Showing posts with label robert mccloskey. Show all posts
Showing posts with label robert mccloskey. Show all posts

Thursday, September 17, 2020

Back to School Specials


The Thirteen Clocks, by James Thurber. Illustrations by Marc Simony.

Another acquisition from the great San Antonio Library Sale. They seemed determined to get rid of any good books they still had, or maybe they had new copies. Anyway, I had read it in college and was as pleased as punch to find this copy. A poetic book, a fractured fairy tale, and has the Golux, the only Golux in the world, and his indescribable hat. This book is the obvious ancestor of Peter S. Beagle’s “The Last Unicorn”. A book, like the Golux’s hat, that is indescribable, a mixture of whimsy, horror (the scene where the ball comes bouncing down the staircase is somehow worse than anything I’ve ever read of in many a ‘scary’ book), and magic, and must be experienced to even begin to comprehend what it is. Its library binding somehow makes it an even more authentic experience. [Not my cover.]

Ranking: Essential.

File Code: Fantasy. Novel. Hardback.


Rivets and Sprockets, Written and Illustrated by Alexander Key.

A book I read in grade school and in the public library during the summer. There were two others in the series; the first was “Sprockets: A Little Robot”, and the third was “Bolts: A Robot Dog”. Sprockets is a factory mistake: a robot the size of a boy with a brain the size of a planet (a genuine Asimov Positronic Brain!). His little brother Sprockets had only a semi-positronic brain. Together they help Dr. Bailey and his son get to Mars to answer a mysterious signal before the evil scientist Professor Vladimir Katz can claim it for the Russian government. Looking now at the dilemma of a little metal boy in a world of humans, I wonder if my own character of Athenor might not have been influenced by stealth memories of Sprockets (who also wears clothes, not a robotic or brass homuncular trait). Had no idea until years later that this was the same Key who wrote the Witch Mountain books, or “The Golden Enemy”, a book we read in middle school. We didn’t really pay much attention to author’s names back then. This copy is from the great San Antonio Library sale.

Ranking: Essential.

File Code: Science Fiction. Series. Hardback.



The Water Babies, by Charles Kingsley. Illustrations by Roberta McDonald.

Junior Deluxe Edition. For years I avoided reading this book; illustrations and adaptations I’d seen of it seemed a little too frilly and twee to me. When I read Humphrey Carpenter’s synopsis and analysis in “Secret Gardens: The Golden Age of Children’s Literature”, however, I gave it a try and found it actually deserving of its classic status. It is the story of a poor chimney sweep named Tom who falls into a stream and drowns, becoming a Water-Baby in the process. He must undergo a Purgatorial, evolutionary process as he travels through the sea and grows wiser and kinder, eventually saving his cruel former master (who also has died) from the Back of Beyond. “And thenif my story is not truesomething better isand if I am not quite rightstill you will beas long as you stick to hard work and cold water. But remember alwaysas I told you at firstthat this is all a fairy taleand only fun and pretenceandthereforeyou are not to believe a word of iteven if it is true.”

Ranking: Essential.

File Code: Fantasy. Novel. Hardback.

The Peculiar Miss Pickett, by Nancy R. Julian. Illustrations by Donald E. Cooke.

Part of the “Nanny Invasion” of America after Mary Poppins, Miss Pickett was a babysitter with peculiarly powerful spectacles. I read it in 5th Grade, I think, and what I remembered most about it was the gathering of bears that included the Big Bear, Ursa Major, with stars in its eyes. I didn’t find it all that impressive even then, except from a comparative literature point of view. I was developing an eye for sources and influences, or ‘copying’, as I called it then. Bought this ‘in memoriam’ years later. Besides, it’s a Scholastic. I find now it has a sequel, “Miss Pickett’s Secret”.

Ranking: Keeper.

File Code: Children’s Fantasy. Softcover.

The Wizard in the Tree, by Lloyd Alexander. Illustrations by Laszlo Kubinyi.

