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Home » The Vine

The Vine, Anniversary Edition: April 28, 2010

Submitted by on April 28, 2010 – 3:16 PM29 Comments

Dear Sars,

Yet another “help me find a book to share with my kids” request is in the offing. I can’t help myself. I have Googled the living tar out of it, but I have not been able to find my adored Easter bunny book from childhood.

It features many types of Easter bunnies, such as the World Traveling Easter Bunny, and tells about their habitats and proclivities. Lots of beautiful pictures. It’s just the thing for training up junior ethnologists.

Anyone have a title or an author? It would make me really happy to find it.

Man, There Are A Bunch of Bunny Books Out There

*****

Sarah,

I have turned up nothing on my many internet searches to help me on this book hunt, so I’m hoping Vine readers can offer some assistance. I am looking for a children’s book from the late 1960s or early 1970s that involves sisters out on a walk with their dad (or were they alone? I don’t recall…sorry). They come across a carousel. While riding, their horses leave the carousel. That’s all I clearly remember from the book’s plot. I know it’s not much, but hopefully someone remembers it from their childhood.

Thanks so much!

Kristen

*****

I am throwing my hat into the “please help me find this book” ring.

I checked this book out of my middle-school library a bazillion times. Unfortunately, that library is now located far, far away from me, and I don’t know that they would be keen on letting a grown woman ransack the library looking for it anyway. And this was 20 years ago so it’s probably not there anymore.

The story takes place in England, and the chief narrative is the female protagonist’s relationship with a guy at her school, who possibly is named Mark and who has a motorcycle. He is working-class, she is not, her parents object, etc. In the house next door, there is a Jewish family with two kids. The daughter, who may be named Rebecca, is about the girl’s age and — this is what I remember most vividly — has a column in her bedroom that Rebecca covered with some sort of beautiful mosaic. The son is older than the girl, may be named Leo, and is very handsome. I think he kisses the girl at some point. The working-class boyfriend gets into a motorcycle accident at some point. That’s all I remember. I read this book over and over circa 1983-1986.

Thanks so much for any help from the TN readers…

I Can Almost Smell The Middle-School-Library Dust

*****

Hi Sars!

I have a request for the readers to help me find a book I read and can’t locate now. It was not very old, probably published in the last five years. I think it was a male author. The narrator was definitely male, and it was a first-person narrative.

This Guy is a vampire. In fact, he was instrumental in spreading the vampire virus to the extent that vampires became the dominant species. Humans are now all kept on farms where they are bred and their blood harvested.

One night, TG is out for a drive, and stops for some reason. He finds the body of a human woman in the woods who’s been slaughtered, and then back at his car finds a Young Girl of about 7 (I think), who is the dead woman’s daughter. YG stabs TG, who of course doesn’t die, and TG decides to smuggle YG back to his apartment and ends up raising her.

Some other details are that TG had to order all her food online, and it was all ridiculously expensive because food became a nostalgia/vintage item. Also TG had turned the toilet into a planter, and YG could only flush the toilet during the day so no one could hear her.

I can remember pretty much the entire plot, and I’ll tell the readers the ending if it’s necessary to identify the book. This book wasn’t a part of a series, as far as I know, it read like a standalone novel. Also, the relationship between TG and YG wasn’t sexual, in fact TG acquires a vampire girlfriend over the course of the story.

I’ve tried Googling relevant keywords, but the popularity of the genre plus the popularity of porn means I haven’t gotten anywhere. I have faith in the Tomato Nation though.

Kate

*****

Hey Sars,

The children’s book I’m trying to remember involved a young girl’s magical adventures under the sea. She is somehow given the ability to breathe underwater (or not to need to) and befriends some sea creatures, and a quest and derring-do ensue.

The vibe was very much like “The Phantom Tollbooth,” full of plays on words. I suspect it was a little older, maybe from the 1940s or 1950s, but that’s entirely a guess. It had black-and-white line-drawing illustrations.

The few details I remember:

On reaching the underwater world, the girl sees a color completely unlike any color she’s seen before, and she decides to call it “twirl.” (I remember this because I spent quite a while trying to imagine what a completely new color would look like.)

She meets, and I think befriends, a pirate named Captain Teach.

She also meets a trio of monkeys, the Evil brothers, whose names are Seeno, Hearno, and Speakno. (Get it?)

A critical task at the end of her quest involves getting a certain bird to alight in a “dimity tree.” It turns out that the phrase “The [something] bird has landed in the dimity tree” is an expression her family uses to mean that a conversation has lapsed into silence. She and her friends try to figure out how to get that to happen, and as they run out of ideas, the conversation lapses, and sure enough the bird alights in the tree and all is well.

I found this book on the shelf at the children’s library when I was maybe 10. I’ve never heard anything remotely like it since and many attempts to locate it with Google have failed. This kind of book seems to be right up the alley of your readers, and I’d love it if anyone can tell me what it was.

