Friday, June 20, 2014

My own Shelf Discovery

Thinking about the old books in my last 2 posts has made me remember Lizzie Skurnick's great book about remembering the books you read in childhood/teenhood.
After reading it, I made a list of all the books I remember reading from age 0 to 14. That was fun! Make a mental note to put that list on the blog.

Thursday, June 19, 2014

Fondly Remembered

I'd like to track down Finders Weepers by Miriam Chaikin, which I read at age 9 or 10. The only cover image I can find on the world wide web isn't quite satisfactory. The illustration by Richard Egielski is fine, but only part of it was used on this reprint cover.
Finders Weepers is a sequel to I Should Worry, I Should Care, but I never read the first. Maybe my copy came from a box of books ordered through a Troll flyer at school. It was a surprise assortment, where you knew only how many items there would be, but not the titles. It must have been a way for them to get rid of overstock. The element of surprise was genius. I was very happy with my assortment.

Wednesday, June 18, 2014

Finding That Book I Read in Childhood

I had a great experience using goodreads.com to help me find a book. There is a discussion group called "What's The Name of That Book???". I posted my query on August 7, 2013 and was reunited with the title on April 25, 2014.
I remembered so, so much of the plot, but was so, so clueless of title and author. When the author turned out to be Florence Parry Heide, it clicked. I met and fell in love with The Shrinking of Treehorn a few years ago, and her name sounded very familiar. Turns out that Time's Up is the reason!
Similarly, I came to admire illustrator Marilyn Hafner through other books, not realizing I'd seen her in Time's Up. In the edition I read, she did not draw the cover, but her interior drawings were there. I have yet to get a copy and re-read as a grown-up, but I will, eventually.

Monday, June 16, 2014

Yesterday In Books

In belated honor of Father's Day, here's a shout out for a wonderful book.
The first time I read this book, while babysitting Ethan Unklesbay, I laughed out loud when I reached the movie theater page. The cover image here bears the Reading Rainbow logo. I am very glad to hear of Lavar Burton's recent success raising funds via Kickstarter in order to revive the beloved TV show. It's neat that the show meant so much to him.