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18 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A perfect book for can-do kind of little lonely girls

As "Harry Potter" calls out to today's young bright outsiders looking for somewhere to truly belong, this book spoke to me. It mesmerised me as a little girl. As an USAF "brat" I very much understand Nona's ache and anger as the "weird" outsider. I fell in love with the dolls as well. Their "voices" sounded like two little doting "aunties" as they subtly...

Published on March 8, 2003 by Dragon Lady

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5 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Enjoyed this
My 8 year old is a reading fanatic. She really liked this book, but it was a very fast read (about an hour and a half)....my point being that I think it is better for a "newer reader". Even for an 8 year old, however, it is interest catching. Just know that a less experienced reader (6 or certainly 7yr old) could also read this!
Published on September 23, 2005 by Book Family


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18 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A perfect book for can-do kind of little lonely girls, March 8, 2003
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As "Harry Potter" calls out to today's young bright outsiders looking for somewhere to truly belong, this book spoke to me. It mesmerised me as a little girl. As an USAF "brat" I very much understand Nona's ache and anger as the "weird" outsider. I fell in love with the dolls as well. Their "voices" sounded like two little doting "aunties" as they subtly manipulated Nona and Belinda into seeing past their differences and fears and into finding friendship. If only I had had such a wonderful pair of guardian angels of my own back then.

Rumer does a great job of painting two total opposites of little girls with warmth and sympathy while never truly turning either into either a villian or a bad joke (way too rare). She showed that even our flaws can become strengths when they are accepted and we are willing to be loved.

One thing that really grabbed me as a child was that the book included all the plans for the house and the furnishings the girls eventually build for their little foriegn guests. I spent hours pouring over the school library copy back then. I nearly wore it out. Now my girls will be able to indulge in the same pleasure without having to always be on the look out for the due date.

This time we'll be building the Japanese doll house together.

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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Absolutely Enchanting!, April 30, 2004
By A Customer
This book is still one of my favorites. I read it when I was 10 years old and in 5th grade. I fell in love with the idea of creating a home for my dolls, so I begged my dad to build me the same dollhouse, which he did. I spent many weeks searching for items to put in it, but I had some trouble finding things that looked Japanese. This book inspired me to learn more about other cultures and languages. I still have the dollhouse, and am planning to refurbish it this summer. I bought a copy of the book about 18 years ago, but it was very hard to find. I'm glad that it is more easily avaiable today. This would be a fun book to read with a child, and the house would be a fun project to make together.
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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars miss illustrations, July 5, 2002
By 
J. Blum (Medford, MA USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
I loved this book as a child, even using the plans to make a dollshouse of my own (albeit out of cardboard). Unfortunately the new paperback lacks the delicate illustrations gracing my cherished edition (circa late 1960s?). Hope that future versions will oblige.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Miss Happiness and Miss Flower, January 26, 2002
By 
Jodi (Sydney, Australia) - See all my reviews
One of the most prized "childhood favourites" in my library along with Little Plum, the follow-up novel to Miss Happiness and Miss Flower. In fact, I'm a fan of all of Godden's works, from her children's books to her adult titles such as Black Narcissus.

I "discovered" Miss Happiness and Miss Flower a couple of years after my family relocated from tropical Queensland - with its memories of mangoes, mosquito nets and frangipani (plumaria) flowers - to Sydney, a temperate climate city with cold winters.

In those days (mid-1960s)when families and cultures migrated a lot less than they do now, migrants from even just another state - let alone another country! - felt homesick and alienated. But even today in the age of the internet, transplanted girls still miss their old home, its sights, sounds, tastes and friends...and would enjoy this gentle book.

Naturally, I related to the novel's heroine Nona, a book-loving young girl uprooted from her home in tropical India and sent to live in England. I also connected to the empathy she develops with Miss Happiness and Miss Flower, two Japanese dolls who are also feeling out of place and homesick for the familiar.

Fortunately I didn't have a selfish (and insecure) cousin Belinda - as Nona does - to make my life even more miserable. But like Nona, I did eventually make friends and begin to feel at home...

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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Japanese Dolls Bring Family Together, July 30, 2002
By A Customer
Miss Happiness and Miss Flower.

