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Privo Tacy

Best Friends Forever

There are lots of children on Hill Street, but no little girls Betsy’s age. So when a new family moves into the house throughout the street, Betsy hopes they will have a little girl she may play with. Sure enough, they do—a little girl named Tacy. And from the moment they meet at Betsy’s fifth birthday party, Betsy and Tacy becoms such good friends that every one starts to think of them as one person—Betsy-Tacy.

Betsy and Tacy have a large total of fun together. They make a playhouse from a piano box, have a sand store, and dress up and go calling. And one day, they come home to a wondrous surprise—a new friend named Tib.

Ever since their introductory publication in the 1940′s, the Betsy-Tacy stories have been loved by each generation of young readers.

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #28781 in Books
  • Brand: Harper Collins Publishers
  • Published on: 1993-06-04
  • Released on: 1993-06-04
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: .42″ h x 6.00″ w x 8.97″ l, .36 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 144 pages
Review”I read each one of these Betsy-Tacy-Tib books twice. I loved them as a child, as a young adult, and now, reading them with my daughter, as a mother. What a wondrous world it was!” — Bette Midler, actor and singer

About the Author

Maud Hart Lovelace (1892-1980) based her Betsy-Tacy series on her own childhood. Her series still boasts legions of fans, some of whom are members of the Betsy-Tacy Society, a national institution based in Mankato, Minnesota.

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.

Chapter One

Betsy Meets Tacy

It was difficult, later, to think of a time when Betsy and Tacy had not been friends. Hill Street came to regard them closely as one person. Betsy’s brown braids went with Tacy’s red curls, Betsy’s plump legs with Tacy’s spindly ones, to school and from school, up hill and down, on errands and in play. So that when Tacy had the mumps and Betsy was obliged to make her journeys alone, saucy boys teased her: “Where’s the cheese, apple pie?” “Where’s your mush, milk?” As though she didn’t feel lonesome sufficient already! And Hill Street knew when Sunday came, even without listening to the rolling bells, for Betsy Ray and Tacy Kelly (whose parents attended dissimilar churches), set off down Hill Street separately, looking uncomfortable and strange.

But on this March afternoon, a month before Betsy’s fifth birthday, they did not know each other. They had not even seen each other, unless Betsy had glimpsed Tacy, without knowing her for Tacy, among the children of various sizes moving into the house throughout the street. Betsy had been kept in because of bad weather, and all day she had sat with her nose pasted to the pane. It was stimulating beyond words to have a family with children moving into that house.

Hill Street was rightfully named. It ran straight up into a green hill and stopped. The name of the town was Deep Valley, and a town named Deep Valley naturally had a great deal of hills. Betsy’s house, a little yellow cottage, was the last house on her side of Hill Street, and the rambling white house opposite was the last house on that side. So of course it was very important. And it had been empty ever since Betsy could remember.

“I hope whoever moves in will have children,” Betsy’s mother had said.

“Well, for Pete’s sake!” said Betsy’s father. “Hill Street is so full of children now that Old Mag has to watch out where she puts her feet down.”

“I know,” said Betsy’s mother. “There are a great deal of children for Julia.” (Julia was Betsy’s sister, eight years old.) “And there are dozens of babies. But there isn’t one little girl just Betsy’s age. And that’s what I’m hoping will come to the house throughout the street.”

That was what Betsy hoped, too. And that was what she had been looking at for all day as she sat at the dining room window. She was sure there ought to be such a little girl. There were girls of almost each size and boys to match, milling regarding the moving dray and in and out of the house. But she wasn’t sure. She hadn’t utterly seen one.

She had watched all day, and now the dining room was getting dark. Julia had stopped practicing her music lesson, and Mrs. Ray had lighted the lamp in the kitchen.

The March snow lay cold and dirty outside the window, but the wind had passed away down, and the western sky, behind the house opposite, was stained with red.

The furniture had all been carried in, and the dray was gone. A light was shining in the house. Suddenly the front door opened, and a little girl ran out. She wore a hood under which long red ringlets spattered out above her coat. Her legs in their long black stockings were thin.

It was Tacy, even though Betsy did not know it!

She ran firstborn to the hitching block, and bounced there on her toes a minute, looking up at the sky and all around. Then she ran up the road to the point where it ended on the hill. Some long-gone person had placed a bench there. It commanded the view down Hill Street. The little girl climbed up on this bench and looked intently into the dusk.

