User:P64/FSF/Children's/VIAF

This workspace has contributed to User:P64/Technical. 2013-10-23 (3)

, along with a note that two VIAF records need merger.

Several weeks ago (Dec 2013?) I asked somewhere at WikiData about their coverage of redirects, which then seemed to me another matter of stalled debate. (I'll try to remember to return if/when I know more.)

The page history shows that I covered Moira Young among all winners of the British Whitbread/Costa children's book of the year. history

P.S. Template LCAuth isn't redundant to {A c} anyway, here at English Wikipedia
 * 'LCCN' in the template display is likely to be overlooked or inscrutable to most visitors; it really isn't for readers
 * our template display targets the unhelpful 'Library of Congress Name Authority File' rather than the old 'Library of Congress Authorities' --unlike the German; select 'n79086308' from both template displays
 * english Authority control: Penelope Lively
 * deutsch Normdaten: de:Penelope Lively

some relevant talk 2013:
 * Template talk:Authority control/Archive 2 (2012)
 * 3.22 Template talk:Authority control/Archive 3
 * 3.25 Template talk:Authority control/Archive 3 --Andy Mabbett suggests also template {infobox person} and its cousins
 * 3.35 Template talk:Authority control/Archive 3


 * 3.11 Template talk:Authority control/Archive 3
 * Wikipedia talk:Authority control


 * Wikipedia talk:Persondata/Archive 5 (2012) --Rich Farmbrough says no problem with multiple templates {Persondata}


 * Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Persondata (with links 2007 to 2013)

2015-05
✅ 2015-05-21, newcomers to including many Brit council and ISFDB check, yet probably incomplete
 * List of children's literature writers
 * List of young adult writers

Hughes, 1961 --messed up
 * Carol Hughes
 * mixes US psychiatrist, NL children's writer NTA=07127622X
 * BJPsych Bulletin review of the 2006 depression book http://pb.rcpsych.org/content/30/7/278.2
 * google books has several child psychiatry books by co-author Philip Jeremy Graham

Carol Hughes (Hughes)  http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/no2015030614.html http://lccn.loc.gov/no2015030614 (no catalogue record)

Carol Hughes, ed. 1995/1996 Research Libraries Group NTA=13444583X

Carol Hughes undifferentiated
 * [//worldcat.org/identities/lccn-no92-026973 Works by or about undiff] in libraries (WorldCat catalog)
 * [//worldcat.org/identities/lccn-no92-026973 Works by or about undiff] in libraries (WorldCat catalog)

Following the German national library, worldcat puts in its undifferentiated group |115670440/ also a wildlife filmmaker born 1983 , LC cites IMDb for "Carol Hughes; documentary screenwriter, director, producer, and cinematographer"
 * [//worldcat.org/identities/lccn-no2014-056162 Works by or about filmmaker] in libraries (WorldCat catalog)
 * [//worldcat.org/identities/lccn-no2014-056162 Works by or about filmmaker] in libraries (WorldCat catalog)

See also User:P64/FSF/Children's/VIAF/Joint


 * 2015-05-16

AC done
 * [//worldcat.org/identities/viaf-172677777 Works by or about Howie Shia] in libraries (WorldCat catalog)
 * [//worldcat.org/identities/viaf-172677777 Works by or about Howie Shia] in libraries (WorldCat catalog)


 * 2015-05-03

Russell Ayto VIAF 19808226 305349478 302478204 --add new GND at Wikidata "preferred" (insufficient for our template), then in our template
 * Talk:Margot Zemach - Harve, Kaethe, Hannelore Hahn Harvey Fichstrom
 * Moira Young
 * Zizou Corder EN WD-- = Louisa Young + Isabel Adomakoh Young
 * = Louisa Young + Isabel Adomakoh Young

Marijane Meaker = TALK done
 * pseud  30 VIAF needs merge
 * pseud  5

and three others Ann Aldrich 2 Mary James 4 Laura Winston not found; 4 pseud done infooter Talk:Marijane Meaker
 * [//worldcat.org/identities/lccn-no97-008710 Works by or about Ann Aldrich] in libraries (WorldCat catalog)
 * [//worldcat.org/identities/lccn-no97-018393 Works by or about Marijane Meaker] in libraries (WorldCat catalog)
 * [//worldcat.org/identities/lccn-n88-210536 Works by or about Mary James] in libraries (WorldCat catalog)
 * [//worldcat.org/identities/lccn-n80-139677 Works by or about M. E. Kerr] in libraries (WorldCat catalog)
 * [//worldcat.org/identities/lccn-no97-015768 Works by or about Vin Packer] in libraries (WorldCat catalog)

