pig and his father's adventures skating, exercising, finding greens for supper, and going to a wedding."
Richard Scarry.  Don't know if these books are old enough, but it seems to me that Mr.Pig in Richard Scarry's books is always doing foolish things that he needs to be reprimanded for.


P4.5: Pig & otter
Solved: Hooray for Pig! 
P5: poetry anthology

Solved: For a Child: Great Poems Old and New

P7: Pipe Cleaner Man
Solved: Me And Frumpet
P8: Pie for a beggar

Solved: The Road in Storyland
P9: Purple

Solved: Pitidoe the Color Maker
P10: Patsy Doll

Solved: The Old Rag Dolly
P11: Pussy willows

You helped me find a book some time ago (The tales of Jimmiboy or similar title) and now I need your help again. I remember reading a library book in the 1970's (after '72 because we moved that year) about a little girl who had a pussywillow plant and the pussy willows sproated little baby kittens (pussies). They got into everything. That unfortunately is all I remember about the book. I think she lived with her grandparents, but I could be wrong. If you could find this book I would be thrilled. I think my daughter would love it.

Going by the title only, and it's probably way too early - Pussy Willow's Naughty Kittens, by Lillian E. Young,  published Funk & Wagnalls, 1924, 54 pages, small quarto, orange cloth with paper pastedown illustration. Illustrations by the author include color frontispiece and twelve color plates; six plates have panels that open like doors to reveal the contents, most portraying cats, inside.
Jack Bechdolt and Decie Merwin, Fairy Kittens. 1947, copyright. Girl buys pussywillows from a man in the park, who tells her they're "fairy kittens." During the night they turn into tiny little kittens that are rather naughty.


P12: Pinkwater/Pinkerton?
SOLVED:  Duncan Emrich, The Whim-Wham Book.

P20: Percival the Kitten
An Illustrated children's story about a kitten, possibly part af a collection of stories. His mom always encouraged him by saying "Purrrrserverance, Percival." It was read on Romper Room, I would love to see this story again. I learned a lot from it.

P20 percival kitten: maybe Pussy Cat Talks to Her Kittens, by Fannie Mead, illustrated by Drummond Doyle, published Rand McNally 1924, 1933, illustrated by Nell Smock, reprinted Rand McNally 1942, 1944, 1949, 1960. "Adorable color plates by Drummond of black-furred mother "Pussy Cat" and her 4 little kittens. The stories are really instructional tales on proper behavior for young children. All ages will be captivated by the pictures of the 4 kittens' antics."


P22: Portrait Gallery
This book was set in the 1800's and was a mystery that had something to do with portraits in a gallery. It might have had something to do with the underground railroad. The lead characters were a boy and a girl, the boy's family might have owned an inn where the portraits were housed. I read it in the 60's and would appreciate any help with the title.  Thanks.

P22 - Some similarities to Nesbit's House of Arden/Harding's Luck I always get mixed up which comes first but   there are chimneys/tunnels and the Mouldiwarp, the bad-tempered 'mascot'/badge of the family come to life.
Not much information, but some similarities: Raftery, Gerald Slaver's Gold NY, Vanguard 1967 "A story for older children set against an authentic background of country life in Vermont and the Underground Railroad as a group of children try to find out if there is any truth in the stories Grandpa told about an old house."
Maybe House of Dies Drear by Virginia Hamilton, NY Macmillan 1968? "A huge, old house with secret tunnels, a cantankerous caretaker, and buried treasure is a dream-come-true for 13-year-old Thomas. The fact that it's reputedly haunted only adds to its appeal! As soon as his family moves in, Thomas senses something strange about the Civil War era house, which used to be a critical stop on the Underground Railroad. With the help of his father, he learns about the abolitionists and escaping slaves who kept the Underground Railroad running. While on his own, he explores the hidden passageways in and under the house, piecing clues together in an increasingly dangerous quest for the truth about the past." Still nothing firm about a portrait gallery, though.
You might want to check out The Ghost of Follonsbee's Folly by Florence Hightower. Some of the things mentioned in your request are in this book.
No solution but I remember reading a similar book in the 60's also. I believe there was only one portrait that was missing or
stolen and it is found in a room that no one knew was in the house.  It was set in more modern times and no one knew that the house had been a stop on the underground railroad until they found the room with the portrait.
Harriet Evatt, Secret of the Old Coach Inn, 1959. I believe this book is Secret of the Old Coach Inn, by Harriet Evatt.  The portraits in question have blank faces, which creeps the children out it turns out that they belonged to an itinerant painter, who would fill in the faces of the people whom he was hired to paint.


P23: Pirates
Solved: Robin and the Pirates 
P29: Penelope

Solved: Traveller in Time


P32: Peacocks
This has stumped me for decades, but I have faith in you and your Web visitors.  Pictures of a peacock and a girl, or children, in a garden, behind an ornate iron fence or gate.  An illustrated children's book, maybe 5" tall and 4" wide, hardbound, from the 30's or 40's.  Printed in navy blue and orange on white.

Hmm, not quite The Wicked, Wicked Pigeon Ladies of the Garden...
#P32--the only book I know about peacocks is The Plaid Peacock, by Sandy Alan.
Maybe an edition of Walter de la Mare's Peacock Pye? Was it poetry? The 1927 Henry Holt edition had green boards with gilt lettering and "picture of a peacock and a boy with a quote from Isaac Watts". Nothing about blue text though.



P34: Playmate and Crosspatch
I am searching for a book from my childhood.  I am not sure of the exact  title.  It could be Playmate and Crosspatch.  The story is about a little  girl who is poor, but happy and friendly (Playmate).  The animals of the forest love her and keep her warm in the cold weather.  The other character is Crosspatch.  She is rich and spoiled.  I wish I had more information.  I think the book was published before 1930. Please let me know if you can help me.  Thank you!

Susan Coolidge has a book called Cross Patch, written in 1881.
Susan Coolidge's Cross Patch is a scarce book that contains 6 stories adapted from the myths of Mother Goose, with 44 illustrations by Ellen Oakford.
see #P98
P34 and P98 playmate and crosspatch: no real luck, but there is a book by David Cory (Happyland series, Little Jack Rabbit series etc.) called The Which Book, the Doings of Mary Sunshine and Willie Cross Patch, published by Platt probably in the 1920s, and another called The Tale of Mary Sunshine, published Platt 1918. Margaret Baker wrote a story called Cross-Patch, but I don't know if it was published separately at all. And of course no plots for any of these, though the first one looks promising.
Mabel Guinnip La Rue, In Animal Land, 1924, 1929.  I have this book in front of me. It might be an old school reader, since there are questions at the end of each chapter. Crosspatch and Playmate appear in several of the stories.
I hadn't realized that the Racketty-Packetty House by Frances Hodgson Burnett was subtitled As Told by Queen Crosspatch. Here is the Introduction by the Queen Crosspatch herself, in case this helps any.  Now this is the story about the doll family I liked and the doll family I didn't.  When you read it you are to remember something I am going to tell you.  This is it:  If you think dolls never do anything you don't see them do, you are very much mistaken.  When people are not looking at them they can do anything they choose.  They can dance and sing and play on the piano and have all sorts of fun.  But they can only move about and talk when people turn their backs and are not looking.  If any one looks, they just stop.  Fairies know this and of course Fairies visit in all the dolls' houses where the dolls are agreeable.  They will not associate, though, with dolls who are not nice.  They never call or leave their cards at a dolls' house where the dolls are proud or bad-tempered.  They are very particular.  If you are conceited or ill-tempered yourself, you will never know a fairy as long as you live.  --Queen Crosspatch.



P36: Penguin pet
There's a long lost book I've been wondering about for a long time.   It was about some children in England, and they had this pet that was some sort of cute, loveable, fur-bearing penguin, and it was a mystery, because it seemed to be the only one, but then later they learned that there was a whole colony of these fur-bearing penguins on the Amazon in Brazil, and they repatriated their little friend. Or something like that. I know, it sounds really stupid, but it was adorable. Does this ring a bell?

#P36--instead of penguins, try puffins or some related bird.  Looking up birds of South America might reveal a word to use as a keyword.
P36 Penguin Pet -- sounds like the Bogwoppit descriptions in Solved Mysteries, incidentally the LC description is "Abandoned by her guardian, Samantha moves in with an unwelcoming aunt whose dilapidated house includes bogwoppits, ratsized creatures with wings, fur, and blue eyes."
Possible - Sparrows and Bouins by Susan Skinner, illustrated by Laszlo Acs, published London, Heinemann 1967 "What became of inventive Great-Uncle Horace Sparrow, who vanished, saying in a note: "Men are ungrateful ... I will maybe find some gentler beings who will listen to me and will learn what I have to teach"? He did. He found the bouins, a sunny-tempered, furry, miniature people -  something between a teddy-bear and a lemur, only smaller - and to them he gave a culture including not only language (English) but washing machines and such. Without these things, as a bouin observes, "we'd never get finished; there'd be no time for songs and dancing and stories and picnics". When this story starts they are making contact with one of the five Sparrow children (humans) in whose overgrown garden - a bouin forest - they still reside; their bouin-baby is lost. A clever, happy, likeable family story, with or without the magic."
Richard and Florence Atwater, Mr. Popper's Penguins, 1938  I think that P36 is Mr. Popper's Penguins.   It is a delightful book, with lots of pictures, about a family that receives an Antarctic penguin from Admiral Drake.  They use their refrigerator for a nest and flood the cellar for aswimming pool in the summer and an ice rink in the winter.  When the penguin (named Captain Cook) gets lonely they acquire another penguin named Greta.  Eventually Mr. Popper has 12 penguins that he trains as a vaudeville troupe.  At the end of the book he sends them to the North Pole to live.
Illustrations for Mr. Popper's Penguins are by the Caldecott and Newberry-Award winning Robert Lawson.
Could this  be E. Nesbit's Five Children and It? English children find a strange creature?!?



P39: Pixie Trink
Solved: Water Babies

P41: Prime Minister and barefoot queen
Can you recollect a book about a Prime Minister and a barefoot queen?

Could this be the book by Sue Townsend (of Adrian Mole fame), called The Queen and I?  In it, the English
public votes out the monarchy, and the Queen and her family have to go live on a public housing estate.   She is befriended by her working class neighbors, but Prince Phillip can't bring himself to accept life outside Buckingham Palace, and never gets out of bed.  Prince Charles discovers a love of gardening, etc.
P41 - There isn't much info here but it made me think of the story The Cat That Looked at a King, and of the chapters in Mary Poppins Opens the Door.  By P.L. Travers, of course.
Hillary McKay, Happy and Glorious.  This might conceivably be Hillary McKay's Happy and Glorious, a collection of
stories about a rambunctious ten-year-old queen.  She has a fuddy-duddy prime minister who wishes he had been cleverer in school so he could have had a better job.


P43: Pigeons who were once children
Solved: Magic in the Park

P44: A present for the princess
Solved: Present for the Princess
P46: Pirate with no lips

My grandfather had this book as a boy in England. It was a delisiously scarey book with one part about a pirate with no lips looking through a window.  It had a few ink drawings and was quite thick for a childrens novel by today's standards.  My grandfather probably read it around the age of 10 - he was born in 1902 if that helps with the search.  My family has been trying to find a copy of this beloved books for years and will be thrilled if someone can help us!  Good Luck

J Meade Faulkner, Moonfleet, 1902.  This sounds like Moonfleet (first published 1902), a ripping yarn of
piracy and adventure!
P46 pirate with no lips: this one is about 30 years too late to be the one wanted, but in The Island of Adventure, by Enid Blyton, published Macmillan 1944, while exploring the old copper mines the children encounter the villain Jake. "He had a black patch over one eye and the other eye gleamed wickedly at them. His mouth was so tight-lipped that it almost seemed as if he had no lips at all." He's a counterfeiter, not a pirate, though, despite the eyepatch. Our library's copy of Moonfleet has gone missing, so I can't check it for lipless pirates. It's about smugglers, actually, but that's a technicality.


P48: Pumpkin princess
This is a book I read to my daughter when she was quite young so it is about 15 years or so ago.  The story was about a mother and daughter and the mother called the little girl "Pumpkin Princess."  Can you help me?

A remote possibility - Sing-Along Sary by Margaret and John Travers Moore, illustrated by John Moment, published Harcourt 1951, 150 pages. "The 'Great Pumpkin Flood' took place in rural Pennsylvania in the 1850s and Sary had to watch the pumpkins she had been raising for the fair go sailing down the river entirely out of her reach. The loss of few pumpkins might not seem so important to an adult, but to Sary they represented her only chance to buy her brother Zeke a fiddle for Christmas, and she knew that Zeke wanted a fiddle more than anything in the world. If Uncle Ed had not had a bright idea, the story might have ended unhappily." (Horn Book May/51 p.183) It doesn't seem to involve the mother much, and no mention whether Sary has any pet-names of that sort, so I'm not too hopeful about this.
P48 pumpkin princess: a slightly better bet is A Golden Coach for Callie Rose, by Martha Gwinn Kiser, illustrated by Gloria Gaulke, published Bobbs-Merrill 1964 "Callie is upset when a party is announced at school, for everyone is to bring refreshments, and Callie has no money. Her discovery of a big yellow pumpkin and her mother's surprise idea turn an unpromising situation into a worthwhile lesson. Ages 8-12." (HB Dec/64 p.562 pub ad) At least this one is about a mother and daughter, and the pumpkin (coach) could be associated with a princess (Cinderella).



P49: A present for a mother
I am trying to remember a book that I loved as a child.  It was about a boy that wanted to buy his mother a present.  He raised watermelons on a terraced hillside and when they were ripe he sold the melon to buy his mother a piece of jewelry.  I hope you can help because this is driving me crazy because I've seen the name a few years back and saw the book in our library.

