
How They Broke Away to Go to theRootabaga Country
How They Bring Back the Village ofCream Puffs When the Wind BlowsIt Away
How the Five Rusty Rats Helped Find aNew Village
The Potato Face Blind Man Who Lostthe Diamond Rabbit on His GoldAccordion
How the Potato Face Blind Man EnjoyedHimself on a Fine Spring Morning
Poker Face the Baboon and Hot Dogthe Tiger
The Toboggan-to-the-Moon Dream of thePotato Face Blind Man
How Gimme the Ax Found Out Aboutthe Zigzag Railroad and Who MadeIt Zigzag
The Story of Blixie Bimber and the Powerof the Gold Buckskin Whincher
The Story of Jason Squiff and Why HeHad a Popcorn Hat, Popcorn Mittensand Popcorn Shoes
In a delightfully odd little town where chimneys always puff, doors always open, and windows are forever either shut or ajar, a solitary carpenter named Gimme the Ax raises two children who choose their own names—Please Gimme and Ax Me No Questions. Their world is a rhythm of simple routines, wild‑grass hair and long ears, and the comforting certainty that everything stays exactly as it has always been.
Yet the quiet sameness soon feels too tight, and the siblings, urged on by their father, sell everything they own to buy a ticket that promises a journey “where the railroad tracks run off into the sky.” Boarding a rattling steam train that whistles and chugs toward an impossible horizon, they set off for a place where the ordinary rules no longer apply, hoping to discover what lies beyond the familiar landscape of their home.
Language
en
Duration
~2 hours (147K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Betsie Bush, ronnie sahlberg and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was made using scans of public domain material from the Children's Books Online - Rosetta Project)
Release date
2008-10-29
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1878–1967
A poet of city streets, working people, and the American voice, he brought plain speech and big feeling into modern poetry. He also became one of the country’s best-known interpreters of Abraham Lincoln and won three Pulitzer Prizes along the way.
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