Lois Lenski
(1893 - 1974)
Lois Lenski was a popular and prolific American writer and illustrator of picture books and children’s and young-adult fiction.
Bibliography
A Book of Princess Stories (1927)
Seventeen princess stories.
Frances Elizabeth Atchinson
Boom Town Boy (1948)
One family lives the excitement of the Oklahoma oil boom.
Read online at archive.org.
Bound Girl of Cobble Hill (1938)
A story of the early republic where a young orphan is indentured.
Candle-Light Stories (1927)
A collection of traditional folk and fairy tales.
Read online at archive.org.
Children of America (1939)
Sixteen stories about American children.
Cornelia Meigs
Et al
Lois Lenski
Leonard Weisgard
Kurt Wiese
Et al
Children’s Hour with Cinderella and Other Stories (1922)
Five favorite fairy tales.
Lois Lenski
Children’s Hour with Mother Goose Jingles (1929)
A collection of Mother Goose rhymes.
Children’s Hour with The Three Bears and Other Stories (1929)
Includes The Three Bears, Jack and the Beanstalk and Dick Whittington and His Cat.
Lois Lenski
Chimney Corner Fairy Tales (1926)
A collection of traditional fairy tales.
Chimney Corner Poems (1929)
A collection of famous poems for children.
Emily Dickinson
Ann Taylor
Et al
Chimney Corner Stories: Tales for Little Children (1925)
A collection of stories for children.
Read online at archive.org.
Cinderella, or the Little Glass Slipper (1922)
The classic tale of the neglected daughter.
City Poems (1971)
A collection of the author’s poems about city life.
Coal Camp Girl (1959)
Tina and her family live in a West Virginia coal mining town and her father and brothers are miners.
Read online at archive.ort.
Corn Farm Boy (1954)
The life of an Iowa farm family.
Read online at archive.org.
Cotton in My Sack (1949)
A story about the life of Arkansas field laborers.
Read online at archive.org.
Cowboy Small (1949)
The adventures of Cowboy Small.
Read online at archive.org.
Davy and His Dog (1957)
A very ordinary day for Davy and his dog.
Davy Goes Places (1961)
Davy gets about on cars, trucks, trains and scooters.
Davy’s Day (1943)
We follow Davy through his daily activities.