The first Alexander I ever read, in Briesemeister. If I traveled back in time right now, I could locate its exact position on the shelves. The story of the kitchen maid Mallory, who discovers a wizard who has been caught in a tree since before the magic people left for Vale Innis, an age ago. As they seek to revive his rusty powers, the two get caught up in the machinations of the Dickensian Squire Scupnor, who thinks they have seen too much of his evil plans. An entertaining book that fed my want of wizards, with nice pencilly pictures. But it wasn’t quite “The Hobbit”. Hard to believe that I read this but not “The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe”, though. A Dell Yearling.

Ranking: Keeper.

File Code: Fantasy. Novel. Softcover.

The Foundling and Other Tales of Prydain, by Lloyd Alexander. Cover by Jean-Leon Huens.

Eight tales connected to the history of Prydain, explaining some background and mysteries about the characters and objects in the Chronicles. A Dell Yearling.

Ranking: Keeper.

File Code: Short stories. Fantasy. Softcover.



Homer Price and Centerburg Tales: More Adventures of Homer Price, Written and Illustrated by Robert McCloskey.

Read these stories back in 4th grade, and they are a slice of small-town Mayberry-esque Americana, An out of control donut machine, a musical mousetrap, mail-order seeds gone wild, an ear-worm song that takes over the town, a slick salesman selling an ‘invisible’ enhancer, all lead to adventure and mayhem. I love the picture of the musical mousetrap, a vehicle to lure away the mice rather than kill them. And we can all learn the lessons taught by buying Ever-So-Much-More-So. Got these copies of newer Scholastic reprints at Half-Price.

Ranking: Keepers.

File Code: Children’s Books. Americana. Softcovers.

The 13 Clocks, by James Thurber. Illustrated by Marc Simont. Introduction by Neil Gaiman.

A New York Review Children’s Classic Collection book, with their signature red spine binding. A new deluxe edition I had to have. See elsewhere in the Inventory for my review of the book.

Ranking: Essential.

File Code: Fantasy. Novel. Hardback.


The Shy Stegosaurus of Indian Springs (Illustrated by Paul Galdone), and The Shy Stegosaurus of Cricket Creek (Illustrated by Hubert Buel, by Evelyn Sibley Lampman.

It is a truth universally acknowledged that all small children love dinosaurs. How much more can they love a dinosaur named George, the talking, peaceable last of the stegosaurus who has the chameleon-like ability to fade into the rocks and sand of the desert and thus evade detection. It’s no wonder he makes friends with the children who discover him and who then must keep his secret. I read the ‘Cricket Creek’ one back in McQueeney; I don’t believe they had a copy of the other one. When I saw these copies at the fabled San Antonio Library sale, I had to have them. They are bound in that old-fashioned school binding that somehow incorporate the cover picture into the boards; are they just bought that way or is there a process they can do? I think the ‘cricket’ in the title might have helped draw me. I always had a liking for crickets; they were harmless, easy to handle, and swarmed the school. Our grade school paper (a mimeograph) was even called “The Cricket Chirps”; its mascot was a cricket in a matador suit.

Ranking: Keepers.

File Code: Adventure. Children’s Book. Hardback.




Mr. Revere and I, and Captain Kidd’s Cat, Written and Illustrated by Robert Lawson.

Two fairly harshly used ex-library editions of Lawson’s books, one told by a horse and the other by a cat. Personally, I’d like to find a copy of “I Discover Columbus”, as told by his faithful parrot. More looks at history through the eyes of the animals who happened to be there. I read ‘Revere’ years ago in school, but still haven’t got around to ‘Cat’ yet.

Ranking: Essential. Essential. Keeper. In that order.

File Code: History. Beast Fable. Hardbacks.

Saturday, September 5, 2020

A Saturday Afternoon Meander Through Childhood


Edward Lear’s Nonsense Book/A Wonder Book, by Nathaniel Hawthorne, A Companion Library “Double Book”.
The Companion Library, besides publishing classics for children in single books, would have these reversible two-in-one books, often related in some way (though in this instance I’m not sure how). I bought this one at Yesterday’s Warehouse, to replace the Companion Library copy we had of the Lear book, which was in pretty poor shape. The Hawthorne was just a bonus. The spine-cover is missing. We had read our ‘Lear’ to rags. The best part, besides the classic nonsense poems, was “The Story of the Four Little Children Who Went Around the World”. Illustrations by the author.
Ranking: Essential.
File Code: Nonsense. Poetry. Hardback.
Mister Magoo’s “A Christmas Carol”, Adapted from the UPA Cartoon Feature by Horace J. Elias.

