Thirteen Vintage Paperbacks

Thirteen paperbacks from my various collections.
#1 From my science fiction collection, a classic Scholastic: The Wonderful Flight to the Mushroom Planet.

#2 I’ll admit I’ve been remiss and have not read Junior Miss.

#3 Lad of Sunnybank, from my collie collection (which is growing into a general dog collection, but then collections are like packs, so the more the merrier).

#4 Fury and the White Mare, a throw-back to my childhood television days and part of my horse collection.

#5-6 Dating, ever confusing, requires books: Boy Dates Girl, and Betty Cornell’s All About Boys. Funny that I feel no further understanding from having read them… or any of the others in this collection. But then lack of understanding didn’t stop me from marrying one either.


#7-9 Three books which explore and exploit career perks your guidance counselor never told you about: Super-Jet Girls, Semi-Tough, and If It Moves, Kiss It.



#10 If the dating rules confuse, or if you’ve previously had a career in air travel or medicine, just say “Good Is For Angels,” and remember that motto, “a little sin – a lot of love.”

#11 And if you follow that motto, you’re likely headed for the Valley of the Dolls. (I preferred Beyond the Valley of the Dolls, myself.)

#12 Ode to Billy Joe — yes, the Billy Joe McAllister who jumped off the Tallahatchie Bridge. Not read yet because I fear nothing can live up to the song.

#13 And based on all this, it’s no wonder that I need Zolar’s Occult Dream Book.

================
Get the Thursday Thirteen code here!
The purpose of the meme is to get to know everyone who participates a little bit better every Thursday. Visiting fellow Thirteeners is encouraged! If you participate, leave the link to your Thirteen in others comments. It’s easy, and fun! Be sure to update your Thirteen with links that are left for you, as well! I will link to everyone who participates and leaves a link to their 13 things. Trackbacks, pings, comment links accepted!

A few weeks ago I was the lucky bidder on a vintage cook book. I must admit, my interest in the book was not so much ‘culinary’ as it was the historical 
I knew there was little information on Mariposa before I bid. I had accidentally discovered knowledge of her and this book in doing other research and was intrigued by the title and the one-name author that I stopped the first search to work on Mariposa.
John H. Hayes? Was that a relative? (And if so, how tacky to pass-off him off as other than a relative!) It is difficult to tell from the poor photocopy of what I gather was a black and white newspaper clipping how old Mariposa was, but Mr. Hayes is sort of lumped into the category of “young men” here… So the still beautiful, but possibly of the ‘well preserved’ variety, Mariposa was photographed with her son?
Who was Mariposa?
Along with the corny (and ill-rhyming) poem was more than probably the H.A. Hayes from the other book. (N.D, is, after all, a naturopathic doctor — but a “Doc” nevertheless!)
