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Elizabeth Orton Jones (1910–2005)

Autor von Twig

12+ Werke 624 Mitglieder 12 Rezensionen Lieblingsautor von 1 Lesern

Über den Autor

When Elizabeth Orton Jones was a child living in Highland Park, Illinois, her mother bought her a big second-hand dollhouse. Her grandmother made some of the rugs and furniture for it. Elizabeth grew up to be a famous artist and children's book author. She won the Caldecott Medal in 1945, at age mehr anzeigen 35, for her book Prayer for a Child. Two years later, she wrote Big Susan, featuring her dollhouse and dolls that inhabited it. The dolls, their furnishings and a replica dollhouse can be seen at the Highland Park Historical Society. For the last fifty years, Elizabeth's friends have called her by her nickname "Twig", after her book of the same name. She has written more than twenty books for children, and now lives in New Hampshire weniger anzeigen

Werke von Elizabeth Orton Jones

Twig (1942) 374 Exemplare
Big Susan (1947) 166 Exemplare
Maminka's Children (1940) 18 Exemplare
A Little Child (1946) 11 Exemplare
How far is it to Bethlehem? (1955) 6 Exemplare
David (1937) 4 Exemplare
Little Red Riding Hood (1982) 2 Exemplare

Zugehörige Werke

Prayer for a Child (1941) — Illustrator — 1,158 Exemplare
Canticle of the Sun (1224) — Illustrator, einige Ausgaben176 Exemplare
Small Rain (1943) — Illustrator — 99 Exemplare
Told under the Magic Umbrella (1939) — Illustrator — 68 Exemplare
Animal Friends and Adventures (1949) — Mitwirkender — 55 Exemplare
Told Under the Stars and Stripes (1945) — Mitwirkender — 38 Exemplare
This Is the Way: Prayers and Precepts From World Religions (1951) — Illustrator — 23 Exemplare
Big and Little Creatures (1961) — Illustrator — 15 Exemplare
The Peddler's Clock (1936) — Illustrator — 12 Exemplare
Brownies - Hush! (1938) — Illustrator — 11 Exemplare
What Miranda Knew (1946) — Illustrator — 2 Exemplare

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Wissenswertes

Geburtstag
1910-06-25
Todestag
2005-05-10
Geschlecht
female
Nationalität
USA
Geburtsort
Highland Park, Illinois, USA
Sterbeort
Peterborough, New Hampshire, USA
Wohnorte
Mason, New Hampshire, USA
Ausbildung
École des Beaux Arts
School of the Art Institute of Chicago
University of Chicago (PhB 1932)
House in the Pines, Norton, Massachusetts
Berufe
children's author
illustrator
children's book author
artist
painter
muralist
Beziehungen
Jones, Jessie Orton (mother)
Kurzbiographie
Elizabeth Orton Jones was born in Highland Park, Illinois to an artistic and literary family. Her great-grandfather Joseph Russell Jones was a friend of President Lincoln and U.S. Minister to Belgium under President Grant. Her grandmother Annette L.R. Jones was a professional pianist. Her father George Roberts was a violinist and her mother Jessie Mae Orton Jones was a pianist and writer. Elizabeth grew up in a household that valued music, art, reading, and imagination, where people from all walks of life and various nationalities and races came to visit and talk. After graduating from the House in the Pines boarding school in Norton, Massachusetts, Elizabeth entered the University of Chicago, where she majored in art, and also took a full course load at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. She graduated with a Ph.B. degree in 1932, and later that same year earned a Diplôme in painting at the École des Beaux Arts in Fontainebleau, France. Elizabeth then studied in Paris at the Académie Colarossi and with artist Camille Liausu. It was during this period that she began drawing and painting children. After she returned to the USA, she had a one-woman exhibit of her color etchings at the Smithsonian Institution. For her debut children's book, Ragman of Paris and His Ragamuffins (1937), she created two little French boys named Mich and Tobie. In 1940, she began to work on the illustrations for her book Maminka's Children with Lillian and William Glaser in New Yokr, who used a special process of drawing on grained plate glass. The resulting illustrations were characterized by their vividness, delicacy, and rich detail.
Over the course of her career, Elizabeth wrote and illustrated about two dozen books, including books by other writers as well as her own. She collaborated with her mother on four books. In 1945, Elizabeth
won the Caldecott Medal for her artwork for Rachel Field's book Prayer for a Child. After moving to Mason, New Hampshire, she began an association with the Crotched Mountain Center, a rehabilitation community for disabled children, after being commissioned to paint several murals for the center.

Mitglieder

Rezensionen

A good book for reading aloud. Three children of a Czech immigrant mother live with her and their grandfather on a farm. They have many little adventures. It appears that Elizabeth Orton Jones may have also been the illustrator since none is credited.
 
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auntieknickers | Jul 17, 2020 |
Really enjoyable read-aloud for me, my 7yo son and 5yo daughter. They gave it 5 stars.

 
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kaciereads | 9 weitere Rezensionen | Apr 9, 2020 |
Huh. I loved making things for my dolls through my adolescence, and I still enjoy some doll and dollhouse stories. But this one verged on the twee, and I just don't see the appeal for re-reads.

Ok, it's cute they don't know what jacks are, and they clean their house for Big Susan, and name the new baby Little Susan. And I suppose I could forgive them for having servants, though the author's treatment of said Nurse and Cook is rather offensive. But I don't feel any depth, complexity, or resonance here. Even the most innocent & sheltered child has more going on in her life than is even possible in this fantasy world.

*My* dolls really lived. They had adventures, and arguments, and sorrows, and joys. And not just on Christmas night, either. Susan's dolls are almost boring. And Susan isn't in the book much at all - the title is misleading.
… (mehr)
 
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Cheryl_in_CC_NV | Jun 6, 2016 |
Hm. A little twee and old-fashioned, but that's not necessarily a bad thing. I know I would have loved this as a girl. So, I probably should rate it higher, but I just wasn't all that charmed at this time. It is cool that it takes place in an urban setting, helping us realize that our i-ma-gi-na-tion" [sic] can help us find magic anywhere, not just in bower-bedecked meadows. But it was just too babyish for me, despite being a full-length chapter book."
 
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Cheryl_in_CC_NV | 9 weitere Rezensionen | Jun 6, 2016 |

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Statistikseite

Werke
12
Auch von
11
Mitglieder
624
Beliebtheit
#40,357
Bewertung
4.1
Rezensionen
12
ISBNs
7
Favoriten
1

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