P49 Present for a mother sounds the same as W2 Watermelons
Could be Little Wu and the Watermelons by Beatrice Liu, illustrated by Graham Peck, Follett, 1954, 96 pages. "A delightful tale of a small boy of the Hua Miao tribe of southwest China and his efforts to earn enough money to buy a present for his mother. Little Wu wanted to show his mother that he thought her the most beautiful mother in the world and he decided that the way to do that would be to buy her a piece of jewelry. When he finally had enough money, most of it gained from the sale of watermelons he had painstakingly raised, he realized that jewelry was not what she wanted most, but for the family to be able to buy a small field of their own."
P49 present for mother and W2 watermelons: If it isn't Little Wu and the Watermelons, maybe it's Magical Melons by Carol Ryrie Brink, illustrated Marguerite Davis, published Macmillan 1945? Granted, that's a girl (Caddie Woodlawn again) not a boy, and melons growing accidentally in the cornfield not purposely on a terraced hillside, and Caddie buys a bonnet for her mother, not a piece of jewelry, but it is about melons...



P54: Pirate captain
Wonderful site, I was wondering if you could help me with the titles of a couple of books.  One (sorry this is a little vague), was about a little boy who would be magically whisked away to a pirate ship where (I think), for some strange reason he was the captain. Even though he knew nothing about sailing. I
distinctly remember a section where the sailor who was captain when the boy was with his parents explaining to him that the tablecloth was wet because it stopped it slipping around with the motion of the ship. For the life of me, I cannot remember the title of this book.

P54 Pirate Captain -- from Horn Book again, Jan-Feb/43, review section The Secret Voyage by Gordon Grant, 62 pages, published by Morrow. "Aided by his own delightful pictures, Gordon Grant draws upon his imagination to tell how Tommy, who loved ships and longed to to go sea, found satisfaction by means of a paint brush. It was given to him by his uncle and it was not only Chinese, but it had magic powers which carried Tommy back to the days of sail. When he found his old sea captain had sailed with Tommy's grandfather, the boy was doubly happy. Besides having the fun of the story, ship-minded boys will value three pages of line drawings showing different rigs ..." It doesn't sound like a pirate ship, but it's the closest I've seen so far.
McPhail, David, Edward and the Pirates, 1997.  This picture book sounds like it might be it..
P54 pirate captain: again, not pirates, but If I Were Captain, by Louise Lee Floethe, illustrated by Richard Floethe, published Scribner 1956 is about "the exciting dreams of a small boy sitting before the fire, who
suddenly becomes captain of the old-time ship on the mantel. Told in gay rhymes, this is a wonderful book of faraway places. Ages 4-7." (HB Oct/56 p.397 pub ad) Then again, the description of the book wanted didn't mention rhyming narration. More on the suggested McPhailbook, Edward and the Pirates, published Little, Brown 1997, 32 pages. "Young Edward really lives all the stories he reads and one night he wakes up and his bed is surrounded by pirates. Wonderful illustrations." It might be a bit too recent, though.
P54 pirate captain - it would be nice to know if the book being looked for is a picture book or a 'chapter book'. If the latter, perhaps Captain Whackamore, by Michael Mason, illustrated by Victor Ambrus, published Deutsch 1971, 224 pages. "The story tells of Joe and Mike Roberts who, after their father has made some models of the captain and crew of an 18th century sailing vessel, take part in all kinds of adventures with them through the medium of dreams. ... on successive nights, just before Christmas, they can each participate in a series of  humorous episodes with Captain Whackamore and his motley crew." (Children's Book Review Jun/71 p.90)
Margaret Mahy, The Pirates' Mixes-Up Voyage,1983. It's a humorous pirate story! They sail on a ship called The Sinful Sausage!



P55: Pig with rose-colored glasses
I was born in 1948 and remember a story about a pig who wore rose-colored glasses.  I do not remember title or author but it  was probably read to me around 1951 or 1952.  If you could assist me I would be eternally grateful.

P55 - Is this Sam Pig? Alison Uttley wrote several collections of stories about Six Pigs and Brock the Badger, Sam was the main character and some of the books, Sam Pig and Sally for instance, had his name in the title. They were ever-so-slightly magical - with the country magic of talking animals but in other respects quite down to earth, and rose-coloured spectacles sound quite likely - but I don't have them all to check. I'll see what I can find and get back to you if I can shed any more light.
Yes,  in response to your note, please search for me.  I feel obsessed with finding this story--a link to my earliest memories.  Whatever light you can shed will be appreciated.
P55 - I've checked the 2 'Sam Pig' titles I have here and it isn't any of the stories in them so I may have led you up
the garden path there!


P57: Paige
I am named after a character in a book.  I was born in 1963, so the book was probably published in the early 60's.  My mom can't remember anything else about the book but that the heroine was named Paige.

The only "Paige" I've ever heard of is in the book Parrish which was published in the '60's, I think. This is an adult book and the book was made into a movie with Troy Donahue. Paige is the good girl who gets him in the end.
P57 paige: more on the suggested - Parrish, by Mildred Savage, published Simon & Schuster 1959, movie tie-in paperback 1960, 408 pages. It's apparently about young Parrish MacLean, tobacco farming, and steamy
relationships. Couldn't find anything on the names of the three women in the story. I would assume that the book wanted is an adult rather than children's book, since the poster's mother read it. I've seen a couple of teen books from the late 50s-early 60s with heroines called Page, but no Paige.
About Paige: I read a book in about 1960 in which the heroine's full name was Serena Paige MacNeill (McNeill?).  She was known as Paige.  That much I am fairly sure of, but what follows is tentative.  She was
one of several children in an American (eastern seaboard? Virginia?) family of Scottish descent. All her siblings had very Scottish names, but someone (Father? grandmother?) told her she was the most Scottish of the lot, in spite of her name.  She was in her mid to late teens and trying to decide what to do with her life.  An attractive character and what seemed then to be an unusual and even romantic name.
I, too, thought the answer to P57 was the story about Serena Page MacNeil when I first read it.  But, I have a copy of this book (The Fair Adventure by Elizabeth Janet Gray, 1940) and she definitely spells it Page, not Paige.  Maybe her mother didn't remember the way it was spelled in the book, or liked it better with an "i"?
Hildegarde Dolson, We Shook the Family Tree, 1950s , approximate.  This childhood memoir describes the various escapades of a family during the early 1900's.  The author's friend/neighbor is a very spunky girl named Paige Campbell who always came over to the Dolsons' house to eat their toothpaste because it tasted so good!!  Maybe this is the Paige you're named after.



P58: Postman Pops
Hello! I got your address from Jill at Purple House Press.  I'm desperate to find a children's book called Postman Pops.  It's for an ailing relative who remembers it from his youth.  As he's now 49 I'm guessing it was published in the '40's.  With that very little bit of information I have searched the Internet to exhaustion and found nothing.  Any information you have would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks in advance.

There was a postman story from the early 1950's, Margaret Wise Brown's Seven Little Postmen (1952).  The story follows a little boy's letter cross country until it is delivered to his grandmother. The final postman, who receives the most attention in the story, is not named Pops but is a Pops type of character.
stretching here, but it's about the right date and subject - The Postman by Charlotte Kuh, illustrations by Kurt Wiese, published Macmillan 1949, 6 x 6" 42 pages. "Cute book on how the mail is processed and delivered - sometimes by dog sleds and horse carts. Begins with writing a letter, how it is sorted, cancelling machine, and on through delivery."



P61: Phillipino fables
I am looking for a folk tale book with stories from SE Asia, probably the Phillipines. As I remember my uncle brought it back from WWII for me, but he may have just purchased it at the time. The book was small, probably about 6x7, with maybe 40-60 pages, with short, unconnected fables and stories, which I remember as very frightening.  It was illustrated with what I now know are woodcuts, with heavy black ink, and intricate borders on the white paper (not plates). I was three or four, but I am pretty sure that these were not from the Jataka tales and that the stories were not from India. I remember it as spare, direct writing, easy to understand, but maybe it was a collection of fables for adults and that's why I can't find it. It was read aloud to me and then it "disappeared"? Maybe my mother edited it as she read.

very maybe - Acacio, Arsenio B. et al, illustrated by Esther Brock Bird  WORK AND PLAY IN THE PHILIPPINES.   Boston, Heath, 1944 80 pgs, color/black & white illustrations. Children Illustrated 8-3/8". Red full cloth, paste-on pictorial. or maybe Perkins, Lucy Fitch The Filipino Twins 1923, 154 pages
Still trying, here. The Philippine Beginner's Book by Blue, Reyes, Brown,  Ayer, published Macmillan, NY 1933 (1st published in 1929). "Illustrated by Manuel Reyes Isip, this reader was intended for schools in the Philippines, and is written in English. The charming 2-color illustrations depict Juan and Maria's life in 8 chapters, and would be an unusual addition to the library of collectors of children's primers."
P61 Phillipino fables: could it be Fairy Tales from the Philippines retold by Dorothy Lewis Robertson & illustrated by Howard Burns, published New York, Dodd Mead 1971, 7" x 10" hardback, 127 pages. "Exciting
ilustrations throughout the book - 11 fairy tales from the Philippine Islands - many appear to be warrior tales - detailed foreword by the author." Probably too long, though.
How about- Elizabeth Sechrist's Once in the First Time  Folk Tales from the Philippines ,ill. by John Sheppard.  Macrae-Smith Co.,1948??



P62: Pram Girl
An English book (color is spelled "colour") no later than 1970 and no earlier than when picture books began to have vibrant colors, in which a little girl, perhaps with long, dark hair, pushes a pram.

This may be too long, at 61 pages - Meet Mary Kate, by Helen Morgan, illustrated by Shirley Hughes, published Faber 1963. "When this collection of stories begins, it is the night before Mary Kate's fourth birthday ... Mary Kate is a kind, practical little girl, with some of the nicest relatives it is possible to imagine. ... Shirley Hughes makes Mary Kate a stout determined little girl in sensible shoes, with a doll's pram which is just the right one for a four-year-old's doll or kitten." The ad for the book shows a dark-haired little girl in bed, with a stuffed penguin and a book. (Junior Bookshelf Jul/63 p.137, ad p.70)
P62 pram girl: almost certainly too late, but Susie's Dolls' Pram, written and illustrated by Renate Meyer, published Bodley Head 1973. "Susie is given an antique Victorian baby-carriage for her birthday. She is proud of her present - and bitterly hurt when the other kids make up mean rhymes about it because it is old. But her teacher saves the day by admiring the pram and basing a lesson on the sort of little girl who might have been the original owner of it. The pictures throughout are clear, colourful and overbrimming with emotional content." (Children's Books of the Year 1973, p.22)
P62--Pram Girl:  After someone made this suggestion, I wrote, "Hadn't heard of this one and don't recognize the plot, but the date is right and sounds like exactly the sort of book I'd pick up." The Magic Perambulator.  Brooks, Jeremy.  New York:  John Day, 1966.  Illustrated by Robert Bartelt.  Children's book, story of Sultan's daughter and a flying pram. Google and eBay searches for both author and artist of  The Magic  Perambulator failed to turn up any further description of the book or pictured examples of the artist's work.  What I remember is a slender little girl of about 6-9 years (probably not as young as 4, and not stout) pushing a pram down a walk which might be in a garden or park.  It is lined with bright and beautiful flowers.  Colors in the illustrations are very solid and vibrant, in some ways like the work of Ezra Jack Keats--not soft or sketchy-looking.  The girl has long dark hair worn loose except for perhaps a headband, with bangs--very much in the Marlo Thomas "That Girl" look of  the times.  Wearing a bright print dress with a short skirt, not very sultan's daughterish, but there could be another girl in the story--don't exactly remember a plot.  Anyone have The Magic Perambulator and care to describe it, or have any picture book like the one I've described?  I'd appreciate any leads!  Thanks.



P65: Poems about families and their animals
Hi!  I received a book of poetry when I was younger and I'm afraid that I don't remember much about it at all.  They were poems written from one person's perspective about an aunt and some other family and maybe their animals...I don't know.  I know that the pages were all white with black outlined drawings...and maybe a few spots of color here and there but I don't think so.  The cover that I had was a celophane-type jacket and it was reddish orange.  The book was about 8 inches tall and about 4 inches wide I guess, it must've been in the early 1980's that I received it.

P65 poems about family and animals: perhaps Meet My Folks! by Ted Hughes, illustrated by George Adamson, published Faber 1961 "Former Laureate’s first book of verses for children. Nine rhymes tell of the writer’s singular family, who seem to undertake ordinary activities with extraordinary results (often involving animals!). His mother cooks: "I took her an alligator that attacked us: She served it up curried with Crème de la Cactus" Each verse illustrated with a full page cartoon type drawing by George Adamson, who also designed the cover and dustjacket."



P66: Poetry book with a Beatles poem
Solved: Remember Me When This You See - A New Collection of Autograph Verses


P68: Pancakes and rafts
Solved: Duck and His Friends

P71: Putnam and the wolf
Solved: Putnam's Cave


P73: Pigs rebuild the world!
Solved: Wump World 

P74: Parallel universe
Solved:  Misplaced Persons

P75: Primer, linguistics
My Fundamentals of Linguistics professor was talking about a book he wish he had kept when teaching a similar course years before.  He described the book as having a blue cover with rings on the front.  He said that they were widely used in elementary schools during the 1970's.  The book covered Linguistics or a similar subject matter.  Any assistance would be greatly appreciated, thank you.

In the classroom long ago we used a text called Cracking the Code. It was a supplemental book that was used with the children who needed some extra practice with  their reading. I believe it was put out by SRA to go along with their  basal readers. This series used a linguistic approach. 



P76: Possums go topless
Solved: Three Billys Go to Town 

P79: Piggy puff
I am looking for an old book, possibly a Little Golden Book, with the name of or with the main character of "Piggy Puff".  Published around the 1940's?

