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Lifton, Betty Jean, Kap the Kappa.
NY Morrow 1960. No plot description, but the title is close.
Kappas
are a Japanese water-spirit, looking like children but with a
depression
in the top of the head which holds water. If the water spills out they
are weakened.
Karlson
on
the
Roof
This story is about a little man who can fly
and has to press a button in his middle. I remember the illustrations
quite
clearly. He had black hair with a school boys cap ? For some reason I
seem
to think he was Belgian or Dutch.
Just in case, check out Paulus and
the Acornemn. It's Dutch, Paulus is teeny tiny, the
illustrations
are fabulous, and he can fly, at least if he rides on the back of a
bird....
Aside from that, no match....
Strong possibility: Astrid Lindgren, Karlson
on
the
Roof illustrated by Ilon Wikland, published
London,
Methuen 1975, 120 pages, also published Oxford UP 1958 as Eric
and
Karlsson-on-the-Roof. "He is a small and very stout and
determined
gentleman, and he can fly. Karlson has only to turn a knob which is
just
about in the middle of his stomach and - whoops! - a tiny engine which
he has on his back starts up. Karlson stands still for a moment while
the
engine warms up. And then - when the propeller has got up enough speed
- Karlson rises in the air and glides away, as dignified as a bank
manager,
if you can imagine a bank manager with a propellor on his back." He
has a little house on the roof, behind a chimney stack, and says
"Heysan
hoppsan!" a lot.
Karius
and
Baktus
OK, here's a goofy one. It was one of my brother's favourite
books. It was about two little men with unusual names who lived
in
peoples mouths, and 'mined' their teeth with pickaxes, causing cavities
of course. At the end of the book, the mouth's owner finally
brushes
his teeth, washing the two little guys down the drain (from where they
emerge to move into someone else's mouth eventually). It was a
hard-cover
book with no picture on the front, blue and off-white I think (of
course,
it may have had a dust jacket once). The title might have been
the
names of the two little men. Any ideas?
This one I'm pretty sure of: Karius and
Baktus by Thorbjorn Egner. Published in English twice,
first
in 1962 by Bobbs-Merrill, then a different translation in 1993 by
Skandisk.
The 1962 blurb is "Karius and Baktus are Dental Trolls who live in
the
mouth of a small boy named Jimmy." The later version says "With
names
derived
from
tooth
'caries' and 'bacteria', these mischievous,
microscopic
rascals make life miserable for Erik, in whose mouth Karius and Baktus
have made their home." It was first published in Norwegian in 1949.
Karoleena
M95 mud bath: Let's try this one - Karoleena,
written
and
illustrated
by
Charlotte Steiner, published
Doubleday
1957. "Karoleena has good intentions, but she always seems to get
into
trouble - like giving someone's lap dog a mud bath, and making friends
with a goat who eats her hat. 2-color illustrations. Ages 4-8." (HB
Oct/57 p.345 pub.ad)
There was a series called Katie John by Mary
Calhoun...
Katie John is set in some
midwestern
state on the Mississippi River, like in Missouri or somewhere.
She
does live in a brown stone house.
Frieda Friedman, The Janitor's Girl,1962.
I bought this from Scholastic or Tab in the early '60s. Kate is
pictured
on the cover. Her dad gets a job as the superintendent in a brownstone,
and they move in. Her sister is aghast that they will become "the
janitor's
girls" to the snooty folks who live there (and, in fact, do). Kate gets
a job sorting and delivering mail in the building, with her father's
admonition
not to read postcards.
The main character in the Janitor's Girl
is Sue Langdon.
Jean Little, Kate,
1960? I believe that this may be Kate, by Jean
Little.
Kate does live in New York. One of the few details I remember is
that she has an uncle named Saul, and asks "Sol as in King Solomon" and
he says "No, Saul as in King Saul." She does definiely live in
New
York. She's also in Hey World, Here I Am and one other
book
by Jean Little, but I can't find the title!
Kate and Emma
Eng writer F - Penguin - England 50'
to 70's - two female school chums - one becomes a social worker - other
marries badly, has children, goes on welfare - social worker is
assigned chum's case & discovers child neglect - one child lives
and eats tied like a dog in shed - cannot speak.
Monica Dickens, Kate and Emma, 1964, approximate. A
possibility.
Monica Dickens, Kate and
Emma. Whoever
posted on your site "Monica Dickens, Kate and Emma" provided the
correct solution. Thank you very much.
Kate Smith, Kate Smith Stories of
Annabelle,
1951. I remembered that the book was written by singer Kate
Smith,
of all things, and I found it in the Library of Congress catalog, with
the title listed as KATE SMITH STORIES OF ANNABELLE. They give its LC
number
as P28.5404 Kat FT MEADE.
I have written you twice already today. You probably think I am nutz. But I no longer need the bookstumper service. I have the title of the book, which is Kathy by Aleda Renken.
Your featured stumper is definitely Kathy
and
the
Mysterious
Statue by Lee Kingman published by
Doubleday
in 1952. I read it just two weeks ago for the first time, and it
absolutely fits the plot description--sculptor father with a back
injury
moves his family to the town in Maine where he grew up in order to
start
a pottery business. The daughter Kathy gets acquainted with his
old
art teacher who runs a furniture store and begins making miniature tea
sets and solves a mystery involving a statue.
Katie
John
This book is not just singular…it was a series of books about a
little girl who lived in the country. I don’t remember the name
of
the series nor the author. The only clues I have are there was
either
a chapter or possibly the name of one book in the series, entitled Hot
Potato Katie and that the little girl had red hair in braids
and freckles. The storyline that beligs to the title above is one
day when it’s really cold, her mother puts baked potatoes in her
mittens
to keep her hands warm, and sends her off to school. Somehow the
other children find out and taunt her, calling her Hot Potato
Katie.
It had to be released prior to 1973, because I read it when I was
around
6 or 7, and I was born in 1973. I really wanted to get them for
my
daughter, but with so little to go one, I can’t seem to find
them.
And our local library has relocated twice, so I am sure the age of the
books and moving around has assured that they are no longer
there.
Any help would be so appreciated!
H9 This sounds very familiar.
Could
you be thinking of the Katie John books by Mary
Calhoun?
I think the first three (Katie John; Depend on Katie John;
Honestly,
Katie John!) were all written in the 1960s. I know I read
about the hot potato episode somewhere, and I read the first three
books,
so maybe it's in one of them. There was a later book (Katie
John
and
Heathcliff), but I didn't read that one and don't know
when it was published.
Isn't that question referring to the Katie
John books by Mary Calhoun? I seem to recall
there
being a chapter about the potatoes...If so, there were four of
them--Katie
John, For Love of Katie John, Honestly, Katie John!, and Katie
John
and
Heathcliff.
---
We love your web site. What a great service. My wife
is looking for a series of adventure story books she read in the late
1950's
or early 1960's featuring a girl named Karen. They were sold
through
her school when she was in the fourth grade or so. Sorry, but
that's
the only information I have. Any help would be appreciated.
Two wonderful books, written by Karen's
mother,
Marie
Killilea. Marie and her husband Jim started the United Cerebral
Palsy
Foundation. The books are titled Karen, and With
Love,
From Karen.
I would have to disagree; the Karen books focus
on Karen and her family and how they cope with her cerebral
palsy.
They are wonderful books, though.
Tizz series, 1970s. Could
this be the Tizz series, about a girl and her horse? (My sister's
name is Karen, and I vaguely remember that she loved this series
for that reason.) I don't remember the author, but the last name
probably began in the C - F range...
Bialk, Elisa. Tizz & Company.
Childrens Press, 1958.
Mary Calhoun, Katie John series.
I
sent
you
this
stumper a while back. We've found the books my
wife
was looking for - the Katie John series by Mary Calhoun, the first
three
books of which were published between 1960 and 1963. I guess
memory
plays tricks, since the main character's name was unfortunately not
precisely
Karen.
---
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.
Alcott?, Jack and Jill.
I don't know how old a book you're thinking of...but Louisa May
Alcott's
Jack
and Jill is about boy and girl neighbours who both get hurt in
a sledding accident, and send each other things over a sort of pulley
line
between their houses. No garden in that story that I can remember,
though.
No, it was a more recent book, similar in
style to Beverly Cleary. Thanks anyway!
Hans Christian Andersen, The Snow
Queen.
This is a real shot in the dark, but there are two children, boy and
girl,
who
communicate across flower boxes that link their
windows in adjoining houses. I think the boy's name was Kay.
Katie-John! There was a
series
of books about Katie-John about this time. She was about ten and
her best friend was a boy named Edgar, I think. I think one of
the
books has her holding the tin can, too.
I think that's it--The Katie John series by Mary Calhoun!
Thank you!
Calhoun, Mary, Katie-John books.
I just finished re-reading the Katie John books, and there is nothing
at
all about a pulley system and messages. Katie John's best friend
is a girl named Sue, who does not live next door or across the
street.
In the third book, Honestly, Katie John!, Katie does
become
friends with a boy named Edgar, but he lives in a cemetery (his father
is caretaker) and they never communicate with anything resembling a
pulley
system. There is a fourth book, Katie John and
Heathcliff
that was written long after the rest of the series (in 1980) and takes
place when Katie John is older and in high school that I have not read.
-------------------------------------------
Girl in front of large brick house on
cover. Chapter book
from the 1970s about a girl who moves into a house left to her
family.
Must rent rooms. Dumbwaiter.
Mary
Calhoun,
Katie John.This
is
definitely Katie John, right down to the brick house on the
cover. Sequels are Depend on Katie John Honestly, Katie
John and Katie John and Heathcliff.
Helen
Markley
Miller,
Beloved Monster,
1968,
copyright.
Fun
young adult romance that I borrowed several times from the library
growing
up. The cover of the book was quite
attractive, with a young blonde woman in front of a large mansion.
Calhoun,
Mary, Katie John.This
is
it. It also has several sequels!
Mary
Calhoun,
Depend on Katie John,
1963. This is
the second in the 4-book series about resourceful and rambunctious
Katie
John. In this book, she helps find
boarders so her parents can manage the financial burdens of the big
house
bequeathed to them by Aunt Emily. Katie
John helps out her parents in managing the boarders and experiences a
lot of
mixed feelings about the hard work and the relationships involved.
Mary
Calhoun,
Katie John. I
think
this is Katie John by Mary Calhoun. There were several sequels.
Possibly Carol (aka Carol from the
Country) by Frieda
Friedman, 1950. There's definitely a dumbwaiter involved - it turns out
to be
very important. According to one source, Carol snubs her new city
neighbors
because they're not as well off as she is/was, though my (faulty?)
memory is
simply that she missed her old country friends terribly and felt no one
could
live up to them as friends, so she unintentionally acted rude to her
new
neighbors to the point where her mother says sadly "you have no talent
for
friends." Friedman's books are (now) low-key looks at working-class
city kids - and before 1960, she even tackled the issue of prejudice,
more than
once.
Calhoun, Mary, Katie John, 1960.
Katie
John's family moves into the house they inherited. She gets stuck in a
dumbwaiter at one point. There is at least one cover online featuring a
girl in
front of a brick building.
Mary
Calhoun,
Katie John.
Followed by "Depend
on Katie
John," "Honestly Katie John," and then about 20 years later.
Could it be Harriett
the
Spy? The book shows her
in front of
a brick building and there's a dumbwaiter in the book.
Mary Calhoun,
Katie John, 1960,
approximate. I
believe this is the book you are looking for.
Mary Calhoun wrote several books about the adventures of Katie
John. "Katie John and her family
move into an inherited house in order to sell it, but find they don't
want
to part with it."
SOLVED Thank you. Was Katie John, and I just ordered it for my daughter.
Sorensen, Virginia Eggertsen, Miracles
on
Maple Hill, 1956. Not
Vermont
but Pensylvannia - could it possibly be this book about Marly and her
family
who move to her grandfather's farm when her father returns from the war.
What a great service! I have been trying for years to remember
the names of those books and you got them solved in a matter of
days.
W178 is Patricia's Secret (I checked on the Internet and they
even
had one with the cover, which I remember, so I know it's the right
one),
F204 is The Unchosen and M325 is Marsha, thank you,
thank
you. The last one, V40, sounds like Miracle on Maple
Hill
which I have read, but I don't think it is that one, although I want to
get it from the library and double check before submitting a denial, it
was a very good guess. You have made my day, you have no idea!
Mason, Miriam E., Katie Kittenheart,
1957. Although I can't find my copy to double-check the details,
I'm pretty sure that Katie Kittenheart tells the story of young Katie
discovering
her bravery by helping a class of young children through a fierce
storm.
She admires her teacher and tries to emulate her behavior. May be
the one?
Jacqueline Jackson, The Taste of Spruce
Gum
early 1960s?, approximate. This is not Miracles on Maple
Hill, although that was similar in plot and character. I
think
the book I am looking for was more for younger children, not juvenile
fiction.