Illustrated by black-and-white stills. The first animated TV Christmas special. Susan got this in grade school (her name is in it), more or less on our advice; it was a way of remembering its existence (it didn’t always play every year and this was still a little before our VCR days). The book, of course, can’t convey the humor and songs of the special.
Ranking: Keeper.
File Code: Children’s Book. Tie-in. Christmas Special. Softcover.
The Haunted House and Other Spooky Poems and Tales, Edited by Gladys Schwarcz and Vic Crume. Illustrations by Gerry Contreras.
A Scholastic book, a gathering of stories and poems, many of them classic, some funny, some ‘haunting’. Vic Crume did many novelizations for Disney live-action movies, like “Dr. Syn”, “The Mystery of Dracula’s Castle”, and “The Shaggy D. A.”, which we had or have. Didn’t have this book in grade school, though John collected it later for his horror library.
Ranking: Keeper.
File Code: Anthology. Children’s. Ghosts. Softcover.
Space Witch, by Don Freeman.
Read it back in grade school as part of my “witch itch” (or did I?) but didn’t find this copy until Susan got it from Weekly Reader Books. She gave it to me later when she grew up. Pictures by the author, I assume. “Me? Ow!” says the cat.
Ranking: Keeper.
File Code: Children’s. Softcover.

Jack and the Beanstalk, and The Story of Old King Cole, Illustrated by Anne Sellers Leaf.
Published by Rand McNally. ‘Cole’ by Daphne Doward Hogstrom. Now these types of books go way back in my mind, especially ‘Jack’, long before school ever started. These “Elf Books” were very popular, and I was very taken with her art style: cartoony but solid, and brightly colored. I can’t seem to find any biographical information on her. The little ladybug crawling through the pictures of ‘Jack’ is sort of a forerunner to the waving snail in “Adventure Time”.
Ranking: Oddly Essential.
File Code: Children’s. Hardback. Pre-School.
Dorothy and the Green Gobbler of Oz, by Romeo Muller.
A tie-in to the animated special, “Thanksgiving in the Land of Oz” (1980). I think this was another ‘legacy’ from Susan’s time in grade school. Illustrated with frames from the special. Not a particularly good special or book, but … Oz collection. And a Scholastic.
Ranking: Keeper.
File Code: Children’s Book. Softcover.
Haunted Houses, by Larry Kettelkamp.
Perhaps the first book I ever read about ghost investigations and psychic phenomenon, back in grade school. This is a replacement copy. With illustrations by the author, and famous ‘ghost’ photos that I’d see replicated for years to come in other, more complicated books. A Xerox Education Publication. Quite a daring read for a young JW.
Ranking: Keeper.
File Code: Ghosts. Softcover.
Puff the Magic Dragon, by Romeo Muller.
“Based on the Song by Peter Yarrow and Leonard Lipton, with Pictures and Songs from the TV Special”. (1979) Another ‘Susan’ book. The style of the drawing was very popular through the 70’s, sort of retro-mod; I saw it on some animations from “The Electric Company” and in textbooks. Dragons! Burgess Meredith! Cartoon!
Ranking: Keeper.
File Code: Animation Tie-In. Children’s. Softcover.
A Cosmic Christmas, Written by Ken Sobol.
“Based on the Nelvana TV Special with Songs by Sylvia Tyson”. Another Susan legacy: she has written her name in it, and “I love Rudy” with a heart and arrow. One of the first Nelvana Specials in 1977, this book came out about 1979. I really liked the design of the three alien ‘wise men’ who come to Earth (a little late) to find the meaning of the ‘new star’ they sighted 2000 years ago. I liked having this book around as a reminder. I guess now I can just watch it on YouTube.
Ranking: Keeper.
File Code: Animation Tie-In. Children’s. Softcover.
The Biggest Bear by Lynd Ward.
A much-touted Scholastic book in my childhood and a slice of Americana. One of those stories about a boy who raises a wild animal and then must part with it; for a while it looks like he’ll have to shoot it, but it ends up in a zoo. We were always trying to have wild pets, from a raccoon to a squirrel to an injured owl to baby fawns. It never ended well. The artwork is great. What I remember best about it is the feasting the bear does as he grows up, on hams and cornfields and maple syrup. Looking at the book right now with the skinny little boy and the huge bear, I realize with surprise that this was probably an influence on “Elf and Bear”, especially the bear’s good-natured gluttony. This copy bought years later.
Ranking: Essential.
File Code: Children’s Book. Softcover.
 The Wonderful Looking-Through Glass, by Mae Freeman.
A Scholastic book, illustrated with photos. I got this book in 2nd grade only because it came with a cheap plastic magnifying glass, which I coveted. Magnifying glasses and magnets were just magic to me as a kid. The book has no cover but is in otherwise good shape, mainly because it was basically unread. Of course in those days we didn’t really have a special place for books, except maybe in a cardboard box later sometimes; especially in the earliest days they would often just be mixed in with the toys. And we used the magnifying glass as a prop in playings for years, even when it was too scratched to see through anymore. Only now do I see that the title might be a play on the ‘Alice’ books.
Ranking: Nostalgia.
File Code: Children’s Book. Science. Softcover.

