Joan Kiddell-Monroe

Joan Kiddell-Monroe (1908–1972) was a British writer and illustrator of children's books, particularly notable for her folk-tale illustrations.

Biography
Joan Kiddell-Monroe was born on August 9, 1908, in Clacton-on-Sea, England. She studied at the Chelsea School of Art and worked in advertising for a while before becoming a freelance artist.

In the late 1930s she married Webster Murray, a Canadian-illustrator who died in 1957. Before the war she travelled in Africa with him and after his death returned there with her son. She lived the later years of her life in Majorca where she died in 1972.

Artwork
Joan Kiddell-Monroe is best known for her book illustrations, and was a prolific illustrator between the 1940s and 1960s. Her work often deals with animals and life overseas, particularly in Africa. She illustrated the Oxford Myths and Legends series for the OUP, which includes legends and folk-tales from China, Scandinavia, the West Indies and many other places. She illustrated a number of Patricia Lynch's Irish books including Long Ears and Orla of Burren. Joan illustrated all six books of the Ladybird series of The Adventures of Wonk about a koala. Four of her own In His Little Black Waistcoat stories for children feature a panda as the hero. Her work was also commissioned and/or reproduced in the New Zealand School Journal (NZ Department of Education) in the 1950s.

She used various styles and media, including scraperboard, wash and pen and ink. For her version of Arabian Nights (Dent, 1951), she used a formal decorative treatment, while the Aesop's Fables, (Blackwell, 1972) was illustrated in vivid, flat colours.

Illustrations for works by other authors

 * Patricia Lynch, Long Ears (Dent, 1943)
 * David Severn, Waggon for Five (Bodley Head, 1944)
 * David Severn, Hermit in the Hills (Bodley Head, 1945)
 * Pearl Buck, The Dragon Fish (Methuen, 1946)
 * Dorothy Martin, Munya the Lion (OUP, 1946)
 * David Severn, Forest Holiday (Bodley Head, 1946)
 * David Severn, Ponies and Poachers (Bodley Head, 1947)
 * David Severn, The Cruise of the Maiden Castle (Bodley Head, 1948)
 * Muriel Levy, The Adventures of Wonk - The Snowman & Kidnapped (Ladybird Book) (Wills & Hepworth, 1948)
 * Ruth W. How, Adventures at Friendly Farm (Hollis and Carter, 1948)
 * Sylvia Leith-Ross, Beyond the Niger (Lutterworth Press, 1951)
 * Malcolm Saville, All Summer Through (Hodder and Stoughton, 1951)
 * Elizabeth Coatsworth, The Enchanted (Dent, 1952)
 * Eileen, O'Faolain, Irish Sagas and Folk-Tales (OUP, 1954)
 * Mary Elwyn Patchett, Tam the Untamed (Lutterworth Press, 1955)
 * J. M. Scott, White Magic (Methuen, 1955)
 * Reginald Forbes-Watson, Shifta! (OUP, 1958)
 * H. W. Longfellow, The Song of Hiawatha (J. M. Dent and Sons, 1960)
 * Eugenie Fenton, Sher, Lord of the Jungle (Benn, 1962)
 * Frederick Grice, The Moving Finger (OUP, 1962)
 * Ivan Southall, The Sword of Essau (Angus and Robertson, 1967)
 * Ivan Southall, The Curse of Cain (Angus and Robertson, 1968)
 * Rene Guillot, Grishka and the Bear (OUP, 1970)
 * Lorna Wood, Hags by Starlight (Dent, 1970)

Written and illustrated by Joan Kiddell-Monroe

 * The Irresponsible Goat (Methuen, 1948)
 * In his Little Black Waistcoat to India (Longmans, 1948)