P80: Pig loses his curly tail
I am searching for a story about a pig who lost his adorable curly tail because he did not listen to his mother.  My son used to recite this story when he came home from pre-school back in the early 80s.  Have you ever heard of such a story?

I think I also remember this story from this time frame(my oldest was born in "77). I, unfortunately, can't remember the name, either, or if it was a separate book or just a story in an anthology. The detail I want to add is that the pig loses his tail because it freezes in ice and he has to pull it off to escape. He went onto the water after his mother told him not to.
Janeen Brady, Standin' Tall:  Obedience, 1980s.  I know I heard this story on the Standin' Tall cassette and book series by Brite Music.  I suppose it could have originally been from somewhere else, but I know you can find it there.  www.britemusic.com



P83: Peanut family
Solved: Goober Village


P84: Polka dot detective
Solved: Rootie Kazootie 

P87: Phobos fudge
Solved: Phobos, the Robot Planet 

P88: Pinocchio variant
Solved: Pinocchio, illus by Howard Waring


P89: Poncho or Pancho
Storybook concerning pigeons from the mid to late 1930s.

Mukherji, D Ghopal, Gayneck, the Story of a Pigeon, 1928.  Could the poster be thinking of this Newbery Award-winner? The date is about right - it would have been around in the 1930s, though I admit the title doesn't sound the same.
P89 poncho or pancho: could this be Chico, the Story of a Homing Pigeon, by Lucy Mansfield Blanchard, illustrated by K. G. Healy, published Houghton 1922? "Story of Andrea, a boy of Venice, and his prize homing pigeon; and of the service rendered by Chico during the World war." (that'd be World War One ...) (Children's Catalog 1936 p.77) It's a somewhat similar name.



P91: Puddle Duck
Looking to find this children's picture book, which I believe is out of print, titled "Puddle Duck"  Not either of the "Puddle Ducks" by Nancy Huendal or Beatrix Potter. Any help would be great!

P91 Beatrix Potter's The tale of Jemima Puddle-Duck???
Try this one - Puddle Duck by Ruth Van Ness Blair, illustrated by Elizabeth Rice, published Austin,  Steck-Vaughan 1966 "Puddle Duck liked wading in puddles left by rains, but he really liked swimming, so he went in search of a puddle big enough to swim in every day. But each time he found one, something happened. Ages 4-7." (Horn Book Dec/66 p.759 publ.ad)
Louis Ross, Puddle Duck. (1979)  This book, illustrated by my aunt's college roommate, Pat Schories, is so obscure it isn't even listed on Schories' own web page!  It is a large hardcover picture book about Puddle Duck, who doesn't like sleeping with his siblings because they like to be wet and muddy and he doesn't.  Whether or not this is the right book for the original requester, I would love to have a copy myself.



P92: Poison Ivy
Solved:  Herself the Elf 

P93: Phillipine Pixies boy friendship
The book I'm looking for has eluded me for years.   I had it read to me by my second grade teacher, and it involved a young boy living in the Phillipines who is befriended by a pixie who is only 3 inches tall.  The book chronicles their adventures together, and at the end, the boy decides to record his adventures and they become the basis for the book.

Might this be Anne Perez Guerra's Poppy, the Adventures of a Fairy?



P94: Pittsburgh's underground river
There was a set of books written back around the early 1970's.  I don't remember if they involved the same characters, or were separate ones, but they were by the same author.  In each book the children  (who I believe were siblings) encountered strange creatures who helped them battle against evil characters.  One of them was set (or at least had part of it set) in Pittsburgh, PA.  My father was particularly interested in this one because it mentioned an underground river running under the city.  We lived near there, and he thought it was interesting.  I know the author is not Susan Cooper, as I have checked her books.  Any ideas of who the author might be, or the titles of the books would really be helpful.

Jane Louise Curry.  Sounds like the author you're looking for may be Jane Louise Curry. Many of her books have been set in the Pittsburgh/West Virginia area.



P95: Pelican finds boy's boot
Solved:  Come Again, Pelican
P96: Popcorn pops out of control in old lady's fireplace!

Solved:  Popcorn Party

P97: Percis rides on a turles back into Forest
Solved: The Little One

P98: Playmate and Crosspatch
I have been looking for the books with these two girls for years. Do you have anything on them?  As I recall, I had more than one book when I was young.  Where can I get them now? To tell the truth, I came on the website by accident, and I need an answer where I can find it.
--
Playmate was a good little blond girl, kind to animals and obedient. Crosspatch was dark haired, spoiled and cruel to the animals.  The two lived in a forest.  There were possibly more than one book about them.
---
Playmate and Crosspatch, 1920's. Two girls: One blond, Playmate, and kind, the other Crosspatch dark hair, cruel

See P34 also
P34 and P98 playmate and crosspatch: no real luck, but there is a book by David Cory (Happyland series, Little Jack Rabbit series etc.) called The Which Book, the Doings of Mary Sunshine and Willie Cross Patch, published by Platt probably in the 1920s, and another called The Tale of Mary Sunshine, published Platt 1918. Margaret Baker wrote a story called Cross-Patch, but I don't know if it was published separately at all. And of course no plots for any of these, though the first one looks promising.
Mabel Guinnip La Rue, In Animal Land, 1924, 1929.  I have this book in front of me. It might be an old school reader, since there are questions at the end of each chapter. Crosspatch and Playmate appear in several of the stories.
I hadn't realized that the Racketty-Packetty House by Frances Hodgson Burnett was subtitled As Told by Queen Crosspatch. Here is the Introduction by the Queen Crosspatch herself, in case this helps any.  Now this is the story about the doll family I liked and the doll family I didn't.  When you read it you are to remember something I am going to tell you.  This is it:  If you think dolls never do anything you don't see them do, you are very much mistaken.  When people are not looking at them they can do anything they choose.  They can dance and sing and play on the piano and have all sorts of fun.  But they can only move about and talk when people turn their backs and are not looking.  If any one looks, they just stop.  Fairies know this and of course Fairies visit in all the dolls' houses where the dolls are agreeable.  They will not associate, though, with dolls who are not nice.  They never call or leave their cards at a dolls' house where the dolls are proud or bad-tempered.  They are very particular.  If you are conceited or ill-tempered yourself, you will never know a fairy as long as you live.  --Queen Crosspatch.



P99: Pop-up cats
A popup cat book.... I remember only that cats are running around chasing mice in the house and also fighting playfully with each other. A huge stretch of the imagination is required for this one unless you know of any popup books from the 80s that involve mostly cats running around chasing mice.

Nearly spoilt for choice, here. Possibles:
ERIC GURNEY'S POP-UP BOOK OF CATS published NY Random House 1974. "20 pages of great cat pop-ups & moveables by Eric Gurney. Shows kittens & cats playing, hiding, fishing, drinking milk and of course, chasing & being chased. A great pop-up, especially for cat-lovers." "This is number 28 in the Random House Pop-Up Series. Paper engineering is by IB PENICK. Eric Gurney takes a clever look at the all too familier and delightful behavior of cats. Note the fire department efforts to get the cat in the tree. Do cats really sit under rocking chairs??"
CATS UP by Ray Marshall, illustrated by Korky Paul published NY: Little Simon Book, 1982 Hard Cover. A Pop-Up Book. 7 1/2 x 9. "The first cat book where cats literally spring into action! Fat Cats, Alley Cats, Classy Cats- all here in the most fantastic pop-ups to turn even the coolest cat among us purr-ple with laughter." "Six double pages, with numerous pop-ups, pull tabs, lift-the-flap. Outstanding, especially for cat-lovers. Vivid colors. Also printed in England under title ACTION CATS.  ALL KINDS OF CATS: A POP-UP BOOK, published NY: Scholastic Book Services. Hard Cover. ca 1980's. 4to - over 9¾" - 12" tall. Colorful pictorial paper covered boards. [10]pp. Pop-Ups, Pulls, Lifts, Adorable book for cat lovers. 



P100: Plane crash only survivers
I remember this being my favorite book, but my memories are very sketchy. It was a boy and girl involved in a plane crash ? and they were the only survivers. Read it in the 60's-70's

Perhaps Mayday, Mayday by Hilary Milton. I think the parents were only injured, not killed, but the plot deals with a boy and a girl who need to get to safety after a plane crash in the mountains.
could this be Walkabout by James Vance Marshall?  They crash in the Australian desert and are helped by an Aboriginal boy to find civilisation.  Also a film by Nic Roeg starring Jenny Agutter.
P100  a slight possibility . Rambeau, John; Gullett, Dorothea    Jim Forest and the plane crash  illus by Joseph Maniscalco    Field Educational Pubns    1967   Jim Forest series
P100 plane crash: might be worth looking at To the Wild Sky, by Ivan Southall, though that is about several children surviving a plane crash, not just a boy and a girl.
Monique Peyrouton de Ladebat, The Village That Slept, 1961,1963, 1965, 1980.  Just a possibility, if any of these details sound familiar: The children survive a plane crash in a remote mountain area (the Pyrenees).  They both have amnesia but know their first names: Franz and Lydia.  They find a baby alive too, and a deserted village where they make a home in one of the houses, get supplies from a climbers' hut, find several abandoned animals (dog, cow, chickens), make a garden, and stay for over a year.  Eventually rescued by searchers for a downed pilot, and reunited with their families.  Very tender and touching story. (It's one of my favorites too!) Translated by Thelma Niklaus. Illustrated by Margery Gill.  A Google search turned up a reference to  Peyrouton de Ladebat, M. (1980). The village that slept. (T. Niklaus Trans.). Goston: Gregg Press. [? misprint for Boston?]
Two youngsters find themselves stranded with an infant near a deserted village high on a desolate mountain. This is a reprint  my copy says First American Edition 1965 / c by Editions G.P., Paris, 1961 / English translation and illustrations c by The Bodley Head Ltd, 1963 / LCCC No. 65-10881
Arthur Catherall, Prisoners in the Snow, 1967.  This is a long-shot. The children Tom and Trudi live on a farm in the mountains of Austria when a plane crashes nearby and causes an avalanche. The house is buried under snow and they have to both save themselves and try to rescue the pilot. The time-frame is right but are the details ?


P101: Prickly Pear
This was my fav library book when I was about ten (1950s).  It was about a group of animals on a search for what I was remember a prickly pear.  The dog was the leader of the pack.  They find the fruit and need to bring it back.  WHy I forget. That's one of the reasons I'd like to find the book again.  I remembe they had to go thrugh a river and other terrains to find the fruit. Does this sound familiar to anyone?

P101 prickly pear: could this be The Bojabi Tree, by Eleanor Rickert, mentioned elsewhere in the Stumpers list, or perhaps another version of it? That does involve several animals and an oddly named fruit that they try to bring back, and difficult terrain. See description under B96 bonjo.
I wouldn't be at all surprised if this book were Rutgers and the Water-Snouts by Barbara Dana, c. 1969.  In it, a bulldog and his animal friends go on a search for Rutgers' missing "water-snouts" (which some of the animals think must be prickly pears, because they're kind of like potatoes with spikes) and bring them back just in time to use them to plug the holes in a beaver dam.  Oh heck, forget that last -- I knew it was too good to be true -- the
poster said the book was from the 50's.


P102: Picky eaters
Solved: Golden Book of 365 Stories

P103: Poor Little Rich Girl
Solved: Poor Little Rich Girl 
P104: Parents divorcing and kids relocating

Solved: Cricket 
P105: Pancakes
Solved: The Perfect Pancake

P106: Problems, math and emotional
I don't know the author or title, a bad start. I read this book in high school in the early 1960's. It is British, I believe, and takes place in London after World War II. The heroine is about 18-20 years old and lives with her father. She has a married older sister. She is confused about life and relationships. She can't understand the reIationship her sister has with her husband.  I think the heroine wants to be a writer and takes a  course in writing but is so confused about her feelings that she spends most of her time alone in an upstairs room of her house solving math problems. She finds this satisfying because math problems have discrete answers whereas life problems do not. Of course, she finally meets a young man she can relate to, albeit tentatively at first, and who seems to understand her.  I believe she only ventures out at night. There are visible signs in London of the damage caused by the Blitz. In fact, I think the book opens with her return to her London home after having been evacuated during the war, perhaps. The book has a light rather than a ponderous tone.  I have been trying to find this book for several years.I had initially thought this book was Ann Veronica by H.G. Welles which I also read in the early 60's. It is not, although there is a similarlity in that both books deal with a young woman finding her way in the world. Any ideas?

Jane Gardam, ?  Can't remember which of hers it is - *not* A Few Fair Days I don't think but possibly Bilgewater, Summer after the Funeral or Hollow Land. Whatever the title, it's about a girl who starts out wanting to be a writer, then thinks she never will be, and eventually (after meeting a professor or poet (???) and showing some of her work to him) gets the right sort of encouragement. Does this sound familiar to the poster?
Jane Gardam, Long Way from Verona. I've looked through a list of her titles now, and almost sure this is the one - if it's her at all!
The book is definitely not A Long Way to Verona by Jane Gardam. That is set in the north-east of England and, though set in WW2 has nothing to do with London. Nor is it any of the other books by Jane Gardam that you have mentioned. I read each of them recently.



P107: Piracy
Solved: Look Out for Pirates!

P108: Puffin
I am looking for a book that I used to have as a child (c. 1975),  it has a few poems in it.  One is something about a Train Driver Mr Macgyver and a Train to Glasgow, another is something like Michael Finnegan who grew whiskers on his chinegan.  Unfortunately that is all I am able to remember, if you are able to help I would appreciate it greatly.