This book is about a girl named Nona who comes from India to live with her aunt and uncle. Her cousins' names are Tom, Anne, and Belinda. She is very unhappy and lonely until two dolls arrive called Miss Happiness and Miss Flower. There was supposed to be a doll called Little Peach in the box too but he was not there. This really disappoints Belinda. When they arrive the whole family gets involved in making a Japanese doll's house. The kids get help from Mr. Twilfit who runs the bookstore who gives them book about Japan. Tom does all the building. Nona reads about Japan and their festivals and houses. Melly, a friend Nona meets at school and her mom help too. Anne sews the dolls' clothes. Everyone pitches in except Belinda. She is mean and spiteful because she feels jealous of all the attention that Nona is getting.
All through the story the reader wonders if Belinda will ruin the dolls' house. She also refuses to let Miss Flower live in the Japanese house.
Nona decides to write her aunt and ask for the Little Peach. When he arrives they have peaches for breakfast and Belinda is happy because Little Peach is inside her fruit. All ends happily because Nona likes her new school and family.
I would recommend this book because it is a little different and a sweet story about a family coming together.

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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Enchanting story - my favourite book as a child, April 22, 1998
This is a beautiful book which, like, most of Rumer Goddens stories, works for adults as well as kids. Virtually everything I know about Japan and its way of life, I learned from this story at the age of about 8. A young girl struggles to fit in with a new family and country but finds peace when she helps two tiny dolls create an authentic Japanese house to find their own peace in. It is heartbreakingly touching and non-patronising in style, unbelievably evocative of Japanese culture and rituals with great attention to detail. Like Godden's other stories, it poignantly deals with the harsh realities of being a misfit and the pain that comes when needs and meanings are misunderstood but celebrates the liberating joy of friendship. I LOVED THIS BOOK and desperately want a replacement copy!!
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Great story, but no dollhouse plans in the paperback, September 17, 2011
By 
Mrs. L. (Malvern, PA) - See all my reviews
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Miss Happiness and Miss Flower was one of my very favorite books as a child, and the original edition rates five stars plus. I spent hours imagining building a Japanese dollshouse, and actually making some of the things Nona makes for her dolls. The paperback edition pictured, alas, deserves only four stars, because it leaves out a crucially important and wonderful part of the original book: the plans and instructions to build a Japanese dollshouse like the one built in the story. It is a perfectly delightful story, but part of what made the book so wonderful was the inclusion of the plans. I bought the paperback to give to my great-nieces, but I will now try to find them an edition that includes the house plans.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars My favourite book as a child, October 14, 1999
By 
"jackie007" (Brisbane, Australia) - See all my reviews
I have been looking for this book for years. It was only just now that I correctly remembered the title after years of searching through bookshops pleading for a book about two Japanese dolls. The footnotes about Japan inspired me to learn Japanese and eventually spend several months living there as a teenager. PLEASE bring back Miss Happiness and Miss Flower and Little Plum!!!
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A truely beautiful story., August 18, 1999
By A Customer
I read this book about 25 - 30 years ago and really loved it. I have two daughters and decided to buy a copy for them to read - when I went to order it I couldn't believe it was out of print. It is a timeless story and would appeal to girls of all generations. The two little dolls (Miss Happiness and Miss Flower)made such a difference to the little girl's life and it was very easy to become the little girl as I was reading it - the plans on how to construct the japanese dolls' house were accurate and easy to follow. Some materials mentioned were hard to source 25 years ago in New Zealand, but wouldn't be a problem today. A lovely girls' story that should be available for today's children to enjoy.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A cultural odyssey inspired by two dolls., February 12, 1999
By A Customer
Considering the popularity of "multicutural" books, it is astonishing that the publisher of this charming story has not re-issued it. An unhappy British girl, Nona, is drawn out of her sadness by the gift of two Japanese dolls.Her quest to provide them with a home of their own drives her to read about Japanese culture and customs. Enlisting the aid of those around her, Nona finally achieves a real Japanese home for her dolls. This is a wonderful story about perserverance and doing things the right way.

The complete plans for Nona's Japanese cottage dollhouse are included in the book's appendix. I was so enchanted with this story as a child that I successfully pleaded with my father to build me the dollhouse, complete with sliding rice-paper screen doors and tatami mats on the floor. I provided a hibachi made from a matchbox and futons sewn from my best pair of silk pajamas. Playing out the story in this way made the reading experience doubly wonderful.

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Miss Happiness and Miss Flower
Miss Happiness and Miss Flower by Rumer Godden (Library Binding - June 2002)
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