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CHRISTINA
KATERINA hawdi.i:
WITH CAM;
THE BOX by Patricia Lee Gauch
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t'THls'iENDUP
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CHRISTINA
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THE BOX by Patricia Lee Gauch
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Digitized by the Internet Archive in
2010
http://www.archive.org/details/christinakaterinOOgauc
Weekly Reader Children's Book Club presents
CHRISTINA KATERINA
&
THE BOX
CHRISTINA KATERINA
&
THE BOX by Patricia Lee Gauch
Illustrated
by Doris Burn
*
*
a c \\ If
*fy
'"%>
Coward, McCann
& Geoghegan,
New York
Inc. \
Text
© 1971
Illustrations
by Patricia Lee Gauch
©
1971
by Doris Burn
All rights reserved. This book, or parts thereof,
reproduced in the
any form without permission
publishers.
Published
simultaneously
may
not be
in writing in
from
Canada by
Longmans Canada Limited, Toronto. Library oj Congress Catalog Card Number: 7i-t33926 Printed in the United States of America
Weekly Reader Children's Book Club Edition
For our Christina
hristina Katerina liked tin
things-.
cups and old dresses,
worn-out
ties
Any of those things,
and empty boxes. but mostly boxes.
Hat boxes, bakery boxes with see-through shoe boxes.
lids,
I>!W1
J&L
' .-
Best of
all
she liked big boxes. So she was
'.•*•:':..•.'
happy
in-
— when even her sometimes-friend Fats Watson was out of town — to see a
deed one sleepy summer day
truck deliver a great,
tall
box.
It
came on
a refrigerator.
,
r
vyj^ J5
"Oh, how grand and new," looking "It
box.
is!
at
Christina's
mother
said,
the refrigerator.
Oh,
it
really is!" said Christina, looking at the
^ J§
And
she quickly claimed the box for her
dragged
it
under the apple
To Mother, who was that boxes
own and
tree.
very neat and tidy,
were for basements or trash
it
barrels,
seemed not for
front yards under the apple tree. But she decided that it
couldn't hurt
—
it
couldn't possibly hurt
day or two to have the big box under the apple
tree.
in
— for one
the front yard, there
^"^
r
That afternoon Christina's father cut door
in
the box, and Christina painted
drawbridge, and bolts for the door. came... a
castle. Inside,
for iron bars,
saucers battle
a
and
she put sticks
and she brought
a lot of Fig
And
Newtons
and she couldn't get out.
V
window and on
turrets, a
the box be-
on the window
in all
her cups and
in case
there was a
*\' S»
WITti
******
"Saw
"1*
^ir».
/
For two days she and her bears lived and played
in
her castle peacefully.
.3 i
Until Fats
Watson came home. He sneaked
castle while she
was out to lunch and
Newtons, and she locked him f
Tm
sorry/' fifteen times.
ate
in until
all
into her
her Fig
he hollered,
When
she finally
castle a kick
let
and over
it
him
out, Fats gave Christina's
went, smack, on
^e
its
side.
Mother came out and saw the the
end of the
fallen box. "I see that's
castle, Christina,"
and started to haul
it
away.
she said with a smile
's
SI
i^-^^^^^^fe^rJ
"
*****
*T>
"But
that's
no
again. "That's
castle/' said Christina, hauling
my
it
back
clubhouse!"
J
And
was... for three long days. Right there
it
under
the apple tree.
Christina changed the
door into
a
window
window. She put
in
into a
door and the
two benches
for
mem-
bers and a chair for the president, and she painted
"Keep out," "Members only," and "Danger
to ene-
mies" on the outside.
(Wi&l|
•ft
W
; W'J
g^M 5
§!^
Mm
i
Till
1
VAUtfiMUJUM*.
k
(I
MUM 'iffi&H
And
she
let
Fats join.
Then they met
in
the club-
house (which was very dark when the door was closed
and very
secret),
and they
to be friends forever.
And
they were.
j I
spit
on
a nickel
and swore
^
Until one day vice-president.
promised to dent.
sit
when
Fats got angry at always being
He climbed on
the clubhouse roof and
there until Christina
made him
presi-
Only the roof caved the club.
in first,
and Christina disbanded
-i*'"-'
vi&J">--fc>*»
igfi*«e?2
When Mother hands together.
saw the
Now
she
sat-in
would have her
yard. "Well/' she said. "Jhat
house!" and she tugged «r
^
\
c_
.
*
*..
*
;
it
box, she brushed her
is
nice neat
the end of the club-
toward the
street.
&>
^ias*tt'-'
cc
But that's no clubhouse," said Christina, tugging
back
again. "That's
late for a race."
my
it
racing car, Hermione, and I'm
1K-2?
^xL'-iLL*
-
Before speeding
off,
Christina put the top on the
bottom, turned the window into
a cockpit,
and on
the sides painted two magnificent curling silver horns
which she blasted
at Fats
apple tree.
*** IV/;i
H.mi h-kimwm
every time she rounded the
ipwp^
w
\>
•.
.'«*,., i«*2"..'
She patted the box out each
bed
flap.
A
for the
and drew furniture on
stove and refrigerator for the kitchen, a
bedroom, and
for the living ball.
flat
room
a
so there
grand piano and a violin
would be music
for her
Then
she and her bears and Fats dressed
and high
some
heels,
up
in
gowns
and they invited kings and queens and
presidents and one vice-president to come.
everybody came, and they danced and danced their feet hurt
and they had to take
Even without shoes Christina had
a
And until
off their shoes.
wonderful time.
«
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:
.
"Fat's
:
':^C'C^:'i*--^^^^i>i{ :
.;.
mother got
a
washer and drier today, and he's
bringing two ships
down now.
wouldn't mind a
we
bit
if
sailed
I
said
them here
yard... right under our apple tree."
my mother in
our front
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About Patricia
Lee Gauch grew up
the
Author Michigan. While living
in Detroit,
in
Westchester County, she was a member of the Jean Fritz Writer's
Workshop. She now summers
in
lives
with her family in
New Jersey, spending
an old red farmhouse near Lexington, Michigan.
Mrs. Gauch
is
also the author of
Margot Tomes and JAy Old Tree
About
A
Secret
illustrated
House
by Doris Burn.
first set
foot
on a small
Puget Sound, Washington, Doris Burn wanted to true
and for
a
number
live
island in
on an
island.
of years she lived on
Wal-
Puget Sound, which looks out on the channel and the beau-
dron
in
tiful
Canadian
islands.
®riginally, Mrs. Burn lived in Portland, Oregon, where she
born. She attended the universities of