Eleanor Farjeon =
 * pseud Tomfool LCCN

French Canada? wr fr:Christiane Duchesne four French-Canadian children's book illustrator and writer (done at WD) :fr:Gilles Tibo
 * fr:Stéphane Poulin
 * fr:Philippe Béha
 * fr:Pierre Pratt=Peter Pratt (illustrator)
 * Michèle Lemieux
 * Stéphane Jorisch
 * Louise Méthé no LCCN
 * László Gál
 * anglo Ann Blades 59636947
 * anglo Eric Beddows 55038800
 * anglo Eric Beddows 55038800

1925-12-03 Philip Turner (writer) Wikidata mixed up 27596086
 * ps.

ps. John Christopher aka
 * 1922-04-16 (Christopher Samuel)(Sam)  VIAF=40948753 |LCCN=n88288144 }}
 * (1955 61)
 * ps.  VIAF=58187605 |LCCN=n88288143 |SUDOC }} NTA
 * (1958 76)
 * ps. William Godfrey o VIAF=53260071 |LCCN=n88288141 ; VIAF=287595903 NTA
 * ps. Peter Graaf o VIAF= 50796137 n88288140
 * ps. Peter Nichols o VIAF=33568138 n88288138
 * ps. Anthony Rye o VIAF=6503335 n88288137
 * ps. William Vineo --
 * Stanley Winchester VIAF=12830964 |LCCN=n50015794 }}; VIAF=28966200 NTA
 * (1967 70)

Nick Lake needs merge VIAF=91034760 |LCCN=n2009042085 |GND=140063900 }}; VIAF= 103373522 de

Jean Lee Latham
 * ps. Robert Campion o http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n81104001.html
 * ps. Janice Gard o http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/no2007078689.html
 * ps. Julian Lee o http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/no2007084719.html

ps. Dr. Seuss
 * (nonfic, adaptations, "Dr. Seuss presents" but several routine Dr. Seuss books)
 * ps. EN
 * EN
 * EN

ps. E. Lockhart0
 * 0
 * needs LCCat correction for Bea and Ha-ha http://lccn.loc.gov/n85098296

@@ Category:Collective pseudonyms (<150) skim for redirects 2015-05-05
 * 20150504/06
 * Penelope Ashe, Adam Blade*, Geoffrey Cohen, Lucy Daniels*, Daisy Meadows*, D. H. J. Polymath, Publius, Barnaby Ross, Travis Tea, Caleb Weatherbee; [sf] L. A. Graf ; [strat] Jerry West


 * to work (writer) -- Ashe, Publius, Tea, Weatherbee
 * to joint -- Cohen, Polymath, Ross ✅

= AC done; others not found at VIAF (none yet marked from writer)

Jerry West --whom LCCat lists under multiple headings
 * LCCat needs correction -- evidently the 3 latest titles under the main heading are by another Jerry West

Category:Pseudonymous writers (541) skim for redirects 2015-05-03/04
 * ,, Fleet Street Fox, Libby Gelman-Waxner, Oliver Jacks, , , Ragnar Redbeard, F. X. Reid, Henry Root, H. N. Turteltaub, , Inger Ash Wolfe,

Ross Queen Dannay Nathan 312885696 no94037980 GND=115795510 should move from here to Dannay

Landers and Van Buren -- not found at VIAF as corporate identities

Sd- AP Henry E. Cooper VL only; that is, daughter Alice Cooper Bailey papers nobiog (John Martin) ; John Martin's Book --{ac} on talk page Morgan van Roorbach Shepard redirect --NOT DONE-- S+-LAP Kelly Ray Masters "VLG ‎--that is, pen name Zachary Ball papers Herbert R. Kohl --EN done; also Judith Kohl; VIAF links name only NEEDS merge --(no DE biog)-- DE should be Herbert R. Kohl Judy Blundell --EN done (NEEDS REPORT WHERE?) --DE [Jude Watson] VL GNDName=121923363 --see also [Judy Blundell] VIAF= 103673366 ; another GNDName=140713468 --see also [Jordan Cray] VIAF=30393330
 * copy* from below
 * Lynn Poole h/w or Gray Poole

Talk:Lynn Poole now redirects

house pseud, mainly
pertains to EN.wiki, perhaps not WD

o-- no page at EN.wiki (o) or Wikidata (--); (dis)=EN.wiki disambiguation page

-i- not found at ISFDB i<> mutual linkage with ISFDB evidently ISFDB does not link redirects, does link series articles (eg, Beast Quest Universe for Adam Blade)


 * j pseud i 174989 Rosie Banks o-- 295009808 305805916 315204695+ nb2013005847; NDL=001119538; NTA=355267594 names also Rosie M. Banks, a writer c. 1960; NLI=001723257 ;
 * ISFDB Secret Kingdom Linda Chapman*, Liss Norton* , Anna Bowles o, Karen King o, Sue Mongredien*


