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Meadow Falls Sweetheart Dance: A Meadow Falls novella - Kindle edition by and I read the book, it was a fast read, lovely story and I know it will continue.
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Also after she gave away her new dress she actually felt happy because she didn't need to worry about keeping her new dress prefect.

It seems that I remember the bioliography as part of a nonfiction series of varies American heros, Presidents, Presidents wives or mothers. Hope this help. Anthony : champion of women's rights.

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This is the story that I was thinking of but I don't know if the dress was green. The grandmother is the one who tells Susan B. Anthony that she can't give her old dress away. The girl who receives the new dress just had her mother die after a long illness so the mother had not been able to take care of the family for a long time. At the end, Susan is happy because her old dress is comfortable and she wouldn't have been able to jump across the creek if she had been wearing the new one for fear of getting it dirty. Carolyn Haywood, Betsy and the Circus Make-believe daughter , I'm not sure why this one comes to mind, but you can see a copy of it on this website.

It's about three friends, all named Matilda except they have different nicknames , and I'm pretty sure one of them has some kind of oddball family background such as being circus performers. That sounds so familiar Barbara Chapman, Santa's Footprints , If this is the same book you people solved for me some time ago! It sounds very similar to the short story The Wonderful Mistake. Thanks for your suggestion, but I just looked up The Wonderful Mistake , and I'm afraid that's not it.

In the book I'm looking for, the first girl not rich per se, just middle-class is given a beautiful new doll, and invites her friends over so she can show it off. The poor girl is somehow invited also, though I don't think she is liked by the others. Possibly the first girl's mother made her invite the poor girl? Or maybe the girl just invited her whole class and the poor girl tagged along? Anyway, the doll disappears, and everyone assumes the poor girl stole her - which she may have done, I don't recall. The doll is later anonymously returned to its owner, but the first girl meanwhile gains some understanding of or sympathy for the poor girl.

She decides perhaps with some urging from her mother or some other relative? She might even have dropped the doll off anonymously for the poor girl? The story takes place during the winter time, at or shortly before Christmas. I seem to recall the first girl walking home through a light snowfall after giving away her doll. The book itself was fairly small, I think with a blue cloth-covered binding, and the writing on the cover may have been in silver. It was mostly text, but I think there were small line drawings on the first page of each chapter, above the text.

There may have also been some larger line drawings scattered throughout the text, but I don't think there were any color pictures. Despite the choice of keeping the old, well-loved doll, this is not The Best Loved Doll, either. I'm almost positive that the book was a single story, not a collection of short stories. Thanks for your help! This seems too obvious, but could it be Goodnight, Moon? It's been years since my son and I read it, but maybe? What a wonderful tribute to Goodnight Moon, but the words "I love you" do not appear in the book.

Thanks for the reply but unfortunately it is not Goodnight Moon.


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My daughter did remember that on the page that said "goodnight mother, I love you" was the picture of a little girl in bed telling her mother goodnight. She also remembered that it was not a "Golden Book" it was smaller in size or hard bound book.


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Any and all input is appreciated. Starts out "Goodnight Red sun, goodnight stars, goodnight bus goodnight cars I have this book -- it too was one of my favorites as a little girl and it took me a long time to track down a copy. It's about a little girl getting ready for bed and she's saying "Good night" to everything she sees like the sun, the things and people she can see out the window. Then she says hello to her bed and good night to her stuffed animals and her baby sibling then she says "Good night, Mother.

I love you! Just wanted to add that I think the Green Glassy of the story title, which I believe was a snow globe, had inside of it the figure of a bear. I am still hoping someone remembers this story. Mary Grannan, Just Mary Stories. Just Mary was a radio personality in Canada.

This book which has both the skating mice and the Bear in the Glassy is a combination of two of her books - Just Mary and Just Mary again. Try looking at some of Joan Aiken's adult novels from the 's - there was one that seems similar - the girl was a musician or music teacher and there was some kind of mystery subplot. The Greengage Summer. I'm not sure of the author, maybe Penelope Mortimer.

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I think this could be your book. Flanders, Rebecca, Yesterday Comes Tomorrow. Harlequin I'm dubious about this one, but it's the closest I've found so far. Then the present and the past merged, and Amelia Langston was back in on the Aury Plantation with Jeffrey Craig, the prime suspect in a murder.

The Gospel According to Todd

There she discovered everything that had been missing from her life Was this a fantasy or a frightening reality? I don't believe that there was a murder and it didn't have a plantation. It was almost from a Victorian time. He made a kind of washing machine and a toilet. As the book unfolds, you learn that the professor had also come through the sundial.

He wasn't inventing things, he was re-inventing things.

INTRODUCTION

In the story there were 2 brothers. The hero was the black sheep of the family. When the girl had gone back in time she knew some of the characters and the plot of the mystery regarding the stolen necklace. She was very suspicious of the black sheep brother. I really believe that the word Time was in the title.

I thought the name was A Stitch in Time. She brought her best friend. Every other guest for the weekend had a title. She was called the Mysterious Lady. She thought that she was gypped. It turns out she was playing herself in the mystery. I come home from teaching every day and I look to see if one of your readers remembers. I have faith in your site!

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It'll happen. My sister is sending a couple stumpers your way, too. I just read an interview with the director Lars von Trier who said that all of his movies are influenced by a book called Gold Heart -- I wonder if it's the same one?