Author picture

Lee Wyndham (1912–1978)

Author of Writing for Children and Teenagers

49+ Works 927 Members 6 Reviews 2 Favorited

About the Author

Series

Works by Lee Wyndham

Candy Stripers (1958) 75 copies
On Your Toes, Susie! (1958) 63 copies
Susie and the Ballet Family (1955) 52 copies
Thanksgiving (1963) 50 copies
Tales from The Arabian Nights (1965) — Reteller — 48 copies
The How and Why Wonder Book of Ballet (1961) — Author — 34 copies
Golden Slippers (1953) 28 copies
Beth Hilton: Model (1961) 20 copies
Susie and the Dancing Cat (1967) — Author — 16 copies
The winter child (1970) 14 copies
Ballet Teacher (1956) 12 copies
The Timid Dragon (1960) 12 copies
A Dance for Susie (1953) 10 copies
Mourka, the mighty cat (1969) 10 copies
Lady Architect (1957) 10 copies
Slipper Under Glass (1952) — Author — 9 copies
Bonnie (1961) 9 copies
Camel Bird Ranch (1955) 8 copies
Showboat Holiday (1954) 8 copies
Dance to my measure, (1958) 8 copies
Holidays in Scandinavia (1975) 7 copies
Buttons and Beaux (1954) — Author — 5 copies
Icy Pavements (2009) 5 copies
Ballet For You (1959) — Author — 4 copies
Folk tales of India (1962) 3 copies
Binkie's Billions (1968) 3 copies
Silver Yankee, (1953) 2 copies
Binkie's Billions (1954) 2 copies
The Lost Birthday Present (1957) 2 copies
Sizzling Pan Ranch, (1951) 2 copies
Defending Walls (2010) 1 copy

Associated Works

Cricket Magazine, Vol. 2, No. 1, September 1974 (1974) — Contributor — 7 copies
Cricket Magazine, Vol. 5, No. 7, March 1978 (1978) — Contributor — 5 copies
Cricket Magazine, Vol. 3, No. 5, January 1976 (1976) — Contributor — 3 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Members

Reviews

Lovely book from my childhood. Dark, haunting and all true. Will write a review ro follow soon.

As enchanting, beautiful and filled with hope as a beautiful night-sky full of stars. This is a book I read as a child, where I'd sit, dreaming starry-eyed dreams in my school's library.

I'd read about all the greats. And she was one of them.

It was stark and horrifiying in some ways. Even though it's a child's book, there are hospital scenes and scenes if death and illness. It's dark - but so beautiful. And remains in my mind ever so vividly.… (more)
 
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Thebeautifulsea | 1 other review | Aug 4, 2022 |
I have been in another reading slump lately, and decided to try and read smaller books. The Lady with the Lamp is a super small book and I really enjoyed it.

I have no idea where this book came from. It has been sitting on my To Be Read shelf for years. I think my dad might have brought it home from work for me. I guess it really doesn’t matter where it came from.

I’ve been interested in learning more about Florence Nightingale for years but never got around to reading anything about her until now. This biography is so interesting and easy to read. Even if it was longer, I think you would still fly right through it.

If you are interested in Florence Nightingale, this would be a good place to start.
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TheTreeReader | 1 other review | Jan 7, 2018 |
"Beth Hilton, Model" is the first book I ever read in the "Career Romance for Young Moderns" series. This series was published by Julian Messner Inc. in the 1950s and 60s, and included dozens of titles, each focusing on a particular career path that might interest young women of the time.

"Beth Hilton, Model" is about a young girl, about to finish high school, who is dismayed by her perceived lack of grace and beauty. She enrolls in a "beauty finishing" course, or charm school, where such things as posture, diction, walking, fashion, and make-up are taught. She is so successful in this course that she begins to wonder whether she could have a career as a model, as her cousin Lisa has done for years.
Modeling is not overly glamorized here; the long hours are stressed, as is the discouraging practice of trudging around to photographers' studios, essentially "selling yourself" so that the photographers will begin calling your agency. The most charming thing about this book, in retrospect, is the innocence of the modeling industry at the time. This was a time when models wouldn't dream of posing in swimsuit or underwear ads, when any work-related trips they went on were fully chaperoned, when they essentially provided their own clothes for their photo shoots.

It's fun to look at this world, and the last page of the book consists of a page of advice to aspiring young girls titled "If You Want to Be a Model." Today's fashion models, who all seem to call themselves supermodels these days, would surely be amused by this!

(NOTE: I am the original author of this review which I first put on Amazon in 2001; it is therefore not copyright infringement to repeat it here.)
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½
 
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amysisson | 1 other review | Jul 26, 2015 |
This was cute. Bonnie was a realistic teenager.
 
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matamgirl | Apr 3, 2013 |

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Awards

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Associated Authors

Adam Szwejkowski Illustrator
Catherine Scholz Illustrator
Jane Miller Illustrator
Charles Mikolaycak Illustrator
Jos. A. Smith Illustrator
Gordon Laite Illustrator
Vera Bock Illustrator
Robert J. Lee Illustrator
Donald D. Wolf Illustrator

Statistics

Works
49
Also by
3
Members
927
Popularity
#27,687
Rating
4.0
Reviews
6
ISBNs
26
Favorited
2

Charts & Graphs