This beautiful set was edited by Mrs.
Olive Kennan Beaupré Miller, who also wrote A Picturesque Tale of Progress and other books.
My Book House was in print from
1920 (6 volumes) through 1971 (12 volumes). THE BOOKS FOR SALE HERE HAVE A COPYRIGHT OF 1937 AND ONE 1950. The contents
of the set did change over the years. THE FOLLOWING LIST DESCRIBES THE 1971 SET ONLY. One change found between
these later sets is the replacement of "Little Black Sambo" with the retold story, "Rama and the Tigers." "The First Moon
Landing" was obviously a 1971 addition as well.)
Each of these volumes is a work of art. On every cover
is a color reproduction of a lovely painting. Inside you will find striking pictorial endpapers and interior illustrations
by such artists as Mariel Wilhoite, The Hollings, Matilda Breuer, M. S. Hurford, Don Nelson, James Daugherty, Donn P. Crane,
Maud and Miska Petersham, Gordon Heath, Garth Williams and others.
THE FOLLOWING QUOTE FROM Mrs. Miller IS PROVIDED HERE
so that you may know the perspectives from which she built her anthology.
Of the literature selections, she wrote--
"In My BOOK HOUSE, I have tried to give children
the best in literature, gathered from the greatest authors of the past and present, and from our rich heritage of old folk
tales, told from generation to generation in every country in the world. But I have selected those stories with care. Avoiding
those tales where evil traits of character, such as lying and cheating to gain one's ends, have been made to appear good,
I have chosen only those where truly desirable qualities invite the child's admiration. I have tried also to grade all this
material as wisely as possible, that the child might have the right story at the right age, and to put it forth so beautifully
illustrated that it would be irresistable to him. Here, in these twelve volumes, adult and child can enter, hand-in-hand,
a wonderful realm of imagination and beauty, portrayed in the best literary forms of verse and prose....
"The permanent value of My BOOK HOUSE arises
from the fact that at the time of its inception, I had no pet theory of education to advance.... I was in search of fundamentals,
simple fundamentals, which must remain eternally true. Chaos then existed and is, unfortunately, still permitted to exist,
in the realm of reading for children. They were being given stories, ethically sound, all jumbled up with those where the
ethical slant was bad, and stories for the older children were being read to the child when he was too young, overwhelming
him with fright and confusion by presenting to him characters and situations far beyond his understanding at the moment. Out
of this chaos I was trying to bring order, an order that could never be disturbed. So let me review a few basic principles,
with which I emerged from my search and on which I built My BOOK HOUSE.
"First,--To be well equipped for life, to have ideas
and the ability to express them, the child needs a broad background of familiarity with the best in literature.
"Second,--His stories and rhymes must be selected
with care that he may absorb no distorted view of life and its actual values, but may grow up to be mentally clear about values
and emotionally impelled to seek what is truly desirable and worthwhile in human living.
"Third,--The stories and rhymes selected must be
graded to the child's understanding at different periods of his growth, graded as to vocabulary, as to subject matter and
as to complexity of structure and plot.
"On those three simple fundamentals My BOOK HOUSE
was built."
Review of Book House books on amazon.com:
I think I'm a fairly unimaginative and unemotional person -- being a middle-aged engineer -- but when I surfed through
a book site and saw a photograph of the books that make up Miller's "My Book House", uncontrollable tears rolled down my face. It's
not just that they were the most important books of my childhood -- although they were. From ages five to about twelve, there
wasn't a day I can remember when I wasn't curled up with one or more of them. With each book geared for a particular age,
I started with my parents reading Volume 1, and then, puzzling through the longer words, I was off on my first great reading
adventure.
But there's more to "My Book House" than individual nostalgia. Written in the thirties, the books exemplify the shortcomings
of America of that time: White Christian male role models, Western culture supreme, and even (sigh) "Little Black Sambo".
It's a one-sided view of life: nothing from the Harlem Renaissance, no Judy Blume, no TS Eliot. Yet "My Book House"
exemplifies the America of that time whose children's books took values seriously, instructed in virtue without being preachy,
and always kept a sense of optimism. And if you want to re-capture that sense of optimism and simple virtue (for yourself,
kids, or grandkids), get a set of the twelve "My Book House" volumes, and start reading them to your babies. You won't ever
regret it, and neither will they.
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