Post by apocalypsemoose on Dec 9, 2023 23:40:01 GMT
Just 1 book. Put simply, it was a book on transportation. All kinds. From semi-trucking to the first cars to the Paris Dakar rally to spaceships, a whole bunch. The book was entirely illustrated too, with pseudo-realistic drawings as the main focus of the page, and far more cartoonish drawings on the fun facts off to the sides of the page. I think the book would have been published around the late 90s to early 2000s (the early 2000s is when I read it). And the inlets (the first and last "pages" when you open a hardcover) were stark red with nothing on them.
Post by lostmediafan02 on Dec 29, 2023 22:22:29 GMT
I vividly remember a book I read in first grade about a dinosaur, or dinosaur-sized creature named Alfonso or Alphonse that a boy tried to hide, such as in a public pool, and its favorite food was cheeseburgers. I've been unsuccessful trying to identify it. I know for sure it was an illustrated book published before 2008, the year I began first grade.
I vividly remember a book I read in first grade about a dinosaur, or dinosaur-sized creature named Alfonso or Alphonse that a boy tried to hide, such as in a public pool, and its favorite food was cheeseburgers. I've been unsuccessful trying to identify it. I know for sure it was an illustrated book published before 2008, the year I began first grade.
Reminds me of the "The Mysterious Tadpole" by Steven Kellogg, but I don't know if this is what you are looking for.
I identified it once, but wasn't able to refind it. It was a book I read in middle school about a kid who finds a genie. The kid disguises the genie as a human and pretends to be working for him. Since the kid's dog is also no longer allowed in his house due to his aunt moving in having pet allergies, he uses his first wish to turn the dog human. It has such clever writing and such interesting subversions to the genie tropes, such as how the family befriended the genie and the now human dog.
I vividly remember a book I read in first grade about a dinosaur, or dinosaur-sized creature named Alfonso or Alphonse that a boy tried to hide, such as in a public pool, and its favorite food was cheeseburgers. I've been unsuccessful trying to identify it. I know for sure it was an illustrated book published before 2008, the year I began first grade.
Reminds me of the "The Mysterious Tadpole" by Steven Kellogg, but I don't know if this is what you are looking for.
It actually is, oh my gosh. Thank you so much for identifying it.
Sometime in the mid to late 2010s, I remember reading a short story with this basic premise:
A girl hates her teacher, and one of her friends knows dark magic, so she uses a voodoo doll to try and murder her teacher. She stabs the doll in the right knee and notices the teacher limping the day after, making her think that it worked. To strengthen to connection and make the teacher hurt more, she dresses the doll up like the teacher. Even though her friend specified to use the hair of person you want to voodoo, she uses her own hair to make the teacher's hair. She stabs the doll in the heart, and accidentally kills herself.
I've never found it, I might have just dreamt it, but I'm fairly certain I read it somewhere.
Sometime in the mid to late 2010s, I remember reading a short story with this basic premise:
A girl hates her teacher, and one of her friends knows dark magic, so she uses a voodoo doll to try and murder her teacher. She stabs the doll in the right knee and notices the teacher limping the day after, making her think that it worked. To strengthen to connection and make the teacher hurt more, she dresses the doll up like the teacher. Even though her friend specified to use the hair of person you want to voodoo, she uses her own hair to make the teacher's hair. She stabs the doll in the heart, and accidentally kills herself.
I've never found it, I might have just dreamt it, but I'm fairly certain I read it somewhere.
From my research it could be A Bad Day For Voodoo, or Leon & The Spitting Image.
Also how long was the book?
Last Edit: Jan 4, 2024 17:41:30 GMT by nostalgist32x
Not long at all, like I said, it was a short story, less than 10 pages long. I don't think it was something I read for a class, I'm pretty sure I got it from the library somewhere.
Maybe it was in an anthology book? Like a collection of short stories?
I remember another series of books I had. All that I can remember is that it was about a series of animals, each book being about one animal, yet having the others show up. I think there was a pig? The only scene I can think about is one of the animal characters in a steamroller. It isn't the give a mouse a cookie series.
Was it Sweet Pickles? There was a pig in this series. I have a hazy memory one of the characters had a steamroller, too.
Post by BeKindRewind2002 on Feb 21, 2024 18:01:24 GMT
There was this one book I read as a kid (would have been around 2006-2008ish although the book could be slightly older) and all I remember is that it was narrated by the daughter of a quirky family. The only line I remember from the book is "my mom turned her hair orange, this family is weird!"
If I remember correctly the art style looked similar to Scary Godmother or Charlie and Lola, although I could be misremembering. A lot of my old childhood books are in a tub in my basement so it could definitely be there, might look for it when I get the chance lol
I used to have a book as a kid that is now very rare called 'The Rabbit And The Tiger; Adapted From a Puerto Rico Folktale' I was able to track that book down and not everything I remembered was in there.
I swear there is a book out there somewhere where a Rabbit tricks his friends into chasing the moon's reflection or something like that upriver, he then hides behind a bush and laughs as they do. In the end, they play a trick on him using the reflection to make it look like there's a giant carrot in the water. So he jumps in and gets wet. Releasing he'd gotten what he deserved.
I could have sworn this was all part of Rabbit And The Tiger, in which a clever Rabbit tricks a hungry Tiger multiple times to get away. In one instance he even makes the Tiger think that the moon is cheese. But how could I remember those other scenes so vividly, only for them to not be there at all? I think Somewhere out there, there's an even rarer book with a strangely drawn rabbit who tricks his friends.
Hmm...What you said about a rabbit chasing the moons reflection and making the tiger think the moon is made of cheese does seem familiar to me. Would the story you are thinking of be a variation of the old tale of the wolf chasing a fox?: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Moon_is_made_of_green_cheese
There exists a family of stories, in comparative mythology in diverse countries that concern a simpleton who sees a reflection of the Moon and mistakes it for a round cheese:
... the Servian tale where the fox leads the wolf to believe the moon reflection in the water is a cheese and the wolf bursts in the attempt to drink up the water to get at the cheese; the Zulu tale of the hyena that drops the bone to go after the moon reflection in the water; the Gascon tale of the peasant watering his ass on a moonlight night. A cloud obscures the moon, and the peasant, thinking the ass has drunk the moon, kills the beast to recover the moon; the Turkish tale of the Khoja Nasru-'d-Din who thinks the moon has fallen into the well and gets a rope and chain with which to pull it out. In his efforts the rope breaks, and he falls back, but seeing the moon in the sky, praises Allah that the moon is safe; the Scottish tale of the wolf fishing with his tail for the moon reflection;
(replying to truley useless idk if I'm replying right-)
I looked at it and it doesn't seem familiar. It wasn't about the letters of the alphabet.
I ACTUALLY just remembered another scene, possibly from the book series. it involved some kind of a store? Maybe with mattresses? Maybe the animal tried them out?? Very fuzzy.
A kid's book about a white boy with a adopted sister (she had brown skin, maybe latina). I read the book in the 90s but it was probably from the 80s or 70s. It had a logo of a smiling sun. The illustrations were semi-realistic.