 * j pseud - i 129771  --sv:Adam Blade=Beast Quest series Q4876857;  nr2006004721; per ISFDB --see vertical listing below, which LCAuth follows [LC lists 21, links 12 of them]
 * ISFDB names all except Foxton for whom LC has independent earlier info


 * j pseud - -i- Jenny Dale o-- n98880531 pseudonym used by several authors. For works of these authors writing under their own names, search also under:‏ ‎‡b  Baldry, Cherith;‏ ‎‡b  Norton, Liss;‏ ‎‡a  Chapman, Linda‏ [lists 3, links 2]


 * j pseud - -i-  --  + n95098250 joint pseud. used by Ben M. Baglio*, Sue Bentley*, Liss Norton*, Lisa Tuttle*, Jennie Walters*, Linda Chapman* [lists 6, links 4]


 * j pseud - -i- Jack Dillon o-- 160636047 34625907+ nb99020738 Pseudonym used by several authors. For works of these authors writing under their own names, search also under:‏ ‎*Baldry, Cherith;‏ ‎*Norton, Liss‏ [lists 2, links 1]


 * j pseud i 37628 Damien Graves o-- Midnight Library US eds.; 38825013 n2007037493 names Shaun Hutson not Jones; NKC=jo2011640931 names several DOUBTFUL;
 * ISFDB names Allan Frewin Jones*, Shaun Hutson* , Ben Jeapes* , Robin Wasserman* , i 156571 Tina Barrett -- , i 156572 Sally Jones -- , i 156573 David Savage --


 * j pseud i 158219 Nick Shadow o-- Midnight Library UK eds.; VIAF|9367099+ nb2006001172 |BNF=cb15612355p |SUDOC=162052456 |NDL=01123794 ;
 * ISFDB names Sara Vogler*, Jan Burchett* , Shaun Hutson* , Allan Frewin Jones*


 * j pseud - i<> Erin Hunter+11  Q641740 nr00003836 pseudonym that Working Partners made up; Cary* and Baldry* [lists 2, links 3]


 * j pseud? - --i-- Fiona Kelly (dis)[de fi sv] + Q546763(1959-05-15) no00029822 Pseudonym used by several authors. For works of these authors under their own or other names, search also under:‏ *Coleman, Michael, 1946 May 12-;‏ *Farmer, Derek;‏ *Hendry, Frances Mary;‏ ‎*Norton, Liss‏ [lists 4, links 2]


 * j pseud - i 37702 Rob Kidd+1  Q7340286 nr2007004530 Pirates of the Caribbean prequels [lists 0, links 0]
 * ISFDB names Tui T. Sutherland*, Liz Braswell* ; credits some "unknown"
 * we link Pirates at ISFDB; neither Pirates nor kidd links here
 * (2006 to 2009)


 * j pseud - i 32638   Q1157698 nb2003004856 "house pseudonym for four writers: Narinder Dhami, author of Bend it like Beckham; Sue Bentley best known for her Magic kitten series; My secret unicorn's Linda Chapman; and Sue Mongredien, the creator of Oliver Moon‏" [lists 4, links 4]
 * ISFDB lists also i 162073 Kristin Earhart o--, Marilyn Kaye*, i 198738 Myra Ramsden o--, i 204219 Valerie Wilding o-- (aka i 174890 Phoebe Bright o which also used by i 213427 Maria Faulkner o--)


 * 1960- - i<> Ben M. Baglio Q4886094 no99004487
 * j pseud too, for US eds. of Daniels
 * 1947-01-21 i<> Cherith Baldry Q465339 n91023591 used some of Adam Blade (isfdb); Jack Dillon (interview); Jenny Dale (3d party); Erin Hunter (publ); we say she "... Kate Cary, Tui T. Sutherland and editor Victoria Holmes who write under the pen name of Erin Hunter."
 * done Blade Dillon Dale Hunter
 * 1951-07-31 i 139182 Sue Bentley o--
 * GND=134070852 Sue Catherine Bentley, pseudonyms Kate Bloom Cleo Cordell  Susan Swann
 * ps. -i- Kate Bloom o-- nb2006027412
 * ps. i 3164 Cleo Cordell o--  + n94108968 ; ISFDB does not affirm identity
 * ps. -i- Susan Swann o--  ja + nl; nb99010845
 * YoB - i<> Elizabeth J. Braswell+1 ISFDB cites Rob Kidd for Jack Sparrow as well as these three:
 * ps. i 7350 --
 * ps. i 28636 J. B. Stephens o
 * ps. i 28001 --
 * 1967-11-04 i<> Kate Cary+3+ ✅  Q465326 n2004047702 LCCat-2
 * 1969-01-15 i<> Linda Chapman de ru Q525621 n2008020483 for works of this author written under other names, search also under:‏ ‎‡b  Meadows, Daisy;‏ ‎‡b  Brooke, Lauren;‏ ‎‡b  Castle, Amber;‏ ‎‡b  Dale, Jenny;‏ ‎‡b  Daniels, Lucy‏
 * ps? -i- Lauren Brooke+4+de:Gill Harvey Q508297 no96025705 --she implies that Lauren Brooke is shared Talk:Lauren Brooke
 * ps. i 168456 Amber Castle o-- nb2012023278
 * ps. i 202404 Katie Chase o-- no2006081835
 * 1946-05-12 i<> Michael Coleman (author)+2 Q6829361 n87105685 band leader?
 * 8? 12? also as Fiona Kelly
 * probably mixed up
 * 1958-11-15 i<> Narinder Dhami de Q1725534 n00038138
 * YoB - -i- Derek Farmer o--
 * YoB - i 138404 Helen Hart (author)0 Q16203250

