Immagine dell'autore.

Howard R. Garis (1873–1962)

Autore di Uncle Wiggily's Story Book

266+ opere 4,225 membri 19 recensioni 4 preferito

Sull'Autore

Howard R. Garis was born in 1873 in Binghamton, New York. A popular author and journalist, he wrote many mystery and adventure books for children, as well as newspaper and magazine stories. His very first Uncle Wiggily story was published in The Newark News in January 1910, and was an immediate mostra altro success. For the next fifty years, a new Uncle Wiggily adventure appeared almost daily, and the series was nationally syndicated. Howard Garis died in 1962 mostra meno
Fonte dell'immagine: Howard R. Garis & Uncle Wiggly

Serie

Opere di Howard R. Garis

Uncle Wiggily's Story Book (1921) 751 copie
The Uncle Wiggily Book (1953) 67 copie
Uncle Wiggily's Airship (1915) 58 copie
Uncle Wiggily on the Farm (1918) 56 copie
Uncle Wiggily's Travels (1913) 55 copie
Uncle Wiggily's Fortune (1942) 47 copie
Uncle Wiggily Stories (1965) 21 copie
Dick Hamilton's Airship (1914) 15 copie
Buddy and Brighteyes Pigg (1913) 14 copie
Uncle Wiggily (2019) 13 copie
Jackie and Peetie Bow Wow (1912) 13 copie
Teddy and the Mystery Dog (1936) 11 copie
Uncle Wiggily Plays Indian Hunter (1931) — Autore — 9 copie
Dick Hamilton's Fortune (1909) 8 copie
Bully and Bawly No-Tail (1915) 7 copie
With Force and Arms (1902) 6 copie
The White Crystals (1904) 6 copie
Umboo the Elephant (1918) 5 copie
Uncle Wiggily's Journey (1915) 5 copie
Uncle Wiggily Starts Off (1943) 4 copie
Daddy Takes Us Skating (1914) 4 copie
Uncle Wiggily Longears (1915) 4 copie
Tom Cardiff's Circus (1927) 3 copie
Rocket Riders in the Air (1934) 3 copie
Uncle Wiggily's Ice Boat (1931) 3 copie
Daddy Takes Us Coasting (1914) 3 copie
Uncle Wiggily's Holidays (1936) 2 copie
Tuftoo The Clown (1928) 2 copie
Mostly Mary 2 copie
Saving the old mill (1930) 2 copie
Isle of Black Fire (1904) 1 copia
Tam of the Fire Cave (1927) 1 copia
Daddy Takes Us Fishing (1914) 1 copia
Uncle Wiggily's Radio (1929) 1 copia
Snarlie the Tiger (1916) 1 copia
Woo-Uff the Lion (1917) 1 copia
Uncle Wiggily's Picnic (1929) 1 copia
Uncle Wiggily's Snow Man (1924) 1 copia

Opere correlate

Etichette

Informazioni generali

Nome canonico
Garis, Howard R.
Nome legale
Garis, Howard Roger
Altri nomi
Appleton, Victor
Chadwick, Lester
Davidson, Marion
Hope, Laura Lee
Powell, Van
Sperry, Raymond (mostra tutto 7)
Young, Clarence
Data di nascita
1873-04-23
Data di morte
1962-11-06
Sesso
male
Nazionalità
USA
Luogo di nascita
Binghamton, New York, USA
Luogo di morte
Amherst, Massachusetts, USA
Luogo di residenza
East Orange, New Jersey, USA
Amherst, Massachusetts, USA
Binghamton, New York, USA
Attività lavorative
reporter
author
Relazioni
Garis, Lilian (wife)
Garis, Roger (son)
Garis, Leslie (granddaughter)
Organizzazioni
Neward [New Jersey] Evening News
Breve biografia
Howard R. Garis was a reporter for the Evening News in Newark, New Jersey. He, along with his wife, Lilian, also a writer and the first newspaperwoman in New Jersey, and their two grown children, wrote adventure stores under various names for juvenile literature syndicator Edward L. Stratemeyer. Fortune magazine dubbed then "The Writing Garises" in 1934. They wrote more than 500 titles, and all or part of a dozen series, including Tom Swift, The Bobbsey Twins, and Baseball Joe. E. M. Scudder asked Garis to write children's stories for the Evening News, and these became the Uncle Wiggily Longears series, which Lilian Garis continued after her husband's death in 1962. [adapted from Favorite Uncle Wiggily Animal Bedtime Stores, introduction (1998)]

Utenti

Recensioni

Tom Swift and His Big Dirigible, book 33 in the original series, was first published in 1930, or seven years before the famous Hindenburg disaster, but our intrepid inventor makes use of a fictionsl less explosive gas Tom invented (safer than nitrogen, but not as safe as helium, we're told), and a fictional metal called 'oralum' to build his huge dirigible. It was commissioned by Mr. Martin Jardine of the Jardine Company. Martin Jardine is not the easiest customer to work with. There's a chapter in which he brings in several impractical ideas and doesn't want to listen to Tom.