Readno Evil

*****

Hi Sars!

You and your readers are just so good at finding books, I have to ask your help on one that’s been bugging me for years. I read this around 2000 or 2001, as part of a high school class, which makes me think it might have won some awards/been famous/otherwise had some reason for the teacher to assign it, but I’ve never been able to Google it up. I don’t think it was a classic: it seemed like it had been written fairly recently.

The book is a novel, set in Appalachia in the 1700s or 1800s. The main plot concerned a Big-City (maybe even British?) man who came to the area for some humanitarian reason; I think he was a doctor or a teacher? I remember he fell in love with one of the local women, and when he caught some kind of fever, she took care of him. There was even a scene where she gave him a sponge-bath, which quite scandalized me and my classmates. I seem to remember that there were multiple narrators, and one of the words in the title might have been “Hollow” or “Holler.”

Possibly there was a magical-realism-type scene at the end, where a character who was accused of being a witch casts a real spell, but I might be getting that detail from a different story.

It’s not Songcatcher or Gap Creek, by the way. But if anyone else can remember this book, I will love you forever. This has been driving me crazy for years.

I didn’t even like it that much at the time, and now I can’t get it out of my head

*****

Dear Sars,

My search for an old children’s book has been constantly hampered by the fact that I remember very little of it other than the eventual solution to the mystery — and even that is dubious.

I would estimate that the book was published pre-1950; it was almost certainly set before then. I also think it was set/published in America, though I came across it in Britain.

As I recall, some sort of incident causes young siblings to relocate from the city to a smaller town where they end up solving a mystery connected to a female friend or relative (possibly an aunt) and the disappearance of her fiancé. The eventual solution to the mystery involves his identical twin, who I think was in love with the female in question, killing his brother before posing as him and undertaking some massive scheme, including signing a check at the bank very shakily (for some reason I remember that part quite vividly). I think the body of one or other of the twins is discovered to be buried in the garden or barn or somewhere after this is revealed.

The only other thing I can remember about the plot is that pies or cakes sold in little tins were a popular snack, and at some point the children had some sort of tea party using the empty tins.

I want to say that the twins could be in some way distinguished by different-coloured eyes, but I might be mixing it up with the strange events of Anne’s House of Dreams by L.M. Montgomery.

Unsurprisingly, various combinations of the words “check,” “identical twin” and “pie” have turned up very little. Can the readers possibly help?

Jenny

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29 Comments »

  • StillAnotherKate says:

    @Readno: I’m afraid I am no help at all. But thank you for putting the Phantom Toll Booth back in my head. I LOVED that book when I was a kid. I’ll have to scare it up and give it another read.

  • Krista says:

    The Appalachia book might be “Oral History” by Lee Smith. It was published in 1996 and is about a college student doing an, obviously, oral history project on her hometown of Hoot Owl Holler. I haven’t read the book in a while, but I do remember the teacher/doctor (possibly pastor?) transplant and the woman who may be a witch.

  • amyg says:

    The vampire book is VAMPED by David Sosnowski:

    http://www.amazon.com/Vamped-Novel-David-Sosnowski/dp/0743493591/ref=sr_1_3?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1272482909&sr=1-3

    Not to be confused with VAMPED by Lucienne Diver (who happens to be a friend of mine, but that’s neither here nor there).

    –Amy

  • Sara C. says:

    Kate, I am pretty sure your book is Vamped by David Sosnowski.

  • mrs f says:

    This probably doesn’t help at all, but the 2nd letter totally made me think of the part in “Mary Poppins” when their cartoon carousel animals take off across the countryside.

    Oh, and also “Phantom Tollbooth” is one of my favorites. I re-read it all the time. It’s perfect quicky bedtime reading.

  • Meri says:

    @Kate- I did some snooping, and it looks like the book you want is Vamped: A Novel by David Sosnowski.

  • Katie says:

    @Readno- Echo Platoon by Richard Marcinko and John Weisman?

  • Kriesa says:

    @Bunny Books: Could your book be The Easter Egg Artists by Adrienne Adams (http://www.librarything.com/work/440714)?

    It came to mind because you said that it had gorgeous illustrations. It doesn’t quite fit your description — it’s about a single family of rabbits (the Abbotts), but they do travel.

    I loved that book as a kid, but I’d forgotten it until your post. I’d never have found it, except that I somehow remembered the rabbit-son’s name, and googling “Orson Abbott easter egg” got me a hit. Even if it’s not YOUR book, I’m grateful to you for making one of MY old favorites surface in my mind!

  • Kriesa says:

    Dang, I did the link wrong in the post I just submitted. Try this:

    http://www.librarything.com/work/440714

  • shanchan says:

    Or “The Magic Carousel” by Dorothy Levenson? The descriptions in the reviews on the amazon page for it match your description.