Hope someone will recognize it, thank you!
I just looked at my copy of Katie
Kittenheart:
Katie has black hair and she's in the 4th grade. She goes to visit her
Grandma Buckley in Kentucky, on an apple farm. The teacher at her new
school
leaves her in charge when a pupil breaks his arm, there is a flood,
Katie
takes care of the children overnight in the schoolhouse. Stumper
requester might want to look at Understood Betsy, too.
Miriam Evangeline Mason, Katie Kittenheart, 1957. I
think this might be it, thank you so much for your help, but I am going
to get a copy of it to double check before I say for sure. Thank
you for getting me this far, I never thought it would be solved!
Miriam E Mason, Katie Kittenheart, 1957. Katie it
is!
Thanks so much for all the contributing suggestions, I love this web
site!!
If this isn't Understood Betsy
I'll eat my old straw hat. The only thing different is the bit at the
end.
Rather than being left to tend to the schoolchildren, Betsy and a
younger
school friend are abandoned at the county fair. They haven't enough
money
to catch the rural transit that would take them within three miles of
home,
so they connive a doughnut-seller into paying them to tend the booth
while
she takes care of some personal business. They are walking the
remaining
three miles home when Betsy's uncle finds them.
Weber, Lenora Mattingly, Don't Call Me
Katie
Rose/ The Winds of March,
1965.
This sounds like an amalgam of Weber's first two Katie Rose Belford
books,
with possibly some confusion with another story. The "aunt", a
relative
(Liz) from Ireland, is in Don't Call me Katie Rose the
toilet-in-the-hall
anxiety is in the sequel. Katie Rose has a group she eats lunch
with,
and a best friend, Jeanie, but not a "clique" problem. Her actual
aunt, Eustace Belford, gives her a dress and a fluffy white jacket in
the
first book, but the cover of the second shows Katie Rose in a winter
coat
with a collar that might look like velvet. The five siblings, the
mother who sings at "Guido's Gay Nineties", and Katie Rose's dislike of
secondhand clothes, messy house and cracked eggs (as largesse from
rural
relatives) are in both, as are two boys, her crush Bruce Seerie and
Miguel,
a neighbor, whose real name is Michael Parnell.
This sounds like Don’t Call Me Katie Rose
by Lenora Mattingly Weber. This is the first in a series about
the
delightful Belford family of Denver. Katie Rose Belford is
ashamed
of her shabby home and that her mother plays piano and sings nights at
an Italian restaurant. Her role model is her socially-prominent Aunt
Eustace,
her deceased father’s sister. On the morning Katie Rose and brother,
Ben,
are to start attending the new high school she first asks her family to
call her by her given name, Kathleen. Later, before she and Ben enter
the
school she asks that he not make their mother’s job public. I
think
the reader might be combining Bruce Serie, with whom Katie Rose falls
in
love at first sight the day before school starts, and who would care
about
the toilet in the hall, with Miguel, who wouldn’t. She meets Miguel a
few
hours before she meets Bruce, and he helps her clean house and move the
toilet out of sight (for her anticipated visit from Aunt Eustace) in
exchange
for use of a purple pen. He becomes like one of the family and develops
a crush on Katie Rose but she only has eyes for Bruce. The toilet in
the
hall is because mom wants to convert the downstairs closet into a
half-a-bath
(which happens in the next book in the series The Winds of March)
but
the
project
is
on hold until she is able to save enough in her tip
money for the conversion.
Weber, Lenora Mattingly, Katie Rose
series. I haven't read these books in more than 20 years, but
some
of the details sound familiar - didn't her mom work in a saloon/lounge
as a singer? And I know her family was Irish...
Lenora Mattingly Weber, Don't Call Me
Katie
Rose, 1964. This is the
first
of the Katie Rose Belford series of books about the Irish Belford
family
living in Denver with a widowed mother who played the piano at Guido's
Gay Nineties, Ben, Katie Rose, Stacy (after the glamorous and wealthy
Aunt
Eustace), and the littles--Matt, Jill, and a name I'm blanking on. Don't
Call
Me
Katie
Rose
is followed by The Winds of March, A
New
and Different Summer, and several other books focusing on Katie
Rose and then on Stacy. The Belford series is scheduled to be
reprinted
shortly by Image Cascade who has already reprinted the Beany Malone
books
by the same author.
See the Back in Print
page for some more info on Weber.
Thanks so much for all the contributions to
solving my mystery. The Weber books about the March family are what I
was
remembering. Your contributors are absolutely fabulous to help solve
this
puzzle for me. Thanks again.
Could this be The Shy Kitten or
maybe it is The Shy Little Kitten? It is a Little
Golden
Book and it is about a little kitten who gets separated from her mother
and littermates and finds a black puppy dog, and a mole and a frog to
visit
with. The frog gets a bee in his mouth and the bee stings him and
the side of his face swells up and the whole bunch of them jump into a
pond to escape the bee. Then, the kitten gets reunited with her
mother.
It is a companion book, more or less, to The Poky Little Puppy and
is
illustrated
by
the
same artist.
Color Kittens -- coming back into
print
Both are Little Golden Books: Schurr, Cathleen. The
Shy Little Kitten. Illustrated by Gustaf Tenggren. 1956,
LGB
#248
Revised
in
1946 as LGB #494. Brown, Margaret
Wise.
The
Color Kittens. Illustrated by
Alice & Martin Provensen.
1949, LGB #86. Later reissued with new cover art as LGB
#436.
Thanks for the hints! I can't remember what the story line
was, just that I could read the whole book. Will keep my eyes open for
both titles.
In the 50's I had a book about 3
kittens.
The gray one hid from its mother in a stone wall; the black and orange
one hid in the black-eyed susans; and I think there was a white one
which
hid in the daisies. I know it was a Little Golden Book, but I
cannot
remember the name.
tHANKS FOR THE INFO, BUT THIS STILL ISN'T
THE ONE. tHE MAIN IDEA OF THE WHOLE STORY WAS HOW THE KITTENS HID
FROM THEIR MOTHER(S) BY BLENDING IN WITH THEIR SURROUNDINGS.
PLEASE,
KEEP TRYING-I'LL KNOW THE NAME WHEN I SEE IT.
Are K7 and K5 the same book?
I remember this book well. Of course, I
can't remember the name. It was about a litter of white kittens
and
one black kitten, and all they want to do is play hide and seek, but
when
the white kittens hide in the snow, the black kitten isn't hidden, and
when the black kitten hides in the dark, the white ones aren't hidden,
so they can never play right. Finally, the white kittens all roll in
coal
so that they will match their brother, but unfortunately, the black one
rolls in flour at the same time, so they still don't match.
Ultimately,
they all get in a silly wrestling match until they are all black and
white
and no one can tell anyone apart. I hope those details
help.
It wasn't a Golden Book--it was a tall, flat, white book, I think.
I think that the answer to K5 is The
Surprise
Kitten.
Thanks again for the infor, but the name of
the book is still unknown. I will recognize it when I see
it.
Keep thinkin'/lookin'--I appreciate your efforts.
#K5--Kittens: This one has jogged memories
of probably a different story entirely. A white mother cat has
three
kittens: one pure black, one white, one black with a white spot
and
paws. The black-and-white one is self-conscious. It rolls
in
coal dust to match the black one and in flour to match the white one,
but
they wash off. Then another cat comes to see the kittens and
says,
"I was so hoping there'd be one like me." Sure enough, he is the
father, and he is black with white paws. Could this be Socks?
Not
the
one
by
Beverly Cleary, but the Little-Golden-sized one?
I couldn't find any listing for a Golden Book
or Elf book called Socks....
Take it back! We have Socks
here and it's about one outcast kitten trying to fit in.
K5: Kittens--Socks by Betty
Molgard
Ryan, is a Whitman Tell-a-Tale which appears on page 467 of
Santi's Collecting Little Golden Books, 4th edition. What
I'm asking, for anyone familiar with the book, is does it in any way
fit
the description I gave, or can they name a book which does? On the
subject
of kittens hiding, there's a Rand McNally Junior Elf Book, Mommy
Cat and her Kittens, on page 347 and 369, with three
different-color
kittens, and I would have sworn there was one with the same cover with
a title about kittens hiding, but of course I can't find it now.
On #K5, about the kittens hiding, I found the
title I was thinking of. It's The Kittens Who Hid From
Their
Mother, by Louise Woodcock, a Wonder Book pictured on
page
384 of Santi's Collecting Little Golden Books Fourth
Edition.
Not the same cover as the Junior Elf book, but does show a mother cat
with
three different-colored kittens. The person who sent the stumper
in may want to compare this and The Surprise Kitten and
see
if either one of them is right.
#K5--Kittens: Socks, by
Betty
Molgard Ryan, is indeed a book I had as a child about a kitten trying
to
match the others, but I still haven't found the story which I think had
three white kittens and one of another color, where the different
kitten
meets his father at the end, who says, "I was so hoping there'd be one
like me."
This is just a title I came upon, I do not know
the story line. Bootsy by Lucienne Erville,
illustrated
by Mirian Lear.(1959) It
is a Wonder Book.(# 741)
Kathryn and Byron Jackson, Katie The Kitten.
1949. The reader is thinking of Katie the Kitten,
a
small tiger cat, is asleep in the hall, in a ball, in a hat.
Golden
Books
Haskell, Helen Eggleston. Just
a guess since I don't have the books in front of me, but possibly
Haskell's
Katrinka series -- Katrinka, the Story of a Russian Child (1915),
Katrinka
Grows Up (1932), & Peter, Katrinka's Brother
(1933).
The subject headings are 'ballet' 'brothers & sisters' and 'Russia'
so it sounds like a real possibility.
So far I've found only two really worth checking: De Angeli,
Marguerite.
Thee,
Hannah! Doubleday, 1940. Although this concerns a
Quaker
girl, it seems to me I was going to look at it as a possibility for my
"Amish Sleepover" unknown, but never got hold of a copy to see if the
pictures
and story looked familiar. If someone who has it could look to
see
if there's an incident where Hannah goes on a visit and isn't used to
running
water and so on it could either make or eliminate this as a possibility.
Later, regarding Thee, Hannah!: I found this book online
and it's definitely NOT the "Amish sleepover," as it's set in the
pre-Civil
War era. The book I'm thinking of took place in modern times, at
least in the 1920s or whenever "city folk" had electric lights and
running
water as a regular rule.
Could be Plain Girl by Virginia
Sorenson, illustrated by Charles Geer, Harcourt Brace 1955,
151
pages (grade 4-6 reading level) "A sensitive, sympathetically told
story
of a young Amish girl's growing understanding of her people and their
religion.
Esther faced her first days at school with mingled curiosity and
dread."
(Good Books for Children 1948-61 Eakin, 1962) It may be at a higher
reading level than the reader described, though, and no mention of
visiting
the city.
#A46--I'm pretty sure I've seen "Plain Girl"
and it is not the book I'm looking for.
For a reversal of this, there's Wonderful
Nice! by Irma Selz, published Lothrop 1960 "Alison, who
lives in a tall apartment house in New York City, speds a day with Katy
Zook on an Amish farm in Pennsylvania, discovers that riches are not
just
a matter of money - and friends are 'wonderful nice!' Ages 4-8." (Horn
Book Jun/60 p.183 pub ad)
let's try Katy, Be Good, written
and Illustrated by Irma Selz, published Lothrop 1962. "The
story
of an Amish child who goes to spend an overnight visit with her friend
who lives in the big city. Told in rhyme. Text uses the Amish speaking
syntax and words like ferhoodled, schnoopduf and schwitz.
#A46--Amish Sleepover: as "Katy, Be
Good" is rather rare, I've been unable to look at the book so
far,
but the plot and an example of the artwork online convinced me, so for
now I am assuming this is the story I'm after.
Any chance this is Mystery in the Doll
Hospital
by Elizabeth Honess? There are twins in the story and the
doll that is being restored has sapphire eyes. The doll belongs
to
a old neighbor whose father was a ship's captain
and he gave the doll to a man on his ship for
safekeeping. Unfortunately, the man was a jewel thief and hid gems
in the doll. He was put in jail without
recovering the jewels, died, and told someone else the story.
That
man got
out of jail and tried to recover the gems.
hi. thanks for your response. Your synopsis
of that book doesn't ring any bells, but it sounds like a great book.
Again
thanks for responding.
#D38: If it's the one I am thinking of,
this was one of my all-time favorites. Amy's Doll,
by Barbara Brenner, published in the '60s, illustrated with
black-and-white
photographs of Amy, her brother, and the doll. Unfortunately
scarce.
I'd love a copy!
D38 - doll hospital - might be Laura Bannon's
Katy Comes Next, a favorite of mine, too. A library
catalogue
synopsizes it as "Ruth's mother and father own a doll hospital
where
they are so busy repairing other children's dolls, they never seem to
have
time to mend daughter Ruth's toy" (but eventually Katy does get a
complete
makeover).
