Richard Scarry
(1919 - 1994)
Richard McClure Scarry was a popular American children’s author and illustrator who published over 300 books with total sales of over 100 million units worldwide. In 1948, he married author Patricia (Patsy) Murphy.
Bibliography
About Animals (1976)
Pictures and words about our animal friends.
Read online at archive.org.
The Adventures of Tinker and Tanker (1961)
An omnibus containing Tinker and Tanker, Tinker and Tanker and Their Space Ship and Tinker and Tanker Out West
Albert’s Zoo a Stencil Book (1951)
Use the stencils to help Albert put the animals in their cages.
All Day Long (1976)
Words and pictures describe what I do all day.
Read online at archive.org.
All Year Long (1976)
An introduction to time-telling and the season.
Read online at archive.org.
The Animal’s Merry Christmas (1950)
Thirty-one Christmas stories, with lots of gold ink!
Read online at archive.org.
The Animals of Farmer Jones (1953)
It’s the animals’ supper time, but here is Farmer Jones?
Read online at archive.org.
At Work (1976)
Pictures and words about what people do all day.
Read online at archive.org.
Bedtime Stories, Selected from the Big Golden Bedtime Book (1963)
A collection of short stories.
Boats (1967)
A collection of pictures of boats.
The Boss of the Barnyard and Other Barnyard Stories (1949)
Five stories about farm animals.
Brave Cowboy Bill (1950)
This story of a little cowboy includes a puzzle stored in the back cover.
Kathryn Jackson
The Bunny Book (1955)
What will Bunny be when he grows up?
Cars (1967)
A collection of pictures of cars.
Cars and Trucks (1959)
A smaller version of The Great Big Car and Truck Book.
Chicken Little (1960)
The sky is falling! The sky is falling!
Read online at archive.org.
Chipmunk’s ABC (1963)
Chipmunk lives in a burrow under the apple tree and so on all the way to Z.
The Chipmunks’ Merry Christmas (1959)
A story based on the pop singing group.
Christopher Bunny and Other Animal Stories (1949)
Fourteen original stories about bunnies and other animals.
Colors (1959)
How do you get the color you want?