Helen Marie Hart, born 21 May 1965, Helen Hart is real name, also writes under pseuds. Maya Snow, Sebastian Rook & Helena Ravenscroft)

Helen Hart, 0

Helena Ravenscroft, 0

Sebastian Rook, 3


 * 1967-02-22 i 125779 Gill Harvey o-- de:Gill Harvey=Lauren Brooke  LCCN=no96025705 GND=123562872  Talk:Lauren Brooke
 * 1941- - i<> Frances Mary Hendry0  + Q5478829 n91088895 also as Fiona Kelly
 * 1975-07-17 i<> Victoria Holmes+3  Q522277 n2003054849 Talk:Victoria Holmes LCCat-3
 * YoB - i 112295 Inbali Iserles o-- another Erin Hunter
 * 1965-02-14 i<> Ben Jeapes+1 WDdone  Q4885927) nb98073459
 * Sebastian Rook at LC Authorities, with 3 records -- Sebastian Rook 26585224 nb2006002617 "pseud. of Helen Hart" (only); lists those 3 that ISFDB credits to Ben Jeapes, all as "Sebastian Rook ; with special thanks to Ben Jeapes"
 * YoB - i<> Dan Jolley+1  D:Q10263844 nb2003038159 comic books as Erin Hunter, we say
 * 1949-07-19 i<> Marilyn Kaye+2 Q6763561 L20
 * ps. -i- Shannon Blair o-- no97055840
 * 1970- - i 130580 sv   307287675 271394077+ Q6698271=Lucy Diamond n95042710  |GND=140268685 |BNF=cb165016718 |SUDOC=164124438 |NDL=001101494 |NTA=149257058 |NUKAT=n 2006006429 |NLP=a2577363x
 * ps. -i- Lucy Diamond+sv:Sue Mongredien Q6698271 ---Wikidata/VIAF should prefer this linkage to that with the mongredien identity --- nb2007016922 |BNF=cb16701257z |NLA=000042190670 |NTA=297984845 |NKC=jo2013753137 |NUKAT=n2013152567 |NLP=a27470209 pseud. of Mongredien; "there is actually a Lucy Diamond who's written a lot of religious children's books but that isn't me" [namely VIAF=94717241 |BNF=cb11900095c |NTA=072051256 but probably not vocalist GND=135169437]
 * VIAF=266052640 |GND=134098676
 * YoB - i 205478 Liss Norton o--   + nb99036742 has wr as Jack Dillon Fiona Kelly Jenny Dale Ben M. Baglio Lucy Daniels
 * ISFDB names only Rosie Banks
 * 1964- - i 132409 Gillian Philip Erin Hunter-- nb2009003352 per ISFDB used Gabriella Poole [publisher attests], Erin Hunter, Adam Blade
 * ps. i 136582 Gabriella Poole o--
 * 1978-07-31 i<> Tui T. Sutherland+3+ Q465356 n00008537 search also under‏ ‎‡b  Williams, Heather, 1978-‏ ‎‡b  Summers, Tamara, 1978-‏
 * ps. i 130651  --  n2008065148 GND=1059422379
 * ps. Heather Williams (dis)-- n2007028608 GND=1059424797
 * ISFDB lists also i 134117 T.T. Suth (1), i 157174 Eva Gray (1 of 4 hers) whose other users are not listed here yet 2015-05-06
 * 1952-09-16 i 224 Lisa Tuttle+8 Q440744 n80161138 search also under:‏ ‎‡b  Daniels, Lucy‏ ‎‡b  Baglio, Ben M.‏ ; wd lists also
 * ps. i 3669 Maria Palmer o-- house pseud, we say (ISFDB lists 9!)
 * ps. -i- Laura Waring o--
 * 1958-09-03 -i- Jennie Walters o-- nb2005017738
 * 1978-05-31 i<> Robin Wasserman+2  282094816+ ? Q2159917 n2004047711 NTA=343686090 ?
 * 1978-05-31 i<> Robin Wasserman+2  282094816+ ? Q2159917 n2004047711 NTA=343686090 ?

