Thursday, August 18, 2016

Harry Potter Books


This is Lily.  And this week, we continue going through our bookshelves to show off our new books!  And this is only a small selection of what we've gotten this summer.  We've been asking for modern books (not that McGuffey readers from 1880 are bad or anything...just very very dated) for ages now, and we finally have the start of a rather nice YA fantasy collection.  Still need to get some scifi books though.

Back covers
But first, the books that most people have come to know and love:  Harry Potter.  All 7 books, with the Bloomsbury covers.  They're all little hardcovers, with a dust jacket.  The first two books are 24 pages, the third is 32 pages, and the last 4 are 48 pages.  To be more realistic, the last 4 should have probably been 96 pages each, but the human only has so much patience for making tiny books, and 48 pages a book is the limit before she gets sick of it.  But it's enough to give an impression of a difference in book length.

Spines
As usual, all the books have text on the inside, in this case, usually the first chapter or a portion of the first chapter.  No spoilers, really.

Interiors of books 1-4
Interiors of books 5-7
Because everyone needs back-to-school reading (we're all out of school.  In fact, we'll all be getting a new apartment by Christmas.) here's a little something fun:

Thursday, August 11, 2016

1950s Dick and Jane Readers


This is Nora.  Cauth and I are showing off a set of the (in)famous Dick and Jane readers from the 1950s.  The Dick-and-Jane books that everyone is familiar with are actually the primers and first grade readers of the 12 book New Basic Reader set.  Here, we have the whole 12 books.  The original basic readers were published in the mid-1940s and then revised in the early 1950s.(There's actually a 13th book, a 'transitional reader' between the 3rd and 4th grade readers, but that wasn't published until 1963, so we don't have it yet.)

Book spines, all color coordinated
1st and 2nd grade readers
The beginning readers are really of the 'See Dick Run' variety, though the stories get slightly more complex in the second grade books.  Peter and Ellen are introduced as 'Our New Neighbors', and the whole world is very...traditional.  Where women were stay-at-home mothers and father knows best.  Suffice to say, not our favorite books in the world, though we understand that these are very nostalgic for some people.

3rd and 4th grade readers
Still traditional family stories in the 3rd and 4th grade readers, with introductions of Levittown developments and girl scouts.  Maryellen would have used these in school, almost certainly.

5th and 6th grade readers
The later readers start covering more history, geography, and science, seeing how we've moved from the 'learn to read' books to the 'read to learn' books.  There are stories of children in different parts of the world and the lives of famous people (mostly white men, though a rare woman or black person is covered).

All in all, these are an interesting part of history.

And for fun, here's the infamous 'Fun with Dick and Jane' for your dolls to enjoy, if one can enjoy such an inane book.  If you would like the full 12 books, please contact the human at jinjia.mixed.goods at gmail.com

Friday, August 5, 2016

NYC Souvenirs


 Kana here.  We're back in Boston (and have been for a week now) with some new souvenirs that we'd like to share with you.


First off, a copy of 'The Mixed-up Files of Mrs. Basil E Frankweiler' nominally purchased at the Met, but in reality made by the human after we got back.  



Also, a set of 6 postcards of NYC in the 1900s, including Central Park, Times Square, 6th Ave, the NY Public Library, the Met, and the American Museum of Natural History.


Coming up, we're going to try to get a back-to-school printable series going.  Everything's been made already, so it's just a matter of getting the human to sit down long enough to take pictures of it all.  Leave a comment if there's something in particular you want to see.

Wednesday, August 3, 2016

NYC Trip Day 3: Lincoln Center and the Intrepid


Kana here.  Sunday, 7/24, was our last day in NYC.  We actually stayed right next to the Lincoln Center, which was great when the human wanted to go watch a show on Saturday, but less so for going anywhere else because it was a 30 minute walk (in 90 degree heat) to anywhere fun.

Takarazuka!  Chicago!  Feathers!
But Sunday morning, the plaza was clear, so we got our picture taken in front of the fountain before we all headed to the Intrepid Sea Space and Air Museum.  (The Intrepid was Shep's idea.)

On the flight deck on the Intrepid
It being still somewhat reasonable temperature-wise, we tour the flight deck first before it got too hot.  Ships and airplanes are definitely Shep's territory, and we've never been on an aircraft carrier before.  The flight deck had all sorts of planes on display.
SR-71 Blackbird
F-14A Tomcat (From Top Gun)
It's always a little scary to realize that the pilots didn't so much land on an aircraft carrier than crash in a controlled manner in 200ft of runway.  The humans were gossiping about how you always knew if the person piloting your (commercial) plane was Navy or Air Force because the Air Force pilots land softly on the back wheels first and then drop the nose and Navy pilots just plain drop down on all the wheels.
Flight deck elevator
Grumman E-1B Tracer Radar plane
Space shuttle Enterprise!
And then there was the space shuttle.  One of the surviving ones, at least.  (Next to a Star Trek display, no less, which much have confused the foreign tourists to no end.)
On the Flag Bridge
and the Nav Bridge


Manning the anti-aircraft guns
In the hangar


Monday, August 1, 2016

NYC Trip Day 2: Brunch at the AG store


Kana here.  Continuing the adventures from NYC:  Saturday, 7/23, we dressed up and had brunch at the AG store on 5th Ave.  I'd like to think we were some of the best dressed dolls there.  The human's friend who came with us claimed that Shep looked like she was ready to go on a date.

We even got our own cups and saucers when the humans got food.
The human claims that the food was good, particularly the mousse flowerpot.  We claim that the human needs to make us eggs benedict too.  She has the craft supplies for it.