Newbery and Caldecott Awards - ALA Store

the Newbery and Caldecott Awards guide covers awards for the most
distinguished American children’s literature and illustration. Librarians
and teachers everywhere rely on this annual guide for quick reference, collection
and curriculum development, and readers’ advisory. Retaining the fresh look
and format introduced in the last edition, the 2010 guide also includes
■■ Revised awards’ eligibility criteria, alongside a new essay, “The Times
■■ Updated bibliographic citations and index for the award winners
Locating information on the award-winning books is easier than ever before with
this up-to-date resource.
For additional content, see www.ala.org/editions/extras/alsc35859.
You may also be interested in
C a l d e c o tt A w a r d s They Are a-Changin’,” by former ALSC Executive Director Diane Foote
and
■■ A new preface from ALSC Executive Director Aimee Strittmatter
The Newber y
N
ewly updated to include all 2010 award winners, the latest edition of
n ISBN 978-0-8389-3595-8
9 780838 935958
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The
Newber y
&
C a l d e c o tt
Awards
A Guide to the
Medal and Honor Books
2010 Edition
A s s o c i at i o n f o r Li b r a ry
S erv i c e t o C h i ld r en
A m er i c a n Li b r a ry A s s o c i at i o n
C h i c ag o 2010
The Newbery and Caldecott medal and Honor Book seals are property of the
American Library Association and cannot be used in any form or reproduced
without permission of the ALA, Office of Rights and Permissions.
Cover illustration of When You Reach Me, written by Rebecca Stead, used with
permission of Wendy Lamb Books, an imprint of Random House Children’s Books.
Cover illustration for The Evolution of Calpurnia Tate, written by Jacqueline Kelly,
used with permission of Henry Holt Books for Young Readers. Cover illustration
for Claudette Colvin: Twice toward Justice, written by Phillip Hoose, used with
permission of Macmillan Children’s Publishing Group. Cover illustration for Where
the Mountain Meets the Moon, written by Grace Lin, used with permission of Little,
Brown Books for Young Readers. Cover illustration for The Mostly True Adventure of
Home P. Figg, written by Rodman Philbrick, used with permission of the Blue Sky
Press, an imprint of Scholastic, Inc.
Cover illustration for The Lion and the Mouse, written and illustrated by Jerry
Pinkney, used with permission of Little, Brown Books for Young Readers. Cover
illustration for All the World, written by Liz Garton Scanlon, illustrated by Marla
Frazee, used with permission of Beach Lane Books, an imprint of Simon &
Schuster Children’s Publishing. Cover illustration for Red Sings from Treetops: A Year
in Colors, written by Joyce Sidman and illustrated by Pamela Zagarenski, used with
permission of Houghton Mifflin Books for Children/Houghton Mifflin Harcourt.
The paper used in this publication meets the minimum requirements of American
National Standard for Information Sciences—Permanence of Paper for Printed
Library Materials, ANSI Z39.48-1992.
Copyright © 2010 by the American Library Association. All rights reserved except
those which may be granted by Sections 107 and 108 of the Copyright Revision
Act of 1976.
ISBN-13: 978-0-8389-3595-8
ISSN: 1070-4493
Printed in the United States of America
14 13 12 11 10 5 4 3 2 1
Contents
Preface v
Newbery and Caldecott Awards:
Authorization and Terms
1
The Times, They Are a-Changin’
Diane Foote
11
The Newbery Awards,
2010–1922
21
The Caldecott Awards,
2010–1938
91
Author/Illustrator Index 157
Title Index 165
Additional material can be found on the book’s website,
at www.ala.org/editions/extras/ALSC35859.
iii
Preface
W
elcome to the 2010 edition of the Newbery and Caldecott awards guide. This
complete listing of Newbery and Caldecott Medal–winning titles and Honor
Books showcases the most distinguished examples of American children’s literature
over the past eighty-plus years.
The Newbery and Caldecott Awards is reissued each year, featuring the new medalwinning and honor books and listing the previous awards from their inceptions in
1922 (Newbery Medal) and 1938 (Caldecott Medal). In this year’s essay, Diane Foote
presents an enlightening overview of recent clarifications to the awards’ definitions
and provides an insightful look at some recent trends in children’s book publishing that affect the Newbery and Caldecott Award Selection Committees in their
work. Each year, while remaining true to the original intent of the awards, the award
committees diligently review terms and criteria and often wrestle with challenging
eligibility questions. A practical guide, “Expanded Definitions and Examples,” was
developed and included in the award manuals to help the committees as they grapple
with these issues in committee, and it does a wonderful job of illustrating the types
of complex scenarios the committees often must address. It is included here in Ms.
Foote’s essay.
Bette J. Peltola’s essay “Newbery and Caldecott Awards: Authorization and
Terms,” which discusses the terms and definitions that have evolved for both awards,
was revised by Ms. Foote this year to incorporate the recent clarifications to terms,
criteria, and definitions. The essay continues to provide an overview of the significance of the awards and the evaluation of children’s literature.
We have included photos of the 2010 Newbery and Caldecott medalists, as well
as remarks of the award committee chairs, which provide insight into why these
books were selected. Information on media used in Caldecott Medal–winning and
Honor Books accompanies each individual title entry.
We hope you will find the 2010 guide valuable, and we welcome your suggestions for future editions.
Aimee Strittmatter
Executive Director
Association for Library Service to Children
v
Newbery and
Caldecott Awards
Authorization and Terms
Bette J. Peltola, revised by Diane Foote
E
ach year the Newbery and Caldecott Medals and Honors are awarded by the
American Library Association for the most distinguished American children’s
books published the previous year. Both awards were founded by Frederic G. Melcher,
an influential American bookseller and publisher who served as editor of Publishers
Weekly from 1918 to 1933 and eventually served as president and chairman of the board
of the magazine’s publisher, R. R. Bowker. The awards are administered by the Association for Library Service to Children, a division of the American Library Association.
The Newbery was first awarded in 1922, after Melcher in 1921 proposed to
the ALA meeting of the Children’s Librarians’ Section that a medal be given for
the most distinguished children’s book of the year. He suggested that it be named
for the eighteenth-century English bookseller John Newbery. In Melcher’s formal
agreement with ALA, the purpose of the Newbery Medal was stated as follows: “To
encourage original and creative work in the field of books for children. To emphasize
to the public that contributions to the literature for children deserve similar recognition to poetry, plays, or novels. To give those librarians, who make it their life work
to serve children’s reading interests, an opportunity to encourage good writing in this
field.” The Newbery Medal thus became the first children’s book award in the world.
In 1937 Melcher suggested, and ALA approved, a second annual medal, this
to be given to the artist who had created the most distinguished picture book of
the year and to be called the Caldecott Medal in honor of Randolph Caldecott, the
nineteenth-century English illustrator. The Caldecott Medal “shall be awarded to
the artist of the most distinguished American Picture Book for Children published
in the United States during the preceding year. The award shall go to the artist, who
must be a citizen or resident of the United States, whether or not he be the author of
the text. Members of the Newbery Medal Committee will serve as judges. If a book
Bette J. Peltola is professor emerita, School of Education, University of Wisconsin–​
Milwaukee.
1
2 Newbery a n d Cald eco t t Awar d s
of the year is nominated for both the Newbery and Caldecott Awards the committee shall decide under which heading it shall be voted upon, so that the same title
shall not be considered on both ballots.” In 1977 the ALSC Board of Directors
rescinded the final part of the 1937 action and approved that “any book published in
the preceding year shall be eligible to be considered for either award or both awards.”
Separate committees to choose the Newbery and Caldecott Medals were established
in 1978 and began with the 1980 selection committees.
Changes in Terms for the Awards
A resolution by the Section for Library Work with Children in 1932 that “the book
of a previous [Newbery] award winner shall receive the award only upon the unanimous vote” of the committee was rescinded in 1958 by the Children’s Services Division. The board of directors stated, “In view of the fact that a unanimous vote in the
case of a previous winner of the Newbery or Caldecott Awards was first instituted
to encourage new authors and illustrators at a period when such encouragement was
needed and since such need is no longer apparent, the restriction of a unanimous vote
for winning either award more than once [is] removed from terms for selection [of
the awards].” In 1963 the Children’s Services Division voted that “joint authors shall
be eligible” for the awards.
Also in 1932, the Section for Library Work with Children, with Melcher’s
approval, adopted the following: “To be eligible for the Newbery Medal books must
be original, or, if traditional in origin, the result of individual research, the retelling
and reinterpretation being the writer’s own.”