1965 i<> Tracey West  + n93018545  of New Jersey; "For works of this author written in collaboration with Bonnie Bader and Lisa Q. Banim, search also under:‏ ‎‡b  Harvey, Jayne.‏ ‎‡a  For works written under other names, search also under:‏ ‎‡b  Crowne, Alyssa, 1965-‏ ‎‡b  Darling, Angela, 1965-‏ ‎‡b  Simon, Coco.‏"
 * -i- none of those three pseuds at ISFDB
 * -i- Bonnie Bader o
 * -i- Lisa Q. Banim o
 * j pseud - -i- Jayne Harvey o- no hit

1971-09-11 i<> Stephen Cole (writer)0 Q7608923 https://viaf.org/viaf/315809/#Cole,_Stephen,_1971-
 * ps. Samantha Cole (false)--
 * ps. i 81549 Paul Grice o we say; ISFDB does not affirm identity
 * ps. i 62591 --  no2015015042 Dr Who novella

1954-04-30 i<> Allan Frewin Jones+2 69591159 Q2647969 https://viaf.org/viaf/69591159/#Jones,_Allan_Frewin,_1954- ; ISFDB lists Damien Graves, Adam Blade , Nick Shadow (plus Frewin Jones and Allan Jones) and NEEDS TO LINK US; GND names Sam Hutton too
 * ps. Steven Saunders o |LCCN=nb90266833 (no records) |GND=139222030 |NKC=xx0036953}}
 * ps. 184010156 n2006055215 BNF=cb16540036p SUDOC=166227315



1958- - i<> Shaun Hutson+2 WDdone  Q4496557 nb2005003519 "For works of this author entered under other names, search also under Kruger, Wolf, 1958- Rostov, Stefan, 1958- Blake, Nick, 1958- Bishop, Samuel P., 1958- Lambert, Tom, 1958- Taylor, Frank, 1958-"; ISFDB lists Neville and Graves/Shadow
 * ps. i 5097 Robert Neville  NEEDS split to Hutson

presumably mixed up with another Neville |NLA=000050067413 |NKC=jo2011640914 look ok
 * – and links to 7 pseudonyms, some shared


 * Beast Quest by Blade
 * Rainbow Magic by Meadows --we name writers (4 above) and
 * Rachel Elliot i 162075
 * Mandy Archer i 162074
 * Tracey West i 112144 identity affirmed by ISFDB
 * The Sleepover Club (real names?) we name writers Dhami, Mongredien (both above) and (none at EN.wiki):
 * Rose Impey i 149235
 * Fiona Cummings -i-
 * Jana Hunter -i-
 * Harriet Castor -i-
 * Angie Bates -i-
 * Seekers (novel series) by Hunter
 * Warriors (novel series) by Hunter
 * Animal Ark by Daniels, UK; Baglio, US
 * Survive! by Dillon --Working Partners, Baldry is one half, she said in 2001

List of Beast Quest novels links some of these writers; LCAuth lists Foxton plus same as ISFDB -i- Foxton, Paul -- primary or first? The King Reigns, 2005? listed above Baldry, Cole, AFJones Ball, Karen -- https://viaf.org/viaf/16745818/#Ball,_Karen Bennett, Thea -- https://viaf.org/viaf/123582919/#Bennett,_Thea Burchett, Jan -- https://viaf.org/viaf/37228308/#Burchett,_Jan Chambers, Stephen, 1980- -- https://viaf.org/viaf/48569700/#Chambers,_Stephen,_1980- Courtenay, Lucy -- https://viaf.org/viaf/121714870/#Courtenay,_Lucy Ford, Michael, 1980- https://viaf.org/viaf/122218514/#Ford,_Michael,_1980- Michael C. Ford done; Michael Curtis Ford done 98971501 85462265 Galloway, Elizabeth -- http://viaf.org/viaf/313504290 Harrison, Troon -- https://viaf.org/viaf/91660886/#Harrison,_Troon Jones, Tabitha -- http://viaf.org/viaf/313504466 unknown identity 50452996 Noble, James, active 2009 -- [no VIAF? undiff at LC] Philip, Gillian, 1964- -- https://viaf.org/viaf/78890846/#Philip,_Gillian,_1964- Renner, Ellen -- https://viaf.org/viaf/173302227/#Renner,_Ellen Richards, J. N. -- [no VIAF?] Robshaw, Brandon o-- Scott, Benjamin, 1977- https://viaf.org/viaf/53661010/#Scott,_Benjamin,_1977- Vogler, Sara -- https://viaf.org/viaf/70881165/#Vogler,_Sara Willett, Edward, 1959- https://viaf.org/viaf/107098643/#Willett,_Edward,_1959-.... VIAF suggests to me also Galán, Ana, 1964- https://viaf.org/viaf/19155189/#Gala%CC%81n,_Ana

