~ Confectionery World Publishing ~
Saginaw, Michigan
Hi
We are searching for a publisher to take our
intellectual projects to the next level. Please take a look at our small-publisher-to-large-publisher Series "The Wurtherington Diary."
We are hoping to find an agent for turning our books into major film as
well.
The Little Doll Girl is the first of eight titles in the
series and is our first choice for publication. All the novels
were #1 sellers during our launch promotions. Call 989 4013122 and leave a
phone number or write
ReynoldJay@att.net.
Thank you,
Reynold Jay (currently 75 million internet sites)
Directions: To view the manuscript click RJ Novels and scroll to the "For
Publishers Only" link.
The Little Doll Girl: Book One
Tammy and the Declaration of Independence
Tammy, Meets Ali Baba and the Forty Thieves
Tammy and the California Gold Rush
Tammy Meets William Tell
Buffalo Bill and the Pony Express
Buffalo Bill and the
Indians
Robin Hood and the Magna Carta
~*~
This series is all about "Freedom"
with Tammy becoming a time-traveler through history
to safeguard freedom whenever it threatens the course of
history.
~*~
We would hope someone
would read The Little Doll Girl and ask:
Is this a totally new concept that is not derivative?
Are the characters and the story unlike anything you have ever
read?
Is this an instant classic that compares with Alice in
Wonderland, Wizard of Oz,
and Peter Pan like our readers have told us?
Does this title have the power to reach a world-wide audience
of tens of millions of readers?
Would this be a billion dollar film in the hands of Disney
rivaling, and perhaps surpassing, "Frozen?"
Reynold Jay is a retired teacher, musician, entertainer,
novelist, and business person. Impaired characters often
appear in his novels, most notably, "Lean against the Wind,"
which is a semi-biographical account of his life-long
experiences as a special education teacher. Over 75 million
internet sites (no social sites) are devoted to his
endeavors.
~ Back Cover ~
"...A delightful tale of a brave little girl that will
enthrall readers of all ages." C. Miller Fully Restored
un-revised Illustrated edition for all ages.
As with many illustrated classic stories, it is
a story with unique characters and deals with hope,
determination, compassion, and much more. In the opening
preface, Robert Landsbury discovers the diary in a shed on a
newly purchased estate in River Falls, Ohio and passes it
along to his associates. The diary is faithfully preserved for
today's reader.
In it, the reader will discover that a ten-year-old mute girl,
Tammy Wurtherington residing in the Wixby estate is the
author. She loves to make dolls in a shed out in back of the
house. She lives with Lord Wixby and Aunt May in a lavish
estate at the edge of town. Aunt May teaches her to use a
sewing machine and gives her a small one suited to size as a
birthday gift. One day while constructing a toy soldier for
her brother, Alfred the Mouse appears and is impressed with
her ability to make doll outfits and reluctantly invites her
to follow him to Kira if she will bring along the sewing
machine.
Tammy keeps a diary of her exploits in Kira which is ruled
with an iron-hand by a pair of sorceresses, Catherine and
Lucinda. Tammy and Alfred find their way through a fantasy
underground transportation system that ends up with the pair
mistakenly ending up in a wicker-basket in the middle of the
ocean. Tammy finds her voice for the first time and Alfred
explains that it is a “talking spell that allows virtually
everyone to talk including the pesky (giant) flowers.”
From this point you will discover many wonderful characters
like Zeke, the Flying Opossum, and Cedric the Mongoose, who
accompany Tammy on her journey to Capira to present a petition
to return the kingdom to its former glory. You will meet the
pirate, Captain Flynn, who loves to have his guests walk the
plank and the loveable Kakuna villagers who's harvest is soon
to be confiscated by the royal soldiers. But please beware of
the Oxboar forest, where the evil Hoarggs reside otherwise you
may end up in a stew-pot.
Tammy has an adventure in which she learns to love all the
strange living creatures she encounters in a magical land.
Before she departs, all of Kira will fall in love with The
Little Doll Girl who changed them forever and became a legend.
Synopsis Adult Edition
The story continues with Tammy using her magical machine ( a sewing machine) to repair the tattered sails of the pirates and the become friends. Tammy is rendered helpless when Princess Catherine and Lucinda fly into the Kakuna village and threatens the villagers with an order to surrender the harvest in the next month or suffer the burning of the villages by the Korgoyl.
.
Tammy and her little associates make their way, with the help of giant bees, across Kira on a journey to Capira in hopes of presenting a petition to Princess Catherine and Lucinda to give up the plan confiscate the harvest. Tammy decides to enter the Oxboar forest in sprite of warnings from all. She finds them to be giant ape-like creatures with human emotions. The women love her dress and Tammy makes clothing for all and teaches them how to sew. She embarks upon a plan to unite all the villages and has the Horaggs host a party where everyone can become friends for the first time. Now united she guides everyone in a plan to defend themselves from the evil sorceresses. They build war machines that look like giant nutcracker wooden soldiers.
While the preparations are going on Tammy makes her way to Capria where the pair of sorceresses decide to reject her peace offering and place her in a dungeon where they plan to execute her the following day. Tammy escapes with the aid of her associates and returns to the Oxboar Forest with a swarm of giant bees to make final preparations for the upcoming battle. Soon the army arrives to take possession of the harvest and a great battle ensues. When Tammy's forces overcome the soldiers Catherine and Lucinda appear and hurl many magical spells at the defenders of the land. A Korgoyle ( much like a fire breathing dragon) appears Tammy alone defeats it by chopping off its head with an ingenious mechanism prepared by the Kakuna. Tammy shows compassion for the dead and dying soldiers left in the battlefield and orders that none will be summarily executed as has been the tradition. She befriends a captain of the guard who tells her a terrible secret about Catherine the Sorceress before he passes away.
Armed with this knowledge Tammy and her entourage make their way to Capria and enter the throne room of Catherine and Lucinda. Tammy surprises everyone when she announces that she has not come to set terms for a surrender, but to offer herself as a martyr as she realizes that the powers of the sister sorceresses would eventually destroy all of Kira. They send word throughout the kingdom that Tammy will be beheaded the next morning in a spectacle in the palace courtyard.
Tammy is able to take Lucinda aside and tells her ( information gained from the dying captain of the guard) that Lucinda had their parents, the King and Queen, turned into mice and buried in a swamp. Lucinda breaks into a rage at the betrayal and the sisters battle in the square with magical spells being hurled at one another. Lucinda sends Catherine off to the Netherlands encased in a prison-like floating bubble. With Catherine's evil spells now broken everyone is astonished to see Alfred the Mouse and his sweetheart turn magically into Alfred the Great and Queen Betty. After a three day celebration of dancing in the streets Lucinda sends Tammy home with a magical spell where Tammy discovers her voice for the first time. ( A gift from Lucinda) .
All of Tammy's associates and the King and Queen (as mice) visit with Tammy in her home in Ohio as all are good friends. Alfred writes the last entry in the diary where he describes how the angel Gabriella appeared one evening to fetch Tammy, her lost angel, and they flew into the heavens leaving everyone behind to live...
Happily ever after.