Part 2
A tale of the War of Independence; tells about the Boston Tea Party and concludes with Washington’s inauguration.
LITTLE HEROINE OF ILLINOIS, A. By Alice T. Curtis.
A story of the early days of the Civil War. This little girl, with rare discretion and courage, renders an important service to the cause of the Union.
LITTLE PRINCESS, A. By Frances Hodgson Burnett.
The whole story of Sara Crewe and Mrs. Minchin’s School.
LITTLE PRINCESS OF TONOPAH, A. By Aileen C. Higgins.
A little girl and her father leave a sleepy village in the East and go to a Western mining camp, where they live in a tent. The story tells how Jean Kingsley helps her father in the search for fortune.
LITTLE PRINCESS OF THE PINES, A. By Aileen C. Higgins.
Follows “A Little Princess of Tonopah.” Jean Kingsley and her father go to Minnesota. She goes to school, makes many friends, and enjoys a Northwestern winter. The incidents include visits to the lumber camps and iron mines, and a forest fire.
MAIDA’S LITTLE SHOP. By Inez H. Gillmore.
The little daughter of a millionaire, cured of hip disease, pines for want of occupation. The idea is conceived of having Maida “keep store,” and the story tells of her experiences.
MARGOT, THE COURT SHOEMAKER’S DAUGHTER. By Millicent E. Mann.
A story of the persecution of the Huguenots. The court shoemaker is warned of impending trouble, and manages to have his child taken to New Amsterdam (America), where she meets adventures among Indians.
MAYKEN. By Jessie Anderson Chase.
The adventures of the little daughter of William, Prince of Orange, during the siege of Leyden.
PATRICIA. By Emelia Elliott.
Tells about a most ingenuous girl, whose simplicity and childish innocence lead her into some very amusing situations.
SARA CREWE; LITTLE SAINT ELIZABETH, AND OTHER STORIES. By Frances Hodgson Burnett.
Sara Crewe was brought from India to London by her father, and placed under the care of Miss Minchin, who conducted what she termed “a select seminary for young ladies.” The humor and pathos of Sara’s experiences while with Miss Minchin have an especial appeal to children. In addition to “Sara Crewe,” there are the following stories: “Little Saint Elizabeth”; “The Story of Prince Fairyfoot”; “The Proud Little Grain of Wheat”; “Behind the White Brick.”
SATURDAY MORNINGS. By Caroline F. Benton.
Tells how to make a kitchen fire, set a table, sweep, dust, etc.
“US,” AND THE RECTORY CHILDREN. By Mary L. Molesworth.
The adventures of a twin brother and sister who ran away from home.
WHAT KATY DID. By Sarah C. Woolsey (Susan Coolidge).
The story of a happy, active little girl who learns lessons of patience and endurance. Vol. I of the “Katy Did” Series.
WHAT KATY DID AT SCHOOL. By Sarah C. Woolsey. (Susan Coolidge.)
A story of boarding-school life. Vol. II of the “Katy Did” Series.
WHEN SARAH SAVED THE DAY. By Elsie Singmaster.
The story of a young Pennsylvania-German girl, an orphan, and her efforts at home-making while one of her brothers is away in Alaska.
WHEN SARAH WENT TO SCHOOL. By Elsie Singmaster.
Shows how by steady persistency and habitual cheerfulness a little Pennsylvania-German won out at boarding-school in spite of her shyness and quaint dialect. Follows “When Sarah Saved the Day.”
YOUNGEST GIRL IN THE SCHOOL, THE. By Evelyn Sharp.
The “youngest girl” is eleven years old, and the pet of five brothers. The story is about her doings in a strange boarding-school.
_For Girls Twelve to Fourteen_
BETTY LEICESTER. By Sarah Orne Jewett.
A New England village story, in which a girl of fifteen spends a summer with two old aunts.
BETTY LEICESTER’S CHRISTMAS. By Sarah Orne Jewett.
Tells how Christmas is kept in the good old English way. A companion to “Betty Leicester.”
CAPTAIN POLLY. By Sophie Swett.
Captain Polly fits up an old wreck, in which she carries on a small candy business. She also exposes the conspiracy of a secret society.
CLOVER. By Sarah C. Woolsey (Susan Coolidge).
Vol. IV of the “Katy Did” Series. The scene is laid in Colorado.
COCK-A-DOODLE HILL. By Alice C. Haines.
