Miss Hickory

by Carolyn Sherwin Bailey

Paperback, 1977

Status

Available

Call number

823

Collection

Publication

Puffin Books (1977), Edition: Illustrated, 128 pages

Description

Relates the adventures of a country doll made of an apple-wood twig with a hickory nut for a head.

User reviews

LibraryThing member juliette07
Miss Hickory by Carolyn Sherwin Bailey

The winner of the Newbery Award in1947 this book is set in woodland described so that the reader may feel, see and smell every rich detail. Wonderful vignettes of characters are painted ranging from Bull Frog to Ground Hog all of whom provide the backdrop for
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the story of a year in the life of Miss Hickory. The latter is a doll made from natural materials from the wood all rounded off with a hickory nut head. The book is illustrated with lithographs by Ruth Gannett. They perfectly complement the story and are delightful. You may know of the artist as she was the author of the My Father's Dragon series as well as other short children's novels.

It is a magical fantasy with deeper meanings and lessons for life or reflections as we journey on irrespective of age. For example when Miss Hickory, being given a flight on Crow observes how he looks so dirty and messy we hear how she thinks ‘But all this mattered very little weighed against Crow’s kindness and courage’. The central character is on what we may call a learning journey (I know – very education and hopelessly modern!) but what a role model she is as each chapter unfolds. After one especially unpleasant comment we hear how ‘Miss Hickory asked herself if she had been fair to Squirrel’. Too right she hadn’t been at all fair to the squirrel but the author draws the reader to join in and think.

Each chapter is relatively self contained but moves the story on as the seasons pass. The big questions of life are brought to the fore when we read of young Fawn. ‘And although Fawn looked for Doe until sunset, blind with the tears in his great dark eyes, he did not find her. At last when the forest was too dark to trail, Fawn understood that Doe must have been looking for him, following him, watching over him when he had heard the crashing gun fire.’ We are able to empathise with the characters as the same fawn desires his independence ‘But fawn could endure his mother’s lessons no longer’.

However all is not too serious and we find humour as the Squirrel who had been warned by Miss Hickory about hoarding his nuts and not eating them retorts ‘Now Miss Hickory, it is easy for you to keep your nut’. In the end we are asked to consider responding to our needs for companionship as Squirrel ventures up to Miss Hickory’s nest home to a rather frosty welcome yet is forgiving and compassionate to her and her bitter retort.

On another occasion Miss Hickory displays a mighty refusal to join in with what she views as childish things. The childish thing in question was the ‘specialness’ of Christmas Eve as related to her by Squirrel. Following this she makes her way to join in the wonder of which the characters had all been speaking and we read that ‘They all seemed to share a secret that she had been too stiff minded to believe’.

The suggestion to the reader that the world of empirical science may hold many wonders but that the spiritual realm is one in which marvellous things are witnessed was one I specially valued. Even the hard nut Miss Hickory on seeing the great blazing star in the East outshining the moon commented to herself ‘All contrary to the Almanac, no stars are bright in the full moon’. There was a great deal to ponder as I closed the last page of this delightful book originally written for children. The quality of writing, the descriptions of the natural world, the ideas make this little book a real marvel and one I would highly recommend.
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LibraryThing member allthesedarnbooks
This delightful book won the Newbery Medal in 1947. It's the story of Miss Hickory, a talking "country" doll with a stick body and a hickory nut head, and her adventures in the forest. It's full of wonderful talking animal characters and beautiful descriptions of nature. There are some parts I
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found to be very sad, so I wouldn't recommend it for really young children. Four stars.
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LibraryThing member Whisper1
In this 1947 Newbery Medal award winning book, Miss Hickory is indeed a hard nut to crack. She is a stick figure doll composed of a fork-like twiggy body and a hickory nut for a noggin. Her humble, but clean, abode is made of corncobs nestled beneath a lilac bush.

Miss Hickory is deemed alive by the
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family who made her and the forest animals who befriend her.

