Author picture

Moira Miller (1941–1990)

Author of Oscar Mouse Finds a Home

18+ Works 201 Members 9 Reviews

Series

Works by Moira Miller

Oscar Mouse Finds a Home (1985) 68 copies, 2 reviews
The Proverbial Mouse (1987) 25 copies, 2 reviews
The Search for Spring (1988) 23 copies
Hamish and the Wee Witch (1986) 10 copies, 1 review
The Moon Dragon (1989) 10 copies, 1 review
Hamish and the Fairy Gifts (1990) 6 copies, 1 review
Lucy and the Egg Witch (1989) 6 copies
The Doom of Soulis (1987) 5 copies
Oh, Abigail! (1981) 5 copies, 1 review
Where Does Andy Go? (1985) 3 copies
Just Like Abigail! (1983) 3 copies, 1 review
Sandy MacStovie's Monster (1997) 2 copies

Associated Works

The Kingfisher Treasury of Witch and Wizard Stories (1996) — Contributor — 73 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1941-01
Date of death
1990-04
Gender
female
Short biography
Moira Miller was born in Clydebank near Glasgow in January 1941 and grew up in the seaside town of Ayr. Moving to Glasgow, an administrative job with the BBC led to her having short stories broadcast on radio which she then expanded to create her first books. Over the next decade she had a successful and prolific publishing career while visiting schools and libraries throughout Scotland spreading her passion for reading and story telling to a new generation. She died in a road accident in April 1990; her stories did not.
Cause of death
road accident
Nationality
UK
Birthplace
Clydebank, Scotland, UK
Associated Place (for map)
Scotland, UK

Members

Reviews

9 reviews
Constantly pestered by his many younger siblings, Oscar the mouse decides to seek out a peaceful place where he can get some sleep in this picture-book from Scottish author Moira Miller and expatriate Polish illustrator Maria Majewska. After trying a number of places that prove less than ideal - an owl's nest in the attic rafters, a soft pillow in a human bed, a cluster of stuffed animals - Oscar finally discovers what he is looking for in an old, abandoned tin inside a cupboard...

Published show more in 1985, Oscar Mouse Finds a Home is a book I sought out largely because I was curious to see more of Miller's work, after enjoying some of her beginning chapter-books. That said, I ended up enjoying Majewska's detailed, richly-colored illustrations more than the story, which was engaging enough, but also made me rather uncomfortable. No doubt children will only see the quest for a cozy sleeping place here, but the adult in me couldn't stop imagining mice running over me as I slept, especially in the scene in which Oscar attempts to make his bed on a pillow, and it was not a pleasant sensation. This reaction was unexpected, as I often find mouse stories charming. It wasn't totally unprecedented however, as I had a similarly involuntary feeling of revulsion, reading Pam Muñoz Ryan's Mice and Beans, which features a mouse infestation in a kitchen. Perhaps the lesson here, at least for me, is that mice are charming when off in their own societies, but less appealing when in my house?

Whatever the case may be, this is a sweet picture-book, and is one I would recommend to those seeking picture-books about the need to get away from one's larger family, or featuring beautiful illustrations.
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One of the most boastful young men in all of China, Ling Po gets his comeuppance in this fairy-tale from Scottish author Moira Miller and illustrator Ian Deuchar. When an old woman in his village grows tired of his maintaining that he can do everything better than his neighbors, Ling Po is tricked into claiming that he can build a kite capable of taking him to the moon. When this boast comes to the ear of the Emperor of China, who responds that he will greatly honor the man capable of such a show more feat, Ling Po has no choice but to begin building his "moon dragon..."

Published in 1989, The Moon Dragon is the seventh book I have read from Miller, and the second, after The Proverbial Mouse, that also features artwork from Deuchar. Apparently the two also collaborated on a third picture-book, The Search for Spring, which I have not yet managed to track down. In any case, I found the story here engaging, appreciating its very clear message about the dangers of boasting, rather than working hard. The artwork is lovely, with a vividly colorful palette and expressive human figures. The Library of Congress information on the colophon here lists this as a Chinese folktale, but there is no other information provided about source material, which I find disappointing. Unless personally familiar with the story, I never know in these cases if the tale in question is actually a folktale, or an original creation of the author. Leaving that critique aside, this is one I would recommend to fairy-tale lovers, and to anyone looking for children's stories about the dangers of boasting.
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The eponymous proverbial mouse, living in a toy shop and hungry one night, goes in search of a meal in this picture-book from Scottish author Moira Miller, but finds that the objects which excite his interest are not what they appear. So it is that he mistakes a bowling pin and ball for milk and apple, and a basket of marbles for eggs. The toys in the shop share various proverbs with the mouse, at each mistake. When his antics awaken the shop cat, the mouse himself becomes the focus of show more attention, and must evade another hungry creature...

Published in 1987, The Proverbial Mouse is the second murine picture-book I have read from Miller, following upon her 1985 Oscar Mouse Finds a Home. It was apparently illustrator Ian Deuchar's debut contribution to the form. All in all, I found it an engaging little book, appreciating the rhythmical, not quite rhyming text, and the colorful, somewhat dark-toned artwork. The mouse hero is proverbial, not just because his adventures lead the toys around him to share their time-worn proverbs and adages, but because a mouse hunting for food in the nighttime, while avoiding his feline foe, can be said to be a proverbial figure. Recommended to fans of this author, whose work I have recently been exploring, and to anyone seeking somewhat vintage picture-books featuring mice.
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Fun-loving, mischievous Abigail, the little Scottish girl whose story began in author Moira Miller and illustrator Doreen Caldwell's Oh, Abigail!, returns in this second slim collection of short stories about her everyday adventures. From visiting a museum to playing with Auntie Macdonald's little boy Christopher, from sailing a model ship with her father in the park to visiting the corner shop by herself, Abigail knows how to have fun...

Much like its predecessor, I enjoyed Just Like show more Abigail!, finding its young heroine an engaging and sympathetic character. I discovered these book while investigating the work of Moira Miller, and being an Abigail myself, decided to track them down out of curiosity. Published in the 1980s, they contain "slice of life" stories, and can be quite charming. They can also feel a little dated, as in the chapter where Abigail's mother decides that she is getting a little too chunky, and puts her on a diet, leading our heroine to lecture a fat man she meets in public about the benefits of salad and exercise! It's difficult to imagine this being published today. Leaving that aside, I enjoyed this one, and only regret that I was never able to track down the third and final Abigail book, It's Abigail Again!. Recommended to beginning chapter-book readers who enjoy stories of children and their everyday adventures. show less

Awards

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Associated Authors

Ian Deuchar Illustrator
Mairi Hedderwick Illustrator
Maria Majewska Illustrator
Doreen Caldwell Illustrator
Helen Cooper Illustrator
Rob Dee Illustrator

Statistics

Works
18
Also by
1
Members
201
Popularity
#109,506
Rating
½ 3.5
Reviews
9
ISBNs
48
Languages
1

Charts & Graphs