Friday, March 11, 2011

Who are your favorite children's authors?

As much for posterity as anything else, I thought it would be fun to list the authors I hunt for when I go to the library. I know I'll forget these names in a few years (unless we have a second), and it would be nice to remember them. Who knows, one day we might be buying them for grand kids?

So, in no order, here are the authors of children's books I enjoy the most. Some of them--most?--are famous and well known to those who have put in the hours at the library or book store.

Please add to the list! I'd love to be surprised by more excellent authors. I'm already grateful for those Sue has shown and given us, and the many great books we've gotten from Mom and Dad and Amy and Aunt Ruth and others. I'll keep adding as I remember them. I am certain I am not remembering even half the ones which have been important to us.

Kevin Henkes: Sheila Rae, The Brave is a great example of his top-notch work. Just about everything he did is excellent.

Mark Teague: The How Does a Dinosaur series with Jane Yolen is fantasic. He also contributed some great art for the Poppleton series with Cynthia Rylant. Not to be missed; they are some of my favorite books of all time.

You'll notice I haven't mentioned Dr. Suess. I'll come clean. I really dislike his artwork. Hasn't anyone noticed that he can't really draw? And his wacky worlds just drive me nuts. Horton Hears a Who and Is Convicted of Trumped-Up Charges by a Kangaroo Court paints a bleak picture of human nature no less than Henry Fonda's great The Oxbow Incident. The Cat in the Hat has distinct resonances with that children's horror classic Pinocchio or David Mamet's House of Games: Everything goes worse and worse and worse, rules are broken, and for what? The vicarious thrill of watching someone's life broken, their hope of a good night's sleep dashed? For those who like any sort of order or reason, it's torture.

I know this is like insulting a favorite uncle, but there it is. Not to say Sam doesn't like his books.

Cynthia Rylant: The Henry and Mudge books and much more. She's a machine. We can all learn something from Poppleton and his adventures.

David Small: Great artwork and quirky plots. George Washington's Cows is as good a place to start as any. Or even better: Paper John, which has a great conflict with a demon, not to be missed.

Tomie dePaola: Oh, he's excellent. Some of his books deal with religious topics, quite nicely. Bill and Pete Go Down the Nile (thanks, Amy!) is a great place to start.

David Shannon: A smaller body of work but some great books, such as Pirates Don't Change Diapers (written by Melinda Long).

Arnold Lobel: The Frog and Toad books, Uncle Elephant, Mouse Tales, etc. Just delightful.

Mark Tolen for the Arthur series. Sandra Boynton for her many classics. Richard Scarry's books can't be forgotten either. (Loved finding Goldbug!) And if you like Richard Scarry, try A Year in a Castle by Rachel Coombs. Great art, great detail. For that matter, just about everything in the great collection The 20th-Century Children's Book Treasury really is amazing. That's worth owning.

Lauren Child: Every Charlie and Lola book ever done, plus classics like Beware of the Storybook Wolves.

Don and Audrey Wood: The Little Mouse, the Red Ripe Strawberry and the Bug Hungry Bear, etc. This one was given to Sam by his birth father long ago, and it's excellent. Piggies is classic, and King Bidgood's in the Bathtub--but if you are up for an adventurous graphic novel, try Intro the Volcano. Very well done. And Audrey produced such classics as Silly Sally.

Since I've mentioned graphic novels, I'll add Susan Schade and Jon Buller's series beginning with Travels of Thelonious. It's set in a post-apocalyptic world where animals have thumbs and human-level intelligence, and humans are almost entirely wiped out. These books are real page-turners, but not too sophisticated or scary for a 4 or 5-year-old.

In that vein, there are the Saltwater Taffy graphic novels by Matthew Loux which are a lot of good, innocent fun. Wish there were more. We've found various other comic-booky adaptations of classics, from Greek myths to Sherlock Holmes. I am not sure whether it's a bad idea for him to learn the story and its surprised in that format first. Will this ruin it for him when he's older and tries to read them in book form? Guess we'll see.

Margaret Wise Brown: Good Night Moon and Runaway Bunny, of course, but have you tried Big Red Barn? See if you can find the unintended, impossible reflection in a bucket of water.

And the authors who have only one book we've read, but it's one we love:

Peggy Rathman for Good Night, Gorilla. Follow the balloon on each page if you haven't already.

Bruce Degen for Jamberry -- This is delightful and sing-songy. Hey, you know what? Turns out he illustrated the Magic School Bus series! These are educational, and Sam's just really at the age where he'll get much to all of the information out of them. Very good series.

Margaret Beames for Night Cat. Never has a possum been as dramatically scary. Little known fact: the "reveal" of Grace Poole in the Orson Welles version of Jane Eyre was based on this book. (At least, that's my theory, causality be darned.)

Soon: Children's T.V. programs and movies!

6 comments:

Spud said...

You missed the Harold and the Purple Crayon books, and P. D. Eastman, who did such wonderful things as Go Dog Go and Are You My Mother? Eric Carle can be repetitive, but The Very Hungry Caterpillar is wonderful. We also loved the Jesse Bear books by Nancy White Carlstrom, and the Sheep books by Nancy Shaw. Sheep in a jeep, on a hill that's steep...

Tim said...

I was trying to remember the Jesses The Bear books and the Sheep books! Those are excellent, and favorites.

I agree about Carle. His range isn't wide, but he's written some classics.

And Harold--he's embedded in the psyche of each of us, I think.

Sue, what favorites do you recall for ages 5 and above? I suppose that's entering easy-reader territory.

Spud said...

Yes it is. In another year or two, Sam will be reading all those Rylant books himself. There are also, I'm sure you'll be thrilled, lots of things like Scooby Doo in the easy reader section. Things get much more interesting around 2nd-3rd grade when they start the Time Warp Trio books, and the Wayside School books. Don't worry, they make fine birthday presents.

Tim said...

I also missed Beatrix Potter. Those are actually somewhat edgy for the amount of tea involved. Livestock flirt with rendering at times and in some stories the animals have to carry "papers" which the authorities can require of them. This has to be what inspired Animal Farm.

Sue, I actually am somewhat sad at the thought of Sam learning to read. I really enjoy the time we have when I read to him.

I've been plundering the easy readers for a while, just to have something new. I will look forward to what you recommend.

Spud said...

It doesn't have to end, you know. I read out loud to Emily on a regular basis until very recently. In fact, we were discussing two days ago a book that we never finished, and how we have to get through that one and the last one by that author before she leaves us for college this summer.

Tim said...

Correction to my ban on Suess: A Book About Me is brilliant and helpful. Thank you, Judy! Sam's loving it.

Additions: Meanwhile (http://www.amazon.com/Meanwhile-Pick-Path-Story-Possibilities/dp/0810984237/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1312229893&sr=8-1). It's for older kids (5+) and is very well done. If I taught undergrad QM I would be tempted to assign it as well.

Also, the Magic Treehouse series by Mary Pope Osborne. These are excellent for Sam's age.