From the beginning, committees could, and usually did, cite other books as worthy of attention. Such books were referred to as runners-up. In 1971 the term “runners-up” was changed to “honor books.” The new terminology was made retroactive
so that all runners-up are now referred to as Newbery or Caldecott Honor Books.
In 1978 the ALSC board approved the presentation of certificates to the authors
of the Newbery Honor Books and the illustrators of the Caldecott Honor Books.
Certificates were presented for the first time in 1986.
Also in 1978, the ALSC board adopted new statements of terms, definitions, and
criteria for each award to provide further clarification of the basis on which the awards
are to be given. These statements were slightly modified in 1985 and 1987. An Award
Eligibility Task Force was convened in 2007 and its recommendations approved in 2008.
While the awards’ terms and criteria remained the same, the definitions were updated
in 2009 to reflect these recommendations. In addition, an “Expanded Definitions and
Examples” appendix is available in current editions of the individual award manuals.
Award Committees
The committees that select the Newbery and Caldecott Medal–winning and
honor books each have fifteen members including the chair. The ALSC mem-
Newbery a n d Cald eco t t Awar d s 3
bership elects eight members from a slate drawn up by the ALSC Nominating Committee; the ALSC president-elect appoints the remaining six members;
and the ALSC president appoints the chair. All members of the committees are
members of ALSC.
During the year, each committee member reads as many of the eligible books
as possible, including all books suggested by other committee members and by other
members of ALSC. Three times in the autumn, committee members cast preliminary ballots to begin to focus attention on the books likely to be of most interest in
the selection discussions. During the selection meetings, the committee discusses
all nominated books before beginning balloting. Each committee member votes for
three books, with four points assigned to first choice, three to second, and two to
third. To win, a book must receive at least eight first-place choices and at least eight
points more than any other book. Once a winner is chosen, the committee decides
whether to name honor books and how many.
Medals and Seals
Rene Paul Chambellan designed both the Newbery and Caldecott Medals. The
bronze medals, shown on pages 8 and 9, have the winner’s name and the date
engraved on the back. The inscription on the Newbery Medal still reads “Children’s
Librarians’ Section,” the section of ALA originally charged with administering the
Newbery, although the section has changed its name four times and its membership now includes both school and public library children’s librarians—in contrast
to the years 1922–58, when the section, under three different names, included only
public library children’s librarians. (The section names: until 1929, Children’s Librarians’ Section; 1929–42, Section for Library Work with Children; 1942–58, Children’s
Library Association; 1958–77, Children’s Services Division; and, 1977 to the present,
Association for Library Service to Children.)
At the inception of the Caldecott Medal in 1937, the Section for Library Work
with Children invited the School Libraries Section (now the American Association
of School Librarians) to name five of its members to the awards committee each year.
For this reason the Caldecott Medal inscription reads: “Awarded annually by the
Children’s and School Librarians Sections of the American Library Association.” In
1958 the Children’s Services Division Board of Directors recognized that the wording on both medals was incorrect in terms of current ALA terminology but decided
to retain the original wording on the medals.
Gold (for medal-winning books) and silver (for honor books) facsimile seals
may be placed on winning books, either by publishers or by librarians, booksellers, or
individuals who already have the books on their shelves at the time the awards are
announced. The gold and silver facsimile seals are sold by ALA, with profits going to
support the programs and services of ALSC. Permission for photographic reproduction of the seals is also controlled by ALA; profits from commercial reproduction also
support the division.
4 Newbery a n d Cald eco t t Awar d s
A Time-Honored Tradition
Although some procedures have changed over the years the awards have been given,
and some rules or aspects of what the awards are for have been clarified or modified, the basic purpose of honoring distinguished American children’s books has not
changed. Throughout the years, numerous committees have studied virtually every
aspect of the award-giving procedure as well as the rationale and impact of the
awards. Such study is likely to continue and ensures a vital life to these awards that
have had such an impact on the quality of American literature for children.
John Newbery Medal
The terms, definitions, and criteria for the Newbery Medal are as follows:
Terms
1. The Medal shall be awarded annually to the author of the most distinguished
contribution to American literature for children published by an American
publisher in the United States in English during the preceding year. There are no
limitations as to the character of the book considered except that it be original
work. Honor books may be named. These shall be books that are also truly
distinguished.
2. The Medal is restricted to authors who are citizens or residents of the United
States.
3. The committee in its deliberations is to consider only the books eligible for the
award, as specified in the terms.
Definitions
1. “Contribution to American literature” indicates the text of a book. It also implies
that the committee shall consider all forms of writing—fiction, nonfiction, and
poetry. Reprints, compilations, and abridgments are not eligible.
2. A “contribution to American literature for children” shall be a book for which
children are an intended potential audience. The book displays respect for children’s
understandings, abilities, and appreciations. Children are defined as persons of
ages up to and including fourteen, and books for this entire age range are to be
considered.
3. “Distinguished” is defined as:
• marked by eminence and distinction; noted for significant achievement
• marked by excellence in quality
• marked by conspicuous excellence or eminence
• individually distinct
Newbery a n d Cald eco t t Awar d s 5
4. “Author” may include coauthors. The author(s) may be awarded the medal
posthumously.
5. The term “original work” may have several meanings. For purposes of these awards,
it is defined as follows:
• “Original work” means that the text was created by this writer and no one else.
It may include original retellings of traditional literature, provided the words
are the author’s own.
• Further, “original work” means that the text is presented here for the first time
and has not been previously published elsewhere in this or any other form.
Texts reprinted or compiled from other sources are not eligible. Abridgments
are not eligible.
6. “In English” means that the committee considers only books written and published
in English. This requirement does not limit the use of words or phrases in another
language where appropriate in context.
7. “American literature . . . published . . . in the United States” means that books first
published in previous years in other countries are not eligible. Books published
simultaneously in the United States and another country may be eligible. Books
published in a U.S. territory or U.S. commonwealth are eligible.
8. “Published . . . during the preceding year” means that the book has a publication
date in that year, was available for purchase in that year, and has a copyright date
no later than that year. A book might have a copyright date prior to the year under
consideration but, for various reasons, was not published until the year under
consideration. If a book is published prior to its year of copyright as stated in
the book, it shall be considered in its year of copyright as stated in the book. The
intent of the definition is that every eligible book be considered, but that no book
be considered in more than one year.
9. “Resident” specifies that the author has established and maintains a residence in
the United States, a U.S. territory, or a U.S. commonwealth, as distinct from being
a casual or occasional visitor.
10.The term “only the books eligible for the award” specifies that the committee
is not to consider the entire body of work of an author or whether the author
has previously won the award. The committee’s decision is to be made following
deliberation about the books of the specified calendar year.
Criteria
1.In identifying “distinguished contribution to American literature,” defined as text,
in a book for children,
a. Committee members need to consider the following:
• interpretation of the theme or concept
• presentation of information including accuracy, clarity, and organization
• development of a plot
6 n ewbery a n d cald eco t t medal b o o ks
• delineation of characters
• delineation of a setting
• appropriateness of style
Note: Because the literary qualities to be considered will vary depending on content, the committee need not expect to find excellence in each of the named elements. The book should, however, have distinguished qualities in all of the elements
pertinent to it.
b. Committee
members must consider excellence of presentation for a child
audience.
2. Each book is to be considered as a contribution to American literature. The
committee is to make its decision primarily on the text. Other components of a
book, such as illustrations, overall design of the book, etc., may be considered when
they make the book less effective.
3. The book must be a self-contained entity, not dependent on other media (i.e.,
sound or film equipment) for its enjoyment.
Note: The committee should keep in mind that the award is for literary quality
and quality presentation for children. The award is not for didactic content or popularity.
Caldecott Medal
The terms, definitions, and criteria for the Caldecott Medal are as follows:
Terms
1. The Medal shall be awarded annually to the artist of the most distinguished
American picture book for children published by an American publisher in the
United States in English during the preceding year. There are no limitations as to the
character of the picture book except that the illustrations be original work. Honor
books may be named. These shall be books that are also truly distinguished.
2. The award is restricted to artists who are citizens or residents of the United States.
Books published in a U.S. territory or U.S. commonwealth are eligible.
3. The committee in its deliberations is to consider only the books eligible for the
award, as specified in the terms.
