08Sep

Hugh Lofting
During the First World War, Hugh Lofting‘s children at home in England asked him to illustrate the letters he sent them. His experiences with wounded horses at the Casualty Clearing Station in France led him to visualize a fictional doctor who would learn to speak the animals’ languages…from these beginnings came the ever-popular Doctor Dolittle series. Lofting’s nine books about the friendly doctor who “talked to the animals” have been favorites ever since, and by 1934 had themselves been translated into twelve languages.

Doctor Dolittle

Pamela Travers
Pamela (P. L.) Travers was born in Australia in 1906. While living in Sussex, England, she first began to write while recovering from an illness. Mary Poppins was the result, and the magical governess who “blew in on an east wind” was an instant success. Mary Shepard did the charming illustrations for this and the later books. Travers would go on to write three sequels to the first book, and Walt Disney’s film version starring Oscar-winning Julie Andrews increased Poppins’ worldwide popularity. In a 1934 interview, Ms. Travers said, “If you are looking for autobiographical facts, Mary Poppins is the story of my life.”

Mary Poppins

Tasha Tudor
Boston-born artist/illustrator Tasha Tudor is famed for her delightful illustrations for many children’s books including a few of her own. Married to Thomas McCready, Jr., the couple moved to New Hampshire with their three children in the 1930s and enjoyed the old-fashioned farm ways and holidays that give an added charm to the artist’s work.

Tasha Tudor Fairy Tales
Tags: Add new tag, Doctor Dolittle, Hugh Lofting, Mary Poppins, Mary Shepard, P. L. Travers, Tasha Tudor
03Sep

Marguerite Henry
Marguerite Henry’s first horse story was Justin Morgan Had a Horse; her 1949 best-seller, King of the Wind, won the Newbery Medal.
All of her horse stories are fact-based fiction; one of the most popular series began with Misty of Chincoteague, a real pony. Gifted artist Wesley Dennis created the beautiful illustrations for Henry’s books.

Five O'Clock Charlie

Justin Morgan Had a Horse

C. W. Anderson
C. W. Anderson wrote and illustrated more than a dozen books for children, mostly dealing with horses. Billy and Blaze was the first title in a series about a young boy and his horse; the author’s beautiful pencil and charcoal illustrations make all his works especially collectable. A friend of the author’s gave him a fine thoroughbred horse named Bobcat that served him as a model for many years.

Bobcat

Paul Brown
One of the best animal artists was Paul Brown, whose easily-recognizable strong black-and-white line made his work highly desirable when it came to illustrating horse and dog stories. An author also, Brown wrote several children’s books including Merry Legs; Piper’s Pony; Pony Farm, etc.


Will James
Will James was born in Montana in 1892 and virtually grew up on the range. Orphaned at an early age, James was adopted by a French Canadian trapper who taught him to read and write; he never received any formal schooling. However, the boy had a natural gift for drawing and eventually sold some of his work to magazines. His real fame came after the publication of his semi-autobiographical book, Smoky, the Cow-Horse in 1926. He went on to write several other books based on his experiences, and his vivid illustrations capture all the flavor of the old West.

Lone Cowboy
Tags: Add new tag, C. W. Anderson, Horses, Justin Morgan, King of the Wind, Lone Cowboy, Marguerite Henry, Misty, Paul Brown, Smoky the Cow Horse, Wesley Dennis, Will James
02Sep

Thornton W. Burgess
In 1910, writer/naturalist Thornton W. Burgess wrote his first book, Old Mother West Wind. It contained sixteen stories about animals including Reddy Fox, Peter Rabbit, Johnny Chuck, Jerry Muskrat, Bobby Coon, Little Joe Otter, Buster Bear and many other characters who would go on with their adventures in the dozens of sequels that followed. Burgess in 1934 said that he had written over 11,000 stories since OMWW’s publication. Harrison Cady‘s charming illustrations also contributed greatly to the overwhelming popularity of the series.

Mother West Wind

Adventures of Buster Bear
Tags: Buster Bear, Harrison Cady, Old Mother West Wind, Reddy Fox, Thornton W. Burgess
31Aug

Elizabeth Enright
…when I was eleven years old, I first discovered Elizabeth Enright‘s wonderful books. Beginning with The Saturdays through Spiderweb for Two, the Melendy family’s adventures riveted my attention. Each of Enright’s fictional children, Mona, Rush, Randy and Oliver stepped right off the pages–as real and three-dimensional as any of my school friends. And they seemed to be having even more fun. The author’s beautiful line drawings add to the charm of her writings.
Enright wrote other good books including her Newbery Award-winning Thimble Summer, but the Melendy books are my favorites.

Walter Farley
For the best–and most popular of all–horse stories, Walter Farley‘s excellent Black Stallion series is unbeatable. After publication of his first book, The Black Stallion, in 1941, Farley’s career path was assured; children clamored for more and more stories of Alec Ramsay and his big black horse. The Island Stallion series followed, along with a semi-fictional biography of Big Red, Man o’ War, and other great books.

Le Grand
Among vintage series books of the World War II era, I’ve always liked Le Grand‘s Augustus books. A bright and adventurous 11-year-old Southern boy with the spirit of Huckleberry Finn, Augustus and his sister Glorianna and little brother Jupiter assisted the war effort in Augustus Helps the Navy, ditto the Army and the Marines, not to mention Augustus Flies and Augustus Drives a Jeep. All are out of print and hard to find nowadays. Le Grand (Le Grand Henderson) also illustrated his own books.

Lois Lenski
Lois Lenski’s books are largely stand-alones, and she too illustrated her own work: such books as Strawberry Girl; Blue Ridge Billy and Bayou Suzette are stories of children living in various regions of the United States. All are very collectable today. Lenski also illustrated the books of other authors, such as the very popular Betsy-Tacy girls’ series titles written by Maud Hart Lovelace.

Maud Hart Lovelace
Tags: Augustus, Black Stallion, Children's Authors, Children's Illustrators, Elizabeth Enright, Island Stallion, Le Grand, Lois Lenski, Maud Hart Lovelace, Melendy Family, Walter Farley
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