Paul Foxton o no2015015021 24 years old 2006-02-24 => born 1979/80, singer/songwriter

Brandon Robshaw 51364765+ no2002098561 GND=123070740 BNF=cb13330793g wr also as Adam Blade
 * ps. Dan Lee
 * wife Rochelle Scholar nr99038193

1956-08-14 Cameron Dokey 307229204+ Q5026234 no94012891


 * 1942 - Ingela Bergenrud -- se
 * ps. - Christina Örne -- se pseudonym för Ingela Bergenrud enligt Lina Jauhiainen, B. Wahlströms bokförlag

= This page previously began here and below =

Ursula Jones (merged at VIAF); John Lothar George; Simon Fisher Babbitt; Kim Kahng

Southern Poverty Law Center Cambridge Chronicle GOPAC Democratic Leadership Council The Garden of the Finzi-Continis (film)

http://www.leemac.freeserve.co.uk/chresto1.htm Chrestomanci at the official DWJ

Talk: The Witch's Children and the Queen

Notes on the contributors (perhaps for use elsewhere) info to LC from the publisher of The Witch's Children (Holt, 2003; first US) "Ursula Jones wanted to be a vet when she grew up, and then she went to drama school and became an actress instead. She has written a number of plays for children, but The Witch’s Children is her first picture book. Ms. Jones lives in France, on the edge of the forest of Vaour."
 * Ursula Jones

viaf|244117629 DE undiff viaf| 274401836 AU viaf|14129587 NL JP FR http://lccn.loc.gov/n2002056752 --LC probably conflates two or three Ursula Jones

reports only a 2012 fantasy The Lost King

undiff viaf| 278923389 AU viaf| 302478204 PO http://lccn.loc.gov/n91012496
 * Russell Ayto

DNB works, three DE-lang eds

THIS WEEK EMP Museum and its biographies
 * WP:CFD => Science Fiction Hall of Fame inductees

Mythopoeic Fantasy Awards; Weinstein, Levin, Carnegie, Greenaway, Sendak, E. B. White

Science Fiction Awards Database (supercedes Locus Index) 2013 Results (directory/calendar)

2009 - described lowercase as editor & publisher, artist (2), author

2010 - inline descriptions of three writers, one multi-faceted 2011 - mere links to individual pages; two artists, two writer/editor 2012 - described lowercase as author (2), illustrator, filmmaker

2011 - 1/4 deceased; 2012 - 2/4 deceased; 2013 - 3/5 deceased; sum= 6/13 deceased

Meckwell Lite (simplified)

Related

 * LCC for all book copies by their LC classification such as Z253.U69,
 * LCCN for one book copy by its usually all-numeric LC control number such as 89000456, — does not handle LCCN person id


 * DNB for all catalog records by author id such as 118685783,


 * worldcat for all
 * worldcat id

Does LC online provide any way to access all editions (perhaps we have two represented here) or all copies of all editions (ten) that are in the catalog or in the holdings (I'm not sure which)? That would be analogous to "Formats and Editions of The Manual of style" at WorldCat.
 * Example: "Formats and Editions of Father Christmas goes on holiday". WorldCat. Retrieved 2012-12-04.

DNB portal what links here?
 * Albert Schweitzer --self, no AC
 * Albert, Duke in Prussia --self, AC missing GND
 * Daniel Gabriel Fahrenheit --self, AC replicates DNB
 * Helwig --self, AC missing GND --NAME=Martin Helwig hence no "literature by and about"
 * Helwig --self, AC missing GND --NAME=Martin Helwig hence no "literature by and about"
 * Helwig --self, AC missing GND --NAME=Martin Helwig hence no "literature by and about"

VIAF/errors

old LCCatalog http://catalog.loc.gov/ Category intersection CatScan

altho same VIAF bundle is only a nameholder --> unlink GND nameholder; add LC Authorities and thus Catalog at Library of Congress Authorities — with catalog records

==See also==

Miscellaneous recent
Template talk: Authority control
 * Scott Rosenberg

no DE biogs AP Scott Mitchell Rosenberg, 1963 "VLG VIAF=171686374 LCCN=no/2011/096050 GND=1020170719 ---*AP Scott Rosenberg (journalist), 1959 VIAF=226854458 NDL= *Extlink LC with explanatory note ---*AP Scott Rosenberg, 1963 "VG VIAF=80819242 GND=136483445 *Extlink LC with explanatory note

LCCN=n/96/121734 (undifferentiated) --among six "Selected Titles" listings, at least #1-2,4 belong to the Scott Rosenberg (journalist); at least #5-6 belong to Scott Rosenberg.


