Thursday, August 31, 2023

Home Is Where the Book Is by Holly West

 The winner of Carl Vonderau's SAVING MYLES is Kait! Email me at julia spencer fleming at Google mail and I'll connect you with Carl.

 

 

JULIA SPENCER-FLEMING:  It's the most wonderful time of the year... for crime fiction lovers. Today marks the official start of the 2023 Anthony Boucher Memorial World Mystery Convention, known to one and all as Bouchercon. What better time to have as our guest Holly West, the editor of KILLIN' TIME IN SAN DIEGO, the official anthology of this year's conference. Holly has assembled a California-sized collection of amazing authors to show us the underside of "America's Finest City."

Like much of crime fiction, each Bouchercon is rooted in its unique location; the ins and outs and quirks of setting are integral to both the books we love to read and to the conference where we celebrate them. There is no frigate like a book, and Holly is here to evoke the days when we first fell in love with that magical sort of traveling. Stick around to share your experience, and you might win a copy of KILLIN' TIME IN SAN DIEGO!

 

 



London, England, is the first place I remember falling in love with through books. Peter Pan, Mary Poppins, Paddington Bear, and others all brought the city to wondrous life for a girl who lived in a small Northern California town that held none of the excitement, magic, and delight that a place like London did. Since then, I’ve visited London (in books and in person) many times, and it never fails to charm me, so much so that I set my two novels in a seventeenth-century version of the city.

 

(I also married an Englishman. Make of that what you will).


London, of course, was just the beginning of my childhood world travel through books. The All-of-a-Kind Family had me longing to visit the Lower East Side of New York City, circa 1912. I desperately wanted to see Pippi Longstocking’s Villa Villekula, or Mrs. Piggle-Wiggle’s farm. But one book dominated all of them, even those set in London.

 

Three Without Fear by Robert C. DuSoe, is about Dave, a boy who is shipwrecked off the coast of Baja, California, and meets orphans Pedro and Maria, who are traveling up to San Diego with their dog, Chico, to live with their grandmother. Despite a language barrier, Pedro and Maria invite David to accompany them, and during the journey, they teach him survival skills like saltwater distillation, clam digging, tortilla making, and hunting. We eventually learn that Pedro and Maria are on the run, and the three of them must also avoid detection by their pursuers.

 

It's impossible to say how many times I checked Three Without Fear out of our local library or how many times I’ve read it. Books were my comfort then and remain so, and Three Without Fear was my favorite balm. My family took vacations every summer, usually to the Northern California coast nearby to where I grew up, and I spent many an afternoon with my toes deep in the wet sand, hoping to find a clam we could roast on the campfire and eat with fresh homemade tortillas, the way Pedro and Maria taught Dave to do.

 

(Spoiler alert: There was no campfire—Motel 6 was my parents’ accommodation of choice. The tortillas were store-bought, and the only clams I ever ate were in the clam chowder we sometimes ate from bread bowls).

 

I can’t fully explain my childhood obsession with Three Without Fear, but the book also served as an introduction to Mexico, Baja California, and San Diego. As an adult, I became interested in genealogy and learned that my grandmother’s side of the family hails from Baja California. My great-great grandfather was born in Tecate, and he’s buried in San Diego, along with many of my other ancestors (and Raymond Chandler). If I believed in such things, I’d say that the psychic connection to long-dead family might’ve somehow triggered my love for the setting, but I’m content to accept that it’s simply a coincidence.

 

The point is that, as readers, we become world travelers at a young age, and those places stick with us for a lifetime, no matter where we go or what else we read later. I began this post speaking of my love for London, but, as it turns out, my reading heart was much closer to home.

 

What was the first place you remember falling in love with through reading?

Attending Bouchercon? Please join us for a celebration and signing of Killin' Time in San Diego on August 31, after the Opening Ceremonies in the Grand Ballroom. 

 

Welcome to San Diego, where the perpetual sunshine blurs the line between good and evil, and sin and redemption are two sides of the same golden coin.

Killin’ Time in San Diego is a gripping anthology edited by Holly West, featuring twenty of today’s best crime and mystery writers. Published in conjunction with Bouchercon 2023, this new anthology peels back the postcard-perfect image of San Diego to expose its darker side.

