…And here's where LooNEY_DAC kvetches and whinges about being part of small or passé fandoms.
Has anyone not related to me on this forum ever even heard of Eleanor Cameron? Jay Williams & Raymond Abrashkin? Hopefully more of you have heard of Stephen Manes, Clifford B. Hicks, E. W. Hildick and Donald J Sobol.
So much for the obscure children's series authors. Moving to sci-fi, I tend towards the originators: Jules Verne (in translation only, I'm afraid), and H. G. Wells (though I haven't managed to read most of his political and/or historical writings). In later sci-fi, I prefer "Doc" Smith's Lensman series (not so much his others, though), everything H. Beam Piper ever wrote, some Poul Anderson, some Harry Turtledove, most Timothy Zahn, and some Larry Niven.
So, how alone am I?
The irony is, of course, that Farnol, the two Peters, and Sutcliffe, as well as Georgette Heyer's corpus and the Lord Peter Wimsey canon, have all been on my mom's very extensive bookshelves for the last few decades, accompanied by a hefty helping of Wodehouse. I haven't read the Farnol, two Peters, and Sutcliffe, but I'll look into them.The name Harry Turtledove failed to ring a bell there?
I have to admit, I was hoping Kiraly or Sunflower would recognize Eleanor Cameron. Oh, well.Well, you've been discussing a number of French authors essentially beyond my ken; turnabout is still fair play.
Heard of Eleanor Cameron? I knew people who knew her! (My grandparents lived near where she did, in Monterey, and I'm familiar with many of the settings of her novels.) Her books were among my favorites growing up, and I still have "A Spell is Cast" on my bookshelf.
The sad thing is I've been kind of AWOL from the Forum since the start of the year, between work pressures and time-consuming things on the home front. So I'm sorry I wasn't around to respond in real time to your post, LooNEY. (As it is, it's long past my bedtime but I couldn't resist talking about her.)
What were some of her books that appealed to you -- the "Mushroom Planet" series? As for the "Danny Dunn" books, they appealed more to my brothers than me, but I'm sure they inspired many a future scientist or inventor. Likewise the Alvin Fernald books.
Holy cow, am I having flashbacks now, to all those yellowing little Scholastic paperbacks, so cheaply printed with the pages falling out, which my brothers and cousins and I bought by the dozens at garage sales and left around the house until they got thrown out or sold at a garage sale in turn....
Thanks for bringing back some fond childhood memories, LooNEY!