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Wee Gillis

Wee Gillis( 1 customer ratings | )
Author: Leaf, Munro
Illustrator: Lawson, Robert
Series title:New York Review Children's Collection
ISBN:978-1-59017-206-3
Publication Date:Jun 2004
Publisher:New York Review of Books, Incorporated, The
Book Format:Hardback
List Price:AUD $32.99
Book Description:

A Caldecott Honor Book by the creators of the beloved Story of Ferdinand Wee Gillis lives in Scotland. He is an orphan, and he spends half of each year with his mother's people in the lowlands, while the other half finds him in the highlands with his father's kin. Both sides of Gillis's family are eager for him to settle down and adopt their ways. In the lowlands, he is taught to herd cattle, learning how to call them to him in even the heaviest of evening fogs. In...
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Book Details
Pages:80
Detailed Subjects: Juvenile Fiction / General
Juvenile Fiction / Places / Europe
Physical Dimensions (W X L X H):17.8 x 25.4 x 1.3 cm
Book Weight:0.407 Kilograms
Author Biography
Leaf, Munro (Author)


Robert Lawson was born in 1892 in New York City. He studied art for three years under illustrator Howard Giles. His career as an illustrator began in 1914, when his illustration for a poem about the invasion of Belgium was published in Harper's Weekly. In 1922, he illustrated his first children's book, The Wonderful Adventures of Little Prince Toofat. Subsequently he illustrated dozens of children's books by other authors, including such well-known titles as The Story of Ferdinand by Munro Leaf and Mr. Popper's Penguins by Richard and Florence Atwater.

He has illustrated as many as forty books by other authors, and another seventeen books that he himself was author of, including Ben and Me: An Astonishing Life of Benjamin Franklin By His Good Mouse Amos and Rabbit Hill. His work was widely admired, and he became the first, and so far only, person to be given both the Caldecott Medal (They Were Strong and Good, 1941) and the Newbery Medal (Rabbit Hill, 1945). Ben and Me earned a Lewis Carroll Shelf Award in 1961. Lawson died in 1957 at his home in Westport, Connecticut, in a house that he referred to as Rabbit Hill, since it had been the setting for his book of the same name. He was 64.

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