A bit of a mad week means that I'm a bit behind where I want to be on book reviews right now. Children sleeping a bit better (hope I've not just jinxed that!) and a need to shut my brain off from thinking about other stuff before going to sleep means that I'm actually reading more that I have done in ages. Back for my birthday I was lucky enough to be given some National Trust gift vouchers and as I always love the selection of books they have in their gift shops that's exactly what I headed towards. I picked up a copy of Shiny Pennies And Grubby Pinafores to go ... read more
Ladybird Tuesday: British Wild Animals
I regularly talk to people about my vintage Ladybird collection and one subject that seems to come up time and time again are the natural history books that they used to publish. Loads of people seem to remember not only the Natural History series (number 536) but also the later Conservation series (number 727). Strangely I don't seem to have written about many of there here on Ladybird Tuesday yet, but I hope to rectrify that by this week looking at British Wild Animals from series 536. Originally published in 1958 British Wild Animals was written by George Cansdale and the ... read more
Ladybird Tuesday: First picture book
Friends are wonderful people. Friends who turn up on your doorstep unexpectedly on a Saturday evening with a gift for you are even more wonderful. The friend who has made sure that the gift is a pile full of amazing vintage Ladybird books, some of which you've never even seen before, are quite simply the best. It's therefore with huge thanks to Kirsty from Damson Lane that I bright you this week's Ladybird Tuesday - First picture book. Somehow series 704 (Picture Books) had just completely passed me by until this beauty came into my possession on Saturday. A series of five books ... read more
Ladybird Tuesday: Light, Mirrors and Lenses
Time for a spot of science on this week's Ladybird Tuesday. We've covered Magnets, Bulbs and Batteries from the Junior Science series (621) before on here, but now it's the turn of Light, Mirrors and Lenses. This book covered everything from why we need some amount of light to be able to see, and how the human eye works right through to how light travels from stars so that we can see them here on earth. There are experiments for children to carry out including simply playing with shadows and making your own microscope using two convex mirrors and a ruler. This book ... read more
Ladybird Tuesday: ‘How it Works’ The Camera
Some vintage Ladybird books really do show their age more than others and that's the case with The Camera. Photography has changed so much over the years due to advances in technology, although the basic physics behind it remain the same. 'How it Works' The Camera was first published in 1970 as part of series 654 and aims to take the reader through everything from what the basic components of a camera are (or were in 1970), the physics of light and lenses, how cameras focus, depth of field and how cameras use film to capture an image. What I find particularly interesting to ... read more
Ladybird Tuesday: The Story of the First Queen Elizabeth
A bit of a time shortage this week means we're going to have a whistle-stop history less on the first Queen Elizabeth this Tuesday thanks to this vintage title from Series 561, Adventures from History. My knowledge of English history is sketchy, far sketchier than it should be, especially as I do recall learning most of this at junior school, I just can't remember the facts! For anyone else that's forgotten as much as I have, here are a couple of key facts. Elizabeth was the daughter of Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn, but as even the worst historian will know Henry VIII wasn't ... read more
Ladybird Tuesday: Water
There are many, many reasons why I love my husband. One particular one has to be the fact that he now only rolls his eyes when I ask him to pop into the charity shop that he's about to pass to see if there are any vintage Ladybird books waiting for me there. Just last week he came home with a particularly good haul - a nice mix of half a dozen fiction and non-fiction titles for which he paid less than £2 in total! One of these titles was one that I've not actually seen before, Water from the Ladybird Leaders series, series 737. The aim of this series was to provide "first ... read more
A 1950s Housewife – Sheila Hardy
I've a bit of an ongoing fascination at the moment with the role of women in the home over the last 100 or so years, and how that has changed over time. When my Godmother bought me a National Trust gift voucher as a birthday present it was a great opportunity to buy a couple of the books that they sell in their gift shops about exactly this kind of thing. A 1950s Housewife: Marriage and Homemaking in the 1950s does exactly what the title suggests - tells of the role of a housewife in the 1950. This was a period in which the role of women was changing. Following the war years ... read more
Ladybird Tuesday: The Fun Guys – the bottleneck and the mole hole
You've got Annie over at Mammasaurus to thanks for the book I've chosen as this week's Ladybird Tuesday. From the Fun Guys series (series number 814) it's the bottleneck and the mole hole. The Fun Guys series was first published in 1981 and features Inky, Flop, Toad, Stump, Lumpy and Rot - six friends who love FUN! "Each of them is good-hearted but not very bright and this, combined with their very unusual appearance, leads to many hilarious adventures" Well, their strange, somewhat comical appearance is something that can't possibly go without ... read more
The Casual Vacancy – J. K. Rowling
I'm more than a bit behind when it comes to blogging about the books I've been reading. I'm yet to write about what I was reading whilst in labour with Master C and when you bear in mind that he will turn one next month (I know, how on earth did that happen???) it really makes me realise just how rubbish I've been. Ever since I started blogging I've enjoyed writing about the books I've chosen to read, and it's also been lovely to look back at them all and see what I thought of them at the time. In the early days with Master C reading books fell behind somewhat as ... read more