With contributions from #1
New York Times bestseller C.J. Box and the Edgar-award-winning author Naomi Hirahara, plus a new story from Ann Cleeves OBE, published for the first time in the U.S., Killin’ Time in San Diego showcases an impressive lineup of writers, including Mary Keenan, C.W. Blackwell, J.R. Sanders, John M. Floyd, Kathy A. Norris, Kathleen L. Asay, L.H. Dillman, Richie Narvaez, Wesley Browne, Désirée Zamorano, James Thorpe, Kim Keeline, Victoria Weisfeld, Anne-Marie Campbell, Jennifer Berg, Tim P. Walker, and Emilya Naymark.

From the haunted hallways of the Hotel del Coronado to the tranquil gardens of Balboa Park, from the opulent estates of La Jolla to the bustling Gaslamp Quarter,
Killin’ Time in San Diegois your ticket to the hidden side of “America’s Finest City.” 


Holly West is the editor of Killin’ Time in San Diego, the Bouchercon 2023 anthology (August 30, Down & Out Books). Her previous work includes the Mistress of Fortune historical mystery series and numerous short stories. She also edited the Anthony Award-nominated anthology, Murder-a-Go-Go’s:Crime Fiction Inspired by the Music of the Go-Go’s.

67 comments:

  1. Your Bouchercon anthology sounds like a perfect tribute to San Diego, Holly . . . .

    I can’t remember falling in love with a particular place that I’d read about as a child, perhaps because my childhood reading obsession was with science fiction and I dearly wanted to head off into space with Tom Swift or Lucky Starr . . . .

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    1. This is a great answer just the same!

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    2. Joan, the first place I fell in love with through a book was the Marvelous Mushroom Planet, so I'm right there with you!

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    3. Now I'm trying to think of an "out of this world" place I loved as a kid... nothing is coming to mind immediately but I'm sure there was at least one place.

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  2. I think the first place I fell in love with through reading was The Hundred Acre Wood. I still love Winnie the Pooh and all his friends.
    Hope everyone has safe travels for Bouchercon and a great time exploring San Diego. I look forward to reading about your adventures.

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    1. I guess I forgot to put my name on my comment today!

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  3. Congratulations on the Boucheron Anthology, Holly. Hank has described how much work goes into creating one and this one sounds enormous.

    I was not place obsessed but I was animal obsessed in my childhood reading selections. I read a lot of books about dogs and horses. I wished I could visit the day when transportation meant horses and carriages and wagons. I also read a lot of Nancy Drew. Looking back, I can understand how a reader can be drawn into a location and feel its pull. It is the way most of us traveled during the pandemic.

    Have a wonderful time a Boucheron!

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    1. Judy, I was the same - how I wished I could have one of the collies of Sunnybrooke Farm or one of the wild ponies of Chincoteague! Alas, we were a constantly-moving military family, so pets were out of the question - except in books.

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    2. Thank you, Judy!

      One of the books I loved, and still love, was 101 Dalmations by Dodie Smith. But that might've been as much for the London location as the pups themselves.

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  4. Holly, welcome to Jungle Reds!

    May I ask how you discovered the book THREE WITHOUT FEAR? This is the first time I heard of the book and now I want to read it. I will look for it at the library.

    Reading storybooks, I wanted to visit Castles. Years later when I was older, I learned that there are very few castles (if any) here in the USA while there are more Castles across the pond. I wanted to visit Prince Edward Island after reading Anne of Green Gables. Perhaps someday.

    Reading Winnie the Pooh, the Beatrix Potter stories and many wonderful stories set in England, Scotland, Wales and Ireland, I wanted to visit the Peter Pan statute near the Kensington Gardens, the Paddington Station in London, and have Afternoon Tea at Bertram's Hotel. Reading the fairytales by Hans Christian Andersen, I wanted to visit Denmark.

    In real life, I visited the UK and Europe many times. In Paris, I recognized the places from the Madeleine storybooks. In London, I recognized the places from many storybooks set in London. And I got to see the inspiration for the Hans Christian Andersen storybooks in Denmark.

    Reading books, I can travel anywhere.

    The Anthology looks wonderful. I want to read the stories in the anthology. Looking forward to Bouchercon in a couple of days! It will be wonderful to see you, Carl, Rhys, Hank, Deborah, Jenn, Lucy and many friends at Bouchercon.

