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COLLECTION STORY

A Modern-Day Miniature Library

Discover books created in celebration of 100 years of Queen Mary’s Dolls’ House.

A selection of miniature books lined up next to regular sized book.
New miniature books created in celebration of 100 years of Queen Mary’s Dolls’ House. ©

Reading time: 3 minutes

In celebration of the centenary of Queen Mary’s Dolls’ House, a selection of modern-day writers and binders have contributed handwritten and hand-bound books to a new, doll-sized collection, in an initiative championed by Her Majesty The Queen.

After being exhibited in a special display at Windsor Castle during 2024, the little books will be kept together in the Royal Library. The new books include a miniature version of The Gruffalo by Julia Donaldson and Axel Scheffler and A Tiny Ghost Story by Anthony Horowitz. Her Majesty The Queen has contributed her own miniature book to the collection: a handwritten introduction to the Modern-Day Miniature Library project.

A selection of the books created in celebration of 100 years of Queen Mary’s Dolls’ House.©
The Gruffalo©

Queen Mary’s Dolls' House

The Dolls’ House was built between 1921 and 1924 as a gift from the nation to Queen Mary following the First World War. It was designed by the architect Sir Edwin Lutyens, working alongside Princess Marie Louise. They were joined by hundreds of artists, designers, manufacturers and craft experts in their quest to create a time-capsule of the 1920s. It is a perfect 1:12 scale replica of an Edwardian-style residence – complete with electricity, working lifts and running water.

Queen Mary's Dolls' House at Windsor Castle (RCIN 231999)©

The Dolls’ House Library

One of the most remarkable rooms of the Dolls’ House is its Library. Like the rest of the rooms in the House, its contents are real, but small. Of the nearly 600 books on its shelves, over 170 are manuscripts handwritten by the most notable authors of the 1920s.

Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, A.A. Milne, Thomas Hardy and Vita Sackville-West are among many of the literary figures who squeezed poems, stories, plays and essays into pages around only 4 cm high. Their books were bound in some of the most prominent binderies of the time.

Queen Mary's Dolls' House Library.©
The Miniature Library of Queen Mary’s Dolls’ House

£16.95

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Just like when the Dolls’ House Library was collected in the 1920s, today’s authors were free to copy out by hand work they had already published, or to write something new. The little booklets they wrote in were then bound by leading designer-binders. While in the 1920s a traditional style of binding was preferred for the Dolls’ House books, the artistic attitudes of today are reflected in the individual creativity and use of alternative materials seen on the bindings of the modern books.

The Royal Bindery

A selection of the new miniature books have been bound in the Royal Bindery at Windsor Castle. Established during the reign of George III, the Royal Bindery today not only conserves, protects and repairs the Royal Collection's books, albums and manuscripts, but also creates new bindings for State Gifts and other royal occasions.

The Royal Bindery’s work to deliver the new doll-sized library began with preparing the tiny blank booklets given to authors to write in, and culminated in making designer bindings in miniature.

A selection of the miniature books.©

A Modern-Day Miniature Library

The new collection of books contains a variety of different types of writing. Poetry, short stories and ghostly tales are all included, along with plays, articles and recipes. In the 1920s, children’s authors were not asked to contribute to the Dolls’ House Library, but the new collection for 2024 features several works written for children.

The new collection is also more illustrated than the library formed for the Dolls’ House in the 1920s, and the books contain pictures by leading book artists, the authors themselves, and talented amateurs, including children.

See a list of the newly created books below and find out more in our Collection Online.

AuthorTitleBound byRoyal Collection Inventory Number (RCIN)
Her Majesty The QueenQueen Mary’s Doll’s House: forewordGlenn Bartley, Royal Bindery1171616
Simon ArmitageThere was a steep grass bank then a fieldMatthew Stockl, Royal Bindery1171600
Alan BennettThe MantelpieceAndreas Maroulis, Royal Bindery1171604

Malorie Blackman

Illustrated by Elizabeth Mira Morrison

A Message to JessicaBayntun-Riviere1171607

Lucy Caldwell 

Illustrated by Orla Routh

Intimacies

 

Gillian Stewart, Juju Books1171611
Joseph Coelho, Children’s LaureateAn Abecedarius of the Very Teeny, and other poemsMatthew Stockl, Royal Bindery1171619
Imtiaz DharkerThe WelcomeFlora Ginn1171606
Julia Donaldson and Axel SchefflerThe GruffaloGlenn Bartley, Royal Bindery1171614
Bernardine EvaristoThe African Origins of the United KingdomSue Doggett1171613
Sebastian FaulksMusic for a Dolls’ House, 1924–2024Shepherds, Sangorski & Sutcliffe1171612
Philippa GregoryRichard, my Richard: a playStuart Brockman, Brockman Bookbinders1171602

Robert Hardman

Illustrated by Phoebe Hardman

The Coronation of King Charles III and Queen Camilla, 6· V· 2023Ted Bennett1171618
Anthony HorowitzA Tiny Ghost StoryAngela James1171601
Charlie MackesyThe Boy, the Mole, the Fox and the HorseHannah Brown1171608
Sir Ben OkriPoemsRachel Ward-Sale, Bookbinders of Lewes.1171615
Tom Parker BowlesA Recipe Fit for a QueenAndreas Maroulis, Royal Bindery1171620
Elif ShafakAisha woke up from troubled dreamsHaein Song1171617
Sir Tom StoppardKolya’s GloveLester Capon1171609
Sarah WatersUnderhand House: part oneChristopher Shaw1171610
A.N. WilsonThe Residents: a poemPeter Jones1171605
Dame Jacqueline WilsonThe House Mouse/ translated from Mouse SqueaksEri Funazaki1171603

The income from your ticket contributes directly to The Royal Collection Trust, a registered charity. The aims of The Royal Collection Trust are the care and conservation of the Royal Collection, and the promotion of access and enjoyment through exhibitions, publications, loans and educational activities.