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Ed Young (illustrator)

Ed Tse-chun Young (Chinese: 杨志成; pinyin: Yáng Zhìchéng; born November 28, 1931) is a Chinese-born American illustrator and writer of children's picture books. He won one Caldecott Medal for the year's best American picture book and for his lifetime contribution as a children's illustrator he was twice the U.S. nominee for the Hans Christian Andersen Award.

Ed Young
Young at the Mazza Museum 2013 conference
BornEd (Tse-chun) Young
(1931-11-28) November 28, 1931 (age 91)
Tianjin, China
OccupationIllustrator, writer
NationalityAmerican
Period1962–present
GenreChildren's picture books
Notable awardsCaldecott Medal
1990

Biography

Ed Young was born on November 28, 1931 in Tianjin, China. When he was three years old, he and his family moved to Shanghai. His mother would ring a bell at mealtimes, and he would slide down the banister with his brothers and sisters. "I have never lost the child in me. My father would spin endless tales of his own to entertain our imaginations on summer nights lying on the flat roof of our house. I have never forgotten the images I saw in my mind." From an early age, Ed loved to create stories and draw pictures and thought he could "disappear" into his own world, brought to life through his illustrations.

In 1951, Young came to the U.S. to study architecture. Instead, he grew more interested in art, and soon switched his major. Young's first job was with a New York advertising agency where he spent his lunch breaks sketching animals at Central Park Zoo. During that time, he received a letter from his father which said, "A successful life and a happy life is one measured by how much you have accomplished for others and not one measured by how much you have done for yourself." According to Young, "I understood then that to realize my potential as an artist was subservient to my worth as a human being. To be truly successful, I needed to find a place where my work would also inspire others to fuller and happier lives. I wished to share with everyone my father's words about success – work can, in fact, be the rooftop from which we launch ourselves to higher places."[citation needed] In search of something more expansive, expressive, and timeless, Young discovered all this, and more, in children's books.

Work

Young's first book, The Mean Mouse and Other Mean Stories, was published by Harper & Row in 1962. He expected it to be his first and last book, but it won an American Institute of Graphic Arts award and launched a career that has resulted in almost one hundred books for children. Most of his books are visual masterpieces using colors and images to convey hidden symbolism. His meticulously rendered works have utilized pencil, pastel, cut paper, collage, ink, photographs, and found materials.

"A Chinese painting is often accompanied by words. They are complementary. There are things that words do that pictures never can, and likewise, there are images that words can never describe. I feel the story has to be an exciting and moving experience for a child. Before I am involved with a project, I must be moved, and, as I grow, I try to create something exciting. It is my purpose to stimulate growth in the reader as an active participant. To get the story across for me, mostly it's the feeling. I think that if the book evokes a reaction of some sort, either positive or negative, I think it would have done what it is supposed to do."[citation needed]

The subject and style of each story provide Young with the initial inspiration for his art and with the motivation for design, sequence, and pace. Accuracy in research is essential to his work, too – whether he is illustrating fantasy, folk tale, or fact. According to Young, a strong foundation of credibility must be established in order to create new and exciting images. Through such images, he hopes to capture his readers and ultimately expand their awareness.

Young won the 1990 Caldecott Medal for illustrating Lon Po Po, his version of a Red-Riding Hood story from China. The annual award from the American Library Association recognizes the previous year's "most distinguished American picture book for children".[1] He has also been a runner-up twice (two Honor Books), for The Emperor and the Kite and Seven Blind Mice.[1] For his lifetime contribution as a children's illustrator, he was U.S. nominee in both 1992 and 2000 for the biennial, international Hans Christian Andersen Award, the highest international recognition available to creators of children's books.[2] In 2016, Young was honored with the Lifetime Achievement Award (Contemporary) from the Society of Illustrators.[3]

According to Young, "Producing a book becomes part of the spirit of each person who touched it and those who'd touched them." During a Horn Book acceptance speech, Young spoke about the 'Eight Matters of the Heart', the place where he said that he puts his mind before he does his work (for more information, read Young's book, Voices of the Heart.) When asked to elaborate, he said, "We put ourselves in jeopardy in life if we don't have our mind and body in the right place. The eight matters must accompany me wherever I tread so that I know the time that I have in this world is well spent."[citation needed]