    Diana

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    1. And Congratulations on the Anthology! Diana

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    2. Hello, Diana! My fourth grade teacher, Mrs. Boravicka, read us THREE WITHOUT FEAR, along with the Mrs. Piggle-Wiggle books and Pippi Longstocking. Teachers are a wonderful source for all kinds of great books.

      I'm looking forward to seeing you!

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    3. Diana - wanted to share how much I enjoyed your post from earlier this week. This is chemo day for Amy, so I have a bit of time to myself. Sorry i could not comment before, have reserved the book.

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  5. Editing an anthology sounds like even more work than writing a novel. Also, a lot like herding cats! I have great admiration for those of you who have taken on such a challenge, including Holly and Hank.

    Regarding Three Without Fear: kid empowerment is amazingly powerful for children. Reading about kids on their own, managing really difficult situations without the help or intervention of adults, was something I was also drawn to as a child. Beany Malone was 14 or 15 and she managed her own, mother-deficient family with aplomb. That always appealed to me, as well.

    The Bobbsey Twins at the "seashore" were my gateway travel vehicle. I remember being so full of wonder at the idea of the sea--something I had trouble envisioning from Ohio. It still fills me with awe to see the ocean, whether from the shore or the air, it is just unimaginably vast, but teeming with unseen life and drama.

    Holly, I have also been obsessed with places I now know that I have deep, centuries-old connections to. I always knew we had French and Hungarian roots, but had no idea that one great grandmother's line can be traced clear back to pre-Mayflower England, a place I've returned to in fiction, over and over. Makes you wonder.

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    1. Karen, your comment about kid empowerment reminded me of another book I loved as a child: Walkabout, by James Vance Marshall. Similar to Holly's Three Without Fear, it has two fish-out-of-water Americans helped by a native of the setting; in this case, an aboriginal teen on his walkabout. Such a powerful novel for a young person.

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    2. Karen, that's an interesting observation you had about our innate ties to places, and generations, we might not even be aware of (until we are, and then, it's magical)!

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    3. Julia, when I was about ten or eleven I read a story or a book about a young girl who got stranded on an island with only her suitcase, the contents of which had to suffice for all her needs. That caught my imagination, and for years I kept revising in my mind what I would need in such a situation.

      I didn't know how I could possibly carry luggage stuffed with all the books I'd need!

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    4. By the way, I thought Walkabout sounded familiar. There was a movie made from the book in 1971!

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  6. Question: How much is the Anthology? $20? $30? I'm asking so I know how much cash to bring.

    Thank you,
    Diana

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  7. I couldn’t go to San Diego this year but reading stories inspired by the place seems a good way to begin to know it. Congratulations Holly on the work you did on the anthology . I’m looking forward to reading it.
    I already was an adult when reading became essential in my life. Historical novels were my first love. Lots of them took place in England and Scotland and brought me to visit many years later.
    But the most fascinating place for me have always been Australia. Beginning with Colleen McCullough’s The Thorn Birds, I read tons of books taking place in Australia and still do. I had to wait retirement to visit but enjoyed every minute of the travel.
    Danielle

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    1. You're a better woman than I am, Danielle - Thorn Birds didn't make me want to visit Australia, it made me want to have a forbidden romance with a sexy Catholic priest!

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    2. Oh, The Thorn Birds. What a wonderful book. I was introduced through the mini series but later read the book and loved it.

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    3. The music from the mini-series! That and the sexy priest, yeah, swoon-time!

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  8. HOLLY: Kudos for your work on this year's anthology. And it was nice to meet you in person last evening.

    Being a big city kid from Toronto, I was obsessed with the wide open prairie depicted in the Little House on the Prairie books by Laura Ingalls Wilder.

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    1. Grace, it was lovely to meet you and chat a little bit. I hope you enjoy the convention. And I, too, loved the Little House books. But my favorite remains Little House in the Big Woods.

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  9. Congratulations on the anthology. Bouchercon sounds like a really fun time!