When the family temporarily moves from New Hampshire to Massachusetts, Miss Hickory is left behind to fend for herself in the bitter cold winter.

She is a selfish, self serving, vain and stubborn old coot who self righteously judges others, especially those who help her.

Carolyn Sherwin Bailey weaves subtle humor and social commentary throughout via the personality given to Miss Hickory.

For example, in observing the trouble-making crow as he leads a pack of fellow meanies, Miss Hickory remarks that he most likely is a gangster and really should be shot, but, will not be caught.

The squirrel who tries to help by keeping her warm, alas does not save, but eats all his nuts and is lectured for his bad qualities but not praised for his good attributes. The crow who finds a new robin's nest home for her after her corncob abode is taken over by a chipmunk, is deemed dirty and gossipy.

And, there appears to be a subtle dig at self righteous church goers as we learn that Miss Hickory, decked in her finest attire, looks forward to attending the sermons of Jack in the Pulpit.

In short, Miss Hickory is akin to the character of Gladys Kravitz in the 1970's television series Bewitched. She is a noisy, judging little hypocrite.

When hungry squirrel takes his revenge and eats her head off, Miss Hickory, in a biblical way looses her life to be reborn again in the spring.
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LibraryThing member debnance
Oh, golly, not another book about a doll! This is not the world-traveling china doll of other Newbery books. No, this is the creative Miss Hickory, with a body made of a twig and a head made of a hickory nut. Miss Hickory is able to conquer potential predators like Squirrel using her clever little
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hickory mind. She visits the barn at Christmastime and sees a glorious sight. She helps the Hen-Pheasants figure out a way to make it through the winter without their husbands. And when she loses her home to Robin and his family she uses her ingenuity to figure out a new place to live.
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LibraryThing member dulciepulsie
Originally published in 1946. A Newbery Award Book. Miss Hickory is a doll whose body is an apple-wood twig and whose head is a hickory nut. When her owner moves away she has to survive a New Hampshire winter in a house made of corncobs. Fortunately Miss Hickory has ingenuity and the help of
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neighbors like Crow, Bull Frog and Ground Hog.
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LibraryThing member tjsjohanna
"Miss Hickory" is a curious little book. The main character is a doll made of an apple tree twig. Living out in nature during one winter, she has adventures with the various animals that live around her. There isn't much of a story, but the descriptions are whimsical and Miss Hickory finds her true
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place in the world.
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LibraryThing member auntieknickers
A very New Englandy book about a doll made from natural found objects, with a hickory nut head. It includes one of my favorite Christmas stories, which my children think is too sad.
LibraryThing member fingerpost
Oh my God, how can a book this awful have ever WON a Newbery award? 1946 must have been a miserable year for children's literature.
Miss Hickory is a twig doll, abandoned by the child who created her. She, like all the animals she encounters in the book, is anthropomorphic, though her personality is
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not developed in the least. She spends the book talking to animals in largely unrelated, tediously boring little chapters. Oddest is the fly-ball out into left field when one chapter is about a Christmas miracle where a baby Jesus in some form or fashion, makes an annual visit to the nearby barn, and then that astonishing tale is dropped just as quickly as it showed up. In the end, a squirrel eats Miss Hickory's head. Good job, Mr. Squirrel. You should have done that about 70 pages earlier! The only good thing I can say about this dreadful tome is that it is short.
Absolutely the only reason to read this book is if, like me, you have a ridiculous neurotic determination to read all of the Newbery winners. But so far, this is the worst one I've read.
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LibraryThing member jjmcgaffey
Didn't really work for me - partly because Miss Hickory was rather a pain. The reports of nature were great. The end is...I can't really say unrealistic, when I've already accepted a living twig doll, but unlikely even in that setup, and unrealistically cute. Not terrible, but not particularly
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enjoyable for me.
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Awards

Newbery Medal (Medal Winner — 1947)

Language

Original language

English

Original publication date

1946 (USA, The Viking Press Inc.)

Physical description

7.7 inches

ISBN

014030956X / 9780140309560

UPC

000000926058
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