Exhibits

Young's original art for his books has been the subject of exhibits such as "Journey Without End" at the National Center for Children's Illustrated Literature in Abiline, Texas (2011–2012).[4] He has participated in many group shows such as the Michaelson Gallery's Children’s Illustration Celebration.[5]

T'ai chi

In 1964, Young met the renowned t'ai chi master, Cheng Man-ch'ing. He became one of Cheng's top disciples in America, and was one of his two principal translators. Besides being a master of t'ai chi and Chinese medicine, Cheng was a highly respected master of Chinese painting, poetry and calligraphy. Being Chinese and an artist, Young was able to appreciate and absorb much of what Cheng had to say in those fields. Young is now a respected t'ai chi master in his own right, and has been teaching t'ai chi students for over three decades. He also enjoys swimming and says that his favorite sound is the sound of waves lapping the shore.

Awards and honors

Young has received over fifty awards and honors for his work, among them:

Young's books have received the ALA Notable, Junior Library Guild, Parents' Choice, New York Times' Best Illustrated, Publishers Weekly Best Illustrated, and Boston Globe Horn Book Honors, among others.[citation needed] Many of his books have been translated into other languages.

Works

Self-Illustrated; for children

  • (With Hilary Beckett) The Rooster's Horns: A Chinese Puppet Play to Make and Perform, 1978.
  • (Reteller) The Terrible Nung Gwama: A Chinese Folktale, 1978.
  • (Adaptor) The Lion and the Mouse: An Aesop Fable, 1979.
  • High on a Hill: A Book of Chinese Riddles, 1980.
  • Up a Tree, 1983.
  • The Other Bone, 1984.
  • (Translator) Lon Po Po: A Red-Riding Hood Story from China, 1989.
  • (Reteller) Seven Blind Mice, 1992 (a version of The Blind men and an elephant).
  • (Reteller) Moon Mother: A Narrative American Creation Tale, 1993.
  • (Reteller) Red Thread, 1993.
  • (Reteller) Little Plum, 1994.
  • (Reteller) Donkey Trouble, 1995.
  • (Adaptor) Pinocchio, 1995.
  • (Reteller) Night Visitors, 1995.
  • Cat and Rat: The Legend of the Chinese zodiac, 1995.
  • (Reteller) Mouse Match: A Chinese Folktale, 1997 (a version of The Mouse Turned into a Maid).
  • (Adaptor) Genesis, 1997.
  • Voices of the Heart, 1997.
  • (Reteller) The Lost Horse: A Chinese Folktale, 1998.
  • Monkey King, 2001.
  • What About Me?, 2002.
  • I, Doko: The Tale of the Basket, 2004.
  • Sons of the Dragon King, 2004.
  • Beyond the Great Mountains, 2005.
  • My Mei Mei, 2006.
  • Tiger of the Snows, 2006.
  • Hook, 2009.
  • The House Baba Built, 2011.
  • Should You Be a River, 2015.
  • Cat From Hunger Mountain, 2016.
  • Voices of the Heart, 2019. (New edition).
  • (Reteller, with Stephen Cowan)The Weather’s Bet, 2020 (a version of Aesop The Wind and the Sun).