A sequel to “The Luck of the Dudley Grahams.” Where the Dudley Grahams went to live when they left New York and where Ernie started her chicken farm.
DANDELION COTTAGE. By Carroll W. Rankin.
A housekeeping story for girls.
ELIZABETH’S CHARM-STRING. By Cora Bell Forbes.
Legends of saints, places, and pictures, told simply and in a conversational manner.
“FOUR CORNERS” SERIES, THE. By Amy E. Blanchard.
1. FOUR CORNERS, THE.
2. FOUR CORNERS IN CALIFORNIA, THE.
3. FOUR CORNERS AT SCHOOL, THE.
4. FOUR CORNERS ABROAD, THE.
5. FOUR CORNERS IN CAMP, THE.
6. FOUR CORNERS AT COLLEGE, THE.
The “Four Corners” are four girls whose name is Corner. They have the experiences that naturally are the lot of healthy, growing children. In the sixth volume they matriculate at Bettersley College, and begin to carry out some long-cherished plans. Wholesome and entertaining stories.
GIRL OF ’76. By Amy E. Blanchard.
A story of Colonial Boston.
GIRLS OF GARDENVILLE, THE. By Carroll W. Rankin.
Amusing stories of a girls’ club.
GIRLS WHO BECAME FAMOUS. By Sarah K. Bolton.
Sketches of George Eliot, Helen H. Jackson, Harriet Hosmer, Rosa Bonheur, Florence Nightingale, and others.
GLENLOCK GIRLS. By Grace M. Remick.
Ruth Shirley, a girl of fourteen, goes to live with friends at Glenlock while her father is abroad. She wins her way with other high school girls and boys, who together find many sources of pleasure.
GLENLOCK GIRLS ABROAD. By Grace M. Remick.
A sequel to “Glenlock Girls.” Ruth Shirley goes abroad for a winter, and later some of her Glenlock friends join her, and together they have a very enjoyable time.
HEIDI. By Johanna Spyri.
The story of a little Swiss girl who lives with her blind grandfather in a hut in the Alps.
HISTORIC GIRLHOODS. By Rupert S. Holland.
Tells of Saint Catherine, Joan of Arc, Vittoria Colonna, Catherine de Medici, Lady Jane Grey, Mary, Queen of Scots, Pocahontas, etc.
HOME-COMERS, THE. By Winifred Kirkland.
The Home-comers are four orphans from eight to eighteen who come back from the West to live with their grandmother among the Eastern mountains.
IN THE HIGH VALLEY. By Sarah C. Woolsey (Susan Coolidge).
Tells of the visit of an English girl to Colorado. Vol. V of the “Katy Did” Series.
JACQUELINE OF THE CARRIER PIGEONS. By Augusta H. Seaman.
A story of the historic siege of Leyden, in which the young heroine and her brave brother play a significant part. The raising of the siege, the breaking of the dikes, and the sailing of the Dutch warships are graphically depicted.
JUDY. By Temple Bailey.
The story of a little girl who develops from a spoiled child into a happy and good-natured one.
LASS OF THE SILVER SWORD, THE. By Mary Constance Du Bois.
A very entertaining school story. The “Silver Sword” is a society formed by the girls, the object of which is to engender feelings of love and kindness.
LEAGUE OF THE SIGNET-RING, THE. By Mary Constance Du Bois.
A sequel to “The Lass of the Silver Sword.” The story begins with a happy house-party at Wyndgarth; then there is fun and adventure in the Adirondacks, and a happy ending in the country home where the story opens. These two books teach lessons of love and loyalty.
LITTLE COLONEL SERIES, THE. By Annie Fellows Johnston. 10 to 14.
1. LITTLE COLONEL STORIES, THE.
Contains “The Little Colonel,” “Gate of the Giant Scissors,” “Two Little Knights of Kentucky.”
2. LITTLE COLONEL’S HOUSE-PARTY, THE.
3. LITTLE COLONEL’S HOLIDAYS, THE.
4. LITTLE COLONEL’S HERO, THE.
5. LITTLE COLONEL AT BOARDING-SCHOOL, THE.
6. LITTLE COLONEL IN ARIZONA, THE.
7. LITTLE COLONEL’S CHRISTMAS VACATION, THE.
8. LITTLE COLONEL, MAID OF HONOR, THE.
9. LITTLE COLONEL’S KNIGHT COMES RIDING, THE.
10. MARY WARE, THE LITTLE COLONEL’S CHUM.
11. MARY WARE IN TEXAS.
These are among the most popular stories for girls published. “The Little Colonel” is a thoroughbred, the stories are wholesome, and the tone high.