There was a series of programmes by the BBC in the 1970s called Playaway which featured these poems I think they were specially written for the programme. They were written by a woman and I think there is a collection of them with Playaway in the title, or it may be called "The train to Glasgow" I have tried to trace details but no luck.
Eleanor Graham , Puffin Book of Verse.  I also remember this book from my childhood, and think this may be the one. If not, it may be Barbara Ireson's Young Puffin Book of Verse.
I'm not going to be very helpful here as I don't know anything about this particular book, although I know the words to both poems - but although the poems may have been used in this programme, Michael Finnegan at least is older than that (I have a book from 1967 which lists it as an 'English Traditional Song'), and I think the Train to Glasgow might be older too (my mum thinks from the 60s.
Eileen Colwell, Tell Me Another Story,1964. This is definitely the one- a favourite of mine at the time'



P109: Pegasus, Christmas Cookie
Childrens book with Pegasus on the cover I think.  Pegasus was a Christmas cookie that hung on the Christmas tree and I believe he comes to life by making a wish on Christmas Eve.  This is all I remember, my mother read it to us as very young children in the early 60's

John Brangwyn, Pegasus and the Star, 1955?.  I have a Golden "Christmas Book" that contains short Christmas stories, recipes, etc.  In it is a short story about Pegasus who sees a bubble with a reflection of a house celebrating Christmas.  He asks the bubble how he can get there and he flies into the North Wind.   He finds a town with all the houses shut for the night except the baker's shop.  The kindly baker's wife feeds him and as he tells her of his wish to see Christmas celebrated, she turns him into a gingerbread horse, frosts it in white and hangs him on the Christmas tree.    He almost gets eaten by a child, but when a fire breaks out at the baker's shop he turns back into a winged horse and saves the day by getting the water cart.     The story says "adapted from the story by John Brangwyn".   Maybe this is the same story - hope so!
I am looking for the particular "Golden Christmas Book" which contains the Pegasus story mentioned. Do you have a specific title or author/editor or published year to help me identify which Golden book it is? (They published numerous Christmas titles over the years.)Thanks so much.
The guess is Pegasus and the Star by John Brangwyn. Hope this helps!
Corinne Malvern (illus)  Compiled by Gertrude Crampton, The Golden Christmas Book  (A Big Golden Book)
,1947. The story about the winged horse posing as an ornament is in this book. It is "Pegasus and the Star" by John Brangwyn. In it, the mythical winged horse Pegasus sees an image of a Christmas tree in a floating bubble, and goes to a village to learn more. The baker's wife is able to transfrom him into a frosted gingerbread winged horse to hang on the tree, so he can see it for himself - though he is terribly afraid of being eaten by mistake. He is very nearly eaten by a little girl, when a fire breaks out at the baker's house. Pegasus is restored to his own form and pulls the water cart to put out the fire. The book contains many other Christmas stories, and poems, including Granny Glittens and her Amazing Mittens, The Peterkins' Christmas Tree, The Cratchits' Christmas Dinner, A Visit From Saint Nicholas, and If I Were Santa's Little Boy, plus 10 songs and an assortment of riddles and puzzles. The front cover shows Santa with two small angel children seated on his lap: a boy in a purple robe, beating a yellow drum, and a girl in blue, blowing a trumpet and clutching a candy cane in her free hand. The wings on both children and the stars in the background are printed in a metallic golden ink.


P110a:  Pig and moonlight
I have a friend who lived in Montana. Her grandmother used to read her this when she stayed with her (late 40's, early 50's).   She only remembers three lines:  "See by the moonlight, Tis most midnight. Time me and my pig got home." I would appreciate any help you could give me.   Thanks so much.

I'd assume some version of The Old Woman and Her Pig, the cumulative folktale about the old woman who buys a pig but can't get it over the stile to get it home. She asks the stick to beat the pig, and it won't so she asks fire to burn the stick, water to put out the fire, cow to drink the water, and so on. Good luck, it's been published many
times in many variations. I don't recognise the version quoted, unfortunately.


P110b:  Pasting stars in the sky
Solved: The Gingerbread Shop

P111:  peanut butter mystery
The girl in the story work in her family's grocery store. she notices that she is filling the peanut butter shelf a lot, but not selling that much. No one takes her seriously so she goes looking for answers.  She suppects the sherrif and  a rich, elderly customer before discovering it's her brother, who is  making fudge or cookies with it. It's driving me crazy, because I think there was more to it than just that.

I don't know about making cookies, but if he was putting it on his head it could have been The Peanut Butter Solution.
I'm virtually sure this was The Case of the Crunchy Peanut Butter, though I don't remember the author right offhand.  The girl was Andrea, or Andy, right?  And the brother was Ted?  Andy took over the fudge-making operation, til eventually their parents caught on to the missing ingredients.  A fun book.  Her parents nicknamed Andy "Kitten," and she had an elderly friend, Mrs. Mack, who did listen to her about the thefts.  I hope this helps!
J.M. Goodspeed, The Case of the Crunchy Peanut Butter. 1975.This is definitely the book.  Illustrated by Gilbert Riswold, c.1975, Xerox Education Publications (Weekly Reader Children's Book Club Edition), ISBN
0-88375-209-3.


P112: Prince eats lots of desserts
Does anyone have identifying information on this record?  Prince eats a lot of desserts read along book with 45 rpm record.

John Stratford, Lick a Pickle,1968.Could it be Lick a Pickle?  This is a story included in All About (Volume III), which came with a small record, and included five other stories.  The story starts out with a Prince who will only eat pickles and pickle-flavored food, and commands that everyone else shall eat them too.  However, he is won over, in the end, to sweet foods. 


P113:  Poems veg. fruit flower
With my Collier set of Classics in the early 50's, I had a set of about 10? 8x10 primary colored hard covered books. One book was a poem book, one poem was about a little girl Hetty who bit her fingernails, (navy I think) There was a yellow and green book about stories of people. The other books my favorites, were called something like the Animal book (it was red) a fruit book, flower book, bird book and vegetable book.  Inside were little poems or verses, of each.  The pictures above the little verses, were of fruit children, bird children, animal children, and vegetable children. It was a very nice set of childrens books.  I can't remember the publisher and name of this set.  I'd love to find them, purchase them, and  read the poems to my grandchildren.  Can anyone please help me.  It would be wonderful to have them again.

Collier's Illustrated Classics, 1948, approximate.  I have a set of 10 Collier's Illustrated Classics from 1948; my father bought them, along with the encyclopedia, the year my brother was born!!  Each book in the set is a different, bright color. Volume 1 is called Fairy Tales and Fables, and has a drawing of an elf on the spine.  It is dark red in color.  Other volumes are called "Stories That Never Grow Old," "Myths and Legends," "Stories About Boys and Girls."  The fairy tale book has the kind of illustrations you describe, and the 3 Little Pigs story about the apples and going to the fair.  It also has "The Old Woman and Her Pig" that you mention.  Each book is about 2" thick.  The series was revised and a new edition published sometime in the 50's so the stories are a bit different, but I do think this fairy tale book is the one you are looking for.  A seller had them on eBay recently, so check that out.  Good luck!


2002


P114:Pierrot, mute boy with traveling players
Solved: Burnish Me Bright 



P115: pasting cookie stars in the sky
Solved: Mary Poppins 
P116:  pig eats donuts and explodes

Solved: What Happened to George 

P117: Pete and Repeat
Solved: Arm in Arm 

P118: Parents Magazine Press
Solved: Young Years 
P119: Polar Bear Travels South on Iceberg

In the 70s a book was read to me about a polar bear who couldn't stand the cold, so he decided to go south. He floated off to sea on a large iceberg. It gradually melted and became smaller. Toward the end it was just a tiny piece of ice that barely held him, and then it became so tiny, it collapsed. By then, he was close enough to shore to swim for land, and he reached a warm sunny beach. It might have
been in California.

There's a 1944 Disney Little Golden Book called The Cold-Blooded Penguin about a penguin named Pablo on an ice float who dreams of warmer weather.  But this sounds more like Hans de Beer's Ahoy There, Little Polar Bear, but I believe that was first published in the early 1990's.
PB on holiday or possibly PB's holiday, or even PB goes south. There was a short series - only 2 or 3 titles about PB (short for Polar Bear of course) but I can't remember who did them - they were in picture book format. Has to be worth trying to find PB as a title...
If your polar bear can be a penguin, this matches Walt Disney's The Penguin Who Hated the Cold. In the end Pablo winds up on a tropical island with palm trees where he builds a home- happy at last!
This sounds like one of Eric St. Clair's bear stories which he used to read on "Programs for Young People" on KPFA. I do not know if they were ever published. As I recall the bear was living in a lighthouse, and rescues a shipwrecked seal with some mixed feelings as he remembers how tasty seal was back home.



P120: Princess story, Nielsen-lite illustrations
This one is similar to my Maria in the Meadow stumper (M67). Both of them I remember as being oversize picture-books, possibly Giant Golden Books or Giant Elf, or whatever Giant/Big format Wonder had. So about 9x12" size, probably about 32 pages long, your basic picture-book length. And I am almost certain that both of them were single stories. This one had more plot but I remember almost none of it. It was a fairy story, but I think maybe an original one, since I haven't run across another version of it (or rather, none I've read have snagged that memory back). The very vague memories I have are that the main character was a princess, possibly with sisters. The sisters may have been captured by a giant?ogre? and kept in a castle. The princess had to wander alone, perhaps barefoot and ragged, and maybe perform certain tasks. It seems to me that she did this on her own, however eventually a prince showed up - I don't know whether he helped or was sort of the reward. NOTE: any or all of these plot details may be incorrect! What I do remember is the illustrations. They were very
distinctive. Again, a fairly flat style, not terribly painterly. But the artist was obviously very influenced by Kay Nielsen - in fact for some years I thought he was the artist, but his colours are much darker and more vivid, and his work is generally more intense. I have a quite clear memory of the princess taken up on the prince's horse, with her long hair and the horse's long mane and tail trailing thickly down to the ground. (There is a Kay Nielsen illo very much like this, but the horse's tail is braided). Again, I had this in the early 60s, and lost it in 1974. 

P121: Picnic inside due to rain
Solved: Fun with Decals

P122: Peacock and white alligator
Solved: Seals on Wheels


P123: PJ the Cat
Solved:  P.J., My Friend
P124:  Pirate eats pickled onions - children's anthology

Solved: The Treasure Bag: Stories and Poems Selected by Lena Barksdale
My grandmother had a book (anthology?) with various stories in it.  Stories I remember: Mean pirate loves pickled onions.  Crew puts onions in narrow-mouthed jar.  His hand gets stuck, crew mutinies.  Pirate has pickled onion juice run into his eyes - successful mutiny. Lazy boy who won't get out of bed when called in the morning.  Maid strips beds, and the boy is sent to the laundry - goes through washer, wringer, bluing, etc.  Always gets up after that. Boy finds "tadpole" in a puddle.  "Tadpole" is put in a teacup and larger containers - is actually a whale.  Children come and feed it ice cream cones. I'm praying your service is the answer to my fruitless search to date.  Thank you for any help you can give!

Lena Barksdale, The Treasure Bag: Stories and Poems Selected by Lena Barksdale,1947. This is the book I was looking for - it took 13 years to find it.  The book was illustrated by Maurice Brevannes and was published by Alfred A. Knopf, Inc.  The three stories I remembered so distinctly were "The Teacup Whale" by Lydia Gibson, "The Pirate and the Pickled Onions" by Rose Fyleman, and "The Little Boy Who Wouldn't Get Up" by Rose Fyleman.



P125: Plains of Asia adventure
I'm looking for an adventure set in the plains of Asia--fields of poppies sticks in my mind--there is an incident, with a full-page color illustration, in which a ferry-line breaks, girl is being rescued on a swimming horse.  I read this in late 50's early 60's, I think it was new then.  I know this is vague!  Good luck.  Thanks.

?Kate Seredy?, ?The Good Master? Could this be The Good Master? It takes place on the plains of  Hungary, and in Chapter 6, "The Mirage" the mother tells a folktale about soldiers being led into a field of poppies (illus.).  In Ch. 9, "Strange Waters", the children Kate and Jancsi (about 10 or 12) are playing on the ferry and headstrong Kate goes swimming. When she is swept away, Jancsi rescues her on his horse (also illus.) Most of the book is about Kate getting used to her horse-farming relatives, and it's been reprinted many times, so it could have been new when you read it.



P126: Perry, an animal (squirrel?).
Solved: Perri

P127: plane crash survivors in the wilderness
Solved: Northland Castaways

2003


P128: penguin who wants to fly
This is a children's picture book - probably published between 1953 and 1958. It is the story of a penguin whose overriding ambition is to fly.  I recall him being ridiculed by the other penguins as his various attempts failed.  Finally, he comes upon an iceberg that has a plateau with a slope that resembles a ski jump.  He lies on his belly with his wings outstretched and goes down the slope, launches into the air and flies.  The last page of the book shows hundreds of penguins lined up waiting their turn to try the slope as the hero sells them rides for 25 cents each. The overall visual impression I recall of the illustrations is a great deal of blue for water and sky, white for the ice and the black of the penguins.

I remember reading this also, but I believe it was much newer -- perhaps a reprint, or a retelling of the story?  I don't remember him charging the other penguins.  The title maybe had "slippery" in it?
Berkeley Breathed, A Wish for Wings That Work.  If this isn't it, try it anyway. It's cute.


P129:  pancakes snowstorm kids cabin woods
Solved: Winter Cottage



P130: Penguin on Ice Floe from Antarctic to Tropics
Solved: The Cold-Blooded Penguin


P131: Peter's Wonderful Adventures
Solved: Peter Opens the Door


P132: peanut  butter
Solved: Peanut Butter's Slide


P133: poetry for young people?
Solved: Rocket in My Pocket


P134: poetry anthology
Solved: 200 Best Poems for Boys and Girls


P135: Polka Dot Thief
Solved: Rootie Kazootie, Detective


P136: Poppy
Solved: Poppy or the Adventures of a Fairy


P137: Pirate book
Solved: Look Out for Pirates!


