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Paperback Four Dolls Book

ISBN: 0440425689

ISBN13: 9780440425687

Four Dolls

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Recommended

Format: Paperback

Condition: Good

$18.09
Almost Gone, Only 1 Left!

Book Overview

Paperback, as pictured (please see my image); very mild shelf wear (ch) This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

4 ratings

Grandma reads to Grandaughter

This book is great--interesting--good plots for adult and child--shows parts of life a few decades ago.

A good find

Great stories that were favorites of mine as a child. This copy is a little musty. It arrived promptly.

4 stories: Impunity Jane, The Fairy Doll, Holly & Ivy, and Candy Floss

Read these four stories, and listen to your own doll heart ... "Impunity Jane": Impunity Jane is a Victorian pocket doll who years for adventure. Without a trace of sticky-sweetness, Godden shows us a restless doll consigned for four generations to sitting in a dollhouse, sometimes neglected for years, until she is purloined by a 7-year-old cousin, Gideon, who can hear doll wishes. Then Impunity Jane's life begins! She is a devoted companion in Gideon's play and gets to be a sailor, an aviator, a miner, and enjoy all manner of adventures. Gideon faces being called a "sissy" by a gang of older boys, until tough little Impunity Jane manages to win them over. Yet the guilt of her being stolen weighs heavily on both the boy and the doll, and they know they must do the honorable thing ... This was my favorite story of the book, maybe because the author's style is so original and adventuresome. "The Fairy Doll": The youngest of four children, Elizabeth is picked on by her siblings and feels stupid and clumsy, until Great-Grandmother assigns her a protector in the Fairy Doll at the top of the Christmas tree. Sometimes help comes from without in the form of a talisman, and sometimes it comes from within, that inner "ting!" of intuition that tells us what to do. This story would be good both for the scapegoat child in a family, and for other kids who are mean without realizing how damaging it is to another's self-confidence. "The Story of Holly and Ivy": This charming Christmas story concerns a doll named Holly and a little orphan named Ivy, and the wishes they have that help them come together. In the toy shop, there's a scary, villainous owl named Abracadabra who seeks to thwart the happiness of others, but good prevails! This is also a story about magical coincidences, though as an adult I found that part harder to enjoy. Yet for some reason, when I saw a little doll in a red velvet dress and a tiny white muff in a thrift store, I felt compelled to buy her. Could it be that dolls are beginning to speak to me, at age 46, and only now I can hear? "Candy Floss": Candy Floss has a very happy life with the carnival, helping the little dog Cocoa and a painted horse called Nuts bring business into the "coconut shy" stall of their beloved Jack. This is an unusual story because Jack is a grown-up young man who cares for Nuts and Candy Floss just as much as he does for his real live dog, considering them all his "partners" and Candy Floss his "luck." It shows that some people can hear doll wishes, no matter how old they get on the outside. Then the family gets mixed up with a spoiled, unhappy little girl named Clementina Davenport. She wants to buy Candy Floss and naturally Jack will not sell her, but Clementina is not used to being refused, and she causes everyone a lot of trouble, as spoiled, unhappy people so often do. This was such a great story! It makes you want to run off and be a carnival doll, or a carnival stall operato

Delightful

Four magical stories by a master storyteller, brought together in one book. There's Impunity Jane, who longed to travel about in a pocket, the Fairy Doll, who helps her owner Elizabeth do all the bigger kids can and more, Holly, a Christmas doll whose wish helps a little girl named Ivy find a home for Christmas (a favorite story of mine for years), and Candy Floss, a fairground doll who helps a spoiled rich girl become satisfied for once. No, dolls are not furries, but these charming tales do fall under the "anthropomorphic" banner. ^_^ A fun book, and Rumer Godden's writing style is delightful! A must read for anyone who's ever played with a doll.
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