Definitions
1. A “picture book for children,” as distinguished from other books with illustrations,
is one that essentially provides the child with a visual experience. A picture book
has a collective unity of story line, theme, or concept, developed through the series
of pictures the book comprises.
n ewbery a n d cald eco t t medal b o o ks 7
2. A “picture book for children” is one for which children are an intended potential
audience. The book displays respect for children’s understandings, abilities, and
appreciations. Children are defined as persons of ages up to and including fourteen,
and picture books for this entire age range are to be considered.
3. “Distinguished” is defined as:
• marked by eminence and distinction; noted for significant achievement
• marked by excellence in quality
• marked by conspicuous excellence or eminence
• individually distinct
4. The artist is the illustrator or co-illustrators. The artist may be awarded the medal
posthumously.
5. The term “original work” may have several meanings. For purposes of these awards,
it is defined as follows:
• “Original work” means that the illustrations were created by this artist and no
one else.
• Further, “original work” means that the illustrations are presented here for the
first time and have not been previously published elsewhere in this or any other
form. Illustrations reprinted or compiled from other sources are not eligible.
6. “American picture book . . . published . . . in the United States” means that books
first published in previous years in other countries are not eligible. Books published
simultaneously in the United States and another country may be eligible. Books
published in a U.S. territory or U.S. commonwealth are eligible.
7. “In English” means that the committee considers only books written and published
in English. This requirement does not limit the use of words or phrases in another
language where appropriate in context.
8. “Published . . . during the preceding year” means that the book has a publication
date in that year, was available for purchase in that year, and has a copyright date
no later than that year. A book might have a copyright date prior to the year under
consideration but, for various reasons, was not published until the year under
consideration. If a book is published prior to its year of copyright as stated in
the book, it shall be considered in its year of copyright as stated in the book. The
intent of the definition is that every eligible book be considered, but that no book
be considered in more than one year.
9. “Resident” specifies that the artist has established and maintains a residence in the
United States, a U.S. territory, or a U.S. commonwealth, as distinct from being a
casual or occasional visitor.
10.The term, “only the books eligible for the award” specifies that the committee is not
to consider the entire body of work of an artist or whether the artist has previously
won the award. The committee’s decision is to be made following deliberation
about books of the specified calendar year.
10 Newbery a n d Cald eco t t Awar d s
Criteria
1.In identifying a “distinguished American picture book for children,” defined as
illustration, committee members need to consider:
• excellence of execution in the artistic technique employed
• excellence of pictorial interpretation of story, theme, or concept
• appropriateness of style of illustration to the story, theme, or concept
• delineation of plot, theme, characters, setting, mood, or information through
the pictures
• excellence of presentation in recognition of a child audience
2. The only limitation to graphic form is that the form must be one which may be
used in a picture book. The book must be a self-contained entity, not dependent
on other media (i.e., sound, film, or computer program) for its enjoyment.
3. Each book is to be considered as a picture book. The committee is to make its
decision primarily on the illustration, but other components of a book are to be
considered especially when they make a book less effective as a children’s picture
book. Such other components might include the written text, the overall design
of the book, etc.
Note: The committee should keep in mind that the award is for distinguished
illustrations in a picture book and for excellence of pictorial presentation for children.
The award is not for didactic intent or for popularity.
Author/Illustrator Index
A
Aardema, Verna, 122
Ackerman, Karen, 112
Adams, Adrienne, 133, 134
Adams, Helen Simmons (as Nancy Barnes), 69
Adams, Julia Davis, 83, 85
Alexander, Lloyd, 51, 53
Alger, Leclaire (as Sorche Nic Leodhas), 55,
129, 131
Allee, Marjorie, 82
Andersen, Hans Christian, 138
Angelo, Valenti, 75, 77
Appelt, Kathi, 24
Armer, Laura Adams, 82, 153
Armer, Sidney, 82
Armstrong, Alan, 26
Armstrong, William, 50
Arthur, Malcolm, 111
Artzybasheff, Boris, 74, 87, 155
Atwater, Florence, 75
Atwater, Richard, 75
Avi, 28, 36, 37
Azarian, Mary, 104
B
Babbitt, Natalie, 49
Bahti, Tom, 124
Bailey, Carolyn Sherwin, 68
Baity, Elizabeth, 64
Baker, Olaf, 117
Bang, Molly, 103, 116, 118
Bannon, Laura, 76
Bare, Arnold Edwin, 150
Barkley, James, 50
Barnes, Nancy, pseud. (Helen Simmons Adams),
68
Barney, Maginel Wright, 87
Barnum, Jay Hyde, 147
Bartoletti, Susan Campbell, 26
Bartone, Elisa, 108
Baskin, Hosea, 124
Baskin, Leonard, 124
Baskin, Lisa, 124
Baskin, Tobias, 124
Bauer, Joan, 30
Bauer, Marion Dane, 39
Baylor, Byrd, 120, 121, 122, 124
Beddows, Eric, 38
Belting, Natalia M., 132
Bemelmans, Ludwig, 77, 138, 153
Bennett, John, 86
Bernstein, Zena, 48
Berry, Erick, pseud. (Allena Best), 80, 83
Best, Allena (as Erick Berry), 80, 83
Best, Herbert, 83
Besterman, Catherine, 67
Bianco, Margery, 77
Bileck, Marvin, 131
Bing, Christopher, 102
Birch, Reginald, 90
Birnbaum, Abe, 139
Bishop, Claire Huchet, 62, 68
Bjorklund, Lorence, 62
Blair, Helen, 70
Blegvad, Erik, 43, 57
Bloom, Lloyd, 40
Blos, Joan W., 44
Blumberg, Rhoda, 39
Bock, Vera, 85
Bolognese, Don, 52
Bond, Nancy, 45
Bontemps, Arna, 67
Bowen, William, 90
Bowman, James Cloyd, 76
Boyle, Mildred, 72, 73, 74, 75, 76
Brink, Carol Ryrie, 78
Brittain, Bill, 41
Brooks, Bruce, 35, 40
Brown, Marcia, 117, 132, 137, 138, 140, 141,
142, 143, 145
Brown, Margaret Wise, 138, 149
Brown, Margaret Wise (as Golden MacDonald),
146, 148
Bryant, Jen, 95