Katy Comes Next works for time
period, here's more info: Bannon, Laura Katy Comes Next
Chicago, Whitman 1959 hardcover, "Story ofa little girl whose doll,
Katy, needs fixing and her father runs a doll hospital. Beautiful
delicate
illustrations."
this sounds like it. if you can find a copy
ok
---
I'm actually looking for two books and I don't
have very much info. The first was a book about a doll hospital. It
described
the dolls, their clothes, and the family who fixed them.
the doll hospital book sounds like Katy
Comes Next, listed on the Solved Mysteries page.
You and your website are BRILLIANT! Thanks
much.
---
Story about a woman and her little girl. The Motherhad a
little
shop where she made and repaired dolls for a living. One day she
locked the door of the doll shop and worked on repairing her daughter's
doll that had become very worn and broken. It was a small book
with
a navy blue cover (it may have been rebound as it was a library book)
with
pen and ink drawings scattered throughout of the Mother, the daughter,
the broken doll, and the repaired doll. It was an old book and
had
an old-fashioned format/feeling at the time we read it in the "60's or
70's". Fiction.
Sounds like Laura Bannon's Katy Comes
Next
from the Solved Mysteries page.
Possibly - Katy Comes Next by Laura
Bannon, A. Whitman, 1959. "Ruth's mother and father own a
doll
hospital where they are so busy repairing other children's dolls, they
never seem to have time to mend daughter Ruth's doll."
---
Child's parents run a doll hospital, but
child's
doll never gets fixed. One day they finally fix it!
Bannon, Laura, Katy Comes Next,
1959. "Ruth's mother and father own a doll hospital where they
are
so busy repairing other children's dolls, they never seem to have time
to mend daughter Ruth's toy."
Payne, emmy, Katy No-Pocket,
1944. Katy Kangaroo was very sad because she had no pocket to
carry
her son freddy. Katy asks all the other animals carry their
babies
without pockets and finally end up in the city where she finds an apron
with lots of pockets.
Katy No-Pocket. Your details
are a little off but I'm pretty sure you want Katy No-Pocket.
Katy
is
a
kangaroo
with no pocket and her little kangaroo has trouble
keeping
up with her. The other animals offer solutions but none of those
things work for Katy. Finally she goes to the city and meets a
workman
wearing a big apron with lots of pockets. He gives it to her, she
puts her baby in one of the pockets, and hops back home. Since
she
has so many spare pockets, she becomes a babysitter for a bunch of
other
little animals.
Emmy Payne, Katy No-Pockets.
Emmy Payne, Katie No-Pocket,
1944. This sounds remarkably like Katie No-Pocket, although in
this
book it is Katie who is looking for a way to carry her baby because she
has no poch. After trying to imitate many of the other animals
she
sees around her she ends up in the city where a kind carpenter who
gives
her his apron which is full of pockets.
This stumper sounds a little like Katy
No-Pocket, by Emmy Payne, but in that book, it is the
kangaroo
who hasn't a pouch to carry her baby in. I have''t read Katy
No-Pocket in years, but I think the solution to her problem is
an apron with pockets.
Emmy Payne, Katy No-Pocket,
1944. This sounds very similar to the classic Katy
No-Pocket,
but in that one, it is Katy
the Kangaroo who is sad because she has no pocket
to carry her baby in, so she goes to the city in search of one.
She
meets a workman who has an apron with lots of big pockets, and he gives
it to her. Katy is so happy that she puts ALL of the baby animals
in her many pockets. (from an ex-Children's Librarian)
K51 This sounds like KATY NO POCKET
by Emmy Payne, illustrated by H.A. Rey, 1944. Katy the
kangaroo
has no pouch and cannot carry her son. She goes to the city for help,
and
a carpenter gives her an apron with pockets.~from a librarian
Katy
Rose
is
Mad
Katie (or Katy) is a tomboy who wants to go
outside and play baseball, but is not allowed for some reason. She
decides
to make her displeasure known by being destructive around the house,
but
her attempts backfire. Two examples--she tears all the sheets and
blankets
off her bed, and then her mother comes in and thanks her because she
was
about to wash the sheets anyway. Then Katie goes into the kitchen and
drinks
a glass of milk that was left on the counter, and her father sees her
and
thanks her for drinking her milk. After several of these mishaps Katie
is allowed to go out and play. I think a recurring line was "Katie, you
are such a good girl." I remember very vivid, cartoon-like
illustrations.
Katie had very bright orange hair and freckles.
This is just a guess, but it sounds like it
could
be Katie John (or one of the sequels) by Mary
Calhoun.
Could be Katy Rose Is Mad by Carol
Nicklaus published by Platt and Munk in 1975.
I remeber this story. It was my favorite
when I was 4 years old. I do not know the author or title but I
think
the girls name was Katie Rose. I remember how mad Katie Rose
would
get when her mischief would backfire.
Nicklaus, Carol, Katy Rose is Mad,
1975. Katy Rose is so mad that she threatens to hold her breath
until
she turns blue. I found this info at the library of congress
site.
I would like to thank the person who figured out the correct title and
author- posted in blue on your site.
---
Katie Rose is Mad or Katie Rose Wants to Play,
1976?
I think this is the same book listed as k22 under book stumpers.
I remember the little girl as being Katie Rose. Katie Rose gets
so
mad each time she does something destructive and it backfires.
She
throws blankets off her bed, drinks the last cup of milk that was
supposed
to go in a cake, and picks all the her mothers flowers growing in the
flower
box just to be praised for being so good.
The Katie Rose books are by Lenora Mattingly Weber(see
Most
Requested Books). Mary Calhoun wrote a series
called
Katie
John, both in the 60's.
Could be Katy Rose Is Mad by Carol
Nicklaus published by Platt and Munk in 1975.
---
It is about a girl (with freckles) who is trying to get across how
mad she is by saying several times that she is going to hold her breath
until she turns blue. I'm sorry I don't remember much more than
that!
It is very cute and I used to love saying along with her in the book
"I'm
going to hold my breath until I turn blue!"
G111 Judy Blume, Tales of a
Fourth-Grade
Nothing, 1972. Did freckle-faced Sheila Tubman (who later
starred in her own Blume book, Otherwise Known as Sheila the
Great)
badger the eponymous Peter with this threat?
I thought that the book Tales of a Fourth
Grade Nothing was a chapter book (?), this one wasn't. The
character
was talking to her parents (whom you never see). Does this still
sound like that book?
Carol Nicklaus, Katy Rose is mad,
1975. Is this it? "Katy Rose is so mad that she threatens
to
hold her breath until she turns blue."
That sounds right. I tried to find it
online to confirm, but I can't find it anywhere. I'm going
to keep an eye out for it. Thanks!
Cassidy, Clara, We Like Kindergarten,
1965, Golden Books. This is a possibility. If you go to
Google
Images and enter the title in quotes, you can see two different covers
for the book and see if it looks like the right book.
Clara Cassidy, We Like Kindergarten,
1965. It's a Little Golden Book. The little girl's name is
Carol. Wonderful Eloise
Wilkin illustrations!
Could this be Almost Big Enough
by Jean Tamburine? It doesn’t exactly match, but there are a
lot
of similarities. A little girl can’t wait until she’s big enough to go
to school like her big brother, and is very excited when she gets the
chance
to visit the kindergarten. The first half shows her playing at home
with
her duck, cat, and hen, and they do have a noisy tin-pan parade. Then
she
gets to march in a musical parade at the kindergarten.
You may be remembering a Little Golden Book
titled
We
Like Kindergarten. It has a black cover with a blonde
haired
girl holding up a finger painting. The story is about a girl
named
Carol who is about to start kindergarten. She has a little sister
named Laurie and a dog named patches. It shows all the things she
does at kindergarten and in the end she comes home and plays the "Good
Morning Song" on her piano and Laurie and Patches are her students.
S322 is called Katy Did.
The author's name is Jean Conder Soule. It was
illustrated
by Aliki and is a Top Top Tales book. My copy was published in
1962
by Whitman Publishing Company.
Jean Conder Soule, illustrated by Aliki,
Katy's
First Day - A Going to School story. A Whitman
Tell-A-Tale
book. I am certain this is the book. Katy wears a red dress
and has hair the "color of butterscotch taffy". She marches
around
the kitchen playing pots and pans. She doesn't want to start school but
has to anyway. Her mother slips a blue pencil in her
pocket as a surprise. She doesn't like school
until she gets to lead the kids around the room playing a drum, just
like
at home!
Liebig, Nelda Johnson,
Carrie and
the Crazy Quilt, 1993. This is the only book I could find that
deals with fire and a quilt, but I don't have a copy so I couldn't
verify
the storyline. "Carrie's faith in God helps her to overcome her
fears
during the Great Peshtigo Fire of 1871." The sequel is Carrie
and the Apple Pie.
In an old third grade reader, Friends
Far
and
Near-Ginn-(1966) there was a story matching this
description.
The burned corner of the crazy quilt is patched and then embroidered
with
the words "The Fire of 1868".It is attributed to Ruth Holbrook-Katy's
Quilt-1940.This
is one old story that matches.Perhaps there is some more recent book as
well.
Friend's Far and Near,
Katy's Quilt.
I
think this must be the source of the story I remember. I grew up
in Los Angeles where they used the Ginn series in the schools.
Thanks
for solving this for me.
Judd, Frances K., The Mansion of Secrets,
1951. this is the Kay Tracey Mystery Series. The
description
fits exactly. 1. Double Disguise 2. In the
Sunken
Garden 3. Six Fingered Glove Mystery
4.
Mansion of Secrets 5. Green Cameo Mystery and 6. Message in
the Sand Dunes
Francis K. Judd, Kay Tracey Mysteries.
Maybe it's this series, published in the 1940s? There's a
web page that lists the books.
Frances K. Judd, Kay Tracey mystery
stories, 1930s and 40s. There were 18 Kay Tracey mystery
stories
by Frances K. Judd published in the 1930s and 40s. Kay Tracey was
a teenage detective with friends who helped her solve mysteries.
The volumes published in the 30s had yellow covers with a question mark
on the spine. There is a list of all the titles with plot
synopses
at this
website.
Possibly the Kay Tracey Mysteries
by Frances K Judd. Characters include her mom Kathryn,
Cousin
Bill (a lawyer), and friends Betty & Wilma Worth. There are a
lot of books in the series, which was published beginning in 1934 and
reprinted
into the 1980's. If you do an internet search, you can find lists
of all the titles.
K74 Judd, Frances K [Stratemeyer
Syndicate].
The
lone footprint; a Kay Tracey mystery. Books, Inc, 1952.
I submitted the stumper regarding Kay Thompson, turns out she's
Kay
Tracey! That little minx. Stumper Solved. Thank you so much
for
your efforts. I'm now on a hunt for Kay Tracey.
There were two books about Keeko that I had as
a child. The one I still have is Chee-Chee and Keeko
by Charles Thorson published by Follett in 1952. The
other
one was just Keeko or maybe Keeko the Indian Boy.
Yes, this does help, Harriett....I've found
several copies of his old Keeko books on the 'net! Thanks!
---
Keeko, little indian boy and his forest friends,
including an eagle that he tried to take a feather from.
---
1950s childrens book: I remember as
a child a short story about a little Indian boy who want an eagle
feather.
He goes into the woods, falling asleep on a log he has a dream and when
he awakens he has his Indian headdress.
Charles Thorson, Keeko,
1952. By the creator of Bugs Bunny, this beautifully illustrated
picture book is a sequel to "Keeko and Chee Chee" (1947). It is
about
a little Indian boy who gets into all sorts of trouble while searching
for eagle feathers for his headdress.
Thorson, Charles, Keeko,
1950s. This is absolutely the correct book. While he is sleeping,
Keeko's animal friends that he is so kind to give him the headress as a
surprise. There is a second book titled Chichi and Keeko--Chichi is a
bluejay.
Thorson, Charles, Keeko,
1947. I have had this book since childhood. Keeko is a
little
Indian boy who desperately wants to have a big feather headdress.
During his search for feathers, he falls asleep on a log and dreams he
is given a headdress by a mother eagle in gratitude for saving her
eaglet's
life. Then Keeko falls off the log, waking up from his dream.
S117 isn't a short story, but a book -- Monica
Hughes's
Keeper of the Isis Light, still in print.
Monica Hughes, Peddlar of Isis and
two other books, 1980's? I am sure the book is by Monica
Hughes.
She wrote three books about the planet of Isis, and this girl with the
mutated skin wasthe main character. Hughes resides in Canada, and
has written many great books.
Follow up to my e-mail yesterday. I had
a chance to check our library catalogue, and the title in question is Keeper
of
the
Isis
Light. There are two sequels.
