Peggy Rathmann

Margaret Crosby "Peggy" Rathmann (born March 4, 1953) is an American illustrator and writer of children's picture books.

Rathmann was born in St. Paul, Minnesota, and graduated from the University of Minnesota. She studied commercial art, fine art, and children's book creation in Chicago, Minneapolis, and Los Angeles. Her first book, "Ruby the Copycat, earned Ms. Rathmann the 'Most Promising New Author' distinction in Publishers Weekly's 1991 annual Cuffie Awards." That book was followed by her illustrations of Barbara Bottner's Bootsie Barker Bites and by the self-illustrated Good Night, Gorilla.

Her book Officer Buckle and Gloria (1995) won the annual Caldecott Medal for U.S. picture book illustration. Since then she has written two more: Ten Minutes till Bedtime and The Day The Babies Crawled Away, which made the Horn Book Fanfare List of best books of 2003.

Rathmann and her husband, John Wick, were featured in a New York Times article about regenerative agriculture efforts employed on their ranch in Marin County, California.

In 2014 Good Night, Gorilla was a runner-up (Honor Book) for the Phoenix Picture Book Award from the Children's Literature Association, which annually recognizes the best picture book that did not win a major award 20 years earlier. "Books are considered not only for the quality of their illustrations, but for the way pictures and text work together."

Books
Rathmann has illustrated at least seven picture books, six of which she also wrote.
 * Ruby the Copycat (Scholastic, 1991), ISBN 9780590437479
 * Bootsie Barker Bites, written by Barbara Bottner (G. P. Putnam's Sons, 1992), ISBN 9780698114272
 * Good Night, Gorilla (Putnam, 1994), ISBN 9780399224454
 * Officer Buckle and Gloria (Putnam, 1995), ISBN 9780399226168
 * 10 Minutes till Bedtime (Putnam, 1998), ISBN 9780142400241
 * The Day the Babies Crawled Away (Putnam, 2003), ISBN 9780399231964
 * How Many Lambies on Grammy's Jammies? (Putnam, 2006), ISBN 9780399231971

Several translations have been published. Gute Nacht, Gorilla (2006) was named "Book of the Month" for September 2006 by the German Institut für Jugendliteratur (young people's literature).