Bryant, Samuel, 53
Bryson, Bernarda, 132
157
158 Au t h o r / Illus t rat o r I n d ex
Buff, Conrad, 62, 64, 69, 151
Buff, Mary, 62, 64, 69, 151
Bunting, Eve, 107
Burger, Carl, 60
Burglon, Nora, 81
Burkert, Nancy Ekholm, 124
Burton, Virginia Lee, 146, 150
Byard, Carole, 110
Byars, Betsy, 49
Byrd, Robert, 25
C
Carlson, Natalie Savage, 58
Carr, Mary Jane, 73
Castagnetta, Grace, 146
Caudill, Rebecca, 66, 130
Cendrars, Blaise, 117
Chan, Chih-Yi, 150
Chan, Plato, 150
Chapman, Frederick, 69
Chappell, Warren, 67
Charlot, Jean, 60, 61, 62, 139, 149
Chastain, Madye Lee, 68
Chaucer, Geoffrey, 134
Chodos-Irvine, Margaret, 99
Choldenko, Gennifer, 27
Chrisman, Arthur Bowie, 88
Clark, Ann Nolan, 62, 151
Cleary, Beverly, 40, 43, 45
Coatsworth, Elizabeth, 83
Cober, Alan E., 47
Coblentz, Catherine Cate, 66
CoConis, Ted, 49
Collier, Bryan, 97, 101
Collier, Christopher, 46
Collier, James Lincoln, 46
Colum, Padraic, 80, 88, 90
Coman, Carolyn, 33
Conley, Robert Leslie (as Robert C. O’Brien),
48
Conly, Jane Leslie, 35
Coolidge, Olivia, 55
Cooney, Barbara, 66, 119, 134
Cooper, Susan, 46, 47
Cosgrave, John O’Hara, II, 60
Couloumbis, Audrey, 31
Courlander, Harold, 68
Crawford, Phyllis, 75
Creech, Sharon, 30, 34
Crews, Donald, 118, 120
Cronin, Doreen, 102
Cuffari, Richard, 47
Curtis, Christopher Paul, 25, 31, 33
Cushman, Karen, 33, 34
D
Dalgliesh, Alice, 61, 63, 70, 138
Daugherty, James, 65, 74, 82, 136, 154
d’Aulaire, Edgar Parin, 81, 152
d’Aulaire, Ingri, 152
Davis, Lavinia, 143, 146
Davis, Mary Gould, 82
Dayrell, Elphinstone, 128
de Angeli, Marguerite, 59, 65, 83, 138, 149
de Gorgoza, Maitland, 82
DeJong, Meindert, 58, 59, 61, 62
de Miskey, Julian, 58
Dennis, Wesley, 66, 68, 69
dePaola, Tomie, 31, 123
de Regniers, Beatrice Schenk, 130
Diamond, Donna, 44
Diaz, David, 107
DiCamillo, Kate, 28, 30
Dillon, Diane, 46, 121, 122
Dillon, Leo, 46, 121, 122
DiTerlizzi, Tony, 100
Dobias, Frank, 80, 86
Domanska, Janina, 85, 125
du Bois, William Pène, 67, 136, 141
Duvoisin, Roger, 70, 130, 145
E
Eaton, Jeanette, 65, 70, 76, 85
Eckert, Allan W., 48
Edmonds, Walter, 72
Egielski, Richard, 114
Ehlert, Lois, 112
Eichenberg, Fritz, 72, 140
Elkin, Benjamin, 136
Emberley, Barbara, 128, 129
Emberley, Ed, 128, 129
Engdahl, Sylvia Louise, 50
Engle, Margarita, 24
Enright, Elizabeth, 58, 75
Ering, Timothy Basil, 28
Estes, Eleanor, 63, 71, 72
Ets, Marie Hall, 130, 134, 136, 137, 141, 149
F
Falconer, Ian, 102
Falls, C. B., 63, 64, 70
Farmer, Nancy, 29, 33, 34
Feelings, Muriel, 123, 125
Feelings, Tom, 51, 123, 125
Au t h o r / Illus t rat o r I n d ex 159
Fenner, Carol, 34
Field, Rachel, 82, 84, 148
Finger, Charles, 88
Fish, Helen Dean, 154, 155
Fisher, Cyrus, pseud. (Darwin L. Teilhet), 69
Fisher, Leonard Everett, 56, 57
Flack, Marjorie, 147
Fleischman, Paul, 38, 42
Fleischman, Sid, 39
Fleming, Denise, 109
Floethe, Richard, 66, 69
Forbes, Esther, 71
Ford, Lauren, 153
Foster, Genevieve, 63, 66, 71, 73
Fox, Paula, 40, 47
Frankenberg, Robert, 65
Frasconi, Antonio, 135
Frazee, Marla, 93, 95
Freedman, Russell, 27, 35, 36, 38
Freeman, Don, 135
G
Gág, Howard, 80
Gág, Wanda, 80, 86, 151, 154
Gaggin, Eva Roe, 73
Gaiman, Neil, 24
Galdone, Paul, 58, 63, 135, 136
Gammell, Stephen, 112, 115, 117
Gannett, Ruth, 68
Gannett, Ruth Chrisman, 67, 148
Gannett, Ruth Stiles, 67
Gantos, Jack, 31
Garraty, Gail, 49
Gates, Doris, 74
Gay, Zhenya, 77
Geisel, Theodor Seuss (as Dr. Seuss), 142, 144,
146
George, Jean Craighead, 47, 57
Gergely, Tibor, 138
Gerstein, Mordicai, 99
Giff, Patricia Reilly, 29, 32
Giovanni, Nikki, 97
Gipson, Fred, 60
Glanzman, Louis, 54
Glass, Andrew, 41, 42
Goble, Paul, 120
Goble, Warwick, 86
Goffstein, M. B., 121
Goode, Diane, 117
Goudey, Alice, 133, 134
Graham, Al, 147
Graham, Margaret Bloy, 140, 142
Gray, Elizabeth Janet, 72, 76, 78, 83
Greene, Bette, 47
Grifalconi, Ann, 53, 114
Gurko, Leo, 59
H
Hader, Berta, 90, 144, 150, 153
Hader, Elmer, 73, 90, 144, 150, 153
Hague, Michael, 89
Hale, Shannon, 27
Haley, Gail, 126
Hall, Anna Gertrude, 74
Hall, Donald, 119
Hallock, Grace, 86
Hamilton, Virginia, 38, 42, 46, 49
Handforth, Thomas, 153
Hasselriis, Else, 88
Havighurst, Marion, 66
Havighurst, Walter, 66
Hawes, Charles, 89, 90
Hendrickson, David, 81
Henkes, Kevin, 28, 98, 109
Henry, Marguerite, 66, 68, 69
Herrera, Velino, 151
Heslop, Michael, 46
Hesse, Karen, 32
Hewes, Agnes, 77, 80, 84
Hiaasen, Carl, 29
Highwater, Jamake, 45
Ho, Minfong, 106
Hodges, Margaret, 115, 131
Hogrogian, Nonny, 52, 122, 125, 129
Holberg, Richard, 73
Holbrook, Stewart, 144
Holland, Janice, 66
Holling, Holling Clancy, 64, 67, 151
Holm, Jennifer L., 25, 31
Honoré, Paul, 88
Hoose, Phillip, 23
Horvath, Polly, 30
Houser, Lowell, 84
Howitt, Mary, 100
Hubbard, Ralph, 84
Hunt, Irene, 52, 54
Hunt, Mabel Leigh, 65, 72
Hyman, Trina Schart, 103, 112, 115, 116
I
Isaacs, Anne, 108
Isadora, Rachel, 119
Ish-Kishor, Sulamith, 50
Ishmael, Woodi, 70
160 Au t h o r / Illus t rat o r I n d ex
J
James, M. R., 138
James, Will, 87
Jarrell, Randall, 53, 124
Jeffers, Susan, 123
Jenkins, Steve, 99
Jewett, Eleanore, 69
Johansen, Margaret, 84
Johnson, Gerald W., 56, 57
Johnson, Milton, 52, 55
Johnson, Steven T., 107
Jones, Elizabeth Orton, 148, 150
Jones, Idwal, 77
Jones, Jessie Orton, 150
Jones, Wildred, 88
Joslin, Sesyle, 135
Judson, Clara Ingram, 60, 62, 65
Jukes, Mavis, 40
Juster, Norton, 97
K
Kadohata, Cynthia, 27
Kalashnikoff, Nicholas, 64
Kalnay, Francis, 58
Karasz, Ilonka, 69
Katchamakoff, Atanas, 79
Keats, Ezra Jack, 127, 132
Keith, Eros, 47
Keith, Harold, 58
Kelly, Eric P., 85
Kelly, Jacqueline, 23
Kendall, Carol, 57
Kepes, Juliet, 140
Kerley, Barbara, 101
Kherdian, David, 44
Kimmel, Eric, 112
Kingman, Lee, 150
Knight, Christopher G., 41
Konigsburg, E. L., 32, 51, 52
Krauss, Ruth, 139, 144
Kredel, Fritz, 59
Krommes, Beth, 95
Krumgold, Joseph, 57, 61
Krush, Beth, 58, 59
Krush, Joe, 58, 59
Kyle, Anne, 80
L
Labastida, Aurora, 134
Langstaff, John, 137
Langton, Jane, 43
Laning, Edward, 75
Lantz, Paul, 72, 74
Larson, Kirby, 26
Lasky, Kathryn, 41
Latham, Jean Lee, 60
Lathrop, Dorothy P., 81, 82, 84, 154
Lauber, Patricia, 39
Law, Ingrid, 24
Lawson, Robert, 59, 70, 72, 75, 152, 154,
155
Leaf, Munro, 154
LeGuin, Ursula K., 49
Lehman, Barbara, 98
L’Engle, Madeleine, 43, 55
Lenski, Lois, 69, 73, 77
Lent, Blair, 124, 126, 128, 131
Leodhas, Sorche Nic, pseud. (Leclaire Alger),
55, 129, 131
Lesser, Rika, 115