S117 This is THE KEEPER OF THE ISIS LIGHT
by Monica Hughes. A great sci-fi read. This was one of my own
personal
stumpers that took me ages to find. Luckily, it was republished in
2000.
~from a librarian
Monica Hughes, Keeper of the Isis Light,
1980. This has to be the one - down to the scaly UV protective
skin
her robot companion gives her - only trouble is it's a full-length
novel
- though not a long one! Unless it was published in an abridged version
as part of an anthology of SF stories?
S117 THE KEEPER OF THE ISIS LIGHT
by Monica Hughes 1980, 2000 ~from a librarian
---
I am looking for what is probably a YA SciFi short story or novella,
featured in a collection called "The Turning Point" or "The Vanishing
Point"
or something similar. The story centers on a young girl on an inimical
planet. Her scientist parents have died, but previous to their deaths,
they had genetically and/or surgically altered her to help her survive
on the planet; I remember that her eyes had "nictitating membranes",
perhaps
to protect her eyes from dust storms. She was in the care of a robotic
guardian of some sort, who is now her only companion. She was upset
about
not fitting in with the other humans (who had since settled the planet)
due to the physical differences resulting from the alterations and is
basically
living in self-enforced solitude.
Monica Hughes, Keeper of the Isis Light.
This is almost certainly your book.
Monica Hughes, The Keeper of the Isis Light,
1980. This has to be "The Keeper of the Isis Light" but it'\''s a
YA novel rather than a short story. Perhaps portions of it were
published
as a short story. All the details fit, including the "nictitating
membranes"
(except the main character wasn'\''t nearly as upset about her
appearance
as the settlers were!)
T280 This is definitely KEEPER OF THE ISIS
LIGHT by Monica Hughes~from a librarian.
I'm sure this is an Octavia Butler story,
but I don't remember which one.
The Keeper of the Isis Light.
You guys have done it! I must have been confused about it being a short
story as soon as I read the summary of the plot, I knew that was
it. Thanks so much!
---
Looking for a book for teens I read about
1986. The protagonist is a teenage girl who lived on a planet
distant
from earth, she's human and ended up alone there because her parents
came
as space colony researchers, they were alone there and had a child and
eventually both died from radiation poisoning, the environment really
is
too harsh for humans. She was raised by a somewhat humanoid robot
and, we find out later, she was genetically altered by the robot for
her
own safety so she could live in the harsh environment. Then, a
whole
group of humans come to setup a colony. She lives high up on the
cliffs, the humans set up their colony in the valley, it is the only
place
they can cope. The robot makes the girl wear a special suit, he
says
it is to protect her from germs from the humans (she has never been
exposed
so they could kill her), but we find out later that was just a ruse,
the
reason for the suit was to conceal her now-alien appearance from
them.
I would really like to find this book again to share with my niece,
please
let me know if you can help! Thanks.
Monica Hughes, Keeper of the
Isis
Light. No doubt about it, this is the book.
Monica Hughes,
The Keeper of the
Isis Light,1980. Details match exactly.
Check the synoposis listed on the Solved
Mysteries
page for the Mystifying Twins.
T38 twins: could it be the first of The
Page Twins series? (generally just called The Twins), written
by
Dorothy
Whitehill, published Barse & Hopkins, and Grosset & Dunlap,
1920s.
"It is about Janet and Phyllis Page, identical twins who were
separated at birth by their vengeful grandmother, and who don't
discover
each other until they are 13. The series features locales from Arizona
to New York to Europe, and the characters are interesting. Janet and
Phyllis
both marry in the course of the series. Thelma Gooch is the illustrator
for Books 1 - 6." I wouldn't guess The Mystifying Twins
because they don't seem to have been separated.
Grove, Harriet Pyne, The Strange Likeness,Saalfield
1929. Another possible answer. Synopsis says "Classmates in a
girls'
school in Michigan who look uncannily similar find out they're twins,
separated
at birth. 236 pages." Nothing about a carnival, though.
From the poster's description, it is not the
Whitehill series about the Page Twins. However, there's
a good site for that series. Includes complete text of the first 2
books in the series.
Cooney, Barbara, The Kellyhorns.
NY Farrar & Rinehart 1942. This was reprinted in 2001 in the
"Lost Treasures" series. The date (1942) is right, and the plot seems
like
a good match. "Pam and Penny Kellyhorn are eleven-year-old twins, one
living
with an aunt, the other with their father and cousin, in small towns in
Maine and have just met, but it doesn't take them long to learn to be
sisters
as together they help bring an arsonist to justice, and try to rekindle
the romance between Aunt Ivory and Puppa. About the Author - Barbara
Coone''s
books for children have been loved by generations. Among the acclaimed
books she wrote and illustrated are Eleanor, Island Boy, and
Miss Rumphius. Book Description: Anne of Green Gables meets The
Parent Trap in this delightful tale set in a small Maine island town.
When
Penny Kellyhorn meets Pamela at the county fair, she is certain that
she's
found her long-lost twin sister. Soon they are joyfully reunited. But
then
scandal hits the town and threatens their newfound family."
Charles Kingsley, The Water Babies:
A Fairy Tale for a Land Baby, 1863. This is a possible,
though
if you're looking for something more authentically Celtic, disregard
this
suggestion. :) Tom, a young chimney sweep, is cruelly abused by
his
master Mr. Grimes. While cleaning the chimneys at a great house, he
happens
upon the daughter of the house and frightens/disgusts her - all covered
in soot as he is. He runs out of the house and into the country. He
then
falls into a brook while trying to wash himself, where he is turned
into
a water baby (drowns). After "teasing the trout" etc, he realises he is
lonely and then has various adventures while trying to find his fellow
water babies. All very improving Victorian stuff, ultimately leading up
to his forgiveness of Mr. Grimes, now also dead, and imprisoned in a
chimney.
An excellent description of this book is given by R. M. Fisher
(Ravenna)
in her review entitled "My name is Written in my Eyes" on the
unmentionable
website.
Charles Kingsley, The Water-Babies,
1863. Maybe this one? The stumper didn't indicate how old the
book
might be, but this classic has been reprinted consistantly, even
updated
by different authors. The 1916 color illustrations by Jessie Wilcox
Smith
can be seen online
here. The water fairies are more prominantly pictured in the
line illustrations, as they are hidden from poor Tom until near the end
of his adventures.
My sister was able to get her hands on a copy
of the Water Babies and it is not that book. Nowhere is
there
any mention of Kelpies in that book I guess... This would be an
older
book - my oldest sister is 54 and it was when they were young...
I'm going to talk to all of them again to try to get more
details.
Thanks!
Mollie Hunter, The Kelpie's Pearls,
1976.
Not this one, is it? There is also something called Janet
Reachfar
and the Kelpie but I couldn't find anything more about it.
Hi - thanks for the thoughts - those two books
are both too new - I found those when I searched the internet
too..
I sure wish my sisters would come up with some more details but so far
they haven't...
Janet Reachfar and the Kelpie (by
Jane
Duncan, illustrated by Mairi Hedderwick, published by Seabury
Press,
NY) was published in 1976, so if you're remembering an older book, it's
an unlikely choice. The Kelpie's Pearls (by Mollie
Hunter
(also known as M. M. H. M. McIlwraith), illustrated by
Joseph
Cellini, published by Funk & Wagnalls, NY, 112 pages) was
originally
published in 1966, when your eldest sister was about 12 years
old.
It was republished in 1976 with drawings by Stephen Gammell (Harper
&
Row, NY, 134 page). Here is an online plot summary: "An old woman
of the Scottish highlands makes friends with a kelpie, sees the Loch
Ness
monster, and practices some of her grandmother’s witchcraft." I
haven't
seen or read these, and consequently don't know if they're a match, but
the Library of Congress lists two older books with "kelpies" in the
title:
The
Kelpies (1924) and The Kelpies Run Away (1930), both
written by Etta Austin Blaisdell and illustrated by Clara
Atwood
Fitts. The first book is 147 pages long, the second is 156 pages
long, and both were published by Little, Brown and Company (Boston).
Could it possibly be Baum's The Sea
Fairies?
As I recall, this is a story about a little girl, Trot, who with her
bluff
ship captain uncle goes to visit the mermaids. I think perhaps
Dorothy
(Of Wizard of Oz - same author) also goes along.
It
is not part of the Oz series, but same Art Nouveau illustrations and
mix
of humor (lots of puns) and adventure. I've seen it reprinted
lately.
I have the book printed in 1924, by Etta
Austin
Blaisdell, illustrated by Clara Atwood Fitts, published by Little,
Brown, And Company. The Kelpies lived down at the botton of the
sea,
pictured at front of book. Two chapters on babies. The little
baby
lost and the little baby found.
Etta Austin Blaisdell, The Kelpies.
(1924) I think this is the book you may be looking for
I had not been on the site in forever. Can you believe one
of my sisters started searching again and she was brought to your site
and saw the final message left about The
Kelpies by Etta Austin
Blaisdell,
illustrated by Clara Atwood Fitts and THAT IS THE BOOK WE HAVE BEEN
SEARCHING
FOR FOR YEARS!!!!
Yippee!!! Please thank whoever it was who wrote in with this
answer. My sister was able to find a copy and got it and we all
enjoyed
reading it last night with my parents. Thank you so much again!
Etta
Austin
Blaisdell,
Kelpies,
1920s. Just a comment...there is a book that is the sequel to The Kelpies
called "The
Kelpies Run Away". It was a childhood favorite of my
mothers and mine.
Thank you for posting this!! And before anyone mentions it,
I don't believe what I'm looking for is the John and Mary
British
series by Grace James.
I can tell you for sure now that the John and Mary series
by Grace James is definitely not what I'm looking for. I located
someone with one of the John and Mary series who was able to
send
me a scan. They have black and white line drawings, and what I'm
looking for has regular "filled in" pictures.
I am so glad to be able to tell you that you can now transfer my
book stumper G296 Good Times Club from the archives section to the
solved
section!! I was at a book sale this past Friday evening and found
what I was looking for for 50 cents. It is Kendall's Second
Reader
written by Calvin N. Kendall and Caroline Townsend, copyright 1917 by D
C Heath Company!!
Kentucky
Frontiersman
Hope you can help. I remember reading a series
of books in the 60's about a young boy who was captured by Indians. His
name was Henry and he learned the Indian ways of tracking and surviving
in the wild. Eventually he went back to the whites and became a great
scout.
I can't remember much else so if you can help, it would really be great.
No idea if it was a series, but maybe the
right
subject: Olive Knox Little Giant (Miss-top-ashish): the
story
of Henry Kelsey illustrated by Clarence Tillenius, published Toronto,
Ryerson,
1951 "Historical novel for young readers about an English boy who
came
to Canada in 1684 where he joined the Hudson's Bay Company, exploring
Northern
America, making friends with the Indians."
I22 indian scout henry: besides Little
Giant (Miss-top-ashish) the story of Henry Kelsey, by Olive
Knox,
Ryerson 1951, other books about Henry Kelsey (assuming he is the
historical
character wanted) include - Little giant of the North: the
boy
who won a fur empire, by Alida Malku, published Winston
1952;
and First in the west: the story of Henry Kelsey,
discoverer
of Canadian prairies, by James Whillans, published Applied
Arts
1955, but no series.
Eloise Jarvis McGraw, Moccasin Trail,
1952. This might be a possibility.
Altsheler, Joseph A., Kentucky Frontiersman,
1989, reprint. This is almost definitely one of the books in the
series.
The protagonist is Henry Ware, who was captured
and brought up by Indians but returned to an English settlement to warn
of an impending Shawnee attack and later became a renowned scout and
fighter.
(In fact, the full name of the book is Kentucky Frontiersman:
The
Adventures of Henry Ware, Hunter and Border Fighter). I
read
a bunch of these when I was young
I think there were a total of eight in this
series.
I remember in particular a passage from one of the books describing
how,
just after being captured 9or recaptured) by Indians, Henry was forced
to run single-file with members of the tribe with his hands tied behind
his back. At the conclusion of a several-hours run, Henry and the
Indian chief were the only ones who had never broken a sweat.
Key
to
the Treasure
This was a book for middle-school aged kids a mystery. Some
kids are staying at a house in the country for the summer and
they
find clues that a treasure of some kind is hidden there. They follow
the
clues a which include something about a big rock near a river, and they
find a hidden box, I think in the cornerstone of their
house,
with an old native american headress in it that is meaningful for some
reason.
Parrish, Peggy, Key to the Treasure.
One of my absolute favorites! Three children go to stay with
their
Grandparents in the summer. Above the mantle is a picture with a
key an indian headpiece and a pot. Each of these things in the
picture
holds a clue of how to find the treasure. The "key" in the
picture
opens an old stone in a part of the house.