How to Care for Your Monster, and Monster Holidays, Written and Illustrated by Norman Bridwell.
“Care” is lacking a cover and some pages at the beginning and end; “Holidays” is a replacement ‘Susan’ copy. We really dug monsters in grade school (and since), of course, and these were rather reminiscent of “The Groovy Goolies”.  Bridwell was familiar to us from the ‘Clifford’ books and ‘The Witch Next Door’.
Ranking: Nostalgia.
File Code: Humor. Children’s Book. Softcover.
Monsters of the Sea, by Barbara Lindsay. Illustrated with photos and Drawings by William Bartlett.
A Scholastic book. Some bits about sea monsters, but mostly scientific stuff about real creatures like whales, sharks, and squid. I liked both; it was the mystery and danger of the sea that fascinated me. The back cover is kind of loose; I think this was a copy bought later; maybe we had our own copy, or maybe just read it in school.
Ranking: Keeper.
File Code: Children’s Book. Science. Softcover.
Marco Polo, by Charles P. Graves. Illustrated by John Fernie.
A Scholastic book. I’m trying to remember at this distant era why I ordered this book in 2nd grade. I must have heard about Marco Polo SOMEWHERE, something about it must have appealed to me. Was it the historical setting? Was I exploring, or trying to be a smarty-pants? This little-perused book is an original purchase from the time. Pretty crumbly.
Ranking: Nostalgia.
File Code: Children’s Book. History/Adventure. Softcover.
Rabbit and Skunk and the Scary Rock, by Carla Stevens. Pictures by Robert Kraus.

One of the first books I ever got in 1st grade, this is a replacement copy. Simple, cartoony, expressive in its staging and shading, it seemed like the sort of adventure and fears that little kids could identify with. Even when Woodchuck is revealed to be behind the scary rock, his size and grin is still unsettling. It reminds me now of the evil doll in “The Nightmare Before Christmas”. Scholastic (Weekly Reader). There are several other “Rabbit and Skunk” books.
Ranking: Keeper.
File Code: Children’s Book. Softcover.

