I love that two of those books were known by nearly everyone who commented, and that the third was nearly completely obscure. But Melanie got it!!!
#1 is of course Claudia, from From the Mixed-Up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler (E.L. Konigsburg, 1967). In it, two suburban children run away and hide out in the Metropolitan Museum of Art. I was a suburban child and I wanted to do that - I wanted to sleep in that antique bed, and bathe in the fountains, and hide in the bathrooms.
#3 is Milo of The Phantom Tollbooth (Norton Juster, 1961). Imagine driving through a tollbooth parked in the middle of your own room and ending up elsewhere - ending up in a topsy-turvy and playful world full of numbers and words and puns and riddles and puzzles.
And #2 is the spunky Maria of Mistress Masham's Repose (T.H. White, 1946). Maria's an orphan and discovers that Gulliver's Lilliputians are living on an island in a lake on her dilapidated estate. A spunky orphan! With an evil governess and an indulgent Cook! And little tiny people! And a map on the endpapers! This is an utterly charming book that takes a kernel from Gulliver's Travels and spins it into something completely its own. I found a little essay about it that well encapsulates the whimsy of the book - and I highly recommend it to all.
i knew NONE of them but was immensely curious after reading your last post and now will have to familiarize myself.
ReplyDeleteHuzzah! I thought so. I wish I still had my T.H. White books, but fear my mom may have donated them. They had the best covers.
ReplyDeleteAnd, now that I think about it, fully half of my childhood favorites featured spunky orphans and endpaper maps.
It will, I think, be no surprise to you that Frankweiler is one of my two favorite kid books. The other? Harriet the Spy.
ReplyDeleteAnd Phantom Tollbooth is up there, too.
Can I just tell you, I swat at that damn bug every time I come here! And Frankweiler is my second favorite children's book - after The Prince of the Pond (De Fog Pin) by Donna Napoli. Thanks for the reminder...
ReplyDeleteI never read the T.H. White book, but, now that you've told us where the quotation comes from, I have a vivid recollection of seeing the book on the library shelves. I think I was put off by the title.
ReplyDeleteI knew the first two but came too late!
ReplyDeleteI love From the Mixed-up Files...
I knew none of them! That's why I didn't play!
ReplyDeleteAnyone want to be my friend on GoodReads? No?