Illustrator

  • Janice May Udry, The Mean Mouse and Other Mean Stories, 1962.
  • Leland B. Jacobs and Sally Nohelty, editors, Poetry for Young Scientists, 1964.
  • Margaret Hillert, The Yellow Boat, 1966.
  • Jane Yolen, The Emperor and the Kite, 1967.
  • Robert Wyndam, editor, Chinese Mother Goose Rhymes, 1968.
  • Kermit Krueger, The Golden Swans: A Picture Story from Thailand, 1969.
  • Mel Evans, The Tiniest Sound, 1969.
  • Jane Yolen, The Seventh Mandarin, 1970.
  • Renee K. Weiss, The Bird from the Sea, 1970.
  • Diane Wolkstein, Eight Thousand Stones: A Chinese Folktale, 1972.
  • Jane Yolen, The Girl Who Loved the Wind, 1972.
  • L. C. Hunt, editor, The Horse from Nowhere, 1973.
  • Donnarae MacCann and Olga Richard, The Child's First Books, 1973.
  • Elizabeth Foreman Lewis, Young Fu of the Upper Yangtze, 1973.
  • Diane Wolkstein, The Red Lion: A Tale of Ancient Persia, 1977.
  • Feenie Ziner, Cricket Boy: A Chinese Tale, 1977.
  • N. J. Dawood, Tales from the Arabian Nights, 1978.
  • Diane Wolkstein, White Wave: A Chinese Tale, 1979.
  • Priscilla Jaquith, Bo Rabbit Smart for True: Folktales from the Gullah, 1981.
  • Al-Ling Louie, Yeh-Shen: A Cinderella Story from China, 1982.
  • Mary Scioscia, Bicycle Rider, 1983.
  • Rafe Martin, Foolish Rabbit's Big Mistake, 1985.
  • Jean Fritz, The Double Life of Pocahontas, 1985.
  • Margaret Leaf, Eyes of the Dragon, 1987.
  • James Howe, I Wish I Were a Butterfly, 1987.
  • Tony Johnston, Whale Song, 1987.
  • Richard Lewis, In the Night, Still Dark, 1988.
  • Nancy Larrick, editor, Cats Are Cats, 1988.
  • Robert Frost, Birches, 1988.
  • Oscar Wilde, The Happy Prince, 1989.
  • Lafcadio Hearn, The Voice of the Great Bell, retold by Margaret Hodges, 1989.
  • Ruth Y. Radin, High in the Mountains, 1989.
  • Nancy Larrick, editor, Mice Are Nice, 1990.
  • Richard Lewis, All of You Was Singing, 1991.
  • Nancy White Carlstrom, Goodbye, Geese, 1991.
  • Barabara Savage Horton, What Comes in Spring?, 1992.
  • Mary Calhoun, While I Sleep, 1992.
  • Audrey Osofsky, Dreamcatcher, 1992.
  • Laura Krauss Melmed, The First Song Ever Sung, 1993.
  • Eleanor Coerr, Sadako and The Thousand Paper Cranes, 1993.
  • Isaac Olaleye, Bitter Bananas, 1994.
  • Shulamith Levey Oppenheim, reteller, Iblis, 1994.
  • Penny Pollock, reteller, The Turkey Girl: A Zuni Cinderella Story, 1996 ( a Native American version of Cinderella)
  • Lisa Westberg Peters, October Smiled Back, 1996.
  • Jack London, White Fang, 1999.
  • Mary Casanova, The Hunter: A Chinese Folktale, 2000.
  • Dorothea P. Seeber, A Pup Just for Me—A Boy Just for Me, 2000.
  • Tony Johnston, Desert Song, 2000.
  • Nikki Grimes, Tai Chi Morning: Snapshots of China, 2004.
  • Andrea Cheng, Shanghai Messenger, 2005.
  • Dennis Haseley, Twenty Heartbeats, 2008.
  • Mark Reibstein, Wabi Sabi, 2008.
  • Kimiko Kajikawa, Tsunami!, 2009.
  • Brenda Z. Guiberson, Moon Bear, 2010.
  • Robert Burleigh, Tiger of the Snows: Tenzing Norgay: The Boy Whose Dream Was Everest, 2010.
  • Ashley Ramsden, Seven Fathers 2011.
  • Michelle Cuevas, The Masterwork of a Painting Elephant 2011.
  • Marilyn Singer, A Strange Place to Call Home: The World's Most Dangerous Habitats & the Animals That Call Them Home, 2012.
  • Barbara DaCosta, Nighttime Ninja, 2012.
  • Gary Golio, Bird and Diz, 2015.
  • Barbara DaCosta, Mighty Moby, 2017.
  • Gary Golio, Smile: How Young Charlie Chaplin Taught the World to Laugh (and Cry), 2019.
  • Mark Reibstein, Yugen, 2019.
  • Brenda Peterson, Catastrophe by the Sea, 2019.
  • Barbara DaCosta, Night Shadows, 2020.

Film

Art Exhibits

  • "Picturing Poetry." Group exhibit. Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois. November 17, 2012 – May 12, 2013.
  • "Journey Without End." Solo exhibit. National Center for Children's Illustrated Literature, Abiline, Texas (2011–2012).
  • “Ed Young” solo exhibition at the Tang Gallery in Bisbee, Arizona. (2010).