Georgie, and Georgie’s Halloween, by Robert Bright.
I knew Georgie even before school because Captain Kangaroo read the book on his show. I loved the old-fashioned junk in the Whittaker’s attic where Georgie lived, his cat and owl friends, and the dozens of little mice that shared his room. Perhaps this was an influence on the hordes of imaginary mice that lived in the walls of Loop Drive and kept Maggie and Gaylord company. A tinge of reddish-orange here and there gives the Halloween book just the right look. There are ELEVEN other books in this series, which Bright kept writing up until 1983; I was only aware of three of them, up to now. Some of the aesthetics of Georgie go right to the root of some of my tastes. Scholastic.
Ranking: Essential.
File Code: Children’s book. Softcover.
The Witch Next Door, and The Witch’s Christmas, Story and Pictures by Norman Bridwell.
The Witch Itch strikes again. A little different from most of your neighbors, but a nice person when you get to know her, the Witch next door uses her magic for everyday chores and has some cute “monsters” as pets. She even saves Santa when his sleigh gets tangled up with a space module. People are a little afraid of her until they get to know her. The little brother reminds me of Linus, with his short pants and striped shirt. There are 2 other books in this series, “The Witch’s Vacation” and “The Witch Grows Up” (about her childhood), and also “Norman Bridwell Presents The Witch’s Catalog” (not a story, but a mock catalog). Bridwell himself only died in 2014! These are replacement copies. It makes me think of how monsters and witches were metaphors during the 60’s for minorities and eccentrics (‘hippies’) and sort of training wheels for tolerance.
Ranking: Essential.
File Code: Children’s Books. Scholastic. Softcover.



