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Authors & Artists

Showing 1 to 10 of 14 Results

  • G-Brian G-Brian

    G. Brian Karas

    Illustrator of the picture book Ant and Honey Bee: What a Pair! as well as many other books for children.
  • Jim Jim

    Jim Kay

    Jim Kay studied illustration and then went on to work in the archives of the Tate gallery and the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, two experiences that heavily influence his work. He is the illustrator of the Flaxfield Quartet and A Monster Calls, in which he has used everything from beetles to breadboards to create interesting marks and textures.
  • Dick Dick

    Dick King-Smith

    One of the world's favourite children's book authors, Dick was named Children's Book Author of the Year in 1991.,Dick King-Smith was living proof that it's never too late to find your calling in life. He was a dairy farmer for twenty years before earning his degree at fifty-three and going on to teach six-, seven-, and eight-year-olds. His first book was published while he was in his fifties, and a book a year followed until he stopped teaching. Then, he says, "The books started to spring up like mushrooms." Dick King-Smith became the immensely popular author of picture books and chapter books. One of his books was made into one of the most popular children's movies ever, BABE: THE GALLANT PIG. "My favorite farmyard animals are pigs," said the author, whose distinctive voice - witty, affectionate, and direct - branded even his nonfiction with unmistakable warmth and intimacy. "I don't care if they're little pigs or big pigs, with long snouts or short snouts, with ears that stick up or ears that flop down. I don't mind if they're black or white, ginger or spotted. I just love pigs." More recently, Dick King-Smith's love for porcine creatures found an outlet in the Lollipop series: LADY LOLLIPOP, his tenth book for Candlewick Press, and its sequel, CLEVER LOLLIPOP. "Each time I sit down to write an animal story, I say to myself, 'What sort of animal?' and I answer, 'Pig!' Then I say, 'No, no, you've just done a pig story.' So I have to wait. And I have waited. And then came along LADY LOLLIPOP!" When fans of the best-selling LADY LOLLIPOP clamored for more, the author happily obliged with CLEVER LOLLIPOP. Of this title, Dick King-Smith noted, "When I sat down to write a sequel to LADY LOLLIOP, all the characters were still there, but I felt that they needed a bit more magic - and so Collie Cob the Conjurer came along." Dick King-Smith passed away in January 2011.
  • Rudyard Rudyard

    Rudyard Kipling

    Probably best known as the author of 'The Jungle Book' Kipling is an international favourite with readers young and old.
  • Satoshi Satoshi

    Satoshi Kitamura

    A renowned children's author and illustrator whose quirky perspectives and brilliant watercolours won him the Mother Goose Award for the Most Exciting Newcomer to British Illustration 1983.
  • Jon Jon
  • Michelle Michelle

    Michelle Knudsen

    A children's author and librarian in New York.
  • Ron Ron

    Ron Koertge

    A poet and novelist who has been dubbed "the wisest, most entertaining wiseguy in American poetry.",Ask Ron Koertge what he brings to the realm of young adult fiction, and the seasoned author responds matter-of-factly. "I write dialogue well, and I'm funny," he says--an assessment few would argue with. "I like iconoclasm and practice it in my fiction. I don't like pretense or hypocrisy. I'm almost always irreverent." A faculty member for more than 35 years at Pasadena City College, where he has taught everything from Shakespeare to remedial writing, Ron Koertge is the author of several acclaimed novels, most of them for young adults. That Ron Koertge is a master at capturing teenagers' voices--often in witty repartee--is fully evident in MARGAUX WITH AN X, the story of a sharp-tongued beauty and a quirky, quick-witted loner. "MARGAUX WITH AN X started as a short story, but the heroine wouldn't let me alone," the author says. "She had a story to tell, and she wanted a whole novel to tell it in." Another unlikely pairing is found in STONER & SPAZ, Ron Koertge's funny, in-your-face tale of a young cinephile with cerebral palsy and the stoner who steals his heart. "My wife works with the disabled," the writer says of his inspiration for the novel, which quickly garnered critical acclaim. "One night she came home and told me about a young man she'd been working with. He had C.P. and a terrific sense of humor. Coincidentally, that day I had talked to a former student of mine who'd recently been in rehab for substance abuse. What would happen, I wondered, if those two knew each other?" In addition to his young adult novels, Ron Koertge writes poetry, and has been dubbed "the wisest, most entertaining wiseguy in American poetry" by poet-laureate Billy Collins. SHAKESPEARE BATS CLEANUP is narrated by a straight-talking, fourteen-year-old first baseman who has been benched by mono and decides to take a swing at writing poetry. Written entirely in free verse, with examples of several poetic forms slipped into the mix--including a sonnet, haiku, pastoral, and even a pantoum--SHAKESPEARE BATS CLEANUP is a veritable English teacher's dream. "The interest in SHAKESPEARE BATS CLEANUP is less with the arc of the plot than with the individual poems, some of which demonstrate poetic form, some of which tell the story," the author says. "One of my biggest challenges was to write like a fourteen-year-old who has a knack for writing poetry, and not just sound like a sixty-one-year-old pretending to be one!" The author's first book with Candlewick, THE BRIMSTONE JOURNALS, is also a novel written in free verse, with 15 different teenage characters narrating four or five poems each. "The book started to nag me a few months before the shooting at Columbine High School in Colorado, and I started to make notes in the form of poems," he says of the hauntingly prescient work. "BRIMSTONE needed to move at high velocity, and this form is perfect for that: no tail fins, no leather seats, no moon roof. Just get in and go." Ron Koertge grew up in an agricultural area in an old mining town in Illinois, just across the Mississippi from St. Louis, Missouri. There he learned to "drive a tractor and buck hay bales, which are clearly useful skills in Los Angeles," he quips. He and his wife live in South Pasadena, California.
  • Bob Bob

    Bob Kolar

    A debut author-illustrator, whose first title for Walker Books is the fun football romp Big Kicks.
  • E-L E-L

    E. L. Konigsburg

    World-renowned author of fiction and two-time winner of the prestigious Newbery Medal.