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e "Caldecott Medal & Honor Books, 1938–Present". Association for Library Service to Children (ALSC). American Library Association (ALA).
      "The Randolph Caldecott Medal". ALSC. ALA. Retrieved 2013-07-15.
  2. ^ a b "Candidates for the Hans Christian Andersen Awards 1956–2002". The Hans Christian Andersen Awards, 1956–2002. IBBY. Gyldendal. 2002. Pages 110–18. Hosted by Austrian Literature Online (literature.at). Retrieved 2013-07-15.
  3. ^ "2016 Lifetime Achievement Award (Contemporary): : Ed Young". Society of Illustrators. Retrieved November 6, 2016.
  4. ^ "Ed Young". National Center for Children's Illustrated Literature. Retrieved June 10, 2017.
  5. ^ "27th Annual Children's Illustration Celebration". Michaelson Gallery. Retrieved November 6, 2016.
  6. ^ a b c d . Archived from the original on October 19, 2011. Retrieved February 1, 2019.
  7. ^ a b "2008-2009 AWARDS WINNERS". APALA. Retrieved February 1, 2019.
  8. ^ "Eric Carle Museum 2017 Honorees". Eric Carle Museum. Retrieved August 3, 2017.
  • "Ed (Tse-chun) Young." Major Authors and Illustrators for Children and Young Adults, 2nd ed., 8 vols. Gale Group, 2002.
  • Kotch, Laura and Leslie Zackman. The Author Studies Handbook: Helping Students Build Powerful Connections to Literature. New York: Scholastic Professional Books, 1995.
  • Primm, E. Russell III, ed. Favorite Children's Authors and Illustrators. Excelsior, Minn.: Tradition Books, 2003.
  • Silvey, Anita, ed. The Essential Guide to Children's Books and Their Creators. Boston:Houghton Mifflin Company, 2002.

External links

  • Ed Young's Website
  • Northeast Children’s Literature Collection, University of Connecticut: main archive of Ed Young's artwork
  • Kimiko Kajikawa, Children's Book Author: Ed Young Links
  • Seven Impossible Things Before Breakfast: Interview with Ed Young
  • Video interview with Ed Young
  • [1] An exhibit of forty pieces of Ed Young's art for books.
  • [2] All the Wonders podcast interview, 2017