“I know just how she feels,” thought Betsy with a throb. “This is her new home. She wants to see what it’s like.” She ran to her mother.

“Mamma!” she cried. “There’s the little girl my age. Please let me go out! Just a minute! Please!”

Mrs. Ray was moved by the entreaty. She looked out at the colored sky.

“It does seem to be clearing up,” she said. “But you could only stay a minute. Do you want to go to the bother of putting on your things . . .”

“Oh, yes, yes!”

“Overshoes and mittens and everything?”

“Yes, really!”

Betsy flew to the closet, but she could not find her pussy hood. The mittens were twisted on the string inside her coat.

“Mamma! Help me! Please! She’ll be gone.”

“Help her, Julia,” called Betsy’s mother, and Julia helped, and at last the pussy hood was tied, and the coat buttoned, and the overshoes buckled, and the mittens pulled on.

Outside the air was fresh and cold. The street lamp had been lighted. It was stimulating just to be out at this hour, even without the probability of meeting the new little girl. But the new little girl still stood on the bench looking down the street.

Betsy ran toward her. She ran on the sidewalk as far as it went. Then she took to the frozen rutty road, and she had closely reached the bench when the little girl saw her.

“Hello!” called Betsy. “What’s your name?”

The other child made no answer. She jumped off the bench.

“Don’t go!” cried Betsy. “I’m coming.”

But the other child without a word begun to run. She brushed past Betsy on her headlong flight down the hill. She ran like a frighted rabbit, and Betsy ran in pursuit.

“Wait! Wait!” Betsy panted as she ran. But the new child would not stop. On fleet, black-stockinged legs she ran, rapidly and without delay than Betsy could follow.

“Wait! Wait!” pleaded Betsy but the child did not turn her head. She gained her own lawn, floundered through the snow to her house.

The entrance to her house was through a storm shed. She ran into this and banged the door. The door had a pane of glass in the front, and through that pane she stared fearfully at Betsy.

44 of 44 people found the following review helpful.
5GREAT BOOK! {:-)
By A
For my 8th birthday my Mom and Dad gave me the Betsy-Tacy Treasury which contained this book and Betsy-Tacy and Tib, Betsy and Tacy Go Over Big Hill, and Betsy and Tacy Go Downtown. I have just finished the whole thing and now I am 11. I have read it many others times and I find it amazing that I still appciate it at age 11. Whenever we go to the libary I look for smaller printed books but even though this has fairly large print I think it is a wonderful book. I found it when I was in organizing my family’s books and started to read it and couldn’t put it down. I loved this book and if you do you should read the rest of the Betsy-Tacy book series.

36 of 37 people found the following review helpful.
5a classic
By Lalalalaura
This book begins with a little girl’s fifth-birthday party; in my family it has become a tradition to give it to any little girl for her fifth birthday, and it’s always wonderful to do so, because you feel you’re sharing something really special.

Betsy and Tacy are imaginative and adventuresome and wholly appealing. Though the setting is far removed in time (far, at least for a small child), the characters and situations remain appealing and true, particularly the relationships between younger and older sisters.

This is just an ideal book to read to a child too young to read it — the series grows with the person, so that after a few years the child can read on her own, and Betsy and Tacy can keep her company all the way through high school.

22 of 22 people found the following review helpful.
5Delightful Book
By drebbles
Betsy-Tacy is the first book in the delightful series by Maud Hart Lovelace. Five-year-old Betsy longs for a best friend and finds one when Tacy moves in across the street. Together they have many adventures, including going on picnics, selling sand, playing with paper dolls, going “calling” on neighbors, climbing The Big Hill, and going to school for the first time.

The Betsy-Tacy books were partially autobiographical and Lovelace perfectly captures the innocence and magic of childhood. Betsy’s imaginative stories, such as riding a feather, are delightful. Even though they are children, Betsy and Tacy’s lives are, as in real life, not always happy. The death of Tacy’s baby sister, left tears in my eyes yet joy at the innocence of youth as Betsy and Tacy leave an Easter Egg in a tree with the belief that a bird will carry it up to Heaven and give it to Tacy’s sister.

I loved these books as a child and I’m happy to say I still love them as an adult. This is a great book for young and old.

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