 * Scott Rosenberg at Library of Congress Authorities — unresolved name with catalog records for three works by this screenwriter (1995–2000) and others by Scott Rosenberg (journalist)

three VIAF for two people (LCCN conflates two)

illustrators S--LAP Paul Galdone "VLG S--LAP de:Mary Blair "m VLG S--LAP Remy Charlip VIAF links name +1 S--LAP Crockett Johnson "VLG --pen name of David Johnson Leisk Ap de:Ad Reinhardt "m VLG AP Mischa Richter GNDName=156051753 is name only S--LAP Wesley Dennis (illustrator) --VL no GND S--LAP Robert Lougheed VIAF links name +1 redirect Maruki Toshi redirect Maruki Iri S-ILAP de:John Howe (Illustrator) "m VLG

writers S--LAP de:Ruth Krauss "m VLG AP de:Glenway Wescott "m VLG S---AP de:Mario Benedetti "redir VLG ---LAP Jessamyn West (librarian) --VL no GND S-I-AP Robin Wayne Bailey --VL no GND x-I-AP de:Edith Nesbit "m VLG

related ---LAP Anita Silvey --VL VIAF links name only S ILAP Virginia Kidd --VL VIAF links name +1, hers --I-AP Jean E. Karl --VL no GND S-- AP Marcus Crouch "VLG John Rowe Townsend --VL VIAF links name +14, at least some his S-- AP Julia Eccleshare --VL VIAF links name +1, hers S--LAP Eden Ross Lipson --VL VIAF links name only S2-LAP Frederic G. Melcher --"VLG S2-1AP Anne Carroll Moore --VL VIAF links name only — Extlink LC Annie Edgerton Moore (not to be confused) 2=2column refs except in De Grummond section

de Grummond

 * De Grummond Children's Literature Collection --see What links here?

McCain Library and Archives; Talk:McCain Library and Archives

ref8 St. Nicholas Magazine ‎ (links) EL,inline The University of Southern Mississippi Medallion ==> Fay B. Kaigler Children's Book Festival ref13 Toy book --that is, de:Randolph Caldecott Papers

S-- AP de:John Newbery --DE VIAF missing GND=119420309 GND=1037572696 two Person records; VIAF

de Grummond Contributor List & Finding Aid Index

needs DE.wiki fix
 * Newbery ✅ 0902
 * Barron ✅ 0909

SdILAP KEY (d=deG reference, x=deG externallink); (L=2 two persons at LC)

Sx- AP Verna Aardema EN unlink; VIAF link name only ; List of Michigan State University people--ref done Sd-LAP Arthur A. Ageton EN unlink; VIAF link name only -d-LAp Clifford Lindsey Alderman EN unlink; VIAF link name only SxI AP Victor Ambrus ‎GREENAWAY Sd-LAP Esther Averill "VLG SdI AP de:T. A. Barron "m VL:G VIAF links poor choice of two GNDperson GND=1033247006   GND=121655911 (two persons); SdI AP de:Margot Benary-Isbert http://library.uoregon.edu/speccoll/guides/children.html --DE "m Sd-2AP Margaret Wise Brown NEWBERY Sd-2-- (joint) Mary and Conrad Buff --- AP de:Randolph Caldecott "m VLG Sd- AP Natalie Savage Carlson EN,VIAF link GNDName +19 ! nobiog Betty Cavanna ; Douglass Residential College --ref done Sd-LAP Elizabeth Coatsworth NEWBERY -d- AP Eleanor Coerr EN unlink; VIAF link GNDName +2+1, hers Sd- AP Henry E. Cooper VL only; that is, daughter Alice Cooper Bailey papers SdILAP Scott Corbett EN unlink; VIAF link GNDName +3, his Sd- AP Beatrice Schenk de Regniers EN,VIAF link GNDName +8+11 (who else?) Sd- AP Ed Emberley CALDECOTT S+- AP Edmund Evans "VLG --that is, Randolph Caldecott Papers Sd-LAP Aileen Fisher EN unlink; VIAF link name only Sd-LAP Leonard Everett Fisher EN unlink; VIAF link name +1 Gutenberg Sd-LAP Antonio Frasconi "VLG Sx-LAP (Charles Ghigna) ; Florida Atlantic University --ref done Sd-LAP Ann Grifalconi "VLG Sd- AP Gail E. Haley ‎GREENAWAY CALDECOTT ; A Story a Story --NOT DONE-- Sd-LAP Erik Christian Haugaard CALDECOTT Sd- AP Tana Hoban  EN unlink; VIAF link GNDName +3 Push, Pull, Empty, Full; Look Again; Count and See (hers that we don't list?)  GND=174221622 Person  Sd-2AP Nonny Hogrogian CALDECOTT Sd- AP Isabelle Holland EN,VIAF link GNDName +31 ! Sd- AP Mabel Leigh Hunt "VLG -d- Ap Harold Jones (artist) ‎"VLG Sd-AP Ezra Jack Keats CALDECOTT [viaf now redirects]; The Snowy Day --not done-- Sx-LAP Lois Lenski ‎NEWBERY Sx- AP James Marshall (author) WILDER nobiog (John Martin) ; John Martin's Book --{ac} on talk page Morgan van Roorbach Shepard redirect --NOT DONE-- S+-LAP Kelly Ray Masters "VLG ‎--that is, pen name Zachary Ball papers Sd-LAP de:Jean Merrill "mVL VIAF link GNDName=108350037 name +3, at least 2 hers — The Pushcart War ; Lewis Carroll Shelf Award --not done Sd- AP Cornelia Meigs NEWBERY (Talk covers Adair Aldon) Sd- AP Rutherford George Montgomery --EN unlink; VIAF link name +6+2 SdI AP Phyllis Reynolds Naylor "VLG SdILAP Evaline Ness CALDECOTT SdI AP Richard Peck (writer) ‎EDWARDS Sd-1AP Lynn Poole "VLG Sd- AP H. A. Rey "VLG Sd- AP Margret Rey "VLG SdI AP Willo Davis Roberts "VLG -d- AP Maurice Sendak ‎ANDERSEN Sx- AP Peter Spier CALDECOTT conflates Sx- AP Mary Stolz "VLG S+I AP Rosemary Sutcliff CARNEGIE SdI AP Margot Tomes "VLG Sd- AP Tasha Tudor "VLG -d-LAP Gloria Whelan "VLG -d- AP Robb White "VLG Sd-LAP Taro Yashima "VLG

