Monday, April 22, 2013

Along the Brook - 1931



You can view the copyright announcement here.  It's right next to The Greedy Goat!

"With drawings of fifty common plants and creatures, by Margery N Wilson"... who is, alas, lost to the internet.


The book was actually called Along the Brook, what you will find there and how to name it, and it has survived better than "Along the Shore." At least, it's on Amazon and Along the Shore is not.

According to this source, his full name was Raymond Tifft Fuller, he was born In 1889 and died in 1960. He wrote several books for young naturalists (you can read a review of one of the later ones here.)

 He also wrote a book about the passion play in Oberammergau (written in 1934, which was its 300th anniversary and the year the Nazis tried to take it over and turn it into some kind of Jew-hating "peasant festival" )You can read the book here. I skimmed parts of it and gathered that the beer in Munich is really, really, good and the play is NOT COMMERCIAL AT ALL,  M'KAY! Mr. Fuller had attended the 1930 version, but wrote this book before the 1934 play took place. The book appears to be more about urging people to visit Germany than it is about the play itself, specifically it's about how nice these German tourist bureau people are to give us such a good exchange rate.

Germany in 1934 was not poised to descend into the depths of evil. It had already descended. Dachau concentration camp had been open since 1933. Dachau is only about 65 miles from Oberammergau. The books where already burning. The Nazi party was the only legal party. Hitler was dictator of Germany. The Gestapo were open for business. Jews were no longer second class citizens, they were not citizens at all. They were boycotted, forbidden to own land or arms or run newspapers. They were steadily losing any rights they still possessed and it was getting worse. This was already in effect.

So, was Mr. Fuller evil? I doubt he was conscious enough for that. I think he had one of these:
...But that dosn't make me feel any better.



Friday, April 19, 2013

Pinafores and Pantalets - 1931

I couldn't find out anything definite about the authors of this book. They are both credited with writing other things, so I presume they existed.
The review in Parents' makes it sound like the story took place in colonial times; but from this review of Pinafores and Pantalets it appears that 1864 was the year in which "children's lives where considerably simpler than they are now."

Considerably simpler, because we where only having a civil war at the time.

In 1931 the Civil War had ended 66 years previously. Because so many had enlisted so young, there where many civil war veterans still living in the 1930s. (Albert Woolson was the last surviving civil war veteran, he passed away in 1956.)

Wednesday, April 17, 2013

Gay Madelon - 1931


It must have existed because you can get it on amazon, they even have a picture of the cover:

I can't find much about Ethel Calvert Phillips, except that she was quite prolific and wrote children's books from the nineteen-teens through the 40s.
There is slightly more information on Ilsa Martha Bischoff (1901-1990); This Source says:
"Ilse Martha Bischoff was born on November 21, 1901 in New York City, to Adele Maria Timme Bischoff and Ernst Bischoff, founder of the Ernst Bischoff (pharmaceuticals) Company of Ivoryton, Connecticut.
From 1928 to 1946, Bischoff illustrated 12 books and wrote two novels about George Washington's Portraitist, Gilbert Stuart: Painter's Coach in 1943, and Proud Heritage in 1949. Her autobiography, Drive Slowly: Six Dogs, was published in 1953. She was also an avid collector of Meissen porcelain."


Monday, April 15, 2013

Boochy's Wings

Yes, the reactions to this book (and to Ms. Weaver's other two books Frawg and Pappy King)are exactly what you would expect, ranging from This to This.

But what I want to know is, what does Alice Dalgliesh have against chickens?

Annie Vaughn Weaver is better known as Ann Weaver Norton, the name she used during her career as a sculptor.(She did blocky quasi-Egyptian stuff like This.) Apparently she only wrote three books, to earn money for art school. Her estate is now a "sculpture garden" and its website does not mention Ms. Weaver's books at all.

Friday, April 12, 2013

The Goat who Wouldn't be Good - 1931


Not to be confused with the Greedy Goat.