Sounds like KEY TO THE TREASURE
by Peggy Parish, 1966. Siblings Liza, Bill and Jed stay with
their
grandparents. When their grandfather tells him of a treasure hunt that
his grandfather set up and that was never solved, they set out to solve
it. I believe one of the clues was found in a secret compartment in a
porch
column, I think one was found when a feather from a Native American
headress
was pulled out, and the treasure itself was found hidden in a space
under
a stone in the old well. I forget what the treasure was though! I'll
have
to check my copy. And good news - it's still in print. ~from a librarian
Key to the Treasure, by Peggy
Parish, illustrated by Paul Frame, published Macmillan 1966, 154
pages.
"Liza,
Bill, and Jed, spending the summer at their grandparents' farm, are
determined
to solve the puzzle of an often-told family legend of authentic Indian
relics which, a hundred years before, vanished without a trace. Young
readers
will be immediately involved when the children accidentally stumble
upon
the first of the coded clues." (HB Dec/66 p.706)
---
Grandfather starts the children on a treasure
hunt around the farm with a clue that leads to other various clues that
he has written that send them on to the next clue. The treasure
at
the end is a key that unlocks…something. Possible title, The
Golden
Key. I read this book around the year 1967.
I was thinking this might be by Alexander Key, but that The
Golden
Enemy... I think I'm just confusing the words
together.
Peggy Parrish, Key to the Treasure,
ca 1967. This is probably the right book. The treasure was
hidden by the childrens'
great-great-grandfather in the Civil War, and
the three children find the clues and hunt down the treasure while
visiting
their grandfather, who lives in the ancestral home. It was a
Weekly
Reader Book Club selection.
MacDonald, George (1824-1905), The
Golden Key. Could this be George MacDonald's The
golden
key? There was a reprint in 1967 (Farar, Strous and
Giroux,
New York). The adventurous wanderings of a boy and girl to find
the
keyhole which fits the rainbo''s golden key. The Golden Key is the
story
of two children, a boy and a girl, who live (not together) on the
border
of Fairyland. The boy has been told that at the end of the rainbow he
can
find a golden key -- it is not to be sold, and no one knows what door
it
may open, but it will surely lead somewhere wonderful. One day he sees
a rainbow, and decides to follow it into Fairyland, where it seems the
end of it might be -- and there he finds the golden key. Meantime, the
girl, much mistreated, wanders into the forest of Fairyland, following
a strange owl-like flying fish. Soon she meets a beautiful, ageless,
woman,
and she learns that she and the boy must journey together, looking for
the keyhole into which the golden key will fit.
Peggy Parish, Key to the Treasure.
Looks like this was originally published in 1967, so the date
matches.
Liza, Bill and
Jed are visiting their grandparents and discover
clues that lead them to a hidden treasure. I'm pretty certain there's a
real key involved, hence the title.
Peggy Parish, The Key to the Treasure.
This sounds a lot like The Key to the Treasure. Three
children
are staying at their grandparent's house, which is very farm-like (one
child gets chased by a goose). They find a clue to an old treasure hunt
in an Indian head-dress. The kids' grandfather's grandfather set up the
treasure hunt, but the first clue was lost.
Peggy Parrish, The Key to the Treasure.
Just a guess- the children are Liza, Bill, and Jed Roberts and
their
grandfather leaves them clues to find a treasure.
Peggy Parish, Key to the Treasure.
Could be "Key to the Treasure" The first clue is in an Indian
headress,
and it goes on
with more clues from there.
MacDonald, George, The Golden Key.
"The adventuous wanderings of a boy and girl to find the keyhole which
fits the
rainbow's golden key."
Peggy Parrish, The Key to the Treasure.
This was the answer to a query on Abebooks, but it sounds as if it
might
be the answer to this one also.
Peggy Parish, Paul Frame, Key to the
Treasure,
1960's. This sounds like Key to the Treasure,
which
was published in the mid-60's, but in this book I don't think the
grandfather
made up the treasure hunt himself - it was a family mystery.
Parish, Peggy, Key to the Treasure,
1966. The plot, the dating, and the approximate title look to me
like a very close match for the Peggy Parish book KEY TO THE TREASURE
(listed
in Solved Mysteries), which I also read as a youngster. As I
recall,
there are several sequels as well.
This was the book title I was looking for! I really enjoyed
this book during a summer at my grandparents camp in the mid 60's, but
the book disappeared. I see that it is still in print. Thank you
to everybody who contributed to solving the mystery! This is an
awesome
site with very thoughtful people.
This is an addendum to my earlier
comment.
The correct title was The Key to the Treasure, by Peggy
Parrish.
Thanks again to all who contributed. I'd like to get this book
for
my niece and possibly the sequels, so this was very helpful.
---
Children on summer vacation (a girl and two boys?) at grandparents?
farm? see painting above fireplace of Indian headdress rubric which
starts
them out on a treasure hunt that their parents? never solved.
Obstacles
include a goose that tries to keep them them out of a field, a wasps
nest
that needs to be smoked and disposed of so they can unbury a
clue.
There's also a treehouse and well with purple stones. One of the
characters may have been named Billy.
Parish, Peggy, Key to the Treasure.
Bill, Liza, and Jed solve a mystery that their family has been
attemping
to solve for generations.
Peggy Parish, Key to the Treasure, (1966).This
book has been reprinted with a horrible cover (see Amazon). At
the
end of the book, the children remove a brick and find things inside.
What
happens is these three children named Liza, Bill, and Jed try to figure
a mystery out. This is how there'\''s a mystery to be solved. Their
grandpa
told them a story one night and he said when his grandfather was a
little
boy there was a bonnet hanging on the wall and the boy always wished he
could try it on. One day he came downstairs and the housekeeper said he
could try it on. He was excited. Then one day something happened that
made
everyone sad. The boy'\''s dad was going to fight in the army. But the
dad left a puzzle. The boy had other brothers and sisters so the dad
gave
them envelopes with clues to a treasure. Their mom by mistake put the
envelopes
in her apron pocket. When she washed the apron, the envelopes were
still
in the pocket. So the envelopes got all soggy. Each summer Lisa,
Bill, and Jed visit their grandparents, and they hear the story of the
sketches hung above the mantel. The sketches are clues to a hidden
treasure,
and no one has been able to figure them out for a century. There is a
missing
first clue, but when the children stumble upon the second clue,
they'\''re
on their way. Could it be that on this visit they will solve the secret
that has eluded so many for more than a hundred years?
---
My description is VERY vague...it was a series
of a few mysteries that I read in the late 70's or early 80's. They
were
part of my summer book club and were about 3(?) siblings (two girls and
their brother) who go to their grandparents house for the summer and
"solve"
mysteries. I remember them worrying about grandparents house being
haunted
or scarey. I don't know if maybe a family member planted the
mysteries/clues
to give them something to do while on vacation. I remember a clue being
found in a tree. I DO remember one of these being my first "100+ pager".
Peggy Parish, The Key to the Treasure.
This might be The Key to the Treasure -- the children visit their
grandparents
and discover a series of clues to a treasure that their
great-grandfather
had hidden on the farm before he went off to war (perhaps the Civil
War?).
There was also at least one sequel. I don't remember anything
about
the house being haunted, though, and I don't think that the Key to the
Treasure is more than 100 pages. But it's the first chapter book
I remember reading, so it sounds as though it's about the right age
bracket.
Good luck!
Except for the description of two girls and a
boy, the Peggy Parish mysteries about Liza, Bill and Jed fit
the
description perfectly. I think the mystery where they find the
clue
in the tree is "Key to the Treasure", which is listed on the solved
stumpers
page.
Peggy Parish, Key to the Treasure.
(1966) This sounds like the Liza, Bill and Jed series of
mysteries
by Peggy Parish. The first was Key to the Treasure, followed by Clues
in
the Woods, Haunted House, Hermit Dan, Ghosts of Cougar
Island....they've
been in print most of the time since 1966 (and I believe are currently
in print) so they could easily have been the collection you're thinking
of (I know the first was at one time a Weekly Reader book)
Gage, Wilson, The Ghost of Five Owl Farm.
(1966) If it's not the Peggy Parish books, try Wilson Gage
(pseudonym
of Mary Q. Steele). In The Ghost of Five Owl Farm, Ted and his
twin
cousins come to spend the summer at their grandparent's farm. Ted
wants to make the twins believe the farm is haunted, but to his
surpise,
spooky things do start to happen. I think there might have been a
sequel or series too.
Peggy Parish, The Key to the Treasure. (1966) This
is it!!! Thank you!!! I can't wait to buy these for my children!!!
---
I'm trying to find a book that I liked
as a kid. I'm sure my neice would love it. I don't remember
the title or author. I had this book in the 1960's. Hard
bound and illustrated. Maybe 30 pages long? The story is
about 3 grandchildren visiting their grandparent's home for the
summer. The house has been in the family for many
generations. Over the mantel, the family has an old drawing made
by the great grandfather before he left for the civil war. The drawing is of an indian headdress, a small
clay pot and a strange looking key. The tale behind the drawing
is that the great grandfather knew he would be away at war for a long
time, so he left a series of clues for his children (which is the
grandfather that the kids are visiting in the story) to follow.
The clues would lead to some kind
of
family
treasure.
The
drawing was just a teaser that he made
weeks before leaving to keep the kids occupied. The great
grandfather gives an envelope with the first clue to his wife on the
day he leaves for the army. Unfortuneately, she puts the envelope
in her apron pocket and then washes the apron. The first clue is
destroyed. The treasure remains a mystery. The grandkids start
playing with an old indian headdress that their grandfather has in a
glass display case. It looks just like the one in the
drawing. The bottom most feather comes out. They go to glue
it back in and find a rolled up piece of paper, which they pull
out. The grandkids discover that it is what would have been the
first clue. It is written in a simple code - numbers for
letters. Written on the paper is "All 26. This is your
first clue." This leads to a clue found inside a clay pot just like the
one in the drawing. This in turn leads to a key shaped like the
one in the drawing. This in turn leads to the family treasure.
Peggy Parish, Key to the Treasure. Look at the solved page
for full details. This is definitely the story you are looking
for. There is actually a series of books with the same characters.
Peggy Parrish, Key to the Treasure, 1966, copyright. "Each summer
Lisa, Bill, and Jed visit their grandparents, and they hear the story
of the sketches hung above the mantel. The sketches are clues to a
hidden treasure, and no one has been able to figure them out for a
century. There is a missing first clue, but when the children stumble
upon the second clue, they're on their way. Could it be that on this
visit they will solve the secret that has eluded so many for more than
a hundred years?"
This certainly sounds like The
Key
to
the
Treasure by Peggy Parrish. Found under Solved- a much requested
book.
Parrish,
Peggy,
Key to the Treasure.
See Solved Mysteries.
Peggy
Parish,
Key to the Treasure.
I'm
positive
this
is
the first of the Liza, Bill, and Jed mysteries.
Followed by Clues in the Woods, The
Haunted House, Pirate Island Adventure, Hermit Dan, and The Ghosts of Cougar Island.
Parish,
Peggy,
Key to the Treasure.
Liza,
Bill,
and
Jed
Roberts stay at their grandparents' farm one
summer. The kids' great great grandfather left the clues before
going off to the Civil War. I remember Indian artifacts but not
exactly what kind.
Peggy
Parish,
Key to the Treasure.
Sure
sounds
like
this
Peggy Parish book, except you think it was only
30 pages long.
Peggy
Parish,
The Key to the Treasure,
1966,
copyright.
Peggy
Parish,
The Key to the Treasure, 1966, copyright. "Each
summer Liza, Bill, and Jed visit their grandparents, and they hear the
story of the sketches hung above the mantel. The sketches are clues to
a hidden treasure, and no one has been able to figure them out for a
century. There is a missing first clue, but when the children stumble
upon the second clue, they're on their way. Could it be that on this
visit they will solve the secret that has eluded so many for more than
a hundred years?" The first in a series of Liza, Bill and Jed
mysteries. Other titles include: The
Haunted House, Pirate Island Adventure, The Mystery of Hermit Dan, The
Clues in the Woods, and The
Ghosts of Cougar Island.
Parish,
Peggy,
Key To The Treasure,
1966. This has got to be it. It's in the solved stumpers.
Peggy
Parrish,
The Key to the Treasure,
1966,
copyright.
I'm
almost
positive this is the one... "Each
summer Lisa, Bill, and Jed visit their grandparents, and they hear the
story of the sketches hung above the mantel. The sketches are clues to
a hidden treasure, and no one has been able to figure them out for a
century. There is a missing first clue, but when the children stumble
upon the second clue, they're on their way. Could it be that on this
visit they will solve the secret that has eluded so many for more than
a hundred years?"
|
Condition Grades |
Parish, Peggy. Key to the Treasure. Illustrated by Paul Frame. Macmillan, 1966. Hardback. G+ $10 |
|
Kid Sister, 1958, by Margaret
Embry. This book works like a karate chop on stereotypes from that
period. Not only is Zibby brazenly atypical as a fictional female
character,
but so is her elderly aunt. On top of that, Zibby's more "feminine"
older
sisters are nasty and have far less maturity and appeal.
