Astrid Lindgren wrote Pippi Longstocking in 1945 for her daughter, and the little girl she invented has been unsettling the grown-up world ever since. Pippi lives alone, lifts a horse over her head, tells outrageous lies with complete confidence, and refuses every attempt to make her ordinary. She is one of children's literature's great originals: funny, anarchic, and genuinely free in a way that children recognize immediately and adults find quietly alarming. Lindgren believed fiercely in children's right to be taken seriously, and Pippi is the fullest expression of that belief. This collection brings together gifts and stationery for everyone who has a little Pippi in them.