LITTLE COUNTRY GIRL, A. By Sarah C. Woolsey (Susan Coolidge).
The story of a Connecticut girl’s summer at Newport.
LITTLE LADY AT THE FALL OF QUEBEC. By Annie M. Barnes.
Anne Weldon, heiress to an English estate, is in Quebec when it is besieged by General Wolfe. She carries the information which enables him to gain the Plains of Abraham and the city. Wolfe and Montcalm figure in the story.
LITTLE WOMEN. By Louisa M. Alcott.
An especially good and wholesome story for girls. Based on the early life of Miss Alcott and her sisters.
LUCK OF THE DUDLEY GRAHAMS, THE. By Alice C. Haines.
A family story of city life.
MERRYLIPS. By Beulah Marie Dix.
A story of the Roundheads and Cavaliers. Tells of a girl held as hostage by the Roundheads, and who escapes, disguised as a boy.
NELLY’S SILVER MINE. By Helen Hunt Jackson.
A story of Colorado life. Excellent.
OLD-FASHIONED GIRL, AN. By Louisa M. Alcott.
The life in the city of a sensible little girl reared in the country.
ORCUTT GIRLS, THE. By Charlotte M. Vaile.
A story of New England school life.
OWLS OF ST. URSULA’S, THE. By Jane Brewster Reid.
The pranks and escapades of four girls at boarding-school.
PEGGY OWEN. By Lucy Foster Madison.
The story of a patriotic Quaker maiden in Philadelphia during its occupation by the British. Washington, Franklin, and Betsy Ross figure in the story.
PEGGY OWEN, PATRIOT. By Lucy Foster Madison.
Follows “Peggy Owen.” Peggy and her mother go to spend the winter with her father, who is in the American army, then near Morristown, New Jersey. Through the treachery of her cousin, an English girl, Peggy is captured and taken to New York and afterward to the South. She has many exciting adventures before seeing her parents again.
PRETTY POLLY PERKINS. By Gabrielle E. Jackson.
The story of a little country girl with a love for drawing, and of her friendship for a lame girl who comes from the city.
REBECCA OF SUNNYBROOK FARM. By Kate Douglas Wiggin.
The story of a fascinating little girl. Full of real humor.
“SIX GIRLS” SERIES, THE. By Marion Ames Taggart.
1. SIX GIRLS AND BOB.
2. SIX GIRLS AND THE TEA ROOM.
3. SIX GIRLS GROWING OLDER.
4. SIX GIRLS AND THE SEVENTH ONE.
5. BETTY GASTON—THE SEVENTH GIRL.
A wholesome series of stories relating the doings of the Scollard family, consisting of six girls, Bob, and their mother, and their friend Betty Gaston.
“SPINNING-WHEEL” SERIES, THE. By Louisa M. Alcott.
1. SPINNING-WHEEL STORIES.
2. SILVER PITCHERS: AND INDEPENDENCE.
3. PROVERB STORIES.
4. GARLAND FOR GIRLS, A.
A collection of wholesome short stories.
SUE ORCUTT. By Charlotte M. Vaile.
A sequel to “The Orcutt Girls.” Life at a New England academy.
THREE LITTLE DAUGHTERS OF THE REVOLUTION. By Nora Perry.
Stories of Dorothy Merridew, Patty Endicott, and Betty Boston, three girls whose loyalty to their country was put to some hard tests.
WHAT KATY DID NEXT. By Sarah C. Woolsey (Susan Coolidge).
Tells of Katy’s trip to Europe. Vol. III of the “Katy Did” Series.
YOUNG LUCRETIA, AND OTHER STORIES. By Mrs. C. M. Freeman (Mary E. Wilkins).
Delightfully humorous stories about little New England country girls.
_For Girls Fourteen to Sixteen_
ACROSS THE CAMPUS. By Caroline M. Fuller.
A girl’s college story.
ANNE OF AVONLEA. By Lucy M. Montgomery.
A sequel to “Anne of Green Gables.”
ANNE OF GREEN GABLES. By Lucy M. Montgomery.