young, illustrator, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, article, introducing, more, precise, citations, july, 2013, learn, when, remove, this, template, message, . This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations July 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message Ed Tse chun Young Chinese 杨志成 pinyin Yang Zhicheng born November 28 1931 is a Chinese born American illustrator and writer of children s picture books He won one Caldecott Medal for the year s best American picture book and for his lifetime contribution as a children s illustrator he was twice the U S nominee for the Hans Christian Andersen Award Ed YoungYoung at the Mazza Museum 2013 conferenceBornEd Tse chun Young 1931 11 28 November 28 1931 age 91 Tianjin ChinaOccupationIllustrator writerNationalityAmericanPeriod1962 presentGenreChildren s picture booksNotable awardsCaldecott Medal 1990 Contents 1 Biography 2 Work 3 Exhibits 4 T ai chi 5 Awards and honors 6 Works 6 1 Self Illustrated for children 6 2 Illustrator 7 Film 8 Art Exhibits 9 See also 10 References 11 External linksBiography EditEd Young was born on November 28 1931 in Tianjin China When he was three years old he and his family moved to Shanghai His mother would ring a bell at mealtimes and he would slide down the banister with his brothers and sisters I have never lost the child in me My father would spin endless tales of his own to entertain our imaginations on summer nights lying on the flat roof of our house I have never forgotten the images I saw in my mind From an early age Ed loved to create stories and draw pictures and thought he could disappear into his own world brought to life through his illustrations In 1951 Young came to the U S to study architecture Instead he grew more interested in art and soon switched his major Young s first job was with a New York advertising agency where he spent his lunch breaks sketching animals at Central Park Zoo During that time he received a letter from his father which said A successful life and a happy life is one measured by how much you have accomplished for others and not one measured by how much you have done for yourself According to Young I understood then that to realize my potential as an artist was subservient to my worth as a human being To be truly successful I needed to find a place where my work would also inspire others to fuller and happier lives I wished to share with everyone my father s words about success work can in fact be the rooftop from which we launch ourselves to higher places citation needed In search of something more expansive expressive and timeless Young discovered all this and more in children s books Work EditYoung s first book The Mean Mouse and Other Mean Stories was published by Harper amp Row in 1962 He expected it to be his first and last book but it won an American Institute of Graphic Arts award and launched a career that has resulted in almost one hundred books for children Most of his books are visual masterpieces using colors and images to convey hidden symbolism His meticulously rendered works have utilized pencil pastel cut paper collage ink photographs and found materials A Chinese painting is often accompanied by words They are complementary There are things that words do that pictures never can and likewise there are images that words can never describe I feel the story has to be an exciting and moving experience for a child Before I am involved with a project I must be moved and as I grow I try to create something exciting It is my purpose to stimulate growth in the reader as an active participant To get the story across for me mostly it s the feeling I think that if the book evokes a reaction of some sort either positive or negative I think it would have done what it is supposed to do citation needed The subject and style of each story provide Young with the initial inspiration for his art and with the motivation for design sequence and pace Accuracy in research is essential to his work too whether he is illustrating fantasy folk tale or fact According to Young a strong foundation of credibility must be established in order to create new and exciting images Through such images he hopes to capture his readers and ultimately expand their awareness Young won the 1990 Caldecott Medal for illustrating Lon Po Po his version of a Red Riding Hood story from China The annual award from the American Library Association recognizes the previous year s most distinguished American picture book for children 1 He has also been a runner up twice two Honor Books for The Emperor and the Kite and Seven Blind Mice 1 For his lifetime contribution as a children s illustrator he was U S nominee in both 1992 and 2000 for the biennial international Hans Christian Andersen Award the highest international recognition available to creators of children s books 2 In 2016 Young was honored with the Lifetime Achievement Award Contemporary from the Society of Illustrators 3 According to Young Producing a book becomes part of the spirit of each