Friday, March 31, 2023

The Doll Book of the Month Club: Twilight Tales

   This month's Doll Book of the Month is one of my childhood favourites. I still love it as an adult. The book is called "Twilight Tales".


  This isn't a Golden Book, so it's not as well known as some of those titles. This one is a Rand McNally Tip-Top Elf Book. It's by  Miriam Clark Potter, and the beautiful, soft illustrations are by Dean Bryant.

  My sister had this book as a kid, and so it was there when I was a kid. I borrowed it to read to my kids when they were little. Somehow I seem to have forgotten to return it...

  In any case, I loved this book. It's sweet, and gentle, and somehow magical in every day situations. (If you can call stories about anthropomorphic animals 'every day'.) The book contains three stories...I thought. Be careful when buying a copy of this book. I needed a copy for this post, and mine is somewhere packed away at The House of Fire. I was super lucky a couple of days ago, to find a copy at an antique mall. I gasped and snatched it up. Hey, maybe someday my sister will remember and ask for hers back. It's good to have a back up. Anyway, I laid it up when we got back to Emma's, and today when I took it out of it's plastic to photograph it...HORROR! There were only two stories! And neither of them was my favourite, the one that makes this book eligible for The Doll Book of the Month Club. I thought it must have been torn out, but no. It didn't look like anything had been torn out, and in researching I found that there are various versions of this book, with different covers, and with and without the third story. Lucky me. I found one without it. I thought this book was different when I took it out of the plastic today. Ours was smooth and shiny, and this one has a textured cover.

  So let's carry on. The other two stories are lovely. It's not that I didn't like them. I did. It's just that I loved the other story so much. The first story is "Mrs. Hen's Red Hat".


  It's about Mrs. Hen and her three 'butter yellow chicks'. Mrs. Hen says she would like to have a red hat, and her one of her chicks tells her that if she wants one, she should have one. So Mrs. Hen takes her 'golden corn money' out of the pink sugar bowl, and she and her chicks go shopping for a red hat. Sadly, they can't find one anywhere. On the way home one of the chicks points out that Mrs. Hen has always had a red hat: the red comb on her head. "But that grew on me." responds Mrs. Hen. "But it's beautiful all the same and you look good in it." says a chick. So Mrs. Hen puts the golden corn money back in the pink sugar bowl and says, "I have you and you have me, and we have saved our money." It's a simple story, but warm and cozy and loving. 

  The third story,(since I remember 'my' story being the middle one.), is "The Big Noise at Half Past Three".


  This story concerns a loud noise heard in the forest, and Timmy Squirrel being late home from school. Various animals in the forest end up at Mrs. Squirrel's house, and she invites them all to 'Have a piece of caraway cake', which has become a sort of catch phrase in our family now. Mrs. Squirrel learns that the noise was because 'the big dead tree in the forest fell over'. She gets more and more worried when Timmy doesn't arrive home from school. Eventually Timmy shows up, scolded for not coming home right after school. But then his teacher arrives, and explains that when 'the big dead tree in the forest fell over', it shook the school clock so hard that the hands moved back a half hour. Timmy's teacher, being, apparently, something of a nut case, made the kids stay until the hands said the appropriate hour again. (I think I'd be having a talk with her.) So all ended well, with Timmy home safe and sound, and vindicated about not coming home right after school. 

  Good thing Mrs. Squirrel hadn't watched a show I watched recently. She'd really have been freaking out.

  But what about my favourite story from the book? (Without my book, I'm having to rely on pictures found on the internet.) Well, it's called "Jimmy and Mr. Boo".


  The story opens with a post man coming to the door at Jimmy's house and asking for 'Master James Wilson Jr.'. "I am that little boy.", says Jimmy. So Jimmy's mother signs for a letter 'with two stamps', addressed to Jimmy.


The letter is from Jimmy's Aunt Alice, and says there is a visitor coming to see Jimmy. His name is Mr. Boo. Jimmy even gets a phone call, from someone with a squeaky voice, who says he will arrive about three o'clock.


 Jimmy eats his lunch and takes his nap, and then watches out the window for Mr. Boo. He gets excited every time he see someone coming past the house, or up the walk. Finally, a boy gets off a bike in front of Jimmy's house, and comes up the walk with a package. Jimmy thinks this must be Mr. Boo, and is disappointed because the boy 'is quite old-- almost a man. Too big for me to play with." 


But it isn't the boy who is Mr. Boo. The boy has brought a package for Jimmy. When Jimmy opens the box, there is something wrapped in blue tissue paper. Jimmy unwraps it, and it's a beautiful teddy bear, with 'a high black hat and leather shoes, green trousers, a blue vest, and a long tailed red coat with brass buttons'. There is also a card reading, 'Here I am!'. 


  This is Mr. Boo. He stays with Jimmy so long that he is no longer company, but just like one of the family. This is the last page of my book. Apparently there is a third version of the book, that includes this story, but has a different last page!


   I think I like mine better. 

   I loved the way Mr. Boo is 'alive'.  I always loved the idea of living toys. The description of Mr. Boo, and the picture of him laying in the box were always the perfect toy to me. If I could have found a bear like Mr. Boo I would have bought it for one of my kids. I did have a doll send letters to Emma the doll, saying she was coming for a visit. She was Emma the Doll's pen pal, and one day she arrived to live in 'Dolltown', (otherwise known as Emma's room.)

  So that's my favourite story from "Twilight Tales". I think you understand!  And okay, he's not a doll, he's a bear. Split hairs why don't you?

