
Miss Rumphius by Barbara Cooney, 1982.
From the time she was young, Alice Rumphius wanted to travel and see the world. She planned to return home to live by the sea when her travels were over. However, her grandfather, an artist, gives her one more mission in life: to make the world more beautiful. Although Alice isn’t quite sure how she will accomplish that, she agrees.

When she grows up, she lives out her dream of traveling, seeing all the places that she read about while she working in a library. However, she ends up hurting her back while getting off of a camel she was riding, so she decides that it’s time to retire and find a home by the sea, as she planned.

As she recovers from her injury, she thinks about her mission to make the world more beautiful. At first, she still doesn’t know how to accomplish that, but some flower seeds she planted and her particular love of lupines give her the inspiration for her final legacy of beauty.

Her gift of spreading seeds of beautiful flowers gives her a reputation as an eccentric, the Lupine Lady, but it also inspires a new generation to undertake their own missions to see the world and to create beauty in their own way.

One of the things that fascinates me about Miss Rumphius and her story is that she leads a very non-traditional life. She has very definite goals from childhood and sticks to them throughout her life, but they are not quite the common goals of most people, like marriage and career. She remains unmarried throughout her life (the book never says anything about whether she had any romances in her life because that wasn’t one of her main life goals and therefore not really important to the story), and her only listed career was that of working in a library, which allowed her to have some money and to read about the places where she wanted to travel. In the end, she is not wealthy and has no husband or children of her own, but she is happy because she has achieved the things that always meant the most to her. She has had rich life experiences, she has made the world a little better for her presence, and she encourages her nieces and nephews to see the world, to enjoy their experiences, and to leave their own mark of beauty.
Apparently, parts of the story are based on the author’s own life and on the life of Hilda Hamelin, the original Lupine Lady. The book is currently available online through Internet Archive.
The Twenty-Four-Hour Lipstick Mystery by Bonnie Pryor, 1989.
Danny is the first to notice that there is an octagonal window in the wall of the house, but none of the rooms has a window in that shape. Sometimes, lights can be seen through this window at night. Also, Cassie finds what looks like lab equipment among Miss Murdock’s boxes. Is Miss Murdock involved in something illegal? Does it have something to do with the burglaries that have been occurring around town? Why is the grumpy old gardener sneaking around? Just what is in that hidden room?