person who touched it and those who d touched them During a Horn Book acceptance speech Young spoke about the Eight Matters of the Heart the place where he said that he puts his mind before he does his work for more information read Young s book Voices of the Heart When asked to elaborate he said We put ourselves in jeopardy in life if we don t have our mind and body in the right place The eight matters must accompany me wherever I tread so that I know the time that I have in this world is well spent citation needed Exhibits EditYoung s original art for his books has been the subject of exhibits such as Journey Without End at the National Center for Children s Illustrated Literature in Abiline Texas 2011 2012 4 He has participated in many group shows such as the Michaelson Gallery s Children s Illustration Celebration 5 T ai chi EditIn 1964 Young met the renowned t ai chi master Cheng Man ch ing He became one of Cheng s top disciples in America and was one of his two principal translators Besides being a master of t ai chi and Chinese medicine Cheng was a highly respected master of Chinese painting poetry and calligraphy Being Chinese and an artist Young was able to appreciate and absorb much of what Cheng had to say in those fields Young is now a respected t ai chi master in his own right and has been teaching t ai chi students for over three decades He also enjoys swimming and says that his favorite sound is the sound of waves lapping the shore Awards and honors EditYoung has received over fifty awards and honors for his work among them Caldecott Medal Lon Po Po A Red Riding Hood Story from China 1990 1 Caldecott Honor The Emperor and the Kite 1967 1 Caldecott Honor Seven Blind Mice 1992 1 Hans Christian Andersen Award U S nominee 1992 and 2000 2 Mazza Medallion of Excellence for Artistic Diversity 2002 citation needed Boston Globe Horn Book Award Nonfiction The Double Life of Pocahontas 1984 6 Boston Globe Horn Book Award Picture book Seven Blind Mice 1992 6 Boston Globe Horn Book Award Picture book Lon Po Po 1990 6 Boston Globe Horn Book Honor Picture book Yeh Shen 1983 6 Asian Pacific American Awards for Literature Picture book Wabi Sabi 2008 2009 7 Asian Pacific American Awards for Literature Picture book The House Baba Built An Artist s Childhood in China 2011 2012 7 Washington Irving Children s Choice Book Award Pinocchio 1997 The Hunter 2000 citation needed Publishers Weekly Best Illustrated Books selection The House Baba Built 2011 citation needed Publishers Weekly Best Illustrated Books selection Nighttime Ninja 2012 citation needed Children s Book Council Children s Choice Award Nighttime Ninja 2013 citation needed Society of Illustrators Lifetime Achievement Award 2016 citation needed The New York Times Best Illustrated Books 2016 Cat From Hunger Mountain citation needed Eric Carle Museum Lifetime Achievement Award 2017 8 Young s books have received the ALA Notable Junior Library Guild Parents Choice New York Times Best Illustrated Publishers Weekly Best Illustrated and Boston Globe Horn Book Honors among others citation needed Many of his books have been translated into other languages Works EditSelf Illustrated for children Edit With Hilary Beckett The Rooster s Horns A Chinese Puppet Play to Make and Perform 1978 Reteller The Terrible Nung Gwama A Chinese Folktale 1978 Adaptor The Lion and the Mouse An Aesop Fable 1979 High on a Hill A Book of Chinese Riddles 1980 Up a Tree 1983 The Other Bone 1984 Translator Lon Po Po A Red Riding Hood Story from China 1989 Reteller Seven Blind Mice 1992 a version of The Blind men and an elephant Reteller Moon Mother A Narrative American Creation Tale 1993 Reteller Red Thread 1993 Reteller Little Plum 1994 Reteller Donkey Trouble 1995 Adaptor Pinocchio 1995 Reteller Night Visitors 1995 Cat and Rat The Legend of the Chinese zodiac 1995 Reteller Mouse Match A Chinese Folktale 1997 a version of The Mouse Turned into a Maid Adaptor Genesis 1997 Voices of the Heart 1997 Reteller The Lost Horse A Chinese Folktale 1998 Monkey King 2001 What About Me 2002 I Doko The Tale of the Basket 2004 Sons of the Dragon King 2004 Beyond the Great Mountains 2005 My Mei Mei 2006 Tiger of the Snows 2006 Hook 2009 The House Baba Built 2011 Should You Be a River 2015 Cat From Hunger Mountain 2016 Voices of the Heart 2019 New edition Reteller with Stephen Cowan The Weather s Bet 2020 a version of Aesop The Wind and the Sun Illustrator Edit Janice May Udry The Mean Mouse and Other Mean Stories 1962 Leland B Jacobs and Sally Nohelty editors Poetry for Young Scientists 1964 Margaret Hillert The Yellow Boat 1966 Jane Yolen The Emperor and the Kite 1967 Robert Wyndam editor Chinese Mother Goose Rhymes 1968 Kermit Krueger The Golden Swans A Picture Story from Thailand 1969 Mel Evans The Tiniest Sound 1969 Jane Yolen The Seventh Mandarin 1970 Renee K Weiss The Bird from the Sea 1970 Diane Wolkstein Eight Thousand Stones A Chinese Folktale 1972 Jane Yolen The Girl Who Loved the Wind 1972 L C Hunt editor The Horse from Nowhere 1973 Donnarae MacCann and Olga