    My mom became an anglophile as a child through reading about England== and then had an opportunity as a young children's librarian to work for a year there. She came home with my dad in tow. Some of the first books our parents read us were A.A. Milne's, so from an early age I wanted to see the changing of the guard at Buckingham Palace (Christopher Robin went down with Alice). I also adventured with Pippi Longstocking and Mrs. Piggle Wiggle, but never ran into Three Without Fear--it sounds great! My twin and I spent a lot of time in Oz as well (mom had a collection of Oz books from her youth). We enjoyed Beverly Cleary's books, which were set in my grandparents' neighborhood, just across town. I remember mom bringing home The Secret Garden from the library and reading it to us. She especially wanted us to experience the beauty of Yorkshire through that book, because dad grew up there. I still remember the descriptions of Dickon out on the moors watching the larks soar. It did make an impression, and I have been lucky enough to visit a number of times.

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    1. Gillian, the ultimate win for any anglophile must be coming home with a piece of the UK in the form of a spouse!

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    2. Gillian, you've reminded me of one of my all time favorite books, The Marvelous Land of Oz. My father picked up an old copy—I think it's a first edition, I should check, because I still have it—at a garage sale when I was a kid and I've read it countless times since.

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  10. Hank Phillippi RyanAugust 31, 2023 at 8:48 AM

    Congratulations! Cannot wait to grab this marvelous sounding Anthology… Headed for the airport in two hours! See you soon…!

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  11. Congratulations on your anthology publication!

    I fell in love with Helene Hanff's London in 84, Charing Cross Road.

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  12. Waving hi to Holly - hope I'll see you around the hotel today! As a Southern California kid, I'm surprised I never read Three Without Fear. It sounds like my kind of book.

    I also fell in love with 1912 New York, and with the Wisconsin woods and on to the prairies with Laura and her family. Can't wait to get my hands on the anthology!

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  13. What a great question, Holly! Congratulations on the anthology... SO much work with a great result.

    I fell i love with the Plaza Hotel (NYC)... and I wanted to climb up and down those stairs and hang out by the potted palm in the Oak Room with Eloise (by Kay Thompson with fabulous illustrations by Hilary Knight). I read that book so many times it fell apart. When I was older the award would have to go to PEI to look for Anne of Green Gables.

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    1. Hallie, didn't we all want to live in PEI? One of the things I loved about the 1985 miniseries was all the gorgeous locations they filmed in.

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    2. Thank you, Hallie!

      I hate to admit this, but I've never read the Anne of Green Gables books!

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  14. Congrats Holly. What a great sounding anthology. Look forward to it.

    I love all the English children's books - those you mentioned plus Winnie the Pooh's 100 Acre Wood, Peter Rabbit (set in the Lake District which was actually Beatrix Potter garden), and of course all the mysteries set in England such as du Maurier's haunting Rebecca, Miss Marple & Hercule in Miss Mary's Mead (fictional), and walking the streets of London with Sherlock Holmes. So much of great literature seems to have come from England (Shakespeare -- he also took us all over Europe, Dickens, the Lake District poets, etc).

    The children's book 3 Without Fear sounds wonderful. I will try to find it so I can share it with my grandkids.

    Enjoy Bouchercon!

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  15. Holly, this question really describes my early reading experiences! Books took me to places that opened the world for me. One book in particular stands out--although I can't recall the title or author. The drawings remain vividly etched in memory. A young Native American child on the plains--the annual buffalo hunt--where the buffalo were driven into an enclosure. I wanted so much to see that land, to know more about the child's life. (I eventually grew up to become an anthropologist/archaeologist, so the fascination stuck). Other stories were the Black Stallion books, a book about a young boy searching for the Lost Dutchman's gold mine in the Superstition Mountains in Arizona--hmmm, I'm sensing a pattern here....

    Congratulations on the anthology--anthologies are a great way to discover hidden stories of particular places and for me to sample unfamiliar writers.

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    1. This comment above is by Anonymous Flora, as so many of us seem to be Anon today :-)

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    2. Everyone's anonymous today - it's going to be hard to pull out the name of a winner!

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  16. Congratulations on the anthology! I'm going to have to look up Three Without Fear. Sounds like a perfect adventure book.

    I'm not sure if it was the first place I fell in love with, or if it was the first I remember! The book was The Motor Girls Through New England. It was included in my mother's collection of books and it was the 1911 edition (looked it up on Goodreads to find that out). I fell in love with New England seaports in that book. There was a description of the rigging and masts of sailing ships - I was lost.

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    1. Kait, I'll have to look for this book! It sounds wonderful.