P138: poetry, famous Americans in history
Solved: A Book of Americans


P139: Poor family eats bread
Solved: The Fence: a Mexican Tale


P140: Poppy, tiny fairy
Solved: Poppy or the Adventures of a Fairy


P141: Pilgram or Thanksgiving
The first Thanksgiving/The Pilgrams, 1960s.  The only thing I remember about this book is the pictures.  I remember reading it in our elementary school library in the late 1960's early '70s.  The book had beautiful illustrations of a family of pilgrams inside their house by the fire, eating, etc.  I don't remember much more than that, I just have fond memories of being captivated by the images of those early Colonists.

There are lots of versions of this.  Here's one possibility: Barksdale, Lena.  Illus. by Lois Lenski. THE FIRST THANKSGIVING. Alfred Knopf, 1942. 5 full page & 1 double page 3-color illustrations by Lenski, + black and white drawings throughout. Decorated end papers. Lenski's authentic drawings in the folk-art style add a warmth to the story.
Lois Lenski, Puritan Adventure.  Another possibility is Lenski's own "Pilgrims" book, in which a family of children (names I remember are Seaborn, Comfort, Thankful) are delighted but confused when their non-Puritan aunt comes to live with the family, wearing bright colors and such. I'm not sure if Thanksgiving is involved, but I recall the girls stirring "pumpkin sauce"!
Unfortunately, neither of those descriptions ring a bell.  I'll keep checking back.  Thanks again.



P142: Pet Store
The book I am looking for is a children's story about a pet store in which the old owner does not return and all the pets get very worried, begin to cause mischief, while an old dog tries his best to keep order...finally a monkey breaks out of his cage and mortally shoots the dog. Can you help me locate it?

P143: Puffin talks and yells about closing doors, windows
Solved:  Adventure series


P144: prairie dog
1953-1954.  This was one of my sister's favorite books, so I don't remember much about it.  I remember my mother saying she could hardly get through the book, because my sister was constantly asking her "why?" the prairie dog did this or that.

I've got a couple of possibilities here -- unfortunately, without more information, it's really hard to make a guess at what book you're looking for! Grace Coolidge, Paddy-Paws: Four Adventures of the Prairie Dog with the Red Coat, 1914.
L. Frank Baum, Prairie-Dog Town, 1919. Those are the only two I can find that were written early enough for the time frame specified. I'm sure there are more of them out there, though.
Florella Rose, Peter Picket Pin, 1953.  This book was about a prairie dog that had dozens and dozens of cousins that all looked just like him.



P145: Pygmy people
I am looking for a book which was read by our family in the 40s and 50s.  It may have actually been older that that but that was when it was read to me.  It was about pygmy people.  I remember that the book was in black and white and the pygmy people wore grass skirts and carried spears.  That's about all I remember except that I loved to hear those stories!

Two possibilities - Bomba the Jungle Boy and the Cannibals, or Winning Against Native Dangers by Roy Rockwood (Cupples & Leon, 1932) and Saranga, the Pygmy by Attilio Gatti and Kurt Wiese (C. Scribner's Sons, 1949, c1939).
P145 Does black and white mean photos or drawings? I have King of the Pygmies by Lahey published by St Anthony Guild Press. It is written for children but is as big as an adult book. Joe, whose father collected African animals for zoos  and circuses, finally gets to go to Africa, but runs into all sorts of dangers including  capture by pygmies. The illus are black and
white ink drawings.
P145 I have a report on Saranga; It, too, is almost an adult book. [Maybe we read harder books in those days.] There are many black and white illus by Kurt Wiese, most of animals or of the boy, Saranga, wearing a loincloth, not a skirt, and the "spears" are bows and arrows. Gray cover  has elephant outlined in green.  Gatti, Attilio.  Saranga, the pygmy.  illus by Kurt Wiese. Scribner, 1939 daily life of pygmy boy, Saranga, in the jungle full of animals, ritten by famous explorer.



P146: post-apocalypse psychic kids
Solved: Children of Morrow


P147: "princess" buried up to her neck in a pond ?
Solved: The Light Princess


P148: Popcorn
Solved: Popcorn Party


P149: Puppy wakes up...
"Puppy wakes up, he yawns and stretches and runs to his bowl for a drink of water..."  Is the first line fo a childrens book from the 1950s.  My sister and I beleive this is the first book our parents ever read to us.

 Puffy the Puppy,I remember this book as a young child and I was actually on this site to search for that books origins. I do believe a few lines from it would jog their memory if it is indeed the same book."Puffy the Puppy is fat and well fed/ Puffy the Puppy is asleep in his bed/ His tail is cut short/ His long ears are dragging..." I seem to recall the story is about a little cocker spaniel puppy'\''s daily activity



P150: Prince drowns in hold for love of Princess
Solved: Junior Classics


P151: Possum hanging upside down smiling
Solved: The Possum that Didn't


P152: Peddler/Veggie/Fruit Man
I remember a book from when I was little (i.e. early 60's) about a man (Italian or Spanish or something) who was a peddler or veggie/fruit seller who wore a white apron and sold his produce from a cart.  It was a pre-school aged book and I'd love to know the name of it because I loved it so much and want to share it with my grandchildren.

Hogrogian, Nonny, Apples.  (Macmillan, 1972)  "The apple peddler replenishes his cart from the trees that grow from the discarded cares of the apples he sells."   This stumper has been driving me nuts because I could see the peddler and his cart in your description, but I couldn't remember what book it was in.  Maybe this isn't the book you're looking for since the date is a little later, but at least I finally solved my own 'stumper.'



P153: Paper Craft Art Project Book
Solved: Paper Projects for Creative Kids of All Ages


P154: Pot Licker the Coon Hound
Solved: Haunted Hound


P155: Pixie Trink
I remember sitting on my grandmother's lap as she read a story with wonderful pictures of fairies and pixies, at least that's how I remember it. I was probably only 3 or 4 and this was the mid-1950s. I believe these fairies and pixies lived in a forest and used acorns and mushrooms for furniture, but I may be confusing this with other stories. My grandmother called me her "Pixie Trink" all my life based on one of the characters -- a red-haired pixie named Pixie Trink. I would love to find this book. Any help would be so appreciated.

I don't have a copy in hand to check the name, but consider The Golden Books Treasury of Elves and Fairies....  It's on the Most Requested Pages.
Argh!  This isn't in the Giant Golden Book (my childhood favorite), but I *know* it has to be somewhere on the Solved pages, because I remember seeing the name "Pixie Trink" in the Stumpers when I first found your website a year or so ago.  But I can't find it! Back to the search...(Harriett, I don't know if you keep records of past web pages, but a Google search
turned it up in a different request, P39)
Here's that older stumper for reference (she never answered if this was the correct match):

P39: Pixie Trink
I am also looking for a book my grandmother read to us in the early 1950's.  The book could be much older though.  It was about fairies and pixies living around a pond or a brook.  I only remember that there was a pixie named Pixie Trink who may have lived on a lily pad.  Pixie Trink had red hair.  I would love to find out what this book was and if it is available.
P39: keeps sounding like Zeee by Elizabeth Enright.
I saw the Golden Book posted for sale and wrote to the woman selling it to ask if Pixie Trink was a character. She replied "There is a story about a little boy named Dicky who finds a pixie's scarf called The Pixie's Scarf, but no Pixie Trink." She did suggest ZEEE -- but I'd be surprised if that is the book because from I can see it was first published in the mid-1960s. I'm sure that I remember sitting on my grandmother's lap as a small child, and that would put it in the mid-1950s. My sister reminded me that my grandmother was Swedish and perhaps it was a  Swedish fairy tale.  Thanks for helping and I'll keep checking back.
After seeing these two books for sale on-line I thought they might show promise! Both are full of fairies, pixies etc. The  Story Wonder Book, edited by Harry Golding, and Ward Lock's Wonder Book, a picture book for boys and girls. Both books are related in some way. One came out in the 1920's and the other was put out later, maybe 30's.  Hope this is a lead! 

P156: Pirates, Octopus, Hidden Cave, Treasure
Solved: Once Upon a Pirate Ship


P157: Paris after WW-I
1920s or early 1930s.  I read this book in the early fifties when I was a young teenager.  The book was a novel, probably French (in translation) about post WW-I life in Paris  romance, lower middle class with life's ups and downs.  I was enchanted by the whole loaf-of-bread, jug-of-wine and thou lifestyle.

P158: Party disaster for bear
This one's from a colleague of mine.  She remembers a book of the Little Golden Book style about a fat bear who wore a (pink?) bow in her hair.  The bear gave a party but nobody came--she thinks that the bear may have done something to cause this, and that people eventually showed up at the party.

P159: puffins in the 50s
I am looking for a book I read as a child in the 50s. Think it was a picture book..at least it has a lot of pictures. The thing I remember most is the puffin. There was at least one, maybe more. Not sure if s/he was the main character or just one I remember. So I think of it as the puffin book, although there may have been other stuff gonig on. The illustrations were very detailed...I especially remember one with a beautiful seaside village ( maybe in Maine? Northern Canada? ). I have looked at all the Library of Congress listings, but they have nothing this old, or with pictures. I REALLY want to see if i can find a copy of this. Please help! Thanks.

Miss Flora MacFlimsey.
  This is a long shot but the puffins illustrated in this book would stick in anyone's mind.    Miss Flora is a doll who flies to Puffin Island with Tuffy Puffin.  There is a wonderful illustration of the puffins interacting.


P160: Plum Tree
Solved: The Delicious Plums of King Oscar the Bad


P161: Pink Toy Trumpet
Solved: The Toy Trumpet


P162: Praying mantis and beatle swap bed and chair
Solved: Humpty Dumpty's Bedtime Stories

P163: Perseverance wins
My grandmother read me a story when I was a little girl (sometime between 1950 and 1959) and the key-phrase from the book "Perseverance wins!" has been with me my entire life. When times were tough, it gave gave me that little extra push I so often needed (thanks, Grandma!) The other things I recall about the story are a sea captain and, I believe, a brown and white dog. I would like to find this book, but have no clue where to begin. I hope you can help me!

Edward Ardizzone, One of the "Tim" books. Not at all sure but the date is about right, and a sea captain does feature prominently. I don't remember the phrase "Perseverance wins" but it could have occurred, as it would fit a lot of the plots. There is a dog in some of the books, but I think he may have been just brown.
I've read almost all of the Little Tim books and I don't remember any of them having a repeated line like that.



P164: Prose and Poetry
There are two, that I know of, series of books called Prose and Poetry. I beleive they were used as school books. I have some of both series published by The LW. Singer Co. my problem is that I don't have a full list of the titles so I can fill out my collection. Does anyone have a list of either or both series? The series I have are 1. One through ? year by Avery-Leitzell and 2. Prose and Poetry for Appreciation by McGraw. Thank you.

Well, these are the titles I could dig up on a web search: Prose and Poetry for the Eighth Year Including a Study of the Life and Poems of James Russell Lowell the Grade Poet (1924) ed. by Fannie L. Avery, Mary M. van Arsdale & Emma D. Wilber; Prose and Poetry Adventures (1935) ed. by Margaret Greer et al; Prose and Poetry Journeys  (1935) ed. by Margaret Greer et al; Regional America. Prose and Poetry of Toda (1941) by Harriet Marcelia Lucas; Poetry and Prose Journeys (1945) by Donald MacLean Tower, Cora J Russell, Christine W. West; The Firelight Book Prose and Poetry (1946) ed. by Barbara Henderson, Marion T. Garretson, Frederick H. Weber; Prose and Poetry: The Emerald Book (1947) ed. by Fannie L. Avery; Prose And Poetry Of America (1950) ed. by Harriet Marcelia Lucas & Herman W. Ward;
Prose and Poetry Adventures (1951) ed. by Andrew J. Kenner; Blue Sky Book: Prose and Poetry (1953) by Henderson, Garretson, Weber; Prose and Poetry of England (1955) ed. by McCarthy Rodabaugh; Along the Sunshine Trail , part of Prose and Poetry Series (1960) by Iverson, Delancy, Leet, Foes, and Smith; Story Carnival: The Prose and Poetry Series (1960) by Floy DeLancey and William Iverson
Tower, Donald Maclean; Russell, Cora J; West, Christine W    Prose and poetry adventures   [Part 1]    illus by Guy Brown Wiser    L W Singer c1945



P165: Perfectionist at Lawn Cutting
Solved: Countess and the Impossible


P166: Paint Pigs
Solved: The Color Kittens

P167: Praying Pines
Solved: Praying Pines


P168: Pug Tree
Pug Tree, 1950s.  The is a story about children choosing a pug puppy by the balled-up pugs' curly tails when they were hanging on a tree. Then they would pick a pug off the tree to keep and love.

I found this using Google... there is a short story from the Christian Science Monitor called Pug Island.  However, the only way to get to this article online is through Goggle's cached version, found here.



P169: Panda
Solved: Dear Uncle Looy


P170: Prince Hal and the Monster
Solved: My Friend the Monster


P171: Pickle Book
I am looking for a book that my fiancee calls "The Pickle Book".  He used to get it out from the library, according to him, every other week.  (This was in the late 80s, early 90s.)  It is a children's book about having too many pickles and making all kinds of things out of the pickles like pickle juice etc.  I know that this isn't much to go on, but it would mean a lot to him. Thank you.