An elderly brother and sister, living on a farm on Prince Edward’s Island, want a boy to assist them. The brother asks for one from an orphan asylum and a girl is sent instead. This is one of the best stories of recent years for girls.
BIOGRAPHY OF A PRAIRIE GIRL, THE. By Eleanor Gates.
A story of life on a Dakota farm.
CAPTAIN’S DAUGHTER, THE. By Gwendolen Overton.
A story of girl life at an army post on the frontier.
CAPTAIN POLLY OF ANNAPOLIS. By Gabrielle E. Jackson.
Polly is an original, attractive little girl, a leader among her playfellows, and with ideals which make her seem older than her years. The story is linked with the Naval Academy, and the Battleship fleet which made the journey round the world.
CONFIDENCES—TALKS WITH A YOUNG GIRL CONCERNING HERSELF. By E. B. Lowry, M.D.
Gives the facts concerning the development of life in such clear and suitable language that it may be placed in the hands of the young girl.
DALE GIRLS, THE. By Frances Weston Carruth.
A story of every-day life, with two attractive young heroines.
DAUGHTER OF FREEDOM, A. By Amy E. Blanchard.
A story of the latter period of the War for Independence.
DOROTHY BROOKE’S SCHOOL DAYS. By Frances C. Sparhawk.
DOROTHY BROOKE’S VACATION. By Frances C. Sparhawk.
The first volume is a good story of school life, and the second tells of a vacation spent in great part on a motor trip. A chauffeur who enacts the villain; an elderly young lady, and an absent-minded professor supply a source of good-humored fun.
ELINOR’S COLLEGE CAREER. By Julia A. Schwartz.
Takes four girls of widely different characters through the four years of college, supposedly Vassar.
FAITH GARTNEY’S GIRLHOOD. By Mrs. A. D. T. Whitney.
Tells about Faith’s New Year oracle, and of what it meant to her.
FROLICS AT FAIRMOUNT. By Etta A. Baker.
Follows “The Girls of Fairmount.”
FROM SIOUX TO SUSAN. By Agnes McClelland Daulton.
Tells about a brave, generous, madcap girl, who had times of storm and stress in overcoming her faults.
GIRL WANTED, THE. By Nixon Waterman.
Cheerful, friendly talks to young women. An aid to the moulding of temperament and the shaping of character.
GIRLS OF FAIRMOUNT, THE. By Etta A. Baker.
A story of genuine, natural, and generous girls; the keynote is loyalty to friends.
HEARTS AND CORONETS. By Alice Wilson Fox.
The school life of Audrey Denver, which includes some rather unusual experiences.
HITHERTO. By Mrs. A. D. T. Whitney.
A story of New England country life of fifty years ago.
JANET’S COLLEGE CAREER. By Amy E. Blanchard.
Tells of the studies, pleasures, and various experiences that make up the life of a college girl.
KATRINA. By Ellen Douglas Deland.
The story of a girl who indulged her waywardness and stand-offishness until she learned the sad results brought about by such qualities.
LAND OF PLUCK, THE. By Mary Mapes Dodge.
A series of stories and sketches, chiefly of Holland.
NEW CHRONICLES OF REBECCA. By Kate Douglas Wiggin.
This book takes Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm up to her eighteenth birthday.
OH! CHRISTINA! By J. J. Bell.
Christina is a quaint, good-hearted little Scotch girl, and her dialect is very funny to American ears. Very humorous.
OTHER GIRLS, THE. By Mrs. A. D. T. Whitney.
A companion to “Real Folks.”
PHILIPPA AT HALCYON. By Katharine Holland Brown.
A rattling good college story for girls. It is full of fun, and the characters are very human.
POLLY PAGE RANCH CLUB, THE. By Izola L. Forrester.
Sprightly Polly Page is brimful of ideas and is quite able to carry them out. She plans a summer outing in Wyoming for the Ranch Club and arranges for the jolly good times the girls have while there. Polly is a thoroughly fine, all-round girl, who cannot fail to make friends. Follows “The Polly Page Yacht Club.”
POLLY PAGE YACHT CLUB, THE. By Izola L. Forrester.
A sprightly girl, leader of her set, forms a yacht club, secures a yacht, and engages a skipper to sail it. The story tells about the jolly times the club members have.
PRAIRIE ROSE, A. By Bertha E. Bush.
A true-to-life story of pioneer days in Iowa.
REAL FOLKS. By Mrs. A. D. T. Whitney.
