In the first book, a boy named Elmer Elevator is tipped off by an alley cat to rescue a baby dragon who's being held captive and used as free transportation by a bunch of mean animals on an island. In the second book, Elmer and the baby dragon help an island of escaped canaries, including one who used to belong to Elmer's mom before it flew the coop, uncover a long-hidden secret. In the third, Elmer helps the dragon rescue the rest of his family from hunters.

A charming and whimsical set of children's fantasy books from the 1940s, which unlike almost every English-language children's book from the 1940s, manages to HAVE an island and NOT HAVE racism. Two islands, even!

These books, with equally delightful illustrations by the author's step-mother Ruth Chrisman Gannett, are funny and sweet and have excellent kid-logic. Elmer packs pink lollipops (handy for bribing crocodiles) and tangerines (he eats the inside, while the baby dragon prefers the peels). Escaped canaries live together on an island. The baby dragon's mother is blue while his father was yellow, so his brothers are blue and yellow in configurations ranging from horizontal stripes to vertical stripes to patchwork to speckles, while his sisters range from blue-green to yellow-green. I only wish that particular illustration had been in color, but it's very adorable even in black and white.

sovay: (Otachi: Pacific Rim)

From: [personal profile] sovay


My Father's Dragon; Elmer and the Dragon; The Dragons of Blueland, by Ruth Stiles Gannett

I remember these with deep affection from my childhood.
ethelmay: (Default)

From: [personal profile] ethelmay


I remember enjoying these books, but few of the details. Elmer inside the bag having his elbow mistaken for a corncob is one.
minoanmiss: Minoan maiden, singing (Singing Minoan Maiden)

From: [personal profile] minoanmiss

*


These sound utterly darling.

starlady: Raven on a MacBook (Default)

From: [personal profile] starlady


I adored these books as a child and I still have my copies in storage.
sheliak: Fire lizard landing on a kneeling girl's outstretched hand. (fire lizard)

From: [personal profile] sheliak


I loved these books as a kid. (Braiding the lion's mane before he went to see his mother! The crocodile bridge!)
skygiants: the aunts from Pushing Daisies reading and sipping wine on a couch (wine and books)

From: [personal profile] skygiants


I loved these books when I was a kid -- I don't remember anything that happened in them but the visuals live clearly in my memory.
.

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