  • Jen S says:

    Mrs F, I think you’re onto something. There was a whole series of Mary Poppins books and I’m positive that riding the merry go round horses across the countryside was one of the adventures they went on.

  • Deirdre says:

    Yeah, the carousel thing definitely makes me think of Mary Poppins, but I can’t remember if the chalk-drawing adventure is in the book or not.

  • Holly says:

    Middle-School-Library Dust, I know exactly the book you mean. I also read it multiple times as a teen, and but for the life of me, I can’t remember the name. I know it’s still on my old bookshelf at my parent’s house, so if the Vine Readers don’t come up with the name, I’ll take a look next time I’m there!

  • Suzanne M says:

    Jenny’s twins novel reminds me a great deal of Josephine Tey’s “Brat Farrar”, but some of the details are pretty far off, so I’m not convinced that’s the right book. The time period is roughly correct, though it’s set in England. There is a matter of a missing/dead identical twin, but in Tey’s book it’s a guy who poses as the missing twin who comes to live with the family and ultimately solves the mystery.

    Anyway. Probably wrong, but take a look at Wikipedia’s summary: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brat_Farrar

  • Suzanne M says:

    Oy. Somehow I missed that Jenny’s book is a children’s book. So that’s a pretty hefty strike against Tey’s novel, which is… well… not.

  • Readno Evil says:

    @Katie: well, the book I’m looking for is a light children’s fantasy, and “Echo Platoon” appears to be a geopolitical military action thriller. Surely you jest?

    @Suzanne M: pretty sure “Brat Farrar” isn’t the one Jenny’s looking for, but it’s one of my favorite books and has some intriguing similarities.

    Others: always glad to remind people of “Phantom Tollbooth” in any case. One of my all-time very favorite books.

  • Daisy says:

    The Appalachia book could possibly be _Christy_ by Catherine Marshall.

  • Maren says:

    re: Appalachian book, I thought it might be “The People Therein” by Mildred Lee, but that didn’t seem to be it — however, at the bottom of the page Amazon gave me the option to search for “Juvenile Fiction” and “Applachian Mountains”, which gave me Growing Up in a Holler in the Appalachian Mountains, which I think must be the book you want. *fingers crossed*

  • Belinda Gomez says:

    Chalk drawings are in the Mary Poppins movie, so yes, the book has them as well.

  • gabbiana says:

    The last description, the one with the twins and the long-lost relatives, made me think of The Diamond in the Window by Jane Langton. Of course, you’d have to be mixing books there (I don’t think anyone dies in children’s Jane Langton, most of the time), but I figured I’d mention it.

  • Andrea says:

    My first thought about the Appalachia book was “Christy” as well, but all the details are backwards: Christy is the one who comes to Appalachia for humanitarian reasons, she falls in love with a local (and the preacher too – she was busy!), she catches a fever and nearly dies. The timing is about right though; it was a television series in the mid-late 90’s, and the re-issue of the book came out around then, making it very popular with high school English teachers.

  • Middle-School-Library Dust says:

    @Holly: Oooh, please! This has been driving me even crazier since I sent this in.

  • anotherkate says:

    Vamped it is! Thanks for your help, TNers, I am heading off to the library. Can’t help on the other books though.

  • Jane says:

    Dust, is there any chance this is one of the K. M. Peyton books about Pennington and Ruth? Particularly The Beethoven Medal? I don’t remember Jewish neighbors, but it’s a book that was in a lot of school libraries and it definitely had the cross-class relationship.

  • Halo says:

    Like Daisy, I think the last one is by Catherine Marshall, but it could be A Man Called Peter if it isn’t Christy. Good luck!

  • CindyP says:

    Dear Dust: like Jane, I thought of “Pennington’s Last Term” (didn’t know there were other Pennington books until today!), but knew it wasn’t right. I asked my children’s-librarian-sister because I thought my copy had been passed along from her, and she found the answer: “My Darling Villain” by Lynne Reid Banks. She found a long description on a site that is only accessible to librarians with paid memberships (apparently–I can’t get into it, anyway) but reviews on Amazon and other brief synopses found via Google seem to prove it’s the right one.

    Can’t believe I can give back so soon after the Vine readers answered my obscure query (4/26 Vine!)

  • Trish says:

    I second (third?) the answer of Christy.

  • Brigdh says:

    I’m the person who was looking for the Appalachia book.

    @Krista – I wasn’t sure until I got a copy and read the first half, but yes, it is totally ‘Oral History’ that I was looking for! Thank you so much! You have resolved YEARS of bad memory for me.

    Everyone else, thanks for the guesses!

  • Middle-School-Library Dust says:

    @CindyP: Oh my god that’s it. That’s it! Thank you!

    Hmmm. I’m going to have to find something else to obsess over now. I’ll take suggestions.

    Thank you, TNiverse!

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