A reader writes:
Hello. I am on a quest to remember a book I read a long time ago. I
THINK the book involved twins. One part I remember clearly, the girl or
girls were giving tours in an old house. They accidentally found a
loose panel in a stair railing. In it was a letter written by a man
that was in love with the then owner of the house. She was told about
the letter and realized her love from long ago hadn't deserted her, he
was waiting for her. It was a touching story in a great book AND I
can't remember the title! Can anyone help me?
Monday, April 4, 2016
Friday, December 25, 2015
Vicki’s Mysterious Friend (1947)
Emma Atkins Jacobs, il. Jean MacLaughlin
1947, The John C. Winston Company
Her upstairs room was
none too warm in winter; so Vicki wriggled herself into a faded brown wool
jersey and jerked the side zipper snugly into place.
A very promising beginning, with clothing porn. In a small city in Washington, nineteen-year-old
Vicki Burnett has been stand-in mother for her four younger siblings since
their mother’s sudden death five years earlier.
She (of course) has someone to do the heavy lifting in Aunt Bertha, but
it’s to Vicki that all the million small chores come – keep Bob (14) from drifting
into trouble with his pals, wrangling the small children Donald (7) and chatty
Susan and, most of all, dealing with pretty, popular little bulldozer…er,
sister, Margery. As the book opens,
Margery blows into Vicki’s bedroom to demand big sis do some sewing for her
(she’s got a hot date). Vicki weakly protests she has to work on her sketches
(she’s a budding interior designer in college) but capitulates quickly.
At that moment the
door burst open and Margery swept in. She wore a dark gray Chesterfield coat
with a scarlet beret and mittens. Gold-blond curls framed her gay young face.
Her eyes were very blue and her saucy mouth was vividly accented with
cherry-red lipstick. She carried a green frock, which she tossed on the bed.
Somehow, it’s obvious the underlying theme of this book is
going to be sister rivalry. And indeed,
a handsome young man soon arrives at the door.
He has nearly killed Donald, who was sledding on a dangerous
street. The kid’s fine, so we’re told –
he then vanishes from the book. He
existed only to bring together Brian Royce with the mostly legal female members
of the family. They will fight over him
like cats over a fish head.
And then we switch gears and discover that their father is
sick. He owns a bakery and his hard work
and stress over supporting a large family have given him a “bad digestive
condition” and his doctor says he needs a six months break in a warmer climate
– say, southern California – to recover fully.
He stresses over who will run the business, and Vicki volunteers.
For a while, we watch Vicki struggle mildly to learn the
baking business and make inexpensive décor changes to the shop and sign. She
realizes how hard her father’s worked to support them all, and begins to wonder
if she really wants to finish that design course instead of staying with the
family business.
And then we switch out again. While the above action was going on, Margery
and Vicki had been jousting for the McGuff.. er, Brian Royce. He seems a swell guy, charms the family, dates
both sisters genteelly. But Bob,
drifting into a tough part of town, finds Royce in a seedy bar. The man
manipulates Bob, who’s found himself in a bit of a argument with the bar owner,
into keeping his mouth shut about seeing Bob in this disreputable place.
The first half is snappy and interesting enough, if not
fully realized. The mystery that begins with Royce’s strange, unsavory behavior
simply ruins the book.
Other books by Emma
Atkins Jacobs
The Secret Spring
(1944)
Far West Summer
(1949)
Trailer Trio
(1942)
Smooth Sailing
(1954)
A Chance To Belong
(1953)
For Each A Dream
(1958)
Links
Kirkus review
Sunday, October 18, 2015
Book search!
A reader writes:
I am looking for a book printed sometime in the 1940 or 1950s. Set in pioneer America about a young woman, poor relation, unpaid servant type being forced to marry much older wealthy abusive widower. Rescued by long lost brother taken as a child during Indian raids. Girl is taken to woods by brother taught to live in woods as mountain man type. Brother halls build sturdy cabin and such. Then one day disappears back to life he misses leaving sister to fend for self. After much time she rescues man from marauding Indians. Escape to Fort rescued at last minute by brother who has reverted to Indian. (Long but thought more detail better.)
I have to say, this one sounds wonderful and I'd like to read it myself. Some of it is similar to a very, very good book from 1946 called Moccasin Trail by Eloise Jarvis McGraw. I don't think it's the same book, though. Anyone?
Wednesday, October 7, 2015
More long-lost books
Two more book requests!
1) I'm looking for a vintage teen novel from the fifties or sixties about a girl who goes out for cheerleader. On the day of tryouts she realizes she has chosen an outfit that looks almost like the uniform--white sweater and navy blue skirt. She's embarrassed about that but she winds up making the squad and a bunch of new friends.
2) I'm looking for a teen novel about a girl going to Marde Gras for the first time. She winds up walking thru the streets alone. At first she enjoys her freedom but then she playfully sticks her hands in a fountain that is changing colors. It turns red and that reminds her of blood. It's sort of a gothic mystery novel.
The first doesn't ring a bell for me, but the second reminds me of Phyllis Whitney, who wrote many gothic mysteries and some for teens. She did write a New Orealeans-set book, Creole Holiday (1959). Anyone else?
1) I'm looking for a vintage teen novel from the fifties or sixties about a girl who goes out for cheerleader. On the day of tryouts she realizes she has chosen an outfit that looks almost like the uniform--white sweater and navy blue skirt. She's embarrassed about that but she winds up making the squad and a bunch of new friends.