Lester, Julius, 51, 108
Levine, Ellen, 96
Levine, Gail Carson, 32
Lewin, Betsy, 102
Lewin, Ted, 108
Lewis, Allen, 82
Lewis, E. B., 99
Lewis, Elizabeth Foreman, 81
Lide, Alice, 84
Lilly, Charles, 47
Lin, Grace, 23
Lindquist, Jennie, 60
Lionni, Leo, 127, 128, 131, 133
Lipkind, William (as Will), 141, 142
Lisle, Janet Taylor, 37
Lobel, Anita, 118
Lobel, Arnold, 48, 118, 125, 126
Lofting, Hugh, 89
Lord, Cynthia, 24
Louden, Claire, 64
Louden, George, 64
Low, Joseph, 119
Low, William, 81
Lownsbery, Eloise, 83
Lowry, Lois, 35, 37
Lufkin, Raymond, 67, 84
M
Macaulay, David, 111, 121, 124
MacDonald, Golden, pseud. (Margaret Wise
Brown), 146, 148. See also Brown, Margaret
Wise
Au t h o r / Illus t rat o r I n d ex 161
MacDonald, James, 78, 79
MacDonald, Suse, 114
MacLachlan, Patricia, 39
Malcolmson, Anne, 146
Malkus, Alida, 84
Marcellino, Fred, 111
Marshall, Bernard, 90
Marshall, James, 113
Martin, Ann M., 29
Martin, Jacqueline Briggs, 104
Mathis, Sharon Bell, 46
Maxwell, William, 69
Mazer, Norma Fox, 38
McCarty, Peter, 100
McCloskey, Robert, 135, 139, 140, 144, 151
McCully, Emily Arnold, 109
McCurdy, Michael, 71
McDermott, Beverly Brodsky, 122
McDermott, Gerald, 109, 123, 125
McGinley, Phyllis, 143, 145
McGraw, Eloise Jarvis, 33, 56, 63
McKean, Dave, 24
McKinley, Robin, 40, 42
McKissack, Patricia C., 36, 113
McLimans, David, 97
McNeely, Marian Hurd, 85
Meade, Holly, 106
Meader, Stephen, 74
Means, Florence Crannell, 70
Meigs, Cornelia, 79, 81, 86, 90
Miles, Miska, 49
Milhous, Katherine, 70, 142
Miller, Elizabeth, 85
Minarik, Else Holmelund, 133
Montgomery, Rutherford, 66
Montresor, Beni, 56, 130
Moon, Carl, 86
Moon, Grace, 86
Moore, Anne Carroll, 88
Moore, Janet Gaylord, 50
Mordvinoff, Nicolas (as Nicolas), 141, 142
Morse, Dorothy B., 65
Mosel, Arlene, 124
Moser, Barry, 38, 57
Moss, Lloyd, 107
Mukerji, Dhan Gopal, 87
Murphy, Jim, 28, 34
Musgrove, Margaret, 121
Muth, Jon J., 98
Myers, Christopher, 105
Myers, Walter Dean, 36, 38, 105
N
Nadejen, Theodore, 83
Naylor, Phyllis Reynolds, 36
Negri, Rocco, 51
Nelson, Kadir, 96, 97
Nelson, Marilyn, 30
Ness, Evaline, 55, 129, 130, 131
Neville, Emily, 55
Newberry, Clare Turlay, 143, 151, 152, 154
Nicolas, pseud. (Nicolas Mordvinoff ), 141, 142
North, Sterling, 55
O
O’Brien, Robert C., pseud. (Robert Leslie
Conley), 48
O’Dell, Scott, 50, 52, 53, 56
Olds, Elizabeth, 141
Orr, Forrest W., 81
Ostman, Lempi, 85
P
Page, Robin, 99
Palazzo, Tony, 147
Park, Linda Sue, 29
Parker, Robert Andrew, 127
Parnall, Peter, 49, 120, 121, 122
Parrish, Anne, 65, 84, 88
Parrish, Dillwyn, 88
Paterson, Katherine, 43, 44
Patron, Susan, 25
Paulsen, Gary, 37, 38, 40
Peck, Richard, 30, 32
Peet, Bill, 112
Pelletier, David, 106
Perkins, Lynne Rae, 26
Perrault, Charles, 111, 137, 140
Petersham, Maud, 85, 147, 151
Petersham, Miska, 85, 147, 151
Phelan, Matt, 25
Philbrick, Rodman, 23
Pilkey, Dav, 106
Pinkney, Andrea Davis, 104
Pinkney, Brian, 104, 107
Pinkney, Jerry, 45, 92, 101, 103, 108, 112, 113
Plume, Ilse, 119
Pogany, Willy, 90
Politi, Leo, 143, 145, 147
Pope, Elizabeth Marie, 47
Prange, Beckie, 98
Preston, Edna Mitchell, 127
Price, Christine, 55
162 Au t h o r / Illus t rat o r I n d ex
Priceman, Marjorie, 98, 107
Provensen, Alice, 42, 116, 118
Provensen, Martin, 42, 116, 118
Pruszynska, Angela, 85
R
Raible, Alton, 48, 49, 52
Rankin, Louise, 67
Ransome, Arthur, 128
Rappaport, Doreen, 101
Raschka, Chris, 97, 109
Raskin, Ellen, 44, 47
Rathmann, Peggy, 106
Ravielli, Anthony, 61
Rawlings, Marjorie Kinnan, 61
Ray, Ralph, 65
Reed, Philip, 132
Reiss, Johanna, 48
Reyher, Becky, 148
Rhoads, Dorothy, 60
Ringgold, Faith, 110
Ripley, A. L., 89
Robbins, Ruth, 133
Robinson, Mabel, 74, 76
Rohmann, Eric, 100, 108
Rojankovsky, Feodor, 62, 137
Rose, Jack Manley, 76
Rourke, Constance, 78, 79
Ryan, Cheli Durán, 125
Rylant, Cynthia, 35, 39, 115, 117
S
Sachar, Louis, 31
St. George, Judith, 102
San Souci, Robert D., 107, 112
Sandoz, Mari, 59
Sauer, Julia L., 64, 71
Sawyer, Ruth, 77, 139, 149
Say, Allen, 108, 113
Scanlon, Liz Garton, 93
Schaefer, Jack, 56
Scheer, Julian, 131
Schindler, S. D., 26
Schlein, Miriam, 139
Schlitz, Laura Amy, 25
Schmidt, Gary D., 25, 27
Schmidt, Sarah, 80
Schoenherr, John, 47, 48, 55, 113
Scholder, Fritz, 45
Schreiber, Georges, 64, 68, 146
Scieszka, Jon, 110
Seeger, Elizabeth, 79
Seeger, Laura Vaccaro, 96
Selden, George, pseud. (George Thompson), 56
Selznick, Brian, 96, 101
Sendak, Maurice, 53, 58, 59, 61, 62, 118, 126,
131, 132, 133, 134, 135, 139
Seredy, Kate, 69, 75, 76, 77, 78, 149
Seuss, Dr., pseud. (Theodor Seuss Geisel), 142,
144, 146
Sewell, Helen, 63, 72, 73, 74, 75, 76, 138
Shackell, Rodney, 50
Shannon, David, 104
Shannon, Monica, 79
Sheldon, Myrtle, 83
Shenton, Edward, 74
Shimin, Symeon, 57
Shippen, Katherine, 61, 70
Shub, Elizabeth, 53
Shulevitz, Uri, 95, 104, 119, 128
Sidjakov, Nicolas, 133
Sidman, Joyce, 93, 98
Siegal, Aranka, 43
Siegel, William, 85
Simon, Adam, 89
Simont, Marc, 102, 136, 144
Singer, Isaac Bashevis, 51, 52, 53
Singmaster, Elsie, 81
Sís, Peter, 39, 96, 104, 106
Sleator, William, 126
Slobodkin, Louis, 63, 71, 72, 149
Small, David, 24, 102, 105
Smith, Alvin, 54
Smith, Lane, 110
Snedeker, Caroline Dale, 81, 87
Snyder, Diane, 113
Snyder, Zilpha Keatley, 48, 49, 52
Sorensen, Virginia, 59
Speare, Elizabeth George, 41, 55, 57
Sperry, Armstrong, 73, 77, 78
Spier, Peter, 120, 133
Spinelli, Jerry, 32, 37
Staples, Suzanne Fisher, 37
Stead, Rebecca, 22
Steele, Mary Q., 51
Steele, William O., 58
Steig, William, 42, 45, 122, 126
Steptoe, John, 114, 116
Stevens, Janet, 107
Stewart, Sarah, 105
Stolz, Mary, 54, 56
Stone, Helen, 143, 145
Au t h o r / Illus t rat o r I n d ex 163
Stong, Phil, 78
Swanson, Susan Marie, 95
Sweet, Melissa, 95
Swift, Hildegarde, 82, 85
T
Taback, Simms, 103, 105
Tafuri, Nancy, 116
Talbott, Hudson, 27
Taylor, Mildred D., 45
Teilhet, Darwin L. (as Cyrus Fisher), 69
Thayer, Ernest L., 102
Thompson, George (as George Selden), 56
Thurber, James, 149
Tiegreen, Alan, 43, 45
Tietjens, Eunice, 83
Titus, Eve, 135, 136
Todd, Robert, 60
Tolan, Stephanie S., 29
Tomes, Margot, 42
Torrey, Marjorie, 147, 148
Treffinger, Carolyn, 68
Tresselt, Alvin, 130, 145, 147
Treviño, Elizabeth Borton de, 53
Tudor, Tasha, 137, 149
Tunis, Edwin, 55
Turkle, Brinton, 127
Turner, Megan Whalen, 33
U
Udry, Janice May, 134, 136
Ullman, James, 61
Unwin, Nora S., 64, 72
Updike, John, 103
V
