I’ve been looking forward to today so I can see what books you remember reading when you were a child. Did those books lead you to the books you read today? I think they led me to mysteries, fantasy, and biographies.

Before I was old enough to go to the library and read, there were Little Golden Books. Do you remember the books such as The Poky Little Puppy, The Three Little Kittens, and Dumbo? We didn’t have many, but my parents did read those to us. Of course, I don’t remember, but both of my parents read to us. My mother made similar pillows for each one of us.

Then, when I was in first grade and got all As on my report card, my father bought me my first adult book, Louisa May Alcott’s Little Women. Way too young to read it then, but once I could read it, it was one of my favorites for so many reasons. Dad bought that for me, and Mom was named after Beth in the book.

The trips to the Huron Public Library opened up the world of books to me. I always loved that library. My parents didn’t limit or review the books we read. If we could read them, that was fine. When I was sixteen, I became a page at the library. When I was twenty-two, I became the Director, my only goal in life. My mentors were the women who worked there. It was, and is, a wonderful library.

But, we’re not here to talk about the Huron Library. We are here to talk about the children’s books I discovered there. My goal, before I was old enough to know better, was to read all the books in the children’s department. Then, I learned there were new books being added all the time. What a disappointment! However, I did start with A in the biographies, and worked my way toward the end of the alphabet. Do you remember a series called Childhood of Famous Americans? In older libraries, like Huron, those books were rebound because they needed to be. Ours were rebound in orange, and we just called them the orange biographies. They covered the childhood, education, and early careers of famous Americans. I remember Annie Oakley, Lucretia Mott, Clara Barton, Daniel Boone, and Elizabeth Blackwell. This series is still being published, and, of course, updated with additional people. I loved these “orange biographies”. They’re designed for ages 9-11, and I probably read them around those ages.

I know so many people say they fell into mysteries because of Nancy Drew.I loved the Nancy Drew books, but they weren’t my first mysteries. There was a series called The Happy Hollisters,”popular children’s mystery/adventure book series about the Hollister family—Pete, Pam, Ricky, Holly, and Sue—who solve mysteries in their hometown of Shoreham, written by Andrew E. Svenson under the pseudonym Jerry West. The wholesome, family-oriented series, published by the Stratemeyer Syndicate, ran for 33 books from 1953 to 1969.” Do you recognize the Stratemeyer Syndicate name? They published Nancy Drew and the Hardy Boys, but these books were for a little younger audience. We went on a month-long camping trip once, and were told we could each take 15 books. Linda and I took books we both wanted to read so we’d have 30. Included in those were Happy Hollister books. I mentioned these to Linda’s husband, Kevin, one night, and he said he read them, too.

These were my first mysteries, but I also read mysteries by an author named Helen Fuller Orton, who wrote books in the 1930s, ’40s, and ’50s, such as Mystery in the Pirate Oak and The Secret of the Rosewood Box. It’s funny. LIke the “orange biographies”, if the library hadn’t been renovated, I could have walked to the shelf blindfolded, and found these books. I have a visual membery of Orton’s books. They were for a young audience. When I was a little older, but still in the children’s department, I read Phyllis A. Whitney’s mysteries. Did you know she wrote twenty mysteries for children as well as adults? Two of those books, The Mystery of the Haunted Pool (1960) and The Mystery of the Hidden Hand (1963) won Edgar Awards.

I know I developed a love of mysteries thanks to The Happy Hollisters, Helen /fuller Orton, and Phyllis A. Whitney with her exotic mysteries set in other countries.

Before I dive into fantasy, though, I have to mention a family favorite, Snow Treasure by Marie McSwigan.

When I was in fourth grade, I ordered that book from Scholastic Book Club. How exciting to order books monthly, and get them delivered to your desk! Snow Treasure, when I read it, was supposed to be the “true” story of Norwegian kids who smuggled gold out from under the noses of the Nazis during World War II. It was originally published in 1942, and later editions said it was not a true story. But, my mother read that book and loved it as a child. Then, I read it and shared it with my sisters. Linda’s kids loved it. We shared that book to pieces. It was probably one of my early historical fiction books. And, if you’re ever tempted to watch the old movie “Snow Treasure” with James Franciscus, don’t do it! It’s awful, and they make him the hero instead of the kids.

There are a few authors who led me into fantasy, L.Frank Baum, Andrew Lang, and C.S. Lewis. Ah, L. Frank Baum and those wonderful Wizard of Oz books. I don’t think I ever read the actual The Wizard of Oz book. But, one summer day when I was probably between fourth and fifth grade (a prime reading time for me), I read three of those 300 page books in one day,

The Patchwork Girl of Oz, Tik-Tok of Oz, and The Scarecrow of Oz. I had such a headache at the end of the day, but I was determined to stay in that world until I finished.

Did any of you read Andrew Lang’s “Coloured” Fairy Books? There were twelve of them, although I don’t know how many our library had. I read ones such as The Blue Fairy Book, The Red Fairy Book, The Yellow Fairy Book. When I looked them up, Lang and his wife published 25 children’s collections, including the 12 “Coloured” ones, the ones I read. I was never a fan of Hans Christian Andersen, and his depressing stories. But, Lang’s books, published between 1889 and 1913, “compiled fairy tales from diverse international sources, many appearing in English for the first time.” I discovered other stories and cultures in those books.

Then, there’s my strange story about The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe by C.S. Lewis. I read that book, and loved it. But, it was the only one of his books in the library. It wasn’t until I was in high school and a classmate said he had the whole set, that I said, what set. I didn’t even know there were others in the series! Fortunately, he lent me the others, but, none of them ever moved me like the first one I read. Too late! I didn’t fall for them as I did The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe.

I really think these are the books that made me the reader I am today, thanks to my parents and the Huron Public Library. Some of it is serendipity, what I could find at the library. My reading is somewhat eclectic. However, there’s still a strong emphasis on mysteries and fantasy, some adventure, some biographies.

What about you? Tell us about your childhood favorites, please.