I'll bet this is the popular Pickle-Chiffon Pie by Roger Bradfield.  Your fiancee isn't the only one who remembers it fondly; check out Loganberry's Most Requested page.
I'm almost positive that this isn't Pickle-Chiffon Pie.  That story involves a king who loves pickle-chiffon pie and three guys who go out to find the most unusual thing that they can in the kingdom.  One guy finds this unusual creature who has baby creatures and he lets it go rather than drag it away from its family, even though he knows that he won't win the contest, and he is rewarded for his kindness.  It really doesn't involve pickles at all.  I love to use this book when I do a 'food' storytime.  Actually, the first book I thought of was Marc Brown's Pickle Things, though that story describes all the things that a pickle *isn't*.
Pickle Juice.  I remember reading a book called Pickle Juice and it seems to me it was quite similar to what you describe.
P171  I don't think this sounds quite like it. My copy has been sold, so can't check: Wolcott, Patty.  Pickle, pickle, pickle juice.   illus by Blair Dawson.   Scholastic
Pickle Pickle Pickle Juice by Wolcott has a vocabulary of only 10 words -- repeated over & over & over...
I agree, I'm sure there was a novel (not an easy reader) called Pickle Juice (it had something of the same "flavour" as How to Eat Fried Worms)  but I can't find it on abebooks or Alibris or in our local library's catalogue.  Any other ideas?  Oops--I guess I was thinking of Judy Blume's Freckle Juice.  I'll keep my eyes open for a pickle book, though.
Thank you all for your suggestions, but it seems as if none of them are exactly right. If this helps, he said that he remembers piles and piles of pickles (that's what they made the pickle juice out of).
Acutally, I got a copy of Pickle Things from the library to show to my fiancee and it wasn't what he had remembered.  I don't know why men are so difficult.  I am hoping that someone has a moment of revelation.  Thanks so much, though.
Just a couple more titles to run by your fiance: Purple Pickle Juice by Farber, ill.Mercer Mayer and Hot Fudge Pickles by Andersen. Pickles to Pittsburgh by Judy Barrett, Pickle Pizza by Beverly LewisPickle Creature by Daniel Pinkwater. Oh dear, I'm starting to obsess on this..........
Judi Barrett (author), Ron Barrettt (illustrator), the talented duo who  created Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs and its sequel, Pickles to Pittsburgh.
I havn't found the book, but would just like to validate the girl who is looking for it.  Your boyfriend is not nuts.  Things I remeber from the book are: one page there is a lady with a pickle nose, and maybe another with pickle hair.  The cover of the book is mostly white with a green pickle border. My sister and I read the same book as children, I know exactly what he is talking about and am looking for it for my sister. If I ever find it I wil be sure to let you know.
Marc Brown, Pickle Things. (1980)  Did a little research and looked it up on the Library of Congress Webpage



P172:  Pilot father
Solved:  Patricia's Secret


P173: pigs/planecrash
Solved: Mellops Go Flying


P174: Panama Canal voyage
Panama Canal voyage.  This was a young adult novel read in the late 1950's about a girl whose name was probably Natalie.  She had a serious illness and then took a trip with her father through the Pananma Canal.  Patron thinks that the girl's mother had died young and that an aunt or other female relative had moved in to help raise the girl.

Svenson, Lillian M. , Panama to the North Cape.  Boston, Christopher 1955.  Might be this one: "The story of one family's passage from Los Angeles to England and Norway via the Panama canal aboard a combination freight and passenger steamer. a delightful ocean voyage. very educational and a wonderful story."



P175: Phoenix friend
Solved: David and the Phoenix


P176: picture book with rock cooties monsters blowfish with lantern
Solved: Little Monster's Bedtime Book


P177: Penguin named Richard
Solved: Well, About The Penguin


P178: poetry anthology with silhouettes
Solved: 200 Best Poems for Boys and Girls


P179: pig cheats at cards
A man dies and his family puts his ashes in an urn on top of the fireplace.  The maid knocks it over and scoops up the ashes but accidentally puts in a pigs ashes from the fireplace too.  The man and the pig are stuck in hell together forever.  They play cards and the man discovers that the pig always cheats.

Natalie Babbitt, The devil's storybook.  The is definitely one of the stories in Natalie Babbitt's "The devil's storybook."



P180: penthouse pastor
Solved: Reverand Randollph series


P181: poetry book
Solved: Golden Books Treasury of Elves and Fairies


P182: Puzzle Adventure
Solved: Puzzle Island


P183: PALACE MADE BY MUSIC
by RAYMOND MACDONALD ALDEN, 1912-1945.  "The Palace Made By Music" appeared in an illustrated book of children's stories that may have been, 1) all by R.M. Alden or, 2) in a book with stories by other authors too.  I would have had the book in the late 30's to mid 40's - and clearly remember a blue and white, very vertical palace rising from the ground once the orchestra had played.  My memory of the other stories is vague, but I seem to recall Oscar Wilde's story of the Statue and the Bird.  However, it is the large - for a child - format picture book containing "The Palace Made By Music" that I am interested in locating and BUYING!

Well, there is a collection by that name:  Alden, Raymond MacDonald: The Palace Made by Music. Bobbs Merrill. 1910. Red cloth hardcover, illustrated by Mayo Bunker.  It's hard to find, but I can get you one in Good condition, some wear, for $50.  Let me know.
I'm "sure" the book I had was NOT illustrated by Mayo Bunker and I'm "sure" it was a later edition than 1910- and may not have been all MacDnald stories.  Let's see what your Wonder Working Stumpers come up with!
I found two editions of Why The Chimes Rang And Other Stories by Raymond Macdonald Alden that have this story.  Both are by Bobbs-Merril Co. and have the same stories, but are illustrated by either Katherine Sturges (1924) or by Evelyn Copelman (1945).  The contents are: Why the chines rang / The knights of the silver shield / The boy who discovered the spring / The brook in the king's garden / The hunt for the beautiful / The boy who went out of the world / The palace made by music / The forest full of friends / The bag of smiles / The castle under the sea / In the great walled country.  The only book I found with stories by both Wilde and Macdonald was a collection of Christmas stories.
There is a collection by this author called Why the Chimes Rang that was published in 1924 and again in 1945.  Illustrated first by Katherine Sturges and later by Evelyn Copelman.  The stories are: Why the chimes rang.--The knights of the silver shield.--The boy who discovered the spring.--The brook in the king's garden.--The hunt for the beautiful.--The boy who went out of the world.--The palace made by music.--The forest full of friends.--The bag of smiles.--The castle under the sea.--In the great walled country.



P184: Psychic Girl Meets Dead Guy
Solved: The Haunting of Cassie Palmer


P185: Poor girl has double-life
Solved: Bewitching of Alison Allbright


P186: Parents killed by Indians
Solved: Dickon Among the Indians


P187: Pot Head
Solved: The Story of Little Kettlehead


P188: Pirate parrot with stripy socks
This is an English children's book, so I hope you can help. I read this in around 1985 and it was a fairly large hardback book with full page pictures which the text ran over. It made my Dad cry with laughter, so was obviously funny and was about a group of pirates including a parrot with a wooden leg (I think). There was certainly stripy socks anyway. I have had the Ballad of Bad Ben Bilge suggested by Abebooks, but I'm not sure this is correct and can't check as there are no pictures to see. I really hope you can help!

P188 Shot in the dark, but I came across the title BARNABY SHREW, BLACK DAN, AND THE MIGHTY WEDGWOOD by Steve Augarde, 32 pages with illustrations, published in London in 1979. The short summary said that the crew of the
ship the "Pied Piper" meet Black Dan and his parrot Tough Eric. I can't confirm if it was funny or if the parrot has a peg leg. Perhaps someone else has read this book. ~from a librarian
I've got a copy of Ballad of Bad Ben Bilge and don't think it's particularly funny.  It's told by Bad Ben's parrot, Timber Toe Bob, who does indeed have a peg leg.  Some other characters in the book are Rickets, the stowaway rat  Katey and her sister Meg their mynah bird Pompous McVain -- who all work together to destroy Bad Ben and his ship, the Devil's Delight.  The pictures are in brown and teal blue, very rough and sketchy (the girls are almost scary looking). I doubt that this is the book that you dad thought was so funny.  As to the other suggestion, there's another Barnaby Shrew book, Barnaby Shrew Goes to Sea, which may be the book you're looking for.  Good luck!



P189: PITCH WITCH
Solved: Which Witch?


P190: pa . . . little Clarinda, cold winter
Solved: McBroom series


P191: Psychiatrist's book
psychiatrist takes evening writing class,sends tape of proposed book to teacher, then he dies.  teacher writes book.


P192: Puff
I am looking for a book I remember from childhood. It is a large illustrated childrens book perhaps 9" X 12" or 10" x 13". There was a one page story for every day of the year. The story/text appeared on the left page and the illustattion for the story appered on the right page. Many of the stories were about a white cat or kitten named Puff.

Dick and Jane readers, 1950s, 1960s.  The Dick and Jane readers had a white kitten named Puff.  The description sounds like those readers, too.
Nan Gilbert author, Jill Elgin illustrator,365 Bedtime Stories, 1955.  The Dick and Jane readers feature a kitten named Puff, but Puff is a golden tabby, not a white kitten.  Dick and Jane also didn't have a "story for every day of the year."  Is it possible that the original stumper requester is confusing Dick and Jane's kitten with the kitten in another book?  If so, I'd like to suggest that he or she examine 365 Bedtime Stories by Nan Gilbert, illustrated by Jill Elgin.  This Whitman Giant Book measures 7 1/4" x 10 1/2" and has a story for every day of the year (unless it happens to be a Leap Year).  At least six of the stories are about a white kitten named Velvet.  The book also contains several stories about two other cats, Tiger, a golden tabby, and Tom, a black cat with white paws, vest and nose.   Twelve of the stories in this book have a full illustration on the right hand page, three stories have a full illustration on the left hand page, and the rest of the stories have an illustration at the top of each page.  For more information, please see Most Requested Books.



P193: paige
Solved: Mary Frances Sewing Book


P194: Pork chops in the woods
I read this book in 5th grade (1965) in Roseburg Oregon. The part I remember was about a boy and his dad who live in the forest.  One day, the game wardens came to take the dad away based on some alleged violation of the law.  The dad asked if he could make dinner first.  The game wardens agreed.  The boy and his dad made a huge amount of mashed potatoes, pork chops, etc. which was way more than the four of them could eat.  After dinner, the game wardens took the dad off to jail.  However, while driving into town, with the dad sitting between the game wardens in the truck, as they went around a bend in the road, the dad just kind of slipped out the truck, and took off through the woods back to his cabin.  He and his son quickly packed the extra uneated pork chops and mashed potatoes into jars, etc., then the dad took off into the woods to hide, so the game wardens could not find him.  Of course the game wardens came back, but the dad was long gone.

P195: pessimistic brother
This is short story I would have read around 74-75 but it could be older, about an older brother and sister living together.  Brother is very crabby. Near the end he bangs his head and doesn't know who he is.  Thanks for your help.
2004


P196: purple hippopotamus
I know someone looking for childhood favorite about a purple hippopotamus. Hers was paperback and prob the size of a Tell-a-tale

Thomas Baum, Hugo the Hippo.  A young hippopotamus explains why he trusts children but has a healthy distrust of all grownups.
Roger Dvoinsin (spelling?), Veronica and the birthday present.  Don't know if this is it? Veronica is a hippo who lives on Farmer Pumpkin's farm (with Petunia the goose, whose in other Dvoinsin books) Farmer Applegreen gets a kitten--Candy--for his wife and it escapes the box on way home and finds friendship in Veronica. When found and taken back to Applegreen's farm, there's a series of back and forths as Veronica and various animals from Pumpkin's farm keep going to Applegreen's to fetch Candy back. I'm almost sure Veronica is illustrated as purple. Candy is white with blue eyes. But it is a large book in hardback, at least 8-1/2 x 11"



P197: Pixie & Dixie running into a birthday cake
Solved: Pixie, Dixie & Mr. Jinx


P198: Pinky or Binky
Solved: Binky Brothers, Detectives


P199: Peashooter stunguns in Wales, UK
Title unknown. Described by a friend as follows:  ... a childrens novel I once had. We're going back to the early 1960s here, but it may have been published earlier, possibly in the midFifties. The plot centred around the inauguration of Cardiff as the capital of Wales. The protagonists - young teenagers - were against this and in favour of either Caernarfon or (more reasonably) Machynlleth. They were campaigning for a change. The secondary element of the plot - really quite scifi - is that they had access to what can only be called some kind of nerve agent. A solution  which if painted on a object which then struck a person intensified the sensation to a degree that the person would instantly pass out for an  extended period. (No 'pain' apparently was felt - it was some sort of nervous system crash. Clever stuff, really!) They used this in their campaign by dipping dried peas in the stuff and firing them at 'enemies' with peashooters. Cheap and effective, if short range.

P200: Peter in land of many colors
Solved: Gnome King of Oz


P201: The Pot that would not walk
I have been searching for this book for years.  I read it as a child for hours and hours.  It had a red cloth cover and contained fairy tales that were numbered.  Some included The Three Little pigs, The Three Little Pigs Go for a Walk? (a continuation of the Three little pigs where the wolf tries to get the pigs to come out of the house by telling them about various things they can do or eat, they set a time to meet but each time the pigs get up an hour earlier, go and do what the wolf told them about and get back before the wolf comes to get them.  The third time he beats them at their own game and meets them at the apple orchard while they are picking apples and they have to escape), The Pot that would not Walk (a story about a woman who buys a pot, leaves it at the store, tells her husband to go pick it up and on the way home, the husband notices the pot has three legs and he has only two and he tries to get the pot to carry him instead), the Three wishes (a story about a man who sees a Leprachaun, is given three wishes... inadvertantly wishes for a sausage, the wife wishes the sausage was on the end of his nose and then sadly, uses the last wish to wish the sausage off his nose).  There was also a story about a pig that would not go through the gate so the woman asks a dog to bite the pig, and when the dog does not, a stick to beat the dog and so forth, until the woman asks her own cat.  I know these stories so well, but I cannot find the collection anywhere!  At the beginning of each story, there is a simple illustration. I remember them being black and white.  Some more titles include: the Three Billy Goats Gruff, and may or may not have the Three Bears.