---
I had this book in 4th grade in the
1970s and it featured
a mouse that the family named Rosemary.
Margaret
Embry,
Kid Sister,
1971. This was
one of my favorites! Rosemary isn't a mouse, though, she's a rat, and
Zibby, the kid sister of the title, gets all kinds of grief from her
siste
Margaret
Embry,
Kid Sister,
1967. The kid
sister in the title names the rat after her favorite teacher.
SOLVED:
Kid
Sister.
Your
site
is
fantastic.
I would have never ever been able to remember
the names of the two books I was looking for. Kid Sister and The Winnemah Spirit covered both of
my requests, and so quickly as well. Thank you to everyone behind
the scenes helping to solve the mysteries!
Rosenbaum, Eileen, The Kidnapers
Upstairs,
1968.
This has to be the book you are looking for, the plot is exact!
We
happened to pick it up at a yardsale last year.
---
Read in 70s: plot involves a boy with
green & yellow bike painted by artist parents, his no-nonsense
grandmother staying with him while parents are away, a woman (a spy at
the UN?) with a two-way radio disguised as a feathered hat, and a
charming foreign ambassador. Boy and grandma foil plot.
Eileen Rosenbaum, The Kidnapers Upstairs, 1968, copyright. Definitely this
is your book, I have my copy here and the cover shows the boy and his
grandmother on a crazy green and yellow bike (funny that is not the
detail I remembered) and I specifically remember the foreign ambassador
and the lady with the feathered hat.
That's
the
book--I
can
still
picture the cover art, but have been trying to
remember the title for years with no luck. I'm looking forward to
reading the book again and discovering why it stuck in my memory!
Thanks for solving my mystery, you've made my day.
The kidnapping of the coffee pot
/ story by Kaye Saari ; pictures by Henri Galeron. [New
York]:
Harlin Quist, 1975. A coffee pot, a lawn mower, and a pair
of old shoes live happily together in the city dump until the coffee
pot
is kidnapped.
K9 kidnapping of the coffee pot: The suggested
author and publisher are correct, and there can't be two books with
this
title!
Dorothy Bennett, The Golden Almanac,
1944.
Doesn't have a red cover with a white grid on it but a beautifully
illustrated
pink cover by Masha. A Big Golden Book, it has poems (including
one
about Jack Frost), songs and stories about the months and seasons
although
I can't find one about the saint that you mention.
Randy Harelson, The Kids' Diary of 365
Amazing Days, 1979, copyright. I found it! This is the book I
was looking for! :)
Hi, I have C75. It's called The Kids' Kitchen Takeover and the author is Sara Bonnett Stein. It was published in 1975 and includes all the recipes and activities mentioned, including many more!
Patricia Reilly Giff, The Kids of the
Polk
Street School series. (1984-1986,
approx) Sounds like the first "Kids of the Polk Street School"
series
by Patricia Reilly Giff, which came out in the mid-80s. The books
are very thin. Book 4, "December Secrets" has the fire truck
scene
(two girls ride up front
Jill, who is chubby, gets to wear the
fireman's
hat, much to the chagrin of the other girl). Book 11, "Sunny-Side
Up" had a picture of kids playing in an above-ground pool on the cover.
The books were recently released with new covers/illustrations, so
don't
be dismayed if your search turns up unfamiliar covers at first.
Make it a teenager and this could be My
Side of the Mountain by Jean Craighead George.
T42: Sounds like Lloyd Alexander's Wizard
in the Tree. The wizard is actually sucked into the tree and
kept a prisoner until an orphaned girl servant
lets him out, and she still has to help him until he finds out how to
get
home. Not as much fun as the Prydain Chronicles, but the message is the
same - that magic ultimately isn't what matters in life and that
happiness
and respect are found through work and acceptance of moral
responsibilities,
not luck or daydreaming.
Might also be Kildee House by Rutherford
Montgomery. The tree forms the back of a man's house in the
woods.
He actually has families of animals living with him.
Kildee House by Rutherford
Montgomery,
Doubleday 1950 sounds the most likely, "When old Jerome Kildee went
to live in his redwood grove, he meant to be a hermit. His odd little
dwelling,
backed by a giant tree, was set in the midst of his hundred California
acres ... a big raccoon thought he owned the tree, and presently a pair
of skunks set up housekeeping under the floor ... Emma Lou discovered
it
and then came Donald Roger ..."
---
This was a juvenile novel read circa 1955. It was about a
man named Jerome who lived in a hollowed-out tree. He had a skunk
for a friend, and racoon, a deer, and mice. All the animals in
the
story were his friends. There was no plot that I can remember,
just
that Jerome was friends with these animals, many of whom visited or
lived
in the tree with him (the mice had their own little door, others came
and
went).
Montgomery, Rutherford, Kildee House, 1949.
I'm
pretty sure this is the book you're looking for. It's a 1950 Newbery
Honor
book.
Montgomery, Rutherford, Kildee House,
1949.
Killer of Death. I read a
book in the late 1970's, I believe titled "Killer-of-Death", in which
an
Apache youth is sent on some kind of quest into Commanche territory.
Another
young man from his village goes with him, some kind of rivalry/dislike
between them. There is one scene where the protagonist is hiding as he
watches Commanches kill a whole family from another tribe (don't
remember
if it was grass he was hiding in). As it turns out he has more to fear
from his traveling companion than enemy tribes. When he returns safeley
home he is given the name "Killer of Death". Don't know the author,
haven't
been able to find it at my local library.
A233 Someone else posted the answer of KILLER
OF
DEATH. I found author info to go with it: Betty Baker,
published by Harper & Row in 963~from a librarian
Betty Baker wrote Killer-of-Death
(c. 1963).
Betty Baker, Killer-of-Death,
1963.
A233 If it is Killer of death,
it is by Betty Baker.
Kincaid's
Book
of
Witches,
Goblins,
Ogres, & other fantasy
I am looking for a book I had as a child. The words Witches,
goblins,
trolls, and other fantasy will appear in the title somehow. They were
sold
in the 70's and 80's, and were vividly illustrated. They had stories
like
"Yallery Brown" and "My Own Self" in it. I can give you more info about
it if you'll e mail me with a return addy. How long to get a response?
I have already found out the book. The title is: Kincaid's
Book
of Witches, Goblins, Ogres, & other fantasy.
Kind of Summer
Love
I loved a book as a young teen. I got
it in about 1975 from Scholastic Book Club. It's about a girl in
her young to mid teens in the 1920s or 30s. I think it's
autobiographical.
Her father was the chaplain at Princeton, but the book is about her
summers
on Cape Cod at her grandmother's house. They drove up in a Model A or
T.
It's a really sweet, funny book. Her grandmother teaches her all
about plants and how to be a lady. The grandmother has a daughter
that lives with her and a son who acts like a 3 year old. I would
love to get a hold of this book.
Janet Gillespie, A kind of Summer Love,
1971. Abridged from A Joyful Noise The family has
an
old Dodge called 'The Artful Dodger', and in the first chapter the
author
reminisces about loading (or overloading) the
car. Her father is a chaplain at Princeton, her
grandmother teaches her botany, and her cousin Tink is developmentally
disabled. I think that this is the book!
Oops! Tink is her grandmother's son.
Janet
Gillespie,
A
Kind of Summer Love,
1971. Abridged from A Joyful Noise. I sent this in once
before,
I'm certain that this is the book as I've since reread it. All the
details
match.
Jolie Epstein, The Kindles Find a Home.
(1985,
approximate) I'm pretty sure this is the one you want. I
LOVED
the Kindles when I was young. The witch they hide from is Eyevil
(I think that's how it's spelled). They end up finding a land
with a beautiful waterfall inside a crystal dome
Jolie
Epstein,
The Kindles Find a Home,
1985,
copyright.
I'm
looking
at my copies of both of these books
right now! They are, indeed, "The Kindles Find a Home"
and
the
sequel
"The
Kindles and the Lady of Light," both published in 1985. "Welcome
to the magical land of the Kindles! It's a fantasy forest where music
makes the honeybud trees grow. The Kindles love to sing with gladness,
but now an evil sorceress named Eyevil wants to end their happiness
forever. It's up to Sparkli to lead the rest of the Kindles out of
danger. They embark on a quest to find the Gloracle, who tells them
about the domed Crystal Mountain, an enchanted place where they can
live together safely."
Littledale, Freya, The King and Queen
Who
Wouldn't Speak, 1975. It's a
play published by Scholastic magazines.
King
and the Princess
Yes. King and the Princess by Jack O'Brien,
illustrated
by Robert Doremus. Whitman, 1938, 1949. A Cozy Corner
Book.
Look, I even have a copy!
THANK YOU! THANK YOU! THANK YOU! The book arrived
and wonderful memories came flooding back. You have provided a
wonderful
service and I do so appreciate it.
---
I am looking for information about a 1950s book, or story- I can't
remember, about a black cat and a black dog, possibly a Labrador.
The 2 animals grew up together. Something happened to the kitten
and the owner made a peg leg with a harness for it. The kitten
would
ride on the dog's back. When they played together, or when the
cat
got mad at the dog, it would smack the dog's nose with the wooden leg.
I can still visualize an illustration from the book of the kitten with
it's peg leg ready to smack the dog! This story has stuck with me
for so long, and I would like to find the book. In 1985 we
adopted
a black cat from the Humane Society and later got a black Lab. I
think I was trying to duplicate the friendship that had so impressed me
in the 50's!! Hopefully, someone out there will
remember this story.
O'Brien, Jack. King and the Princess. Illustrated by Robert Doremus. Whitman, 1938, 1949. A Cozy Corner Book. I think it's an Irish setter. It's on the Solved mysteries page, but I've already sold my copy...
|
Condition Grades |
O'Brien, Jack. King and the Princess. Illustrated by Robert Doremus. Whitman, 1938, 1949. A Cozy Corner Book. Spine paper tattered and corners worn, otherwise VG-. <SOLD> |
Jack O'Brien (author), Robert Doremus (illus),
King
and the Princess. Whitman, 1938, 1949. A Cozy Corner
Book.
See more on Solved Mysteries.
There
is an alternate version of this book: The King and the Princess
by Jack O'Brien (author) and Kurt Wiese (illustrator),
published
in 1940 by Grosset & Dunlap. On the bottom of the front cover
it says, "A STORY PARADE PICTURE BOOK."
T184 Sounds like KING OF THE
DOLLHOUSE
by Patricia Clapp ~from a librarian
Clapp, Patricia, King of the Dollhouse,
1974.
I think this is the book you're looking for though the ring/crown
detail
doesn't exactly match. Ellie wakes up one summer day to find King
Borra Borra and his eleven 'peanut butter' babies have moved into her
dollhouse.
The king's family eventually moves out at the end of the summer when
Queen
Griselda finds them a permanent home inside a tree and Ellie is very
sad
to see them go. A few days later Ellie wakes up to find the
Queen's
crown in the dollhouse with a message that the Queen has taken up scuba
diving and finds her crown is a nuisance and they'd like Ellie to keep
it as a momento. Ellie puts the crown on her finger and her
mother
observes that it looks "rather like a fairy crown" and the two of them
decide to write a story about little people who live in a dollhouse.
Patricia Clapp, King of the Dollhouse,
1974.
'The cover looks different than described, but I think this is the
book.
Description: "A miniature royal family moves into the dollhouse of an
only
child and keeps her company the summer her mother is writing a story
for
children."'
Clapp, Patricia, King of the Dollhouse,
1974. I checked to make sure this was the title. This book
was one of the reasons I started making my own dollhouse. I
remember
she used toothpaste tube lids for trash cans, and cut up something (one
of her handkerchiefs?) to make small handkerchiefs for him. From
my local library catalog: A miniature royal family moves
into
the dollhouse of an only child and keeps her company the summer her
mother
is writing a story for children.
There is an old English fairy tale with this
plot
called Lazy Jack that I have read in several different
versions
but it is usually a princess that doesn't smile. In the version I
have in front of me Jack loses his penny and his mother scolds him and
says he should have carried in his pocket. The next day he gets a
jar of milk and puts it in his pocket, so his mother said he should
have
carried it on his head and next he gets cheese and puts it on his head
and so on and so on until he ends up carrying a donkey on his shoulders
and the princess laughs and Jack marries her. I also have read a
version where several people and animals are all stuck together and
travel
in front of the castle causing the unhappy person (princess?) to laugh.
Another possibility is The Frowning Prince,
by
Crockett Johnson, published by Harper 1959 The prince's
frown
has the power to break glass and wilt plants. "What happens when a
prince
with an immovable frown meets a princess with an irresistable smile.
Ages
4-8." (Horn Book Apr/59 p.92 pub ad) This does at least have a
prince
who doesn't smile, rather than a princess. In the usual form of the
Lazy
Jack story, the (marriageable age) princess smiles because she sees a
ridiculous
sight, while the (very young?) prince in the questioner's story smiles
perhaps because he is given a golden toy instead of golden treasures
that
he can't play with.
