![]() ![]() Hitty, Her First Hundred Years by Rachel Field. But as a child I loved the world he portrayed, both inside Marcella’s nursery and out of it.Ħ. Gruelle’s writing very easy to read aloud it feels stilted and arch. As I mentioned the other day, I don’t find Mr. May I count a toy rabbit as a doll? Kate di Camillo’s melancholy The Miraculous Journey of Edward Tulane, which captivated us as we drove across Oklahoma and Missouri last summer, seems to me to deserve a place on this list.ĥ. But I remember the delicious chill up my spine when I (around age eleven) first encountered the sinister gleam in the eyes of that doll family out for revenge.Ĥ. NOT a hit with everyone here: decidedly too creepy for some. Creating a house for two homesick Japanese dolls helps a girl get over her own homesickness. Has probably been read a cumulative total of thirty times by my three oldest daughters. Miss Happiness and Miss Flower by Rumer Godden. Rose went through a long period of attachment to this book after I made her a (highly imperfect) cloth doll when she was seven or eight years old.Ģ. ![]() What else? Rebecca Caudill’s The Best-Loved Doll, of course! I adored this book as a child I found the girl’s devotion to her scuffed-up, faded, frazzle-haired doll deeply touching and believable. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |