When Kirby, Bitsy, and their parents inherit an unusual and very pink motel in Florida, they find it filled with eccentric characters, mystery, and adventure.
As a girl, I loved this book! Still love it. I have my hardback on my shelf, in it's pinkness, no dust jacket. Magical. The author, Carol R. Brink, also wrote "Baby Island," another favorite. Read this a few times, as a kid, and always wanted a Pink Motel of my own. Just the other day, I told my dear Norman, Hunny, let's up and move to Florida, buy a little motel, paint it pink, and have each room different.. just like the book! Palm trees and white sand beaches are calling.. especially since it's been 20 degrees here this week, and miserable! An adventure for kids. All my daughters read my pink copy. Buy it. Read it. You'll love it too.
Finally read this cult favorite: YEAH!
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 19 years ago
What a magical book! The Mellon family inherits The Pink Motel on the Florida coast and moves down for the summer to run it. There they meet an assortment of regular guests and find some new ones. The children, Kirby and Bitsy, make friends with a local boy named Big and revive a bored girl guest named Sandra. Secrets, mysteries, alligator chasing, coconuts, wonderful treats from Miss Frith's basket, and some very, very valuable dog guests make for a lively and engaging story. For 1951, the integration between white and black children is natural and straightforward. This is the kind of book I would like to write. I sure enjoyed reading it.
A lifelong favorite
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 20 years ago
Like others, I received this book when I belonged to the Weekly Reader Bookclub as a 4th grader. It is the first real novel I ever read and it gave me a love of reading that has lasted about 45 years. The easy fantasy, fun chatacters and secret of Uncle Hiram have lasted that long in my heart. I read this book 10 times, literally, before I ever read another novel. When it came as a book club selection even the hardback was pink!
The psychological subtext
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 21 years ago
This was my favorite book as a child in the '60s. I recently re-read it and realized why: the key theme is the acceptance by the conventional of the "Unusual." The narrow-minded vs. the open-minded. The extremely narrow-minded parents balk at the "unusual" color of the pink motel, and declare that they will paint it "gray or brown or white" as soon as possible. The children, more open-minded, love the color of the motel and actively seek out the unusual. Of course, by the end, even the parents have loosened up under the spell of the Pink Motel, and somewhat nervously accept the Unusual.It's clear to me that one reason children embrace this story is that it reassures them that there might be a place for them in the world, no matter how unusual they are: i.e. adopted, too bright, extremely isolated, gay, or the "wrong color" (depending on where they're going to school). Beyond that, it's just a terrific story, swiftly told, with great illustrations. The weather-vanes are especially charming.
My favorite book in elementary school
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 21 years ago
The Pink Motel was my favorite book in elementary school. That was back in the days before the Internet was so widely known and used, and therefore I never thought I could BUY the book. I would check it out from my school's library and try to painstakingly copy it by hand into a notebook. I gave up after a chapter or so. As an adult, I had to buy this book for nostalgia. I think the appeal for me is that it sets my imagination on fire...what an exciting book full of eccentric characters. I highly recommend this book!
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