All the information I can find about Zhenya Gay (1906-1978) is Here. The Goat Who Wouldn't be Good is available used from amazon, so it must have existed at some point.

Wednesday, April 10, 2013

The Twin Lambs - 1931

Marjorie Flack (1897-1958) was the author of The Story About Ping! We met the illustrator a couple of days ago.

Helen Fuller Orton (1872-1955) was a prolific writer and mostly wrote books whose titles started "Mystery of the__" The Little Lost Pigs was another of her books, published in 1925. The Twin Lambs is available used, but I could not find a cover picture.
Stokes publishing had some prime ad space down the side of the page:

  

I've never seen any pigs riding elevated trains; but I have heard of  This Monorail.

Monday, April 8, 2013

Nip & Tuck, the Naughty Dauchshunds - 1931


An "unimportant" German picture book, as opposed to that "Worthwhile" German book we saw last week! It is mentioned but unavailable on both amazon and googlebooks.

I think that Willy Planck (1870-1956?) was primarily an illustrator, you can see a selection of his work at allposters.com ( my personal favorite is here) and you will note that his name never appears alone on amazon.
Christine Turner Curtis seems to have written mostly verse.

I learned a new phrase today:
"Der Artikel „Willy planck“ existiert nicht in diesem Wiki."

Friday, April 5, 2013

North America - 1931

Googlebooks says that it was 383 pages. 

Lucy Sprague Mitchell (1878-1967) was the founder of the "Bureau of Educational Experiments"** a "progressive" establishment which is now the Bank Street College of Education and the Bank Street School for Children. She was the first Dean of Women at U.C. Berkeley, wrote scads of books (including a Little Golden Book) and does not have her own wiki page. She is still much beloved by the mainstream educational community, if a google search of her name is any indication.

She was married to Wesley C. Mitchell, an economist. Both of them where heavily influenced by John Dewy,who doesn't strike me as someone I would want to educate my child.

Let's end with a happy thought:
Where have we heard the name Kurt Wiese before? Why, he illustrated The Story About Ping!
Good stuff.

**This name creeps me out.

Wednesday, April 3, 2013

Sue Sew and Sew - 1931

I would love to be able to find this book. I've been sewing dolly clothes for most of my life!

Wanda Gàg(1893-1946) is most famous for Millions of Cats, but my favorite of her books is The Funny Thing. Asta, Dehli and Flavia where three of her six younger siblings. As far as I can tell, this is the only book they wrote.

This article is about some people who teach a sewing class based on this book to children at the house where the Gàgs lived. There is a small picture of the cover at the link, you can click on it to make it bigger. Based on the picture, I don't think that Sue was a "Sunbonnet Sue."

I would like to think that Sue was one of the dolls that the Aminal did not eat, thanks to Bobo and his inspired invention of Jum-Jills.

Was the "effort to be light and frolicsome" "overdone"? I can't say. The only copy I found for sale was $150 plus shipping.

Monday, April 1, 2013

Young Germany - 1931

Oh. My.


You can see the whole book at archive.com, but don't if you're feeling queasy.

A sample from page 23:
"About thirty years ago a very important thing happened in conservative, disciplined Germany. Youth revolted against the materialistic world created by their elders. They said " we will make our own lives, we will develop our own ideas. We refuse to be ruled by the old."
Which, of course, led to This  and This.

More information about German Youth movements of the 1930s can be found Here.

Bear in mind that this was written in October of 1931. Japan had already invaded Manchuria. In Germany the Nazi party was the second largest in the country.Mein Kampf was a best seller. It was down hill all the way to the ovens.

Who was Anne Merriman Peck? I couldn't find any definite information. I think she was either evil or criminally naive. If you do look at the book, take the time to wiki any names. Most are not people I would give a dog I liked, let alone want them near my children. For instance Isadora Duncan and Klaus Mehnert are both mentioned in a positive manner.

To wash your eyes out, I recommend this.