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Showing 11 to 20 of 43 Results

  • Barbara Barbara

    Barbara Walsh

    Barbara Walsh is a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist who has worked for newspapers and magazines in Florida, Massachusetts, Maine, and Ireland. Sammy in the Sky was inspired by her family's first dog, Sam, a loyal and loving hound who died in 2003. She is also the author of August Gale: A Father and Daughter's Journey into the Storm, an adult biography and memoir book. Barbara Walsh lives in Maine with her family and their coonhound, Jack, a rescue dog from Tennessee.
  • Geoff Geoff

    Geoff Waring

    Creative Director of Glamour magazine and author-illustrator of the non-fiction series about Oscar, the adorably naive kitten.
  • Andi Andi
  • Sarah Sarah

    Sarah Webb

    Amy Green, Teen Agony Queen: Boy Trouble is Sarah Webb's first novel for pre-teens.
  • Rosemary Rosemary

    Rosemary Wells

    A multi-award-winning illustrator of over 60 books for young children.,Rosemary Wells is "Mother Goose's second cousin," declares Iona Opie, the renowned authority on children's rhymes who edited MY VERY FIRST MOTHER GOOSE, HERE COMES MOTHER GOOSE, and MOTHER GOOSE'S LITTLE TREASURES. Each acclaimed collection features Rosemary Wells's illustrations, fanciful images that abound in witty cross-references and absorbing details that "children love pointing out to grownups who probably haven't noticed them," Iona Opie says. Born in New York City, Rosemary Wells grew up in a house filled with "books, dogs, and nineteenth-century music." After a brief tenure at the Museum School in Boston, she married and began a career as a book designer, then published her own first picture book in 1968. From the start, Rosemary Wells's work has been recognized for its strong sense of humor and realism and its gently rebellious approach to childhood. Her books have received numerous honors, including a NEW YORK TIMES BOOK REVIEW Best Illustrated Book of the Year and a PUBLISHERS WEEKLY Best Book of the Year award for MY VERY FIRST MOTHER GOOSE. Young children everywhere have adored the more than 60 picture books Rosemary Wells has created over some three decades. "Simple incidents from childhood are universal," she says. "The children and our home life have inspired many of my books." Among them are two endearing books she wrote and illustrated, FELIX FEELS BETTER (a NEW YORK TIMES bestseller) and FELIX AND THE WORRIER, both about a lovable little . . . guinea pig. "Most of my books use animals rather than children as characters," Rosemary Wells admits. "People always ask why. There are many reasons. First, I draw animals more easily and amusingly than I do children. Animals are broader in range--age, time, and place--than children are. They also can do things in pictures that children cannot. They can be slapstick and still real, rough and still funny, maudlin and still touching." Indeed, not all of Rosemary Wells's ideas come from within the family circle. "I put into my books all of the things I remember," she says. "I am an accomplished eavesdropper in restaurants, on trains, and at gatherings of any kind. These remembrances are jumbled up and changed, because fiction is always more palatable than truth. Memories become more true as they are honed and whittled into characters and stories." Rosemary Wells lives in Connecticut.
  • Andrea Andrea
  • Colin Colin

    Colin West

    One of the most consistently witty children's poets and illustrators.
  • Thomas Thomas

    Thomas Wharton

    An award-winning fantasy writer for adults, The Shadow of Malabron is his first book for young people.,About Me I grew up in northern Alberta, Canada, in a town called Grande Prairie. As a kid I loved to read and create my own storybooks and comic books. I also loved hiking, camping and exploring. There was never a moment when I decided I was going to become a writer because I was always writing. It was just something I liked to do. In university I had to decided whether I was going to pursue a career as an artist or a writer. I chose writing. About My Work Many of the ideas that went into THE SHADOW OF MALABRON have been with me for a long time. Up until now I've mostly written for adults, but when my own kids asked me if I'd write a book for them, I dug out some of my old ideas for a fantasy novel and got to work. I enjoy books that create a rich, detailed world for the reader to enter, and that's what I'm trying to do with this fantasy trilogy. Readers often ask me about the epigraphs at the head of each chapter. They want to know if these are quotes from real books. They aren't; they're all "quotes" from books that don't exist. Three Things You Didn't Know About Me: 1. I'm a vegetarian. 2. I love comic books. 3. I live in a haunted house; we call the ghost "Grimm."
  • Nadia Nadia

    Nadia Wheatley

    NADIA WHEATLEY began writing full-time in 1976, after completing postgraduate work in Australian history. She writes for adults as well as for children and her published work includes fiction, history, biography and picture books. Nadia's work reflects a commitment to multiculturalism, social justice and the preservation of the natural environment and has been recognized with numerous awards. Over a number of years she worked as a consultant at the school at Papunya, an Aboriginal community in the Western Desert.
  • Vicky Vicky

    Vicky White

    Supremely talented young artist and illustrator of the award-winning Ape.