Van Allsburg, Chris, 115, 117, 120
Van Everen, Jay, 82, 88
van Loon, Dirk, 89
van Loon, Hendrik Willem, 89
Van Stockum, Hilda, 79
Varian, George, 90
Voigt, Cynthia, 41
von Schmidt, Harold, 84
W
Ward, Lynd, 71, 74, 76, 83, 84, 85, 139, 144
Watkins, Bernard, 79
Weatherford, Carole Boston, 97
Weik, Mary Hays, 53
Weil, Ann, 63
Weisgard, Leonard, 61, 146, 147, 148
Weiss, Emil, 55
West, Harold, 56
Weston, Christine, 70
Wheeler, Opal, 147, 148
White, E. B., 63
White, Ruth, 33
Whitney, Elinor, 86
Whitney, George Gillett, 76
Wier, Ester, 55
Wiese, Kurt, 67, 68, 78, 81, 145, 148
Wiesner, David, 97, 101, 103, 110, 113
Wilder, Laura Ingalls, 72, 73, 74, 75, 76
Will, pseud. (William Lipkind), 141, 142
Willard, Nancy, 42, 118
Willems, Mo, 96, 99, 100
Williams, Garth, 56, 58, 60, 63
Williams, J. Scott, 90
Williams, Sherley Anne, 110
Williams, Vera B., 111, 117
Wisniewski, David, 105
Wojciechowska, Maia, 54
Wolcott, Elizabeth Tyler, 83
Wood, Audrey, 115
Wood, Don, 115
Wood, Harrie, 86
Woodson, Jacqueline, 24, 25, 27, 99
Woodward, Hildegard, 143, 146
Wright, Orville, 36
Wright, Wilbur, 36
Wyeth, N. C., 80
Y
Yashima, Taro, 128, 135, 137
Yates, Elizabeth, 64, 72
Yeats, Jack, 80
Yep, Laurence, 35, 46
Yolen, Jane, 113, 129
Yorinks, Arthur, 114
Young, Ed, 81, 110, 111, 129
Young, Ella, 85, 87
Z
Zagarenski, Pamela, 93
Zelinsky, Paul O., 40, 105, 108, 114, 115
Zemach, Harve, 123, 127
Zemach, Margot, 51, 121, 123, 127
Zion, Gene, 142
Zolotow, Charlotte, 132, 140
Title Index
A
The ABC Bunny, 80
Abel’s Island, 45
Abraham Lincoln, 152
Abraham Lincoln, Friend of the People, 65
Abraham Lincoln’s World, 71
Across Five Aprils, 54
Adam of the Road, 72
After the Rain, 38
After Tupac & D Foster, 24
Afternoon of the Elves, 37
The Ageless Story, 153
Al Capone Does My Shirts, 27
Alexander and the Wind-Up Mouse, 127
All Alone, 62
All around the Town, 145
All Falling Down, 142
All in the Morning Early, 131
All Sail Set, 78
All the World, 93
All the World illus, 93
Along Came a Dog, 58
Alphabatics, 114
Alphabet City, 107
Always Room for One More, 129
The Amazing Bone, 122
America Is Born, 57
America Moves Forward, 56
An American ABC, 151
An American Plague, 28
Americans before Columbus, 64
America’s Ethan Allen, 144
Amos Fortune, Free Man, 64
Anansi the Spider, 125
Anatole, 136
Anatole and the Cat, 135
. . . And Now Miguel, 61
Andy and the Lion, 154
The Angry Moon, 126
The Animal Family, 53
Animals of the Bible, 154
Annie and the Old One, 49
Anpao, 45
Ape in a Cape, 140
The Apple and the Arrow, 64
The Apprentice of Florence, 80
April’s Kittens, 152
Arrow to the Sun, 123
Ashanti to Zulu, 121
Audubon, 78
The Avion My Uncle Flew, 69
B
Baboushka and the Three Kings, 133
Bambino the Clown, 146
Banner in the Sky, 61
Barkis, 154
Bartholomew and the Oobleck, 144
Bear Party, 141
The Bears on Hemlock Mountain, 63
Because of Winn-Dixie, 30
Belle Prater’s Boy, 33
Belling the Tiger, 56
Ben’s Trumpet, 119
Better Known as Johnny Appleseed, 65
Bhimsa, the Dancing Bear, 70
The Big Snow, 144
Big Tree, 69
The Big Tree of Bunlahy, 80
The Biggest Bear, 139
Bill Peet, 112
Birthdays of Freedom, Vol. I, 63
Black and White, 111
The Black Cauldron, 53
Black Fox of Lorne, 59
The Black Pearl, 52
The Blue Cat of Castle Town, 66
The Blue Sword, 42
Blue Willow, 74
Blueberries for Sal, 144
The Boats on the River, 147
Book of Nursery and Mother Goose Rhymes,
138
Boy of the South Seas, 83
The Boy of the Three-Year Nap, 113
The Boy Who Was, 86
Boy with a Pack, 74
The Bremen-Town Musicians, 119
165
166 T i t le I n d ex
Bridge to Terabithia, 44
Bright Island, 76
The Bronze Bow, 55
Bud, Not Buddy, 31
By the Shores of Silver Lake, 75
C
Caddie Woodlawn, 78
Calico Bush, 82
Call It Courage, 73
Carry On, Mr. Bowditch, 60
Carver, 30
Casey at the Bat, 102
Castle, 121
The Cat Who Went to Heaven, 83
Cathedral, 124
Catherine, Called Birdy, 34
Cedric the Forester, 90
A Chair for My Mother, 117
Chanticleer and the Fox, 134
Charlotte’s Web, 63
Children of the Soil, 81
A Child’s Calendar, 103
A Child’s Good Night Book, 149
The Christmas Anna Angel, 149
Chucaro, 58
Cinderella, or the Little Glass Slipper, 137
Claudette Colvin, 23
Clearing Weather, 86
Click, Clack, Moo, 102
Cock-a-Doodle-Doo, 153
The Codfish Musket, 77
Color Zoo, 112
Coming on Home Soon, 99
Commodore Perry in the Land of the Shogun,
39
The Contest, 122
The Corn Grows Ripe, 60
A Corner of the Universe, 29
A Couple of Boys Have the Best Week Ever, 95
The Courage of Sarah Noble, 61
The Cow-tail Switch, and Other West African
Stories, 68
Crazy Lady!, 35
The Cricket in Times Square, 56
Crispin: The Cross of Lead, 28
Criss Cross, 26
Crow Boy, 137
D
Daniel Boone, 74
The Dark Frigate, 89
The Dark Is Rising, 47
The Dark Star of Itzá, 84
The Dark-thirty, 36
Dash and Dart, 151
Daughter of the Mountains, 67
A Daughter of the Seine, 85
Davy Crockett, 79
A Day on Skates, 79
The Day We Saw the Sun Come Up, 133
Dear Mr. Henshaw, 40
The Defender, 64
The Desert Is Theirs, 122
Dicey’s Song, 41
Dick Whittington and His Cat, 142
The Dinosaurs of Waterhouse Hawkins, 101
Dobry, 79
Doctor De Soto, 42
Dogsong, 40
Don’t Let the Pigeon Drive the Bus!, 100
The Door in the Wall, 65
Down Ryton Water, 73
Downright Dencey, 87
Dragon’s Gate, 35
Dragonwings, 46
The Dream Coach, 88
Drummer Hoff, 128
Duffy and the Devil, 123
Duke Ellington, 104
E
The Ear, the Eye, and the Arm, 34
The Egg Tree, 142
The Egypt Game, 52
Eleanor Roosevelt, 35
Elijah of Buxton, 25
Ella Enchanted, 32
Ella Sarah Gets Dressed, 99
The Emperor and the Kite, 129
Enchantress from the Stars, 50
Everything on a Waffle, 30
The Evolution of Calpurnia Tate, 23
F
Fables, 118
The Fairy Circus, 82
The Faithful Friend, 107
The Family under the Bridge, 58
The Fearsome Inn, 52
Feather Mountain, 141
Feathers, 25
Figgs & Phantoms, 47
Finders Keepers, 141
T i t le I n d ex 167
A Fine White Dust, 39
First the Egg, 96
Fish for Supper, 121
Fish in the Air, 145
Five Little Monkeys, 140
The Fledgling, 43
Floating Island, 84
Flotsam, 97
Fly High, Fly Low, 135
Fog Magic, 71
The Fool of the World and the Flying Ship, 128
The Forest Pool, 153
The Forgotten Daughter, 81
Four and Twenty Blackbirds, 155
The Fox Went Out on a Chilly Night, 133
Frederick, 128
Free Fall, 113
Freight Train, 120
Frog and Toad Are Friends, 126
Frog and Toad Together, 48
Frog Went A-Courtin’, 137
From the Mixed-Up Files of Mrs. Basil E.