Two orphan sisters are adopted, one into a family where luxury abounds, and the other into a simple country home. Follows “We Girls.”
REVOLUTIONARY MAID, A. By Amy E. Blanchard.
A story of the middle period in the War for Independence.
THE “SIDNEY” BOOKS. By Anna Chapin Ray.
1. SIDNEY: HER SUMMER ON THE ST. LAWRENCE.
2. JANET: HER WINTER IN QUEBEC.
3. DAY: HER YEAR IN NEW YORK.
4. SIDNEY AT COLLEGE.
5. JANET AT ODDS.
6. SIDNEY: HER SENIOR YEAR.
Very interesting stories of Smith College life. In the last volume the Commencement that ends the story rounds out several love affairs which have developed in this group of young people.
SISTER’S VOCATION, AND OTHER STORIES. By Josephine Daskam Bacon.
A collection of eight stories of which girls are the heroines. Each has a striking situation and incident, and is well told.
SUMMER IN LESLIE GOLDTHWAITE’S LIFE, A. By Mrs. A. D. T. Whitney.
About a summer spent in the White Mountains. A story full of kindly, Christian feeling, spiced with quaint New England characters and their odd reflections. Followed by “We Girls,” “Real Folks,” and “The Other Girls.”
“TEDDY BOOKS,” THE. By Anna Chapin Ray.
1. TEDDY: HER BOOK.
2. PHEBE: HER PROFESSION.
3. TEDDY: HER DAUGHTER.
4. NATHALIE’S CHUM.
5. URSULA’S FRESHMAN.
6. NATHALIE’S SISTER.
There is genuine sympathy with boy and girl life in these books. The style is unaffected, and the stories give a wholesome view of life.
THAT FRESHMAN. By Christina Catrevas.
A Mount Holyoke College story for girls. The heroine is an impulsive, attractive girl, with fine attributes of character.
TWO COLLEGE GIRLS. By Helen Dawes Brown.
Tells of college life, with its classroom dilemmas, spreads, and holiday merrymakings.
TWO MARYLAND GIRLS. By Amy E. Blanchard.
The story of two girls just home from boarding-school, who are introduced to the social life of an old Maryland town.
TWO WYOMING GIRLS. By Carrie L. Marshall.
Two girls, thrown upon their own resources, are obliged to “prove up” their homestead claim. In doing so they meet with difficulties and adventures.
WE GIRLS. By Mrs. A. D. T. Whitney.
The home life of three New England girls. Sequel to “A Summer in Leslie Goldthwaite’s Life.”
“WIDE AWAKE GIRLS” SERIES, THE. By Ruth K. Ellis.
1. WIDE AWAKE GIRLS, THE.
2. WIDE AWAKE GIRLS IN WINSTED, THE.
3. WIDE AWAKE GIRLS AT COLLEGE, THE.
Bright stories, full of action. The “Wide Awake” girls establish a library in a country town. The third volume tells of the youthful gaiety of college life.
_For Boys Eight to Ten_
ARKANSAS BEAR, THE. By Albert Bigelow Paine.
A very humorous story of a big, black bear and a little boy.
CAPTAIN JUNE. By Alice Hegan Rice.
The story of a little American boy, who has many interesting and unusual experiences in Japan.
J. COLE. By Emma Gellibrand.
The story of a small boy of little education, but honest and courageous, who answered an advertisement for a boy wanted for work in a household. It tells how he came, how he stayed, how he won hearts, and how he left.
LITTLE FORESTERS, THE. By Clarence Hawkes.
A splendid story; contains just enough of the supernatural to make it a very pleasing wonder story.
LITTLE LAME PRINCE, THE. By Mrs. Craik (Miss Mulock).
Tales of woodland and field, in which the animals have speaking parts.
LITTLE METACOMET. By Hezekiah Butterworth.
Life in New England in pioneer days.
LOYAL LITTLE RED-COAT, A. By Ruth Ogden (Mrs. C. W. Ide).
A story of child life in New York a hundred years ago.
PINOCCHIO. By C. Collodi.
The adventures of a marionette. Translated from the Italian.
PRINCE LAZYBONES, AND OTHER STORIES. By Helen Hays.
The story of a little boy who, by the aid of the elves, cured himself of his bad habit. The three other stories are “Phil’s Fairies”; “Floria and Floriella,” and “Boreas Bluster’s Christmas Stories.” The last two are Christmas stories.
