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Authors & Artists

Showing 1 to 10 of 31 Results

  • Lesley Lesley
  • Brian Brian

    Brian Falkner

    Author from New Zealand who has an extraordinary talent for relating his astonishing and exciting real life experiences into his work.
  • Sara Sara

    Sara Fanelli

    One of the most distinctive and idiosyncratic picture book creators, illustrator of the multi award-winning Pinocchio by Carlo Collodi.
  • Rosana Rosana
  • Eleanor Eleanor

    Eleanor Farjeon

    Daughter of popular novelist Benjamin Farjeon, the popularity of her work helped to found the Eleanor Farjeon Award for children's literature.
  • Addy Addy

    Addy Farmer

    Author of well loved children's book 'Grandad's Bench', an emotional story of love and loss.
  • Mark Mark
  • Jan Jan

    Jan Fearnley

    An award-winning author and illustrator, Jan's titles include Watch Out, Wilf! and Never Too Little to Love, written by Jeanne Willis.
  • Josephine Josephine

    Josephine Feeney

    After becoming a full time writer in 1991 she had her first book published in 1994, and has gone on to write many more.
  • Jules Jules

    Jules Feiffer

    Illustrator of Some Things Are Scary, written by Florence Parry Heide.,Jules Feiffer is the acclaimed author-illustrator of several books for children, including BARK, GEORGE; MEANWHILE . . .; and I LOST MY BEAR; and the illustrator of THE PHANTOM TOLLBOOTH, by Norton Juster. Jules Feiffer is also a renowned editorial cartoonist, playwright, novelist, and screenwriter. He has been the recipient of an Academy Award, a Pulitzer Prize, a London Theatre Critics Award, and two Obie Awards, and a retrospective exhibition of his work appeared at the Library of Congress. SOME THINGS ARE SCARY, written by Florence Parry Heide, is his first book for Candlewick Press. Coincidentally, Robert Osborne, who originally illustrated SOME THINGS ARE SCARY in 1969, was a major influence on Jules Feiffer's work. Of his first reading of Florence Parry Heide's text, Jules Feiffer says, "It reminded me very much of the emotional materials that I drew on for my early cartoons." And he adds, "When I was a child, everything was scary-especially parents!"