2) I'm looking for a teen novel about a girl going to Marde Gras for the first time. She winds up walking thru the streets alone. At first she enjoys her freedom but then she playfully sticks her hands in a fountain that is changing colors. It turns red and that reminds her of blood. It's sort of a gothic mystery novel.
The first doesn't ring a bell for me, but the second reminds me of Phyllis Whitney, who wrote many gothic mysteries and some for teens. She did write a New Orealeans-set book, Creole Holiday (1959). Anyone else?
Monday, September 21, 2015
Another lost book
Another reader in search of a long-lost teen novel. Anyone recall this one?
I'm looking for a book where a young girl was attacked from behind, hospitalized and was sent drugged chocolates which her nurses ate. She recovered and went home to her father, David's estate. Her boyfriend, a photographer, turned out to be the bad guy. Her father's partner, Blair/Bruin protected her as best he could from everything, Something about a boat explosion at the end. Thanks if you can help me find this book!!
I'm looking for a book where a young girl was attacked from behind, hospitalized and was sent drugged chocolates which her nurses ate. She recovered and went home to her father, David's estate. Her boyfriend, a photographer, turned out to be the bad guy. Her father's partner, Blair/Bruin protected her as best he could from everything, Something about a boat explosion at the end. Thanks if you can help me find this book!!
Monday, September 7, 2015
Flair for Fashion (1967)
Flair for Fashion
Betty Ferm
1967, Julian Messner
A Career Romance for Young Moderns
Her black hair was brushed
to perfection and capped her head in a casual, to the shoulder length. A new
white lace blouse enlivened the dark V of her jacket, and just the right amount
of powder duster the tip of her slightly tilted nose.
And thus are we introduced to Ellen Matthews, en route to
New York to claim her prize from fashion school; a six-month internship with Countess
Gardella at the House of Etienne.
She gave the gown a
pin-tucked shirt waist bodice with a long, cuffed sleeve. The suggested fabric
to be used was chiffon, with a low-cut matching colored slip. She added a
billowing skirt and indicated that the half-inch belt was to have a round buckle
made of the same chiffon.
This design wins her the internship, and is later dubbed
Black Magic. It not only wins Ellen her shot at New York success, it will
affect all her relationships at the House of Etienne. Starting with the Countess’s son, Tony. Because the Countess is ill when Ellen
reaches New York, and Tony is in charge. And her introduction to Tony is to overhear
him say he needs an experienced assistant, not “some callow kid who’s still wet
behind the ears.”
Meanwhile, in Ellen’s personal life, she’s bunking with conveniently
placed relative Aunt Laura, who lives in New York and is largely dismissed by
Ellen and her cozy nuclear family for being a finicky spinster. Already
interested in the Saint Louis ingénue is handsome blond ad man Bill Jennings,
whose company handled the contest for the House of Etienne. Bill’s a slick native New Yorker whose innate
sneakiness fascinates and repels Ellen in equal amounts. And of course, she ends up with a thing for
her dark, suave, faintly French boss, Tony.
Extreme amounts of clothing porn. Ferm describes what virtually everyone is
wearing in virtually every scene, and makes it clear that this is Ellen’s
fascination in life. Which is
great.
He was very handsome
in a black mohair suit with a woven silk tie. He wore a French-cuffed white
shirt with jeweled cuff links that matched his tie stud….
The descriptions are rather flat and overdone. This side is rather dull, for once.
But the motivations, and the tale of a young, rather naïve girl
thinking over her instinctive reactions to various situations – those are
wonderful. At one point, Ellen giggles
at the complicated process of ordering wine, and Bill tells her something she
had never considered before – that the fashion world involved more than
creative design, that ordering wine and being a social creature was part of the
business as well. In another fine
moment, Ellen’s assumptions about a fat friend – and about her boring, old maid
aunt - are exploded. Just as Ellen is mentally giving both women – one thin and
colorless, the other fat and dressed in loud patterns – a makeover, fat Mrs.
Boorman stuns her:
“Of course,” Mrs.
Boorman remarked, as they sat down at the table, “I could look even slimmer if
I wore solid colors.” Ellen almost dropped her tomato juice. It had never occurred
to her that Mrs. Boorman understood that.
She had assumed the heavy-set woman chose her flamboyant clothes from a
lack of judgement.
Mrs. Boorman continues that she kept up with the styles for
years, obediently changing with the times to suit each era.
“Then I decided to
take a stand. I picked the colorful dresses I liked best and stuck with them.
My daughters are horrified, but I’m happy.”
The romances were dull, the 1960’s swinging New York scenes
hysterical –
Greenwich Village was
alive with activity. Ellen caught glimpses of a dungareed girl with one blond
braid down her back, a thin, bearded fellow with a canvas under his arm, a
couple swaying jerkily outside a nightclub to a drum beat that echoed savagely
from within…
- and Ellen’s career plots were as predictable as the
romances. But the underlying
characterizations were very good, and the ideas good. The larger teen romance itself was just not
good.
Links
Kirkus review
Monday, August 24, 2015
Identify this book!
A reader emailed a book description, hoping I'd recognize their long-lost teen novel.
Quick
question, have you come across or do you remember a book from the 1950s
set at a college campus within the fraternity/sorority system? The most significant moment from the book is the "golden couple"
driving off down fraternity row and getting in a car accident that kills
them both. There's a similar moment in Anne Rivers Siddons "Heartbreak
Hotel" but it's not that book.
I couldn't help; it doesn't sound familiar to me. Anyone else?
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