ROLLO AT WORK. By Jacob Abbott.
ROLLO AT PLAY. By Jacob Abbott.
Books which are entertaining and instructive.
TOMMY TROT’S VISIT TO SANTA CLAUS. By Thomas Nelson Page.
A boy’s story of Christmas. The small boy with the goat team and the youngster who had never coasted before make a wonderful trip to Santa Claus Land, and find out how he makes his presents, how he stores them, who gets them, and why they get them.
_For Boys Ten to Twelve_
ADVENTURES OF JIMMY BROWN, THE. By W. L. Alden.
Full of fun and humor. Jimmy plays circus, amuses himself with a monkey, tries to be a pirate, and makes experiments with unexpected (to him) results.
AMONG THE CAMPS. By Thomas Nelson Page.
Stories of the Civil War. Contents: “A Captured Santa Claus”; “Kittykin”; “Nancy Pansy”; “Jack and Jake.”
BOB’S CAVE BOYS. By C. P. Burton.
A sequel to “The Boys of Bob’s Hill.”
BOB’S HILL BRAVES, THE. By C. P. Burton.
Tells of a vacation which the boys of Bob’s Hill spend in Illinois, where they play at being Indians, and hear tales of pioneer life.
BOYNTON PLUCK, THE. By Helen Ward Banks.
Bob and Billy, sent away for the summer, by mistake get into the hands of a mean old farmer. It takes pluck to stand their hard luck, but in the end they are all the better for their experiences.
BOYS OF BOB’S HILL, THE. By C. P. Burton.
A lively story of a party of boys in a New England village.
CRUISE OF THE CANOE CLUB, THE. By William L. Alden.
A sequel to “The Cruise of the ‘Ghost.’” The four boys cruise in canoes from Lake Memphremagog, Vermont, down the Magog, St. Francis, and St. Lawrence Rivers to Quebec.
CRUISE OF THE “GHOST,” THE. By William L. Alden.
A sequel to “The Moral Pirates.” The boys, with a young naval cadet, cruise in a twenty-foot catboat through the bays along the south shore of Long Island.
CUORE: AN ITALIAN SCHOOL-BOY’S JOURNAL. By Edmondo de Amicis.
An Italian classic for boys.
FOUR MACNICOLS, THE. By William Black.
Contains two stories—“The Four MacNicols,” and “An Adventure in Thule.” The first tells about four orphan boys who make their living in the Hebrides, the other of an adventure with French coast pirates.
HARDING’S LUCK. By E. Nesbit (Mrs. Bland).
The adventures of a lame boy who slipped back in the history of England several hundred years.
JAN OF THE WINDMILL. By Juliana Horatia Ewing.
The story of a miller’s son who became a distinguished artist.
JIMMY BROWN TRYING TO FIND EUROPE. By W. L. Alden.
The further adventures of Jimmy, who leaves home with the intention of finding his parents, who are in Europe.
JOHN OF THE WOODS. By Abbie Farwell Brown.
The story of a little boy who ran away from some cruel gypsies by whom he had been stolen, and who lived in the forest with a good hermit and all his animal friends, and of how they saved the king’s son.
MR. STUBBS’S BROTHER. By James Otis Kaler (James Otis).
A sequel to “Toby Tyler.”
MONI, THE GOAT BOY. By Johanna Spyri.
Stories of Swiss mountain life.
MORAL PIRATES, THE. By William L. Alden.
The story of a vacation cruise made by four New York boys twelve to fourteen years of age. They fit out a large rowboat with spritsail and camping outfit, and cruise up the Harlem and Hudson Rivers to Troy, thence by canal to Schroon River and the lakes in the Adirondacks, where they camp for two weeks.
REFORM OF SHAUN, THE. By Allen French.
Contains two rattling good dog stories.
ROBIN HOOD: HIS BOOK. By Eva March Tappan.
An attractive prose version, well illustrated.
STORIES FROM THE CRUSADES. By Janet H. Kelman.
“Told to the Children” Series. A good collection of simply told stories of the Crusades.
TEN BOYS FROM HISTORY. By Kate D. Sweetser.
The range from which the ten boys of noted courage are selected is from David and Jonathan of the Old Testament to the family of President Lincoln.
TOBY TYLER; OR, TEN WEEKS WITH A CIRCUS. By James Otis Kaler (James Otis).