Frankweiler, 51
Frontier Living, 55
The Funny Little Woman, 124
G
The Gammage Cup, 57
Gandhi, Fighter without a Sword, 65
The Garden of Abdul Gasazi, 120
The Gardener, 105
Garram the Hunter, 83
A Gathering of Days, 44
Gay-Neck, the Story of a Pigeon, 87
George Washington, 66
George Washington’s World, 73
Getting Near to Baby, 31
Gillespie and the Guards, 136
Ginger Pye, 63
A Girl Named Disaster, 33
The Girl Who Loved Wild Horses, 120
The Giver, 35
The Glorious Flight, 116
Glory of the Seas, 80
Goggles!, 127
The Golden Basket, 77
The Golden Fleece and the Heroes Who Lived
before Achilles, 90
The Golden Goblet, 56
The Golden Name Day, 60
Goldilocks and the Three Bears, 113
Golem (Wisniewski), 105
The Golem (McDermott), 122
Gone Wild: An Endangered Animal Alphabet,
97
Gone-Away Lake, 58
The Good Master, 78
Good Masters! Sweet Ladies!, 25
The Good-Luck Horse, 150
Grandfather’s Journey, 108
The Graphic Alphabet, 106
Graven Images, 42
The Graveyard Book, 24
The Great Fire, 34
The Great Gilly Hopkins, 44
The Great Quest, 90
The Great Wheel, 59
Green Eyes, 139
The Grey King, 46
The Grey Lady and the Strawberry Snatcher,
118
H
Hansel and Gretel, 115
The Happy Day, 144
Harlem, 105
Hatchet, 38
Hattie Big Sky, 26
Have You Seen My Duckling?, 116
“Have You Seen Tom Thumb?”, 72
Hawk, I’m Your Brother, 121
The Headless Cupid, 49
The Heavenly Tenants, 69
The Hello, Goodbye Window, 97
“Hello the Boat!”, 75
Henry--Fisherman, 143
Henry’s Freedom Box, 96
The Hero and the Crown, 40
Hershel and the Hanukkah Goblins, 112
Hey, Al, 114
The Hidden Treasure of Glaston, 69
Hide and Seek Fog, 130
The High King, 51
The Higher Power of Lucky, 25
Hildilid’s Night, 125
Hitler Youth, 26
Hitty, Her First Hundred Years, 84
Holes, 31
Homesick, 42
Hondo & Fabian, 100
Honk, the Moose, 78
Hoot, 29
Hope Was Here, 30
The Horsecatcher, 59
168 T i t le I n d ex
Hosie’s Alphabet, 124
Hot Air, 98
The House in the Night, 95
The House of Sixty Fathers, 59
The House of the Scorpion, 29
The House That Jack Built, 135
Houses from the Sea, 134
How I Learned Geography, 95
The Hundred Dresses, 71
The Hundred Penny Box, 46
Hurry Home, Candy, 62
Hush! A Thai Lullaby, 106
I
I, Juan de Pareja, 53
If All the Seas Were One Sea, 125
If I Ran the Zoo, 142
In My Mother’s House, 151
In the Beginning, 38
In the Forest, 149
In the Night Kitchen, 126
In the Small, Small Pond, 109
Inch by Inch, 133
Incident at Hawk’s Hill, 48
Indian Captive, 73
The Invention of Hugo Cabret, 96
Invincible Louisa, 79
Island of the Blue Dolphins, 56
It Could Always Be Worse, 121
It’s Like This, Cat, 55
J
Jacob Have I Loved, 43
Jambo Means Hello, 123
Jane’s Island, 82
The Jazz Man, 53
Jennifer, Hecate, Macbeth, William McKinley,
and Me, Elizabeth, 52
Joey Pigza Loses Control, 31
John Henry, 108
Johnny Tremain, 71
Joseph Had a Little Overcoat, 103
Journey Cake, Ho!, 139
Journey Outside, 51
Joyful Noise, 38
Juanita, 145
The Judge, 127
Julie of the Wolves, 47
Jumanji, 117
The Jumping-Off Place, 85
Just Me, 130
Justin Morgan Had a Horse, 69
K
Kildee House, 66
King Bidgood’s in the Bathtub, 115
King of the Wind, 66
The King’s Fifth, 53
Kira-Kira, 27
Kitten’s First Full Moon, 98
Knee Knock Rise, 49
Knuffle Bunny, 99
Knuffle Bunny Too, 96
L
Leader by Destiny, 76
Li Lun, Lad of Courage, 68
The Light at Tern Rock, 64
Like Jake and Me, 40
Lily’s Crossing, 32
Lincoln, 38
Lion, 136
The Lion & the Mouse, 92
Little Bear’s Visit, 133
Little Blacknose, 85
The Little House, 150
The Little Island, 146
Little Lost Lamb, 148
Little Red Riding Hood, 116
Little Town on the Prairie, 73
Lizzie Bright and the Buckminster Boy, 27
Lon Po Po, 111
Lone Journey, 70
The Loner, 55
A Long Way from Chicago, 32
The Long Winter, 74
M
M. C. Higgins, the Great, 46
MacDonald, Golden, pseud. (Margaret Wise
Brown)
See also Brown, Margaret Wise
Madeline, 153
Madeline’s Rescue, 138
Magic Maize, 62
Make Way for Ducklings, 151
The Man Who Walked between the Towers, 99
Maniac Magee, 37
Many Moons, 149
The Many Ways of Seeing, 50
Marshmallow, 151
Martin’s Big Words, 101
The Matchlock Gun, 72
May I Bring a Friend?, 130
T i t le I n d ex 169
McElligot’s Pool, 146
Meggy MacIntosh, 83
Mei Li, 153
Men, Microscopes, and Living Things, 61
Men of Athens, 55
Mice Twice, 119
The Middle Moffat, 72
The Midwife’s Apprentice, 33
The Mighty Hunter, 150
Millions of Cats, 86
Minn of the Mississippi, 64
Miracles on Maple Hill, 59
Mirandy and Brother Wind, 113
Mirette on the High Wire, 109
Miss Hickory, 68
Missing May, 35
Misty of Chincoteague, 68
Moccasin Trail, 63
Moja Means One, 125
The Moon Jumpers, 134
Moorchild, 33
“More, More, More,” Said the Baby, 111
Moses: When Harriet Tubman Led Her People
to Freedom, 97
The Most Wonderful Doll in the World, 143
The Mostly True Adventures of Homer P. Figg,
23
Mother Goose, 149
Mother Goose and Nursery Rhymes, 132
Mountain Born, 72
Mountains Are Free, 83
The Moved-Outers, 70
The Moves Make the Man, 40
Mr. Justice Holmes, 60
Mr. Penny’s Race Horse, 136
Mr. Popper’s Penguins, 75
Mr. Rabbit and the Lovely Present, 132
Mr. T. W. Anthony Woo, 141
Mrs. Frisby and the Rats of NIMH, 48
Mufaro’s Beautiful Daughters, 114
My Brother Sam Is Dead, 46
My Father’s Dragon, 67
My Friend Rabbit, 100
My Mother Is the Most Beautiful Woman in
the World, 148
My Side of the Mountain, 57
N
Nansen, 74
New Found World, 70
New Land, 80
Nicholas, 88
Nine Days to Christmas, 134
Nino, 75
No, David!, 104
Noah’s Ark (Pinkney), 101
Noah’s Ark (Spier), 120
The Noonday Friends, 54
Nothing at All, 151
Nothing But the Truth, 36
Number the Stars, 37
O
Officer Buckle and Gloria, 106
Old Ramon, 56
The Old Tobacco Shop, 90
Old Yeller, 60
Olive’s Ocean, 28
Olivia, 102
On Market Street, 118
On My Honor, 39
On the Banks of Plum Creek, 76
Once a Mouse, 132
One Fine Day, 125
1 Is One, 137
One Morning in Maine, 140
One Wide River to Cross, 129
One-Eyed Cat, 40
Onion John, 57
Ood-Le-Uk the Wanderer, 84
Our Eddie, 50
Our Only May Amelia, 31
Out of the Dust, 32
Out of the Flame, 83
Outside over There, 118
Owen, 109
Owl Moon, 113
Ox-Cart Man, 119
P
Paddle-to-the-Sea, 151