Hi, I remembered another story in this collection:  A woman is in her home baking some bread when a tired, hungry traveler comes by her door and smells the yummy smell.  He knocks on her door and asks her if she could share a loaf of bread with him.  She says she will.  He sits and waits for the loaf to be finished.  The woman gets it out of the oven, but it is too big to share.  She puts a smaller piece of dough in.  When it is finished baking, the loaf is bigger than the first.   She puts a third piece of dough in, smallest of all, bakes it, and the loaf comes out bigger than the second.  She tells the traveler that all the loaves are too big to give away and sends him on his way.
Maybe some info will help in the search- Kettle Story is by Joseph Jacob.  It can be found in a book called More English Fairy Tales by same author. I do not have this volume so I cannot check for the other stories but this might start your hunt!
I believe that the book you are looking for may be one from a set of books that contained short stories for children.  Each book had a theme to it and the beginning started out with easier to read stories leading to the harder to read ones towards the back.  There was a book of poems and a book of fairy tales as well as the themed books (I specifically remember a Science Fiction theme).  Each book had a red cloth cover and I think gold lettering on the cover and each story was prefaced by a small black and white sketch.  There were otherwise no pictures in it.  I cannot remember the name of the set of books but I think it was something like Children's Book of ... (the theme like poems, fairy tales etc.)  I think the first or second story in the book of fairy tales was about a princess that was unhappy.  I remember the story about the pot, continuation of the three pigs, the wishes, and the bread but I do not remember the one about the pig.  I had the entire set of books when I was a child so they were probably published in the late 60s early 70s.  We always referred to the books as the red books.  I really loved the set of books (they were lost in a move) and will continue watching this post to see if anyone else remembers this.
I have the set of books that the poster in blue is describing but I'm not sure they are the solution to the original poster's query. We also called them the red books!! They are The Children's Hour, published by Spencer Press. My set was published in 1953. I didn't see the stories described by the poster in the fairytale volume, but didn't check the other 15 volumes yet. I am familiar with most of those stories so they could be in another volume-some of them were in my Childcraft set from the 40's (the piggy over the style story!).
Thanks for the leads.  I am checking them out!  The one who's post is in blue mentioned that the book had a black and white illustration at the beginning of each story and otherwise there were no illustrations.  This is exactly what I remember!  For example, the story about the three wishes had a line drawing of a man and a woman at a table with the sausage on the end of his nose.  The Continuation of the Three little Pigs had an illustration with the pigs up in an apple tree.  I think the title DID contain Fairy Tales somewhere, because otherwise I didn't know what fairy tales were.  If Someone has the Children's Hour Book:  Fairy Tales and Fables, Could they check out if it has the stories I mentioned?  Or better yet, list the first several of them?  The book I remember did have the stories numbered 1. 2. 3. etc. at the top of the first page of the story.  I will be so excited if I find this book!  Thank you for your help!
This is the poster in red again---The first few stories in the Children's Hour Vol.2 Favorite Fairy Tales are: Many Moons by James Thurber, The Last of the Dragons by E. Nesbit, The Open Road by Kenneth Grahame. Those stories are in part 1 for youner readers. The first stories in part 2 for older readers are:  The Swan Maiden by Howard Pyle, The Piping on Christmas Eve by Florence Page Jaques, The Great Quillow by James Thurber. The stories are not numbered and the illustrations are black and white line drawings that have a single color wash such as red or green. The poster in blue mentions their edition was in the late 60's so those stories could have numbers, etc.
Please look at my lengthy response to P113; I think both stumpers refer to the same set of books: (pasted here below)
Collier's Illustrated Classics, 1948, approximate.  I have a set of 10 Collier's Illustrated Classics from 1948; my father bought them, along with the encyclopedia, the year my brother was born!!  Each book in the set is a different, bright color. Volume 1 is called Fairy Tales and Fables, and has a drawing of an elf on the spine.  It is dark red in color.  Other volumes are called "Stories That Never Grow Old," "Myths and Legends," "Stories About Boys and Girls."  The fairy tale book has the kind of illustrations you describe, and the 3 Little Pigs story about the apples and going to the fair.  It also has "The Old Woman and Her Pig" that you mention.  Each book is about 2" thick.  The series was revised and a new edition published sometime in the 50's so the stories are a bit different, but I do think this fairy tale book is the one you are looking for.  A seller had them on eBay recently, so check that out.  Good luck!



P202: Peter Johnson's Boots
Here goes- looking for short story-may only be in anthology-circa 1940. Title ' Peter Johnson's Boots' or something similar. Peter tires of his boots, which were still servicable, and sells them. After buying and trying several new pairs-which did not suit, Peter buys back his old pair. Wish me luck, and so many thanks for your very prompt reply.

P203: The Pink (or Blue) Chest
I read this book in 1966, at age 10.  It was about a family who moved to the city to an apartment, and had little money.  One day the kids discovered an unopened room in the apartment, and somehow a chest of drawers played into the plot.

Ruth Chew, What the Witch Left.  Long shot...
Johnson, Siddie Joe, Cathy, illustrated by Mary Lee Baker.  NY Longmans 1945.  I know this was the answer for the one right next to this, so it would be kind of a coincidence, but ... Cathy (just one child) moves to an old house (not an apartment) and discovers a way into the unopened attic, where she finds a blue-painted chest of drawers, which figures into the plot. She has to earn her own pocket-money, so that might be remembered as having little money. And an unopened room seems likelier in a house than in an apartment.



P204:Potato Bugs
Solved: Cathy


P205: Pony Cart
If I remember correctly ...  No more recently than the 1970's, I read a children's story told from the point of view of a young boy who travelled by pony cart with his grandfather, in rural England, in the 1800's.  They travelled from place to place where grandfather carved gargoyles for cathedrals.  I would appreciate any help you could offer me in finding this book, as I would like to pass it along to others.

P206: Penn and Yan
Solved: Two Little Savages


P207: Paris Girl/ book with photographic plates
This is a small book of under 100 pages that recounts the everyday life of a Parisian girl in the 50s. It was a chapter book for a 5th or 6th grade reading level.  It had  photographic plates showing the girl going home from the bakery with her baguette and that sort of thing.  It might have had something in it to do with lacemaking. It enchanted me and so began my enduring fascination with France.

P208: Parents go to India
Solved: Donna Parker On Her Own


P209: Penpals
Plot is as follows: Rich, East coast preppy type becomes pen pals with a small town Appalachian girl during World War II. They finally meet after he returns from the war. He proposes on their first date. After overcoming his family's initial opposition to the match, they have a big wedding, move to her hometown, uses his family money to help revitalize the town after the local mill closes, he runs for congress and is defeated when he runs for the Senate. They then leave Washington for good and move back to the small town to live happily ever after in retirement. First part of the book is just their exchange of letters. This book could possibly be the first volume of a family trilogy, the later volumes deal with the subsequent generations. Any suggestions or clues would be greatly appreciated.

P210: Puzzle book with ghost stories and calculator games
Solved: Super Colossal Book of Puzzles, Games and Tricks


P211: Pulley between houses of best friends, a boy and girl
I had submitted this some time ago and thought it was solved (B271) but after reading the entire Katie-John series I realized it has not been solved. Again, I read this in the early to mid-70's, there was something about an overgrown garden that the boy and girl work on, and they would communicate with each other using a sort of basket on a pulley line to tap on each other's bedroom window.

B271: I read this in the early 70's I think--about the adventures of a girl (age 10?) who was best friends with a boy, her next
door neighbor, and they used a sort of pulley line connected between their houses whenever they wanted the other
one to do something. I think there was an overgrown garden somewhere in the story.
Louisa May Alcott, Jack and Jill.  This is probably not the book, but it does mention a basket on a line between the
characters' houses.  I don't remember the garden, though.



P212: Psychic sisters
Solved: Stranger With My Face


P213: potato, potato, come back, alack
Solved: A Little Child's Book of Stories


P214:poetry collection
Solved:  East of the Sun, West of the Moon


P215: papa bear tries to kill a fly
Wordless book. A fly goes into a house with 3(?) bears.  The papa bear tries to kill the fly and in the process smashes up the house.  The fly then goes out a window.

Shot in the dark because I haven't read the book, but it matches the description for THE BEAR & THE FLY: A STORY by Paula Winter, 1976. ~from a librarian
Emily Reed, Let Papa Sleep!, 1963. Possibly Let papa sleep.Not bears but bunnies. Papa is having a nap and Pip and Chip are told not to make noise. They try to find something quiet to do. Papa sleeps throught it all. Then a fly comes in and walks on Papa's nose, he wakes up and sees the mess. The bunnies blame the fly.



P216: Princess with Twelve Swan Brothers
Solved: The Wild Swans


P217: Plane crash
Solved: Walkabout


P218: Pocketbook
pocketbook. before 1980. story about a women whose husband buys the house she longs for.  At back of master bedroom closet, she finds a door which leads to a series of secret rooms.  At end of book turns out it was all in her mind.  On front cover in foreground, picture of women in a rocking chair with a small picture of a house in the background. (  PLEASE help me find this book- my sanity depends on it)

P219: Psychodelic Kids Activity Book
1970's Psychedelic Kids Activity Book  Trying to remember the name of this book has been making me nuts! I remember it from my 1st grade class, which would have been around 1983, however the style of the book suggests 1970's all the way! It was an oversized paperback filled with mazes, puzzles, games, and TONS of weird old style clip art! It was like a combination of Monty Python, late 60's psychedelica, Edward Gorey, weird antiquated artwork (ie..like on the original Trivial Pursuit gameboard---the pointing hand, bicycles, etc.) It was pretty disjointed and not just games-- I believe one one page there's an old guy in a wizard hat saying "WHOOPS!" and on the other side, it's either jumbled sentences or crazy artwork. If anyone has ideas about what this could be, please do tell!

Susan Striker, The Anti-Coloring Book, 1978.  Could it be the Anti-Coloring Book series by Susan Striker?  Each page in the book (there were 6) is a partially completed weird drawing with a suggestion for completing it, such as "Do you see your future in this crystal ball?" The drawings in her books certainly sound like the Python-Gorey hybrid described above.
This sounds very familiar. Could it have been British? It would have been the 70s. I remember a series called Old King Cole or something like that. I was in Australia at the time, though, & remember it being very British. It was a strange assortment of puzzles etc. as you describe. Sorry, but I can't remember the exact title.
Coles EW, Coles funny picture book for children. The second poster is referring to the Coles funny picture book which was produced by EW Coles of Melbourne, Australia (and subsequently his family)  Very collectible now.  They are kind of psychadelic looking and had a hodge podge of stories, puzzles, cartoons, odd photographs etc. Very non pc, especially the earlier ones but incredibly funny to kids (and adults!) All of Coles publications had his "trademark" rainbow on the front, often with bizarre colours.  A hunt of online auction sites in Australia will often turn up pictures of covers.



P220: Purple Princess
Solved: Shadow Castle


P221: Peter Tumbledown
This book was published awhile ago, as my 60 year old father read it when he was a child.  All I know is that the title was possibly "Peter Tumbledown" or the main character's name was Peter Tumbledown.  It is possible the main character was a rabbit.  This is a children's story.

Spring, Howard, Tumbledown Dick: all people and no plot..  NY Viking 1940.  I'm somewhat doubtful about this, since the comment that the book may have been about a bunny suggests that it was a picture book for younger children - perhaps Peter Rabbit? However this book does fit for time and title, so I'll suggest it. It is a longer book, the adventures of a young boy at the Manchester Market, where he meets many odd characters, some of whom are his relations.



P222:  Planters Made of Logs
Solved: Tough Enough and Sassy

2005

P223:  Polka dots
Solved: Rootie Kazootie, Detective


P224:  Potty training
Solved: I'm a Big Girl Now


P225: pioneer sod house Bethany
girl named Bethany marries young man just rejected by their mutual friend-they go west -live in sod house-many challenges-brush fire-in the end he says he loves her (she thought he loved friend not her)-thought it might be an Elizabeth Howard book -similar but I haven't found it (also similar to Beverly Butler books but again not it)-it's an author who had other historical fiction writings-thanks!

Erdman, Loula Grace, Edge of Time.  Bethany marries Wade Cameron instead of her cousin Rosemary, doesn't want to stake a claim in Kansas.  They travel to Kansas and have a very hard first year and in the end Wade does have to go back home to borrow money from Rosemary's husband.  Wade says at the end that Bethany is the one he really wanted.



P226: poetry book
Solved: Poems to Read to the Very Young


P227: Pirate Adventure
Solved: Once Upon a Pirate Ship


P228: Prospect Park
Solved: No Such Thing As a Witch


P229: Penny Jelly
Solved:  Sugarplum


P230: Pig contests
I have no real memory of this book but both my daughters have asked about it recently.  It is about some pigs who have contests.  One contest is who can get dirtiest.  At the end of the mud contest they can't find the girl pig and she turns out to be completely covered with mud. She wins.  My other daughter says that then they have to get cleaned up and when they are checked (by mama pig??) one has some mud behind it's ear.  That's all the information they gave me.  Any ideas?

P231: Penelope was five
Penelope was five and small, late 50's early 60's.  Don't have title or author - just remember reading this book to my baby sister.  She's going to be 45 in May and I'd like to find the book for her birthday.  Only thing I remember is the first line. "Penelope was five and small and seldom misbehaved at all"


P232: Plain wooden box
Solved: Escape from Warsaw


P233: Polar bear changes color
Solved: Animals Who Changed Their Colors


P234: Pink wagon for grandma, seashore
Solved: What's A Cousin?