Clifford the Small Red Puppy, Clifford the Big Red Dog, Clifford’s Tricks, and Clifford’s Halloween, Story and Pictures by Norman Bridwell.
Having already mentioned Norman Bridwell, we go on to his most famous creation, Clifford the Big Red Dog. This was quite a popular franchise, and again, a metaphor for non-conformity. Clifford, although he poses some problems because of his unusual size for a dog, also has many uses because of the same. There’s a place for everybody, Rudolph! There are SEVENTY SIX other Clifford books, the last (in 2015) was “Clifford Celebrates Hanukkah”. “The series helped establish Scholastic as a premier publishing company, and Clifford is Scholastic's official mascot.” – Wikipedia. It was also made into an animated TV series.
Ranking: Inescapable.
File Code: Children’s Books. Scholastic. Softcover.
The Man Who Lost His Head, by Claire Huchet Bishop. Pictures by Robert McCloskey.
A man wakes up without his head. He tries to replace it with a pumpkin and a parsnip, and then carves himself a wooden head. It is rather foolish and unfeeling and gets him into trouble. Finally, a ragamuffin boy uses some Socratic questioning to help him pin down his troubles, then uses a short sharp shock that makes the man wake up in bed with his own real head again. It’s almost a metaphor for analysis. I liked it for its whimsy: a man with a pumpkin head! The illustrations are a slice of Americana; the illustrator McCloskey (I’ll talk more about him later) was famous for writing and illustrating his own books, especially “Make Way for Ducklings”. He died only in 2003, which I find surprising. This copy is a later buy.
Ranking: Essential.
File Code: Children’s book. Scholastic. Softcover.
 Harvey’s Hideout, by Russell Hoban. Pictures by Lillian Hoban.
A tale of sibling rivalry. While Harvey Muskrat and his sister Mildred are at odds, they pretend that each belongs to a secret club to make the other jealous. I envied Harvey his competence and independence: he could build a raft and light a fire, and he had his own secret hideout – though it was rather lonely. I wanted adventures – just safe adventures, I guess. I’m still pretty timid. This is my original 2nd grade copy, and it shows its age.
Ranking: Precious Antique.
File Code: Children’s Book. Softcover.
City Mouse – Country Mouse, and two more mouse tales from Aesop. Pictures by Marian Parry.
We had a copy of this years before, from my 1st grade year, I think. This is a replacement copy bought during the Susan era, secondhand, I presume (it has “Irene” on the cover), but Susan wrote her name in it. Mice, of course, were another of my old obsessions when it came to kid’s books. A Scholastic.
Ranking: Oodles of nostalgia.
File Code: Children’s Book. Scholastic. Softcover.
Uncle Wiggily Goes Camping, by Howard R. Garis. Illustrations by Lang Campbell.
The writing inside says it belonged to “Harold Kurtz in 1944”. It is a little board book in rough condition, but it has great pictures and both covers still, and sold for ten cents. I loves me some period Uncle Wiggily. Skeezix and the Pipsisewah (looking much as they did in the board game) are up to their old tricks.
Ranking: Keeper.
File Code: Ancient Children’s book. Hardback.
Walt Disney’s Grandpa Bunny, Told by Jane Werner. Adapted by Dick Kelsey and Bill Justice.
A Little Golden Book, read (and more importantly, looked at) very early at McQueeney. Talking about the colors made me SEE the colors, and that, with the Disney house style, made a deep impression on me. The autumn leaves, the blue shadows on the snow, the transparency of the green leaves, appealed to some sort of artistic yearning in me. The fact that it ends with a gentle metaphor about death is a bold and melancholy yet comforting move. It also appeared (in shortened form) in “Walt Disney’s Story Land”. This is a newer copy bought later.
Ranking: Essential.
File Code: Children’s Book. Hardback.
Walt Disney’s Donald Duck’s Toy Sailboat, Told by Annie North Bedford, Pictures by the Walt Disney Studio, Adapted by Samuel Armstrong. (2 Copies)
A Little Golden Book, these are both replacements for our original copy. The older one has Susan’s name in it, the other (secondhand and newer) “Bobby Nance”. The appeal for me: the golden autumnal leaves, the acorns (I’ve always been an obsessive/compulsive gatherer – I still pick up random acorns), the use of a model by little characters as the real thing – these were all to my tastes. Did it start here? Maybe. It was early enough.
Ranking: Essential.
File Code: Children’s Book. Hardback.
Duck and His Friends, by K. and B. Jackson. Pictures by Richard Scarry.
Aunt Melva and Uncle David gave us this book, and I think it must have been Darlene’s (I didn’t know her given name was Wilma until years later, and it has “Wilma Rauch” written in it). I loved this book. The idea of building a raft and paddling down the river on an adventure possessed my dreaming soul. Also the pictures of buttery pancakes, eaten with honey. I certainly identified with the timid duck, afraid to swim. A Little Golden Book that’s missing its cover but otherwise complete.
Ranking: Essential.
File Code: Children’s Book. It was originally a Hardback.
Smokey the Bear, by Jane Werner. Pictures by Richard Scarry.
Another Little Golden Book, ubiquitous when we were kids. Probably helped with my obsession with bears. I recall particularly noticing his bandaged paws after the fire, held with safety pins. Ends with fire safety tips, where cigarettes are called ‘smokes’ – simpler to read, I guess, but a strangely antiquated term now. The condition is a little rough; secondhand.
Ranking: Keeper.
File Code: Children’s Book. Hardback.
Captain Kangaroo and the Panda, by Kathleen N. Daly, Pictures by Edwin Schmidt (1957); and The Golden Egg Book, by Margaret Wise Brown, Pictures by Lilian Obligado.
Two Little Golden Books. The “Captain” was in a lot Susan and Andy bought at auction; I imagine the “Egg” was from the same garage sale as that copy of Donald Duck’s Toy Sail Boat”. They are good, but not a lot of emotion attached to them, as I got them years later.
Ranking: Keepers.
File Code: Children’s Books. Hardbacks.


Walt Disney’s Santa’s Toy Shop, Illustrations by The Walt Disney Studio and Adapted by Al Dempster; Jingle Bells, Story by Kathleen N. Daley (based on the Traditional Christmas carol), Pictures by J. P. Miller; The Night Before Christmas, by Clement C. Moore, Illustrated by Corinne Malvern.
All Little Golden books, two (‘Toy Shop’ and ‘Night’) from Bobby Nance again, and ‘Bells” from John Burgett, but all bought in a bundle, I seem to recall. ‘Toy Shop’ has all the delights of a Disney production, and ‘Night’s style is that solid highlighted style of the late 40’s -early 50’s, while ‘Bells’ is more stylized, like an old quilt. Nice, but again, not much emotional attachment to them, just technical admiration.
Ranking: Keepers.
File Code: Children’s Books. Hardbacks. (I suppose I should say, ‘board books’?)