Pageant of Chinese History, 79
Pancakes-Paris, 68
The Paperboy, 106
Pecos Bill, 76
Pedro, the Angel of Olvera Street, 147
Penn, 76
Penny from Heaven, 25
Peppe the Lamplighter, 108
The Perilous Gard, 47
The Perilous Road, 58
Phebe Fairchild, 77
Philip Hall Likes Me, I Reckon Maybe, 47
Pictures of Hollis Woods, 29
170 T i t le I n d ex
Pierre Pidgeon, 150
The Pigtail of Ah Lee Ben Loo, 86
The Planet of Junior Brown, 49
Play with Me, 137
A Pocketful of Cricket, 130
The Polar Express, 115
Pop Corn and Ma Goodness, 127
Pran of Albania, 85
Prayer for a Child, 148
Princess Academy, 27
Puss in Boots (Brown, illus.), 140
Puss in Boots (Marcellino, illus.), 111
Q
The Quaint and Curious Quest of Johnny
Longfoot, 67
Queer Person, 84
R
Rabbit H, 70
The Railroad to Freedom, 82
Rain Drop Splash, 147
Rain Makes Applesauce, 131
Ramona and Her Father, 45
Ramona Quimby, Age 8, 43
Rapunzel, 105
Rascal, 55
Raven, 109
The Red Book, 98
Red Sails to Capri, 63
Red Sings from Treetops: A Year in Colors, 93
The Relatives Came, 115
Rifles for Watie, 58
A Ring of Endless Light, 43
A River of Words, 95
The Road from Home, 44
Roger and the Fox, 146
Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry, 45
Roller Skates, 77
The Rooster Crows, 147
Rosa, 97
Rufus M., 71
Rules, 24
Rumpelstiltskin, 114
The Runaway Papoose, 86
Runner of the Mountain Tops, 74
S
Saint George and the Dragon, 115
Sam, Bangs & Moonshine, 129
Sarah, Plain and Tall, 39
Savvy, 24
Scorpions, 38
Seabird, 67
Seashore Story, 128
Secret of the Andes, 62
The Secret River, 61
Sector 7, 103
Seven Blind Mice, 110
Seven Simeons, 155
Shabanu, Daughter of the Wind, 37
Shadow, 117
Shadow of a Bull, 54
Shadrach, 62
Shen of the Sea, 88
Shiloh, 36
Show Way, 27
The Sign of the Beaver, 41
The Silver Pencil, 70
Sing Down the Moon, 50
Sing in Praise, 147
Sing Mother Goose, 148
The Singing Tree, 75
A Single Shard, 29
Skipper John’s Cook, 141
The Slave Dancer, 47
Small Rain, 150
Smoky, the Cowhorse, 87
Smoky Night, 107
Snow, 104
Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs (Gág, illus.),
154
Snowflake Bentley, 104
Snow-White and the Seven Dwarfs (Burkert,
illus.), 124
The Snowy Day, 132
So You Want to Be President?, 102
A Solitary Blue, 41
Somewhere in the Darkness, 36
Song and Dance Man, 112
Song of Robin Hood, 146
Song of the Pines, 66
Song of the Swallows, 143
Song of the Water Boatman and Other Pond
Poems, 98
Sounder, 50
Spice and the Devil’s Cave, 84
The Spider and the Fly, 100
Starry Messenger, 106
The Steadfast Tin Soldier, 138
The Stinky Cheese Man & Other Fairly Stupid
Tales, 110
T i t le I n d ex 171
Stone Soup, 145
The Storm Book, 140
A Story a Story, 126
The Story of Appleby Capple, 65
The Story of Jumping Mouse, 116
The Story of Mankind, 89
Story of the Negro, 67
Strawberry Girl, 69
The Stray Dog, 102
Strega Nona, 123
A String in the Harp, 45
Sugaring Time, 41
The Summer of the Swans, 49
The Sun Is a Golden Earring, 132
The Surrender Tree, 24
Surviving the Applewhites, 29
Swamp Angel, 108
Sweet Whispers, Brother Rush, 42
Swift Rivers, 81
Swimmy, 131
Swords of Steel, 81
Sylvester and the Magic Pebble, 126
The Tombs of Atuan, 49
Tops & Bottoms, 107
The Treasure, 119
A Tree Is Nice, 136
Tree of Freedom, 65, 66
Truce of the Wolf and Other Tales of Old Italy,
82
Truck, 118
The True Confessions of Charlotte Doyle, 37
The Trumpeter of Krakow, 85
Tuesday, 110
26 Fairmount Avenue, 31
The Twenty-One Balloons, 67
The Two Reds, 142
T
V
The Tale of Despereaux, 28
Tales from Silver Lands, 88
The Talking Eggs, 112
The Tangle-Coated Horse and Other Tales, 85
Tar Beach, 110
T-Bone, the Baby Sitter, 143
Ten, Nine, Eight, 116
The Thanksgiving Story, 138
Theodore Roosevelt, Fighting Patriot, 62
There Was an Old Lady Who Swallowed a Fly,
105
These Happy Golden Years, 72
They Were Strong and Good, 152
The Thief, 33
Thimble Summer, 75
Thistle and Thyme, 55
Three Jovial Huntsmen, 123
The Three Pigs, 101
Thy Friend, Obadiah, 127
Tibet, 104
Time Flies, 108
Time of Wonder, 135
Timothy Turtle, 147
To Be a Slave, 51
Tod of the Fens, 86
Tom Paine, Freedom’s Apostle, 59
Tom Tit Tot, 130
U
The Ugly Duckling, 103
Umbrella, 135
The Underneath, 24
Up a Road Slowly, 52
Upon the Head of the Goat, 43
The Upstairs Room, 48
Vaino, 85
A Very Special House, 139
The View from Saturday, 32
The Village of Round and Square Houses, 114
A Visit to William Blake’s Inn, 42, 118
The Voice That Challenged a Nation, 27
Volcano, 39
The Voyagers, 88
The Voyages of Doctor Dolittle, 89
W
Walk Two Moons, 34
The Wall, 96
The Wanderer, 30
Waterless Mountain, 82
The Watsons Go to Birmingham--1963, 33
The Wave, 131
The Way to Start a Day, 120
The Wednesday Wars, 25
Wee Gillis, 154
The Westing Game, 44
What Do You Do with a Tail like This?, 99
What Do You Say, Dear?, 135
What Hearts, 35
What Jamie Saw, 33
Wheel on the Chimney, 138
The Wheel on the School, 61
172 T i t le I n d ex
When Clay Sings, 124
When I Was Young in the Mountains, 117
When Shlemiel Went to Warsaw and Other
Stories, 51
When Sophie Gets Angry--Really, Really
Angry, 103
When Will the World Be Mine?, 139
When You Reach Me, 22
Where the Buffaloes Begin, 117
Where the Mountain Meets the Moon, 23
Where the Wild Things Are, 131
The Whipping Boy, 39
Whistler’s Van, 77
White Snow, Bright Snow, 145
The White Stag, 76
Whittington, 26
Why Mosquitoes Buzz in People’s Ears, 122
Why the Sun and the Moon Live in the Sky,
128
The Wild Birthday Cake, 143
The Windy Hill, 90
The Winged Girl of Knossos, 80
The Winter Room, 37
Winterbound, 77
The Wish Giver, 41
The Witch of Blackbird Pond, 57
The Witches of Worm, 48
The Wonder Smith and His Son, 87
Wonderful Year, 69
Working Cotton, 110
The Wright Brothers, 36
Wringer, 32
A Wrinkle in Time, 55
Y
A Year Down Yonder, 30
Yo! Yes?, 109
Yolonda’s Genius, 34
Yonie Wondernose, 149
You Can Write Chinese, 148
Young Fu of the Upper Yangtze, 81
Young Mac of Fort Vancouver, 73
Young Walter Scott, 78
Z
Zen Shorts, 98
Zin! Zin! Zin! a Violin, 107
Zlateh the Goat and Other Stories, 53
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