P235: Puzzles in Philadelphia
Solved: The Treasure Code


P236: Primer with raking leaves
I am looking for a reading book that I read in the 3rd or 4th grade around 1969 -1970. The book was probably written in the 50's or 60's. It had a number of stories in it but I can only remember a picture from one of the stories.  It showed a picture of a father and son raking leaves in the front yard. There was a dirt driveway and a car or truck sitting in the driveway. I think there was a garage or shed next to the house that the vehicle was sitting in front of. There may or may not have been a pile of leaves burning. I do remember some piles of leaves and some wind blowing through the yard. The house may have sat up on a hill and might have been white. I believe the mother and sister were inside the home. I beleive there was a dog running around in the yard. The boys name might have been Ned or Ted but I'm not sure about that. It may have been a Foresman or Macmillan reader or another reader of that day. I am certain that it was a reading textbook with stories or lessons in it. I have been looking and looking for this and just don't seem to have enough info to trigger anyone's memory even thought the picture is emblazoned in my mind. Thanks for any help anyone can give me in solving this mystery.

P237: Pig lady without mail
Solved: The Rand McNally Book of Favorite Animal Stories


P238:  peppermint stick and the candy bar
Big Big Story Book, 1960?  childrens anthology.  Looking for all the words to a poem/anthology in above book  perhaps titled "Picnic in the Pantry."
words are  The peppermint stick and the candy bar sat and dreamed in a big glass jar. We will see the wolrd one day they cried and hand and hand they ran away. I did notice on your web site that C84 has a response to someone elses request...  I would like to give it as a memory gift to my daughter who only remembers part of this and would like to tell her children this poem Thanks

Big Big Story Book, Whitman, 1941, 1955.  Found this on your old stumper page --  "Big Big Story Book. I have an anthology of childrens stories from the 1960's called Big Big Story Book.  Mine is hardcover wtih a picture of a circus on the front. Your requests sounded like the story PICNIC IN THE PANTRY, although there is no store owner or car backfiring.  This is in rhyming verse with the first verse being:  The peppermint stick and the candy bar / Sat and dreamed in the big glass jar.  We'll see the World, they cried one day.  And hand in hand they ran away."
Big Big Storybook, 1960s?  I'd like to comment on P238 about the poem beginning "The peppermint stick and the candy bar, Sat and dreamed in the big glass jar..."  I remember reading this poem when I was a child and I am pretty sure it ended with "And Bobby said, 'Say, isn't it funny?  Even the peanuts taste like honey!"  I think it was in the Big Big Story book as suggested. I had that book (Big Big Story Book) and am fairly certain that the poem was in it.  Hope this helps solve the mystery and doesn't muddle things up.
 Interpreting
Condition 
Grades
Various authors, including Alice Sankey, Jane Flory, Mary Elting, Madye Lee Chastain, Nan Gilbert, Jane Curry, Dorothy Grider.   Big Big Story Book.   many black and white illustrations, some with green, yellow, or blue background swashes. Whitman, 1955.   Large red glossy book with boy and girl leading a group of animals in front of a calliope, corners worn, spine half-fastened on with now-brittle tape; pencilled owner on fly; pages very good, but yellowed.  G.  [IQ10517]  $18



P239: poor little girl named Penelope
A little girl named Penelope, around eight years old, who lives with her impoverished mother. No father, perhaps he died? Penelope lives in a small town, on a street with small houses. She sometimes had milk-toast to eat. She played in her yard under some kind of large tree with low-hanging branches, making a sort of hidden playhouse. An elderly man lived alone on her street, and I think he got chickenpox.  I read this during the 1950's, but I believe it was an old book, maybe from the 30's or even the 20's.   It is from a similar time as "The Brown Castle" by Rebecca Rice, which I think was written in 1926.


P240: pig gets lost in laundry
it is a children's book, maybe a little golden book, and it was read to me in the early 60's...but since i am the youngest, it could have been published sometime in the 50's...the story was about a family of 3 pigs(mom,dad and boy) who lived in a very messy house...and because of this mess, the boy pig was lost in their dirty clothes and sent to the laundry  ... when his parents found him, they swore that they would keep a clean home.... my favorite part of the book was flipping back and forth between the drawing of the messy house at the beginning and the drawing of the neat house at the end of the book. thank you for your help with this.

miriam clark potter, what happened to piggy. (1955) We had this book when my son (now 14) was younger.  Piggy was the only son of a happy but laissez-faire set of parents.  He was caught up in the laundy when his mom made a last minute dash through the house gathering up items for the laundry truck.  He apparantly had overslept and was still in the "bedclothes."  His parents were so upset by the mishap that they reformed their ways.  (I, too, loved seeing the order after the chaos in their home.  Perhaps it gave me hope we would not always live in the realm of "toddler-itis decor." )  Our copy of this book (ironically) was also in very poor condition as some child (long before we bought it at a book sale) had sliced through most of the pages with scissors.  (I think we paid all of a dime for it.)   We threw it out, once my son was beyond enjoying it,  assuming no one would want such a raggy copy.  Alas, it is a rare book (only Alibris seems to have information on it) and an expensive one.  If only we had known - we would have been happy to give it.  P.S. It is a Wonder book, not a Golden.



P241: Pirates, children and treasure
This was a childrens picture/story book from the mid 1970s.  A group of kids boards a pirate ship that then sails thorough a cave and out to sea. They arrive at a small sandy island with a one palm tree and everyone proceeds to dig up the island for buried treasure.  They find an empty chest and nothing more.  Then one of the kids discovers the treasure is underwater just near the island and they recover it.  Finally they sail back through the cave to the dock and the kids get off the ship.

Arthur Ransome, Peter Duck.  From your description, I'm not sure if you're looking for a picture book or something longer.  If it was a chapter book, could it have been one of the Swallows and Amazons books like Peter Duck?  The children do go to an island and find treasure in that one.



P242: Pindy
I remember this children's book around 1958 or 1959.  The first line was "My name is Pindy and I go to school."  It was a picture book in black and white.  I think there were one or two lines on each page and a picture.  I was 5 in 1959 and it was in print then.  It was about a girl going off to school for the first time, I think it was kindergarten.  It was about being apprehensive and making the best of it.

P243: Pig, bear, alligator
Solved: Taking Care of Carruthers


P244: Parents Magazine Press cookie tree?
Solved: Cookie Tree


P245: Packy
A boy’s father was an engineer, and somehow had obtained the full skin and extremities of an African Elephant. He used this skin to build a four-legged mechanical marvel, covering it with the real elephant “stuff.” It traveled with ease at elephant speed, slept four in comfort in its spacious belly, and had all the amenities of a small RV. The driver sat at the controls in the elephant head.  Really neat, huh?   To guide the elephant down the road, the father pushed and pulled rods and levers.

Frederick W. Keith, Danger in the Everglades, 1957. This one features a boy and his electric elephant.  Another possibility is Frances Trego Montgomery's The Wonderful Electric Elephant (1903).
Frederick W. Keith, Danger in the Everglades, 1957, copyright.  The question concerned "Packy" and that was the name given to the mechanical elephant (short for "pachyderm") that the father had made.  I don't remember if he used the skin of a real elephant or not but that's definitely a possibility.  The boy takes Packy into the Florida Everglades to search for his father, and along the way picks up two other children, a boy and a girl, I believe they were siblings.  The father was in a plane that went down in the swamp and was presumed lost, but the boy did locate him.  Together the four of them returned to civilization and solved another mystery too, I think, in the process.  I read this in 5th grade in 1958.  green cloth binding with black lettering.



P246: Pig baby lost in messy house
family of pigs lose their baby son in their house that is a mess inside and out. the baby son ended up being found in the laundry at the cleaners. the family then cleans up the house and fixed everything up. the book was small from about the early to mid 1950's. I think it may have been a golden book or perhaps another book similar in size.

Potter, Miriam Clark, What Happened to Piggy. (1955) This is also the solution to P240.  We had this book when my son was small.  It apparantly is very rare.



P247: Pancakes turn zero to hero
Solved: The Lawrenceville Stories


P248: Pranking siblings
Solved: Nobody's Fault


P249: Peter, Penelope, Patti..
Solved: Secret World of Og


P250: Pilgrimage Contemporary Artist Student Europe
This is a vague description- young woman takes time off of college to follow the routes pilgrims from medieval times used to take to Santiago De Compostela in Spain. She is an artist, or at least sketches a lot at the various cathedrals she visits. It is not quite a coming of age story, more of a coming to terms story. No idea of title, author or anything else. This book is absolutely NOT a historical fiction story. It was written as a contemporary probably in the 1970's or 1980's. No time travel, no medieval, nothing at all related in any way to historical fiction.

P251: Patents
I believe this was a book about American patents, published somewhere around the 1920s.  Small and nondescript from the exterior, what I remember most about the book are small diagrams and drawings inside, including templates for envelope design, with mathematical calculations for which templates produce the least amount of waste material.  I also remember drawings of early paper clip designs, but this book is much older and more technical than Henry Petroski's popular Evolution of Useful Things.  I suspect the book was actually a history of American patents for common, everyday objects.

No help I'm afraid, but I must tell you that even if you had a childhood reading about the design of paperclips, it's still not too late to enjoy a pile of juvenile books about magic, adventure, witches, castles, lost treasure and talking animals!  I'm sure Loganberry will sell you some good'uns.
Travis Brown, Popular Patents: America's First Inventions from the Airplane to the Zipper, September 2000, approximate.  That last posting wasn't very nice.  Those of us who are interested in patents didn't read the usual fairy tales that other children did.  I hope I can help you.  I think this book (Popular Patents) may be close to what you were looking for.  If not, the US Patent Office in Alexandria VA has a wonderful gift shop that sells all sorts of children's books about patents.  You may want to look for a contact number from the uspto.gov website and see if someone there can help you too.



P252: Parallel-Universe Boy Traveler
Solved: Towers of February


P253: Peach/apricot
Solved: Apricot ABC


P254: Proud princess marries prince disguised as swineherd
I'm looking for an elementary school reader from the mid-70's, probably 3rd or 4th grade level.  I think it had a green cover.  One of the stories that I remember was a fairy tale about a proud princess who found fault with everything and rejected all her suitors.  Her father finally swore to give her to the next man who asked.  A prince disguised himself as a peasant (possibly a swineherd?) and asked for her hand.  She was married to him, and he took her to live in a filthy, run-down shack.  He told her that she would have to get a job and help to support them, as he had little money.  She went through a series of jobs, all of which she was poorly suited for (possibly cooking, cleaning, spinning), and all of which he sabotaged.  One of her jobs was to sell crockery in the market.  He then came through the market, disguised as an arrogant nobleman, and smashed all the pots she was supposed to sell.  At the end, when she had learned her lesson, he revealed himself as a prince and they, of course, lived happily ever after.  (This is not "The Swineherd" by Hans Christian Anderson.)  Another story that I think might have been in the same book involved a young man who was either seeking his fortune, or had already squandered it.  He went to a palace to beg for food, but when they offered him bread, he complained that they could surely afford to give him meat instead.  I think he was initially thrown into prison for his arrogance, then released and promised all the meat that he wanted - but he couldn't eat bread or potatoes for some specified number of years.  He might also have had some kind of tasks that he had to complete?  Or maybe they just gave him a job.  After the first year (?) they relented and allowed him to eat potatoes, but still no bread.  By the end, he had come to appreciate bread (and a lot of other things as well).  Thanks for your help!

Hello again. After I submitted this query, I was able to identify the story w/ the princess as some version of King Thrushbeard by the Bros. Grimm.  In the book I'm looking for, the king/prince might have had a different name - the name "Thrushbeard" isn't ringing any bells for me, but the story itself is dead on.  Or I could have just totally forgotten the name - it was a long time ago.  Thanks again!
Johnson, Sally Patrick, The Princesses:  Sixteen Stories About Princesses, 1960s.  This collection of princess stories has one story called "The Princess and the Vagabone". It is an Irish fairy tale, very similar to what you describe.  The public library in my city (Omaha) has several copies, maybe your local library will too.
The first tale you mentioned is "King Thrushbeard" I hope that will help.
Grimm brothers, King Grizzlebeard.Same story as "King Thrushbeard" with a different translation of the name into the English language
I'm not sure about the name of the reader you're looking for, but I know that there's another version of the Thrushbeard story called "Bristlelip." I think it's one of the Grimm brothers' stories.  It's possible that the version you're trying to find is under this name.



P255: Prairie girls
Solved: Once Upon a Time in the Meadow


P256: Peach in a Jar
Solved: Like Jake and Me


P257: poem book
I am looking for a children's poem book I bought in the 1980's from JCPenney catalog. It had the following poems with illistrations:Hiding by Dorothy Aldis and Mice by Rose Fyleman. The book had a light green cover. It also had a poem about a butterfly and kisses. Your help would greatly be appreciated.

Illustrated by Marjorie Cooper, Read Me Some Poems, MCMLXVIII, copyright.  This poetry book is published by Rand McNally and Company.  I have a tattered old copy with no cover, but my copy does contain the "Hiding" poem, and "Mice".  The book is the same size and thickness of a Golden Book, ( but it isn't a Golden Book). I hope this is the one  it is a neat book with great illustrations.
no author given, A Child's First Book of Poems, 1981.   A Child's First Book of Poems containt both of the poems Mice and Hiding, but I don't see anything about butterflies or kisses.  This book has four mice on the front, in the rain, three of which are holding pink flowers for umbrellas.  The light green cover says "with pictures by CYNDY SZEKERES."    The title page lists "Golden Press/New York, Western Publishing Co., Inc., Racine, Wisconsin." 



P258: Paige McNeil
Solved:  The Fair Adventure


P259: Primer
Very vague, but these are details.  I was born in 1953.  When I was young, I remember practicing reading a primer that belonged to my older brothers and sisters (born between 1934 and 1942, a wide spread in our family).  All I can remember is that the words were at the bottom of each page, and under each line of words stood a little boy, face upturned and arms spread, with a pointer stick in each hand, underlining the line of words.  I’d love find a copy, depending on the price!

P260: Primer with Model T Ford
Sorry don't know the publisher or author, only the contents.  It was a school reader when I was in the 5th grade in 1944.