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  17. Congratulations on the anthology. It sounds wonderful. It's been years since I've been to San Diego (does it count that my agent's there?) I may have to buy the anthology to tempt me to go there. Early book to take me somewhere, read again and again, was The Adventures of Arab" by Louis Slobodkin of a carousel horse in Manhattan coming alive and stepping down from constantly going around and around. Magic for a girl from Iowa. I did live a couple years in Manhattan and visit often.

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    1. Maren, I've never heard of Adventures of Arab but it sounds like a book young Julie would have adored! I loved books set in New York City (a place I didn't see in person until I was 14) and I read everything about horses, so a story combining the two? *chef's kiss*

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    2. Manhattan has always held fascination for me, starting with the All-of-a-Kind Family books. I've always wanted to live there, at least for a year or two, but I'm pretty sure that ship has sailed at this point.

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  18. I suspect we'll be seeing more late-in-the-day comments than usual, since so many of our community are either traveling today or in San Diego already!

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    1. Many of them may not land in San Diego. Flights are being diverted because of fog,

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  19. I'll do my best to keep up. I'm loving everybody's comments!

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  20. Welcome to San Diego, may the weather be 'normal'. That anthology sounds wonderfully tempting. I wanted to go to OZ. Desperately (still do a bit). The first real setting that grabbed me was the foggy beach in Sauer's Fog Magic (Newbery Honor 1943). Technically then Nova Scotia. reality any place with fog. The magic lingers.

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    1. It is. Foggy and the airport is closing again,

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    2. We had fog this morning but nothing I'd be concerned about ... it burned off fairly early on this morning and now it is 12.23 pm local San Diego time and it is clear and sunny. Safe travels everyonel.

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  21. Looking forward to being at Bouchercon on Saturday! I'm already there mentally, which is a problem with all the work I need to do between now and when I leave.

    The first place I remember falling in love with via fiction is Narnia. Sadly, it isn't real. :(

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    1. MARK, how many books are you bringing on Saturday for authors to sign? Diana

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    2. The majority is for Donna Andrews, who I'm just hoping to see at some point.

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    3. Wonderful! Have a wonderful time at Bouchercon.

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  22. In my childhood, books took me to the big woods and prairies of frontier USA, Civil War Concord of the March girls, charming turn of last century small town life in Minnesota, and in New York too...on roller skates. Scotland in many eras, Israel on the eve of independence, Netherlands on ice skates and Nova Scotia in the fog. But mostly, they took me England. The first book I was ever aware I was reading all by myself was called Mouse Manor, a sumptuously illustrated picture story about a Victorian country mouse who meets...the Queen! (who was not amused) It was by Edward Eager, who went on to write the beloved fantasy series that began with Half Magic. After that, there was Mary Poppins and Alice and Winnie and The Borrowers and Narnia ( a fantasy,but very English) and the Swallows and Amazons, and after that...Once and Future King. I too was pretty, and permanently, hooked. ( And thanks for giving me a chance to think about this today)

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  23. I am struck by how many of us remember the same books. Were we all friends in a different life? :-)
    And I forgot Secret Garden. How could I?

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  24. An only child, born in 1932, reading was my life, and I probably read most of the books mentioned above--if they were old enough. If not, bet I read them to my kids. Two favorite books were Caddie Woodlawn, by Carol Ryrie Brink. Although it didn't endear me to pioneer Wisconsin, it did mirror the stories my Grandma Hattie told me about her childhood in what is now Lexington, Nebraska. But. . . when I was eight or nine years old, my great-grandfather, a dour, taciturn man, surprisingly gave me a book he found somewhere. It's called Roddy and Scuttle, "a little English boy and his mongrel dog," written by Eleanor Helme and Nance Paul (1933). It was an eye opener. There were exciting adventures all over London, and, best of all, they had afternoon tea! Imagine--sandwiches and sweeties in the middle of the afternoon, just when I was hungriest. I didn't get to London until I was in my 30s, but it was just as magical as I imagined, and so was the afternoon tea. I don't contribute often (it's rather late here in California), but I read you, Jungle Reds, every . single . day. Lenita

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    1. I LOVED Cady Woodlawn!

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    2. Me, too, for Caddy Woodlawn! So great to see it remembered here

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  25. At a panel today an author mentioned reading the Happy Hollisters. I had completely forgotten about them, but checked them out of the library repeatedly as a kid.

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