I meant to say earlier that I reread the Melendys (except for Spiderweb for Two, which was some sort of dreadful anomaly) and the Gone-Away Lake books every few years and they hold up beautifully. The girls have agency. There's very little in the way of set gender roles. They face real problems and solve them.
Do today's children read them? I think they do fine as historical fiction.
I got hardcovers of Four-Story Mistake and Gone-Away Lake. The cover of Gone-Away is the one I remember reading. Glee!! And the paperback re-issues have the same illustrations.
I love the Joe and Beth Krush illustrations.
The illustrations I have are by Enright.
I have the Joe and Beth Krush illustrations in the Gone-Away Lake books.
You're right, I think they are different, I'll have to check my copies.
I read the sample chapters of The Chocolatier's Wife and I do like it very much so far, so I bought it (still at $.99 today). Thanks for the rec, Connie.
So, anyone read Scalzi's "Old Man's War?" I'm having a really bad kidney pain day, and am thinking of indulging and buying a new book to read. Thoughts?
Thanks for the rec, Connie.
I should find a way to contact her and congratulate her for getting it out to a wider audience.
The page won't load right on the 100-year-old browser at work, but near as I can tell this is her contact page:
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