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I read a book once......
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I'm not sure when I read it but would guess the late 80's or 90's.
I don't remember the plot at all. Does that ring any bells?

Otherwise I was thinking about Beatrix Potter but ..."
Thanks, Ann, I'm thinking of an historical fiction book, it might not have named her but included a woman who designed gardens.

But....can't ID it. Thought it was a Somerset Maugham short story. Nope. Google searchs and scanning classic short story collections come up empty. I am starting to think it was a Twilight Zone or Alfred Hitchcock Presents episode.
Yet I still think it was a short story. Maybe I need to check Kipling or Robert Louis Stevenson.

Theresa, that gives me the chills just thinking about it. I know, I never read that one, because I would remember it.

Probably nobody will know what book that was but I thought I would ask.

OK, I found it and it is a tv episode not a short story. But brilliantly written horror by Rod Serling. From 1972 Night Gallery Season 2, the episode called The Caterpillar. There is a twist at the very end that makes all that went before look tame. This review and summary does NOT spoil end. https://thewordwebzine.weebly.com/tv/...
I think that was the episode that turned me away from horror unless just gothic.

I'm gonna have to seek that out!

Robin, I doubt this is it-but here goes The Last Castle: The Epic Story of Love, Loss, and American Royalty in the Nation's Largest Home

Thanks, but I see this is from 2017, I read this book literally decades ago. It may have been as far back as high school for a nonfiction book report!

Now THAT is the stuff of nightmares!
I know this one is a 19th century classic because I studied it at University, but it's about shopping and/or the main character is a popular author. It's a good comparison piece to New Grub Street by George Gissing. I think it may be The Ladies' Paradise by Emile Zola, but am unsure, it could equally be The Old Curiosity Shop by Charles Dickens as I remember studying that as well in the same module. (both books I've named were studied at the same time). Or it might not be these at all!
Does any of this ring any bells?
Does any of this ring any bells?

Looking at New Grub Street description... have not read it ... I would say The Old Curiosity Shop is closer to it than the Zola. The Zola is really about the rise of the department store and its impact on society and the rise of the bourgeoisie.
Another option is either a Henry James or a Trollope.

The best part was when he starts exploring the train tracks, meets an older boy (or young man) who teaches him how to jump on the trains. He meets the boy's friends or family in a nearby area, and something really interesting is going on there. (I feel a Secret life of Bees vibe which might have nothing to do with this book.). At the end of the book, he is adopted. The new mother might be his teacher, and the father is a serious bank-manager who is prominent in town (or considers himself to be).
This is not Orphan train. The mother escorted her son on the train, and I think he went on the train to visit her. He might have learned some town secrets on the train by overhearing a busybody type woman. But the trains do play an important role, and the people he met on the trains might impact the ending.
Any suggestions?

I do want to tell all of you that you often can find that book again. I did a few years ago. There was this wonderful story I read in junior high (back in the Dark Ages, it was not middle school but junior high school - a title I think preferable as it suggests preparation for the next level of your life). It had a girl visiting a house in the country where she met several ghosts who couldn't rest until some mystery was solved. I knew Sherwood was in the title. It was also an old publication when I read it so I knew it was likely OOP. I spent years trying to find that book which was OOP. Thanks to the Internet, I not only found the title/author, but discovered it had been reissued and I could buy a copy - The Sherwood Ring by Elizabeth Marie Pope. It was just as wonderful on rereading as I had remembered.
So these 'lost books' can be found again.

There is at least one group on GR called What was the name of that book? or similar.

The time I believe is the 1890's and the Fox sisters make an appearance although I believe they are renamed. It has quite a bit about spiritualism and seances.
Does this ring any bells for anyone?

However, I will keep my eyes open....and when in Owego, stop in River Row Books which is a new and used bookstore with a section on books set in the region and NYS.

I thought I kept my copy but have not been able to find it.
I rememnber the book had a white cover, a daugerrotype image and a big title in old gold color, ornate alphabet. You'd think I could remember the title....nope.

However, I will keep my eyes open....and when in Owego, stop in River Row Books which is a new and used bookstore with a section on books set in ..."
The former owner of that shop was the person who came to our farm in 2005 to assess my brother’s book collection before he donated it to Binghamton University ( formerly Harper College).
Books mentioned in this topic
Pitcher and I (other topics)The Sherwood Ring (other topics)
New Grub Street (other topics)
The Old Curiosity Shop (other topics)
The Last Castle (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Elizabeth Marie Pope (other topics)Beatrix Potter (other topics)
Many of us have long and full reading lives and have read any number of books. Sometimes something jogs our memory about a book we have read once, but can no longer remember the title to.
Enter your queries and detective work to this thread.