badgerbag: (badgerbooks)
badgerbag ([personal profile] badgerbag) wrote in [community profile] girlycon2009-05-27 01:57 pm

Welcome, introductions, and here's a resource

Hello! Welcome!

Introduce yourself if you like in comments or a post.

As I went looking for interesting community icons I came across this great but U.S.-centric book list:

GIRLS SERIES BOOKS:
A CHECKLIST OF TITLES PUBLISHED 1840-1991





The chronological index is pretty neat! We could make polls for each time period.

Please feel free to post about whatever you'd like relating to reading girls' books.
al_zorra: (Default)

[personal profile] al_zorra 2009-05-28 12:46 am (UTC)(link)
I loved /love 'girls' fiction, but I wasn't that fond of series, I'm afraid. Unless it was animals, like the Albert Payson Terhune Lad books or The Black Stallion books. I adored the two Bambi books. Almost all of those most loved books I own now, with the except of the series I did love, which was Lovelace Betsy books.

I'm hoping maybe someone can help me with the title and author of a book I did love and re-read constantly, set in later 19th century small town midwestern U.S. It was something like "Deskmates" or "Seatmates," and the Louisa May Alcott novels and a library played key roles in the book.

Love, C.
al_zorra: (Default)

[personal profile] al_zorra 2009-05-28 03:09 pm (UTC)(link)
Sunny Banks was in the New Jersey aristo land of Harvey, Jackie-O's fox hunting crew, making it most convenient for Manhattan dog shows and for the author's visits to his publishers like The Saturday Evening Post.

The Lad: A Dog gives us Lad's death, post a life of honor, filled with great deeds, devotion and triumphs. I wept EVERY time I read it, where ever I happened to be reading it. Lad, of course, was a knight, devoted to his lady, the Mistress.

Talk about class education.

Love, C.
eeyorerin: picture of a penguin with a book (oswald reading)

[personal profile] eeyorerin 2009-05-30 03:47 pm (UTC)(link)
I'm Erin, and I grew up reading and re-reading oh so many girls series books-- the ones that stick out most for me right now are Louisa May Alcott (I had my grandmother's copies), Trixie Belden, Nancy Drew, the Bobbsey Twins, and Five Little Peppers, but I know as I keep looking through lists I'll say "Oh! I remember that one too!"

I'm currently reading Girl Sleuth: Nancy Drew and the Women Who Made Her by Melanie Rehak, which is an interesting account of the two Stratemeyer daughters who took over the Stratemeyer syndicate (which produced Nancy Drew, the Hardy Boys, and the Bobbsey Twins, among others) as well as the woman responsible for writing many of the Nancy Drew books on behalf of the syndicate. If there's interest, I could post a review of it here when I'm done.
copracat: diana putting a flower behind anne's ear (anne girls of summer)

wow

[personal profile] copracat 2009-05-31 04:56 am (UTC)(link)
What an amazing list! Does anyone know if there's a similar project for books published outside of the US? My google failed, possibly due to wrong search terms.
copracat: diana putting a flower behind anne's ear (anne girls of summer)

Re: wow

[personal profile] copracat 2009-05-31 05:40 am (UTC)(link)
I found this site for The Abbey Girls, which includes links to Chalet School and Dimsie.
Edited 2009-05-31 05:41 (UTC)