Lazy Jack: I think this may be
- The King Who Learned to Smile, by Seymour Reit,
illustrated by Gordon Laite, a Golden Book Beginning Reader, published
Western 1960. "approximately a 2nd grade level, the story of a
young
king who had gold everything, but who wasn't very happy. This story
tells
what made him happy enough to finally smile." "A young king named
Harold
has all the gold objects you can imagine - shells and bells, skates and
plates, even a gold toothbrush. But Harold is still unhappy." The
cover
shows the young king lying on the grass with animals around him,
smiling
at one who is wearing his golden crown.
A few years ago, I submitted a stumper.
I basically forgot about it, but today, the book I was searching for
came
to mind again....I searched on the internet, and lo and behold, there
was
my answer. I am ordering the book from another online seller, but
the fact is I had no idea as to the name of the book. The answer
provided
me with even more detail to help me remember my story. I knew it was
the
book I was looking for then! What a great service.
Not 100% sure, but take a look at THE
KING
WITH SIX FRIENDS by Jay Williams, 1968.
The previous suggestion was exactly right.
I have a copy of The King with Six Friends by Jay
Williams, illustrated by Imero Gobbato. This copy is
parents'
magazine press, 1968. It's about a good king who loses his
kingdom,
so he's "out of work" and goes to find a kingdom looking for a
king.
He comes across an axe, an elephant, a fire, a snake, a tree, and
a
swarm of bees, all of which turn out to be men.
---
This will probably be impossible to find but
in elementary school in the early 1970s I read a children's book about
a young boy on a quest. Along the way he encountered a number of
strange individuals who were misfits and outcasts. Among their
number
was a chubby man that could transform into a swarm of bees, a
red-haired
man that could turn into living flame, a darkly elegant man who could
morph
into a large serpent and a tall gentleman who could become an enormous
tree. Through the boy's courage and encouragement they overcame
their
insecurities and helped the boy in his quest. But of course I do
not recall the title, author, publisher, or illustrator. And it's
driving me crazy! Any help or recommendations would be greatly
appreciated.
Jay Williams, King with Six Friends, 1968.
Illustrated
by Imero Gobbato - I loved this one, too, and my copy is somewhere in
storage,
but you can visit Eric's
books read page.
---
I recall this book from the early
seventies.
It was a variation on the five Chinese brothers story, but set in 19th
century Europe, with colorful, painterly illustrations. Five men
were enlisted to traverse a mountain pass, a river, etc, and each of
them
turned out along the way to have a special skill...the man with bright
red hair could turn into fire, the man with a large George
Washington-like
nose could turn into an axe to cut wood. I seem to recall one man
in blue who could turn to ice and/or water. That's about all I
remember.
Any ideas?
Jay Williams, The King with Six Friends,
1968. This was a Parents Magazine Press book, one of a series you
could order by mail. King Zar loses his kingdom, meets six
strange
men who can turn into things like fire and axes, and then has to face
three
tests to win a princess.
Jay Williams, The King With Six Friends,1968.
This sounds like The King With Six Friends to me. I am
sitting
here looking at the book in front of me and one friend does turn into a
fire, another into an ax. It is about King Zar, the king with no
kingdom going on a "quest" to find one...he is kind to the odd people
he
meets along the way, and they end up helping him in the end.
The Fool of the World and the Flying Ship.
Maybe?
Jay Williams, The King With Six Friends.
I'm not sure that this is the title you are looking for, but it sounds
like what you are describing. I am a retired elementary schl
librarian
and had this in my former library. If more info is needed, I
could
try contacting that source.
---
I'm looking for a book I had as a child.
The story was about a prince who had 7 or 9 friends. Each friend has
some
special or "supernatural" ability. They go on a quest during
which
each friend helps accomplish some task by using his ability. In
the
end, the prince asks his best friend why he gets to be king since he
doesn't
have any special ability. His friend answers something to the
extent
that we need you to lead us. I know it's similar to the 7 Chinese
Brothers story. One vivid image I remember is the group trying to
cross a gorge. One friend can transform himself into a
snake.
His lower half, still legs, is standing on one side of the gorge; his
upper
half is stretched across the gorge and his snake mouth is biting into a
tree. The rest of the group use him as a bridge.
M210 Most likely THE KING WITH
SIX
FRIENDS by Jay Williams, 1968. The description of the
illustrations
match this book. ~from a librarian
Jay Williams, The King with Six Friends,
1968. Published by Parents Magazine Press. This is
definitely
the one.
This one sounds like The King With Six
Friends again. I helped solve it for someone else awhile
back - more details should be on the solved pages.
---
Illustrated childrens book about a king/prince
who left his land and travels with a group of unique characters. Upon
returning
to his land, he must prove himself by completing tests/trials, he is
allowed
to use his companions to complete them. One is he must eat all
the
food in a banquet room, being told that a king would be able to. His
companions
can change form, so one turns into an elephant to help eat the food,
another
turns into a man of flame who burns the rest of the food. Another
trial, he has to cross a chasm, so a companion turns into a snake to
make
a bridge to cross it.
This is a story that has been told in more
than
one version. One is Jay Williams' The King with Six
Friends
another is Arthur Ransome's The Fool of the World and the
Flying
Ship.
Parker Fillmore, Longshanks, Girth, and
Keen. This is a similar story,
found
in The Junior Classics Volume I, Fairy Tales and Fables. Supposed to be
a Czechoslovakian story.
Jay Williams, the King With Six Friends,
1968. I bet this is it -- if you are of "that certain age",
because
it was a Parents' Magazine Press book. Everyone who was in that
book
club seems to have very vivid memories of the selections! It has
great watercolor/pen-and-ink illustrations by Imero Gobbato.
Thank you so much for this site. T231 entry question has been
solved correctly. I found my long lost book Title. Thank you so
very
much
---
In the early 1970s, my mother bought an illustrated book through
my elementary school for me and my siblings. The hero was a
traveler
(Western European, Middle Ages) who comes across various characters
with
transforming powers (man-to-fire, man-to-rope,) and saves them from
predicaments.
They in turn help him complete a task for a king who rewards the
traveler.
When someone asks one of the transforming characters why the traveler
should
get credit when the "transformers" did most of the work, the
transformer
replied "He lead us".
Williams, Jay, The King With Six Friends. Apparently THE MOST popular book from the Parents' Magazine Press series.
|
Condition Grades |
Williams, Jay. The King With Six Friends. Illustrated by Imero Gobbato. Parents Magazine Press, 1968. Fine. <SOLD> |
Dr. Seuss, The King's Stilts,
1939. I don't know about this being in an anthology, but this
definitely
sounds like The King's Stilts by Dr. Seuss.
The
Kingdom
of
Binn
is below sea level and protected by Dike
Trees.
The Dike Trees have to be protected from the Nizzards who will destroy
the root system and the kingdom will be flooded. Eric the Page
has
to rouse the king to save the kingdom after his stilts have been lost.
Might have been Seuss' THE KING'S STILTS.
Long
picture
book
with
a story of the country with dike trees and how
the
cats defend the trees from the nizzards - birds which would eat
them.
THe boy is the king's page who sounds the warning and helps the king by
recovering his stolen stilts, which cheers him up and he's kingly
again,
so he can lead the Patrol Cats in defense of the dike trees.
Dr. Seuss, The King's Stilts, 1939.
Dr. Seuss, The King's Stilts. Yes, this is the story
I was trying to remember. The stilts brought it all back.
Thanks
so much!!
Kings and
Queens
was available in Canada, maybe published in England in the 1930s
- 1950s ?? There was at least one update to include Queen Eliz.
II.
Listed all the kings and queens of England in chronological order-
through
the current Queen Elizabeth. Marvelous & memorable poems &
illustrations
about each- such as, (which I remember): "John, John, bad King
John.
Shamed the throne that he sat on. Not a scruple, not a straw cared this
monarch for the law. Promises he daily broke. None could trust a
word he spoke. Till the Barons brought a deed, down to rushy
Runnymead.
Magna
Carta was its hite, charter of the peoples' rights..........etc."
Your memory is right on. Here it is:
---
Can you perhaps find for me the words of a poem by Eleanor Farjeon,
which begins John, John, bad King John, Shamed the
throne
that he sat on.....
The poem is in Farjeon's Kings and Queens.
|
Condition Grades |
Farjeon, Eleanor and Herbert. Kings and Queens. Illustrated with 38 coloured plates by Rosalind Thornycroft. London: Victor Gollancz. NY: E.P. Dutton, 1932. This early American edition goes up to King George V. Wonderful color plates. Inscription on front free endpaper. Dust jacket torn at top edge and missing a couple chunks from bottom edge, now secure in a plastic dj protector. VG/P. <SOLD> |
Benjamin Elkin, The King's Wish and
Other
Stories, 1960, approximate.
K39: I love this one, it's so clever for its
age level. Benjamin Elkin, Illustrated by Leonard Shortall. The
King's
Wish
and
Other
Stories. Beginner Books, 1960.
The King's Wish was a childhood favorite. Thank you.
Google makes it sound as if the book is Sleigh's
The
Kingdom of Carbonel.
Catherine McVicar, The grass beyond
the door. (1978) Just a slight possibility because I
can't
find a reference to a flying rocking chair in my copy, but the rest
sort
of fits. It's a chapter book with black & white
illustrations.
Miranda's cat becomes Sinbad and has mysterious powers, acting as her
guide.
Barbara Sleigh, Kingdom of Carbonel.
(1960) Darn - the server keeps eating my answers! Well...
maybe
4th time's a charm? Anyway, this has to be the one you're looking
for. Rosemary and her friend John must guard the royal kittens,
when
Carbonel, the King of Cats, is summoned away to visit the Great
Cat.
This book has both the talking cats and the flying rocking chair.
It is a sequel to "Carbonel, King of the Cats" in which Rosemary
acquires
a magic broom and a talking cat. She and John must help the cat,
Carbonel, to break an evil enslavement spell, so that he can return to
his rightful throne. There is also a third book in the series,
"Carbonel
and Calidor," in which Rosemary and John must track down Carbonel's son
and heir, Calidor, who has run off with an apprentice witch, in search
of adventure. Rosemary & John must restore Calidor's sense of
duty, so that he will return to his kingdom, and then they must also
find/rescue
his missing father, Carbonel. Original copies of these books are
rare and expensive, but "Carbonel, King of the Cats" is back in print -
with any luck, the others soon will be as well.
I think this must be the right one! I was beginning to think
I had made up the detail of the rocking chair! I've so far only located
the first and third in the series of three, the second being the one I
was searching for, and my children and I are enjoying them very
much.
I can't wait to read the second. Thank you so much. This
website
it fantastic and I wish I had found it years ago.
Ann Nolan Clark, All this wild land,
1976. Saunas are Finnish, so maybe this one? "Arriving in
Minnesota
in the late 1800's with plans to homestead, a Finnish family is faced
with
the problems of starting a new life."
#S205--Scandinavian immigrant/pioneer
child:
Well, here's a book about a Finnish immigrant: Kirsti,
by Helen Markley Miller. Garden City, New York: Doubleday
and Company, Inc., 1964. In this one, it's Kirsti's mother, not
her
father, who is dead. Her father doesn't die, but he is gone
through
most of the book, at work in the mines, leaving Kirsti with a pregnant
stepmother and winter coming on. She
doesn't
speak English and survives only with the help of Tom Kincaid, an
American
boy with whom she falls in love.
Thank you for solving a mystery for me.
I've been looking for a book about a Finnish pioneer family. I read it
sometime
before 1974 and about 5 years ago started looking for it. It's been
haunting
me ever since. The lightbulb came on when I read the blurb on KIRSTI.
Thanks.
Winifred Martin, Three Naughty Kittens,
1948. Another possibility is: A. Macgregor and W. Perrin: Smoke
and
Fluff.
This was an early Ladybird book (c. 1942) and
was a story in verse about mischievous kittens. Yet another
possibility
is Lillian Young: Pussy Willow's Naughty Kittens.
Helen Wing, The Kitten Twins,
1960. This is a Rand McNally Elf Book, called The Kitten
Twins.
See suggested solution for T168: "There were two little kittens with
eyes
of blue, One was named Twinkle, one was named Boo They tried to be good
and do what was right But they got into mischief from morning till
night!"
|
Condition Grades |
Wing, Helen. The Kitten Twins. Illustrated by Elizabeth Webbe. Rand McNally, 1966. "A Rand McNally Elf Book". Paperback. Cover is well-worn and creased, but interior is clean. G $5 |
|
Kittens
Surprise
Lost Kitten - Whitman or Golden book? 1960's, childrens book.
