Anybody remember a YA paperback called Victoria (I believe), circa 1970s, about a girls' boarding school? The protagonist was named Dilys, which baffled me as a kid because I could never figure out how to pronounce it, and Victoria was the broody, mysterious ringleader of a clique, and turned out to have a Deep Dark Secret (not that I can remember what it was). 
Author's name is what I'm looking for, because when I search under title anywhere, I get bazillions of books about the queen instead. 
	
 
		
		
AmyLiz, is this what you're looking for?  
Victoria
is #11 on the list.
	
 
		
		
It is! Bless you! God, that was driving me crazy. And now I can buy it! 
Thanks, Kate!
	
 
		
		
In a non-fiction book intended for a popular audience, is it  OK to have an appendix to an appendix? One particular paragraph in the main section will needs a couple of thousand words to prove ; so I put it in an appendix. But then one paragraph in that appendix needs a couple of tables and some calculations to prove. I don't want to interrupt the flow  by putting it in the first appendix; but the tables and explanation are too big to reasonably fit in a footnote.  And the tables need sourcing, which sort of makes putting them in an endnote problematic.   So the appendix to an appendix seems like the best solution, but..
	
 
		
		
Maybe call it a Diagram?  Exhibit?  Attachment?  Annex?
	
 
		
		
Annex sounds  good.  Thanks Wolfram.
	
 
		
		
Tumor?
Can you just put the table at the end of the appendix and refer to it as Table X?