![]() |
The North American Tiddlywinks Association T i d d l y w i n k s ! |
Classification Key · Notable · Marginal · Literature · Etymology · Directories · Catalogs/Antiques · Rabelais · T'an Chi · Tw in Title
| Samuel Hopkins Adams. Common Cause. A Novel of the War in America. Houghton-Mifflin Company, The Riverside Press. © 1918 Curtis Publishing Company. © 1919 Samuel Hopkins Adams. Page 410. ("'Well, then! What's this we're up against right here in Fenchester? Are we fighting"? Or playing tiddledy-winks?'). Page 411 ("'There's very little tiddledywinks in it, so far as The Guardian is concerned,' confessed Jeremy with a wry face.") | ||
| [] | Poul Anderson & Gordon R. Dickson. "The tiddlywink warriors", short story. ("small metal disk with sharp edges [...] poison") Appears in: | |
| The Magazine of fantasy and science fiction. August 1955. (see Magazines section) | ||
| Earthman's burden. 1957, Gnome Press. Pages 154185. Words used on pages 174, 177 (two), 179, 180, 181 (two) | ||
| Earthman's burden. 1957, Avon. Pages 159189. Words used on pages 178, 181, 182, 184 (two), 185, 186 | <o> | |
| [] | Poul Anderson. The rebel worlds. 1969, Signet. Page 50 | |
| [] | Poul Anderson. We claim these stars. © 1959. Page 98 ("hypersquidgeronics") | |
| [] | Poul Anderson. (Other books in the Flandry series ("Hell and tiddlywinks").) | |
| [] | Piers Anthony. Blue adept. © 1981, Ballantine. Page 149 | <o> |
| [] | Piers Anthony. Fractal mode. ("Are you sure you know what you're doing' he asked Colene . . . he knew they were not playing tiddlywinks") | <x> |
| [] | Piers Anthony. Split infinity. © 1980, Ballantine. Page 312 | <o> |
| [] | Isaac Asimov [Ask Dave Lockwood] | |
| [] | James M. Barrie. Peter Pan. 1904. Chapter VII. "There was a chandelier from Tiddlywinks for the look of the thing," | <e> |
John Joy Bell. Cupid in oilskins. © 1916. Fleming H. Revell Company, New York
|
||
John Joy Bell. Ethel. © 1903
|
||
| [] | William S. Burroughs. Cities of the red night. © 1981. | <x> |
| Beverly Cleary. Beezus and Ramona. © 1955. Avon Books, Inc. (1990). Pages 80, 81 ("'Tiddlywinks, tiddlywinks, I want to play tiddlywinks,' chanted Ramona, shaking her head back and forth. 'Not after the way you spoiled our checker game,' said Beezus. 'I wouldn't play tiddlywinks with you for a million dollars.'), and 82. | ||
| [] | Clyde Brion Davis. Something for nothing. © 1955. Page 280 | |
| [] | Philip K. Dick. Our friends from Frolix 8. © 1970, Bantam. Page 180 | <o> |
| [] | J. D. Fitzgerald. The Great Brain. | |
| [] | Erle Stanley Gardner. The case of the motheaten mink. 1952, Pocketbooks. Page 60 | |
| ©1952, 1980, Ballantine Books, New York, ISBN 0-345-36928-9. Page 67 | <o> | |
| [] | Anne Green. With much love. 1948. Page 103 (" [...] Papa found Eleanor and Mary playing Tiddledy Winks while Mamma and Charles pored over maps") | <x> |
Violet Guttenberg. Neither Jew nor Greek: a story of Jewish social life. 1902
|
||
Grace Livingston HIll. The honor girl. 1927
|
||
| [L] | James Joyce. Finnegans wake. © 1939, Viking. Pages 23 ("how biff for her tiddywink of a windfall"), 583 ("whenever she druv behind her stumps for a tyddlesly wink through his tunnilclefft bagslops [...]") | <c> |
| [L] | James Joyce. Ulysses. © 1934 (written 19141921), Modern Library (Random House). Page 670 ("Parlour game (dominos, halma, tiddledywinks [...]") | <o> |
| [] | Stephen King, The stand. © 1978. (paperback) Page 784 ("The coins falling on the plastic made a sound that reminded Harold absurdly of tiddledywinks."). Page 897 ("A manhole cover exploded into the air at Broadway-and-Walnut intersection, went nearly fifty feet, and came down on the roof of the Oz Toyshop like a great rusty tiddledywink.") | |
Sinclair Lewis. The Trail of the Hawk. ©1915, Harper & Brothers.
|
||
| Halford Edward Luccock. Like a mighty army: selected letters of Simeon Stylites [pseud.]. 1954. Page 178 ("(AP) The National Tiddlywinks Shrine, costing $200000, was dedicated her yesterday, in the presence of 10000 members of the American Tiddlywinks Association." | ||
| [] | Fred Majdalany. Patrol. 1953. Page 68 ("In return she gave him four large tiddly-winks [...]") | <x> |
| [] | Julian May. The nonborn king. © 1983, Pan Books, London. Page 209 | <x> |
| [>L] | Vladimir Nabokov. Lolita. © 1955. Putnam. Pages 21 and another page. | <o> |
| Berkley. Pages 20 ("I am just winking happy thoughts into a little tiddle cup"), 21 ("My little cup brims with tiddles.") | <o> | |
| [L] | George Orwell. Nineteen eightyfour. © 1949, HarcourtBrace. Page 298 | <o> |
| Eugene Manlove Rhodes. Copper Streak Trail. © 1917 The Curtis Publishing Company. © 1922 Eugene Manlove Rhodes. Houghton and Mifflin Company, The Riverside Press. Page 173. ("'It is a shame, of the burning variety that a State as wealthy as New York does n't and won't provide country schools with playgrounds big enough for anything but tiddledywinks!' declared Miss Selden." | ||
Edwin Meade Robinson. Enter Jerry. © 1921. The MacMillan Company, New York
|
||
| Dorothy Sayers. Murder must advertise: a detective story.1933 | ||
| [L] | John Steinbeck. The grapes of wrath. © 1939, Bantam. Pages 13 ("flipped the turtle like a tiddlywink"), 87 ("the children squidged their toes in the red dust") | <o> |
| [] | Rex Stout. Rubber band. Page 129 | |
| [L] | P. G. Wodehouse. The cat-nappers (US title). Aunts aren't gentlemen (UK title) ©1974, Perennial Library, Harper & Row, New York. Page 112 (Aunt Dahlia: " 'Do you remember when you had measles and I gave up hours of my valuable time to playing tiddlywinks with you and letting you beat me without a murmur?' ". Bertie Wooster: "I could have disputed this. My victories had been due entirely to skill. I haven't played much tiddlywinks lately, but in those boyhood days I was pretty hot stuff at the pastime.") | <o> |