Doll-A-Day 2023 #83: Country Western Star Barbie-Two Ways!

   Today's doll is two, but also a quick post because I also have a the Doll Book of the Month post due today. So, here they are, Country Western Star Barbie.


This doll was a Walmart Special Edition, exclusive to Walmart stores, back when stores all wanted to have their own exclusive Barbie doll, because Barbie was the in thing at the time.



They even bothered to do two versions of this doll, a blonde, and a brunette. 



The blonde has the Superstar Barbie face.




But the brunette has the Teresa head sculpt.


I always loved this Teresa face.

While the blonde has blue eyes, the brunette has bright green eyes.



But they both have the same outfit and accessories.



She comes with a microphone, and the outfit includes a pink plastic cowgirl hat and boots...




...a dress with gold fringed blouse...


...and a bright, flowered skirt with a ruffled hem.


  These girls need to leave. They were rescued from The House of Fire, and are in perfect condition. If anybody is interested, let me know.

  Tomorrow we'll see another doll. 

Thursday, March 30, 2023

Doll-A-Day 2023 #82: Aidan of Oren

   Today's doll is Aidan of Oren.


  Aidan is based on a character from a series of books by Alan St. Jean, which were illustrated by Judith Friedman.  There were three books in the original Oren Village series: The Journey Begins, The Elf Princess, and Valley of the Dragons. Later there was a prequel, The Oren Chronicles. Just as a point of interest, (to me anyway!), while born in Pennsylvania, Alan St. Jean grew up in Central Ohio, and now lives in Marengo, Ohio, where my dad bought our dog Butch, and which isn't that far from here. The world is a small place sometimes!


  After the publication of the Aidan books, St. Jean founded the doll company Oren Village, which in 2004 produced four doll based on the book's characters, sculpted by Maryanne Oldenburg. 






Besides Aidan, they included Aidan's friends, Lilly and McKenzie, and a dragon named Damon. I've seen the other human dolls online, and one of them in person, but I have never seen anything else about the dragon doll besides an interview with author Alan St. Jean. St. Jean mentions that Damon was produced, so he must have been, but he must be really rare. 

The dolls were available in two sizes, 12 and 8 inch Aidan dolls, and his friends, who were slightly smaller. Only 500 of each doll were produced. My doll is the 8 inch Aidan.



   The larger dolls were sold in boxes made to look like old books, with faux leather covers. The smaller dolls were sold in cases with curved tops. Both sizes of the dolls were accessorized with a journal, in which the owner could record their own writings.

  The backs of the doll boxes explained the theme of the Aidan of Oren books: "In the remote village of Oren, a child was hidden amidst a terrible war. A child of peace, yet powerful beyond imagination. A child unique in all of the world, whose destiny is to fulfill an ancient prophecy of restoration...a destiny that will not go unchallenged. His name is Aidan of Oren, and this is his story."

  Aidan's clothes are sort of medieval. He has a wool looking cloak, with a satin lining.


 



  Under the cloak, Aidan has a very detailed outfit. He wears a tunic with colourful trim around the off the shoulder neckline.




Underneath the tunic, Aidan has a white shirt, and white underwear.

Okay. His necklace is backward. The string was twisted.


He's wearing leggings/stockings that are held up by real suede ties.




  All the suede is real, which I don't like, but what can I do? His shoes are suede, and have ties that lace up to his thighs.








  Aidan's other suede accessories include his satchel...






...and his belt.



The tip is painted gold, to look, I presume, like a metal tip.


His necklace is also on a piece of suede.



    When I was buying Aidan at an antique mall the other day, (The same antique mall, and maybe even the same case where I bought the Kish Little Prince that I showed you HERE.), the cashier called him Frodo. I suppose there is a certain Frodoesque quality about him. He certainly looks like he's going on a journey, which he is.



I nearly bought an Aidan from my friend Karen at a doll show in our town a few years ago. Karen had both Aidan and one of the girl dolls. She was asking very little for them compared to what they sell for, because Karen is like that. (Karen is who I bought my Karito Kids doll from, for $18, at the same show.) But for some reason I only wanted to buy Aidan, and Karen didn't want to break up the set.

I love Aidan's face and his outfit. But I wish he had been more jointed. He only has the standard articulation of neck, shoulders, and hips.






Think what fun and interesting adventure poses he could have done with jointed knees and elbows. 


He can at least tilt his head up and down a bit.







  Aidan has an elfin face and a mop of brown hair.



His cheeks are blushy and his eyebrows are made up of individual strokes.



  The character of Aidan is supposed to be 13 in the books, but I think the doll looks like a younger kid.


    The quality of Aidan's vinyl is really nice. The clothes are very detailed and made of really nice fabrics. There's just one place where I think the quality of an item fails to meet up to the quality of the other parts. That's the wig. The hair is not a bad quality, but it's a bit thin. Aidan's hair is wigged, not rooted, and the wig cap is not hard to see.



It's especially think in the front which, of course, is the worst place for a wig to be thin.



  One critic described the Aidan of Oren books as combining "the charm of Charlotte's Web with the magic of Harry Potter". They've also been compared to the original Wizard of Oz books.

   St. Jean intended for the stories to be a full experience, and, also being a songwriter, he wrote songs to go with the books. He has a music partner, and they recorded the songs for the Oren Village books. McKenzie's Song is quite pretty. You can listen to it, and the other songs from Aidan of Oren, for free HERE

  Now, here are some more pictures of Aidan, just because he was such fun to photograph. See you tomorrow for another doll, and the Doll Book of the Month!