The story was about a little girl who was looking for a kitten all over
the house. I think the house was her grandmothers. She eventually finds
the kitten sleeping on the sofa behind a pillow. The physical
description
of the book: I believe it was a small blue book. The little girl had
dark
hair and the cat was black. The illustrations were done in a lot of
pink
and blue - Ex. the sofa was blue and the pillows were pink.
Nina. with illustrator Feodor
Rojankovsky,
The
Kittens Surprise, 1950s. A Little Golden Book later
reprinted as The Little Lost Kitten. May possibly be the
one.
Little Lost Kitten,
1950 - 1962. I have a Whitman Tiny Tales book entitled Little
Lost
Kitten. It's a 3"x 4" cardboard book with no author
or copyright information. The number 2952 is printed above the
price
tag (5 cents) on the upper right hand corner of the cover.
I was born in 1961, and have had this book as long as I can remember,
it
may have even belonged to my mother or aunt. Brother and
sister
twins, Pat and Prue, go to Grandma Winkies house for a visit. Prue does
find the kitten hiding under the sofa. However, Prue is blonde
the
kitten is a tabby and the sofa is blue with pink throw pillows.
Nina The kitten's
surprise
Feodor Rojankovsky Little Golden Book, 1951
"Nina", The Kittens Surprise.
Little Golden Book, illustrated by Feodor Rojankovsy, first published
in
1951. Later re-published as The Little Lost Kitten. Not
sure
it's the one, but seems likely.
Are K7 and K5 the same book?
#K7--Kittens, dirty: In one of these
stories,
the mother cat holds the protesting kitten down by the ear to clean
it.
Anyone recognize this?
Louise P. Woodcock, ill by Adele Werber
and Doris Laslo, The Kittens Who Hid From Their Mother,
1950.
I have a copy if the searching party is interested...
This sounds like either City Under the
Back
Steps by Evelyn Sibley Lampman or Sarah's Nest
by Harry Gilbert.
I just caught a longer description of City Under the Back Steps
under stumper G117. This does not sound like it at all - there was no
male
cousin, and she was not "shrunk". But I will still take a look as I am
desperate to find this book again!
I do not think it is the Harry Gilbert book, since the publication
date is 1981, and I know I read it in the 1970's. Thanks for the
suggestions to date!
Moon, Sheila, Knee Deep in Thunder,
illustrated by Peter Parnall. NY Atheneum 1968. I think
this
is it. The main character is a young girl who finds herself in a
strange
world (apparently based on Navajo mythology, but I wouldn't know) with
insect companions, including an ant and a caterpillar. They are as big
as she is, but it's never stated whether she 'shrunk' or that's just
how
it is there. At one point they are captured by a Beast and she has to
entertain
it by singing, and the caterpillar is used as a footstool.
I just looked at City Under the Back
Steps,
and
that is not the book. The girl was definitely the main character, and
the
creatures were of different sorts, not just ants. Thanks again! I hope
there are more suggestions!
I think Knee Deep in Thunder is it!
I have requested a copy from another library, and I will let you know!
---
I’d appreciate your help in identifying a juvenile fantasy I read
some time in the early ’70s (although it may have been published even
earlier).
A young girl is transported into a magical world. Unfortunately, I
cannot
remember any details of the adventures she has there. However, the
magical
world is presided over by a mystical creature/tutelary spirit called
(something
like) The Mantis. Despite this title, I seem to recall that he was more
like a winged stag, than insectile in form.
Perhaps Mantis by Peter Fox, St. Martin's
Press,
1979?
Sorry, no. Mantis by Peter Fox is not it. I don't think
"Mantis"
was in the title, and 1979 is much to late. I'm sure I read the book in
9th or 10th grade, which would have been '71, '72. Any other ideas?
Thanks.
Moon, Sheila, Knee-deep in Thunder.
I checked our library's copy of this, and the girl does meet a sort of
tutelary spirit called the Mantid. Several of her quest companions are
insects, including an ant and a caterpillar.
Moon, Sheila, Knee-deep in Thunder,
NY Atheneum 1967. I wonder if it might be this one. The unhappy
young
girl is transported into a world based on Navajo mythology, her
companions
are insects (she may be shrunk to their size, but it's never made
clear)
including an ant and a caterpillar. They must battle an enemy called
the
Beast, who is like a wild boar.
Sheila Moon, Knee-Deep in Thunder: This MIGHT be it!
I originally read the book, over 30 years ago, on loan from the
National
Library Services for The Blind and Physically Handicapped's Talking
Books
program. In the intervening years, the recording has been withdrawn
from
circulation. I'll have to order the book in braille, or find a more
detailed
plot summary elsewhere, to be sure. But the brief summary in the NLSBPH
database rings faint bells. Will let you know if this, indeed, turns
out
to be the solution. THANKS!
---
A girl somehow travels or falls into another world, where she helps
a group of animal-like creatures battle some other creatures. I
remember
in particular an ant-like character who sacrifices himself to save the
others. After that, the marks on the moon resemble the ant's
shape.
Eventually, the good creatures win and she returns to our world.
Moon, Sheila, Knee-deep in Thunder.
NY Atheneum 1968. This has to be it. The girl, Maris, falls into
another world
where she is the size of insects and other small
creatures. With a band of creatures including Exi the beetle, Red the
ant,
Locus the mouse and Isia the caterpillar, Maris goes on a quest to
defeat
the Beasts, with some aid and advice from the Mantid. The land has no
moon
at first as "it will not come until someone has tried" and after Red
dies,
the moon
rises. Maris looks at the moon and thinks "what
was in the moon was an ant, the contours of a wonderful red ant who
tried."
Hello! I am answering my own question! About a month ago I sent you a "stump the bookseller" question about a group of children who have time-travelling adventures involving, among others, Ivanhoe, and the herb Thyme. Thanks to a lucky break on eBay, I have discovered the book. It is Knight's Castle by Edward Eager, and he wrote 6 more books all on the same theme. I now have a list of all the titles. In the meantime could you search for any of his books for me?
Randolph, Jane, illustrated by Don
Freeman,
The
Circus in Peter's Closet. NY: Crowell 1955. This is
perhaps too late and not a close enough match, but worth considering.
"A
lonely sick boy finds friends galore in a new town and a circus that
comes
out of his closet." "The book is illustrated throughout in black &
white and black, red, & yellow drawings in Freema''s rather
representational
but friendly style. An intriguing story about a little boy in a strange
town and the curious inhabitants of his closet."
The Singing Grasshopper(?).
I'm not positive, but I think the title is the Singing Grasshopper,
though
I'm not 100% sure of that (it's definently The [word here] Grasshopper,
however). It has a yellow cover with red letters, and a picture
of
the grasshopper on the cover. The grasshopper is magical and can
talk, and it is him who gives the two children in the story the power
to
shrink the animals in the circus and zoos and carry them home in their
pockets. However, the animals soon start to grow again!
Teichner, Miriam, The Knitting Grasshopper,
1937. Located a copy of the book I had thought was called "The
Singing
Grasshopper" - it is in fact called The Knitting Grasshopper.
This
is
100%
the
book you're looking for - the book is about two
children,
boy and girl, who find a magical talking grasshopper who gives them a
rhyme
to recite - the children recite it, and shrink all the animals in the
zoo
to tiny sizes, and put them in their pockets and take them home.
The animals soon start to grow back to their original size, however,
causing
all sorts of problems!
Well, if the memories are a bit garbled and
it's
Parents' Magazine instead of Weekly Reader, it could be: Devlin,
Wende
and Harry THE KNOBBY BOYS TO THE RESCUE Parent's
Magazine
Press, 1965, 38 Pages. "Bright full page colorful illustrations
highlight
this book about Raccon, Fox and Crow [so self deemed as the Knobby Boys
'cause they liked the name] who meet Baby Brown Bear [complete with
baby
bonnet] who has no mother. Mom was captured by the gypsies. How the
Knobby
Boys save the bear for a happy ending makes for great reading."
Knobby Boys to the Rescue:
I
think
is
the
book they are looking for.
See the Devlin Tribute page for more
on these famous authors.
Harold Keith, Komantcia.
The hero of Komantcia is actually a Spanish boy kidnapped by the
Comanche,
but the episode of stealing the horse herd in order to pay the
bride-price
for the girl "Willow" (and save her from marriage to the evil "Paunch")
is definitely in there!
I wanted to write and thank you so VERY much.
All three of the books I sent in as stumpers have been solved. It was
so
fun to go to your website and check for results - a little like waiting
for Christmas. Your service is wonderful, and I thank you a
hundred
times over. The books you found for me were: O67 - "Orphan girl"
which was Faraway Dream I71 - "Indian boy," which was Komantcia
And G236 "German boy," which was The Quest.
Christine Nostlinger, Conrad the
Factory-Made
Boy.
A182 This was a Wonderworks production.
The book is Konrad oder Das Kind aus der
KonservenbüchseChristine
Nöstlinger, but I cannot find anything with regards to an
English
translation.
A182 This is KONRAD by Christine
Nostlinger, translated by Anthea Bell, first American edition,
1977.
WonderWorks made the movie. ~from a librarian
----------------
I remember this book from an
old PBS
show with John
Robbins. What I remember a woman gets a strange package. When she opens
it up
there is a small very wrinkled boy. She is told from the boy to add
water to
him. Then he transforms to a perfect blond little boy. Thanks.
Christine Nostlinger,
Conrad:
The Factory-Made Boy
(also
just
Konrad), 1983. "Mrs. Bartolotti
finds a
factory-made child, who never does anything wrong, in the
post—delivered by
mistake. The factory men try to reclaim Conrad but he doesn't want to
go."
Christine
Nostlinger,
Conrad: The Factory Made Boy, 1975. Originally "Konrad", in
German. In
this
clever
tale,
Conrad
is
a
made-to-order
boy
who
has
perfect
manners.
When
he
is
accidentally
delivered
to
the
wrong
person,
Mrs.
Bartolotti,
who
does
not
demand
perfection
from
Conrad,
the
boy
bonds
with
his
new
family.
When
the
cold
and
demanding
parents
who
actually
ordered
the
"perfect
child"
arrive
to
regain
their
lost
delivery,
Conrad
must
quickly
learn how to be naughty so that he can
stay with
Mrs. Bartolotti.
Christine
Notslinger,
Konrad
I recall
that book too. Seems the boy is programmed to be Perfect: not eat
candy, always
picks up things, likes vegetables. Over the course of things the woman
and boy
bond and want to stay together but the
people who sent the boy's canister disagree. Ultimately the woman
teaches
the boy to be Normal, that is, make mistakes, which convinces the
Perfects
she's right. Hope this helps.
Christine
Nostlinger,
Konrad. Definitely
Konrad
also
published as Conrad:
The
Factory-Made
Boy. PBS
(Wonderworks) produced it in
1985: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0167240/
Christine
Nostlinger,
Conrad, The Factory-Made Boy, 1976. I'm
not
sure
about
the
"just
add
water"
part,
but
Conrad
(also
published
in
English
as
Konrad)
definitely
involves
a
small
boy
in
a
package
being
delivered
to
a
woman's
door.
SOLVED: Konrad
or Conrad
well, i found my story a few minutes after posting my query. I'd misspelled the name. It was Kotick the white seal. Author is Kipling and i found the whole story online. Thanks... my $2 is well spent in any case to support your service.
Elizabeth Enright, Four-Story Mistake,
1940s. Near the beginning of this book Randy (Miranda) Melendy
collides
with the back of a city bus while riding a bicycle, cuts her head on
the
license plate and suffers a mild concussion.
Babbis Friis, Kersti.
In some translations called Kristy's Courage. A
possibility.
I'm wondering if "G195: Girl in Hospital - head
injury" could possibly be from Elizabeth Enright's Four-Story
Mistake?
Near the beginning of this book Randy (Miranda) Melendy collides with
the
back of a city bus while riding a bicycle, cuts her head on the license
plate and suffers a mild concussion. Thanks again for your site!
Kristy's courage. I think this is it. I am trying
to get a copy of it to make sure. That title sounds vaguely
familiar.
thanks I appreciate the effort.
___________________________________________
This is a 1960s children's book.
All I
remember is the book begins with a girl who is very sick. As she
lies in her bed she imagines strange
things, like horse hooves growing out of her face (I am not
kidding!)
I think the cover was dark blue. Pencil drawings inside.
Maybe authors name in middle of alphabet.
I think while the
sick girl is dozing in her bed having
these strange dreams, she keeps thinking Hickory, Dickory Dock. Not much more to go on...
Britt Hallquist, Bettinas Secret.Is it
possible that this book is BETTINAS SECRET?
Does anybody know how this book begins, if she is in a bed
recooperating, having weird dreams?
Kristy's Courage. I think this is it. Could somebody please confirm? I saw the cover and thought By George, I think I've got it!"
Is it possible that the title for I148 is KRISTY'S SECRET?
KRISTY'S COURAGE. Found a copy of the book, read it, SOLVED~~~
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