Richard The Child s First Books 1973 Elizabeth Foreman Lewis Young Fu of the Upper Yangtze 1973 Diane Wolkstein The Red Lion A Tale of Ancient Persia 1977 Feenie Ziner Cricket Boy A Chinese Tale 1977 N J Dawood Tales from the Arabian Nights 1978 Diane Wolkstein White Wave A Chinese Tale 1979 Priscilla Jaquith Bo Rabbit Smart for True Folktales from the Gullah 1981 Al Ling Louie Yeh Shen A Cinderella Story from China 1982 Mary Scioscia Bicycle Rider 1983 Rafe Martin Foolish Rabbit s Big Mistake 1985 Jean Fritz The Double Life of Pocahontas 1985 Margaret Leaf Eyes of the Dragon 1987 James Howe I Wish I Were a Butterfly 1987 Tony Johnston Whale Song 1987 Richard Lewis In the Night Still Dark 1988 Nancy Larrick editor Cats Are Cats 1988 Robert Frost Birches 1988 Oscar Wilde The Happy Prince 1989 Lafcadio Hearn The Voice of the Great Bell retold by Margaret Hodges 1989 Ruth Y Radin High in the Mountains 1989 Nancy Larrick editor Mice Are Nice 1990 Richard Lewis All of You Was Singing 1991 Nancy White Carlstrom Goodbye Geese 1991 Barabara Savage Horton What Comes in Spring 1992 Mary Calhoun While I Sleep 1992 Audrey Osofsky Dreamcatcher 1992 Laura Krauss Melmed The First Song Ever Sung 1993 Eleanor Coerr Sadako and The Thousand Paper Cranes 1993 Isaac Olaleye Bitter Bananas 1994 Shulamith Levey Oppenheim reteller Iblis 1994 Penny Pollock reteller The Turkey Girl A Zuni Cinderella Story 1996 a Native American version of Cinderella Lisa Westberg Peters October Smiled Back 1996 Jack London White Fang 1999 Mary Casanova The Hunter A Chinese Folktale 2000 Dorothea P Seeber A Pup Just for Me A Boy Just for Me 2000 Tony Johnston Desert Song 2000 Nikki Grimes Tai Chi Morning Snapshots of China 2004 Andrea Cheng Shanghai Messenger 2005 Dennis Haseley Twenty Heartbeats 2008 Mark Reibstein Wabi Sabi 2008 Kimiko Kajikawa Tsunami 2009 Brenda Z Guiberson Moon Bear 2010 Robert Burleigh Tiger of the Snows Tenzing Norgay The Boy Whose Dream Was Everest 2010 Ashley Ramsden Seven Fathers 2011 Michelle Cuevas The Masterwork of a Painting Elephant 2011 Marilyn Singer A Strange Place to Call Home The World s Most Dangerous Habitats amp the Animals That Call Them Home 2012 Barbara DaCosta Nighttime Ninja 2012 Gary Golio Bird and Diz 2015 Barbara DaCosta Mighty Moby 2017 Gary Golio Smile How Young Charlie Chaplin Taught the World to Laugh and Cry 2019 Mark Reibstein Yugen 2019 Brenda Peterson Catastrophe by the Sea 2019 Barbara DaCosta Night Shadows 2020 Film EditSadako and the Thousand Paper Cranes based on the story by Eleanor CoerrArt Exhibits Edit Picturing Poetry Group exhibit Art Institute of Chicago Chicago Illinois November 17 2012 May 12 2013 Journey Without End Solo exhibit National Center for Children s Illustrated Literature Abiline Texas 2011 2012 Ed Young solo exhibition at the Tang Gallery in Bisbee Arizona 2010 See also EditPortals Children s literature Visual artsReferences Edit a b c d e Caldecott Medal amp Honor Books 1938 Present Association for Library Service to Children ALSC American Library Association ALA The Randolph Caldecott Medal ALSC ALA Retrieved 2013 07 15 a b Candidates for the Hans Christian Andersen Awards 1956 2002 The Hans Christian Andersen Awards 1956 2002 IBBY Gyldendal 2002 Pages 110 18 Hosted by Austrian Literature Online literature at Retrieved 2013 07 15 2016 Lifetime Achievement Award Contemporary Ed Young Society of Illustrators Retrieved November 6 2016 Ed Young National Center for Children s Illustrated Literature Retrieved June 10 2017 27th Annual Children s Illustration Celebration Michaelson Gallery Retrieved November 6 2016 a b c d Boston Globe Horn Book Awards Winners and Honor Books 1967 to present Archived from the original on October 19 2011 Retrieved February 1 2019 a b 2008 2009 AWARDS WINNERS APALA Retrieved February 1 2019 Eric Carle Museum 2017 Honorees Eric Carle Museum Retrieved August 3 2017 Ed Tse chun Young Major Authors and Illustrators for Children and Young Adults 2nd ed 8 vols Gale Group 2002 Kotch Laura and Leslie Zackman The Author Studies Handbook Helping Students Build Powerful Connections to Literature New York Scholastic Professional Books 1995 Primm E Russell III ed Favorite Children s Authors and Illustrators Excelsior Minn Tradition Books 2003 Silvey Anita ed The Essential Guide to Children s Books and Their Creators Boston Houghton Mifflin Company 2002 External links EditBiographicon On line Biography of Ed Young Ed Young s Website Northeast Children s Literature Collection University of Connecticut main archive of Ed Young s artwork Kimiko Kajikawa Children s Book Author Ed Young Links Seven Impossible Things Before Breakfast Interview with Ed Young Video interview with Ed Young PaperTigers org In depth interview with Ed Young 1 An exhibit of forty pieces of Ed Young s art for books 2 All the Wonders podcast interview 2017 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ed Young illustrator amp oldid 1089011114, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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