The airship in the third book in the orginal series, Tom Swift and His Airship, was named the Red Cloud. The dirigible is named the Silver Cloud.

Tom's father becomes ill early in the book. Mr. Swift, Tom's wife, Mary, and her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Nestor, are spending some time at a lovely hotel on Mount Camon. The fact that the surrounding forest is very dry is mentioned several times.

There are misadventures in the book. Tom takes his family and in-laws to the hotel in the house on wheels from book 32. On the way, they help a couple with a traveling marionette show whose van has overturned. The Notines go on to provide entertainment at the hotel on Mt. Carmon. Not long after that rescue, the house on wheels is caught in a disaster of its own.

The Silver Cloud runs into an interesting problem during one of its test flights, but the climax of the book involves a forest fire. (This is no spoiler. The original title of the book was Tom Swift and His Big Dirigible; or Adventures Over the Forest of Fire.) Tom and his employees have their work cut out for them to save some people who are trapped in that fire.

The only downside to this book is the way some characters are portrayed. Pietro and Maria Notine, the Italian (or Italian-American) marionettists, are merely passionate about their work. The Italian (or Italian-American) hotel gardener, Cosso Tobini, is described as 'evil-faced' as well as being less than sane when it comes to guests picking the roses. (Decades ago I knew a Red Cross volunteer who was retired military and Civil Service. He had been called 'Italian' when he was young, although I think he was born in Connecticut. He used to tell me that when he was young he was Italian, but now he's considered a WASP.) The Swifts' faithful African-American employee, Eradicate, speaks in stereotypical dialect for the era. So does the giant employee Koku. There's a dwarf named James Chock who is treated as a suspicious character. If you can hold your nose for those portrayals, this is an enjoyable read.
… (altro)
½
 
Segnalato
JalenV | Jan 18, 2024 |
Vintage small hardcover with paste-on cover. Beautiful, detailed illustrations on each page. Binding good. Finger smudges on margins expected on this book from 1922. Great Lang Campbell artwork! Endpapers intact. 12 books listed inside front of this series.
 
Segnalato
marietybur | Aug 29, 2023 |
Originally, the stories were serialized in newspapers so parents could read them to children. The stories were popular enough that they were gathered into books and preserved. Each story still ends with "If this improbable situation doesn't happen, I'll tell you the story of" with the title of the next story. Once upon a time, when I was young, my grandmother read these stories (she had them in books) to my brother and me. My mother also shared her books with me when I was old enough to read them on my own.

This collection focuses on Uncle Wiggily and his search to find his fortune. Uncle Wiggily happens to be a rabbit who had served in the Great War (back when there was only one) and now has rheumatism and gets along with a walking stick. Uncle Wiggily makes many friends as he travels and helps those who need them. And those good deeds done unselfishly often result in help when he needs it: not a bad lesson to learn.

Suggested as stories read to children or as a trip down nostalgia lane.
… (altro)
 
Segnalato
Jean_Sexton | 2 altre recensioni | Dec 26, 2021 |
The very first Tom Swift book, from 1910, is a bit of fun, but only a bit. It is a far cry from the science-fictional Tom Swift I read a few adventures of in the 1960s. Those books were from a later, much different second series. This book is very much grounded in 1910, and the setting (New York State) is quite interesting. Not so interesting is the book's casual racism as Tom meets up with a black man named Eradicate Sampson, who is called a "darky" numerous times and refers to himself as a "coon". Each time Tom meets him, he is sitting hopelessly while some machine or another fails to work, which Tom, of course, fixes quickly, leaving Eradicate marveling at how smart he is. Throughout the book, Tom is referred to as "the young inventor" or "our hero". Of course, this is hardly a book for adults. Kids are supposed to admire Tom for his intelligence and his industriousness, although he makes more than one mistake during the book that gets him into trouble (and prolongs the plot.) The plot itself is modern enough. A group of men, working for some unscrupulous lawyers, are trying to steal an invention from Tom's father, inventor Barton Swift. When reading a book like this, one knows it will have a happy ending, but dark clouds still loom ahead, as in the tradition of other books from the same publishing syndicate, the next adventure is introduced on the final pages. I can't say I didn't enjoy reading this, but it is definitely lacking the plotting and characterization of the best Hardy Boys books I remember from my youth.… (altro)
½
1 vota
Segnalato
datrappert | Jul 19, 2020 |

Liste

Potrebbero anche piacerti

Autori correlati

Statistiche

Opere
266
Opere correlate
9
Utenti
4,225
Popolarità
#5,943
Voto
½ 3.7
Recensioni
19
ISBN
530
Lingue
1
Preferito da
4

Grafici & Tabelle