SdILAP KEY (d=deG reference, x=deG externallink); (L=2 two persons at LC)

2013-08-24 more Sx-LAP Armstrong Sperry NEWBERY Sd-LAP Feodor Rojankovsky CALDECOTT

Search: De Grummond ✅ months ago Search: degrummond [no space] ? Harold Jones (artist) --OK; shows up via r DeGrummond

Cornelia Meigs Papers in the de Grummond Children's Literature Collection — with biographical sketch

" Papers". de Grummond Children's Literature Collection. University Libraries. The University of Southern Mississippi.

papers in the de Grummond Children's Literature Collection

Top 100
Talk: Chapter book
 * Top 100 Chapter Book --ranked list 2012-07-07. Apparently Bird covered each of the 100 chapter books in its own blogpost May 15 to July 2.
 * http://www.slj.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/08/SLJ_Fuse8_Top100_Picture.pdf
 * http://www.slj.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/08/SLJ_Fuse8_Top100_Novels.pdf

Picture
 * 1) Sendak; Where the Wild Things Are
 * 2) Carle; The Very Hungry Caterpillar

Novel
 * 1) White; --not done-- Charlotte's Web
 * 2) L'Engle; --not done-- A Wrinkle in Time

Other Children's book awards
de:Stonewall Book Award (ALA) includes KJL from 2010 ignore it

DE.wiki fix ✅ 0831 Farmer TYP LCCN VIAF Anderson GNDName Williams TYP LCCN VIAF Mazer TYP LCCN VIAF

Leftover reported to Kolja21: de:Judy Blundell; de:Daniella Carmi


 * National Book Award

DE.wiki main article ✅ 0909 --with about 12 dt. needs disambig: Kohl, Martinez

EN.wiki complete AC: Lionni, Mazer, Colum, Zolotow, Barthelme, Nolan, Birdsall, Anderson, Alexie, add AC: Kohl, Farmer, Blundell,

add LC Authorities and thus Catalog; more Metadata
 * at Library of Congress Authorities — with catalog records

de:National Book Award (1.4, 1.5, 1.6) --DE biographies not covered for other awards Isaac Bashevis Singer --DE "VLG Donald Barthelme -- EN done --DE "VLG Herbert R. Kohl --EN done; also Judith Kohl; VIAF links name only NEEDS merge --(no DE biog)-- DE should be Herbert R. Kohl Victor Martinez (author) --EN ac missing --(no DE biog)-- DE needs disambig Victor Martinez (Autor) Han Nolan --EN done --DE "VL GNDName Nancy Farmer --EN done --DE VP Polly Horvath --EN done --DE "VLG Jeanne Birdsall --EN done ISNI GND --DE "VLG Matthew Tobin Anderson --EN done --DE VL GNDName missing GNDName=156578913 GND=157393143 Sherman Alexie --EN done --DE "VLG Judy Blundell --EN done (NEEDS REPORT WHERE?) --DE [Jude Watson] VL GNDName=121923363 --see also [Judy Blundell] VIAF= 103673366 ; another GNDName=140713468 --see also [Jordan Cray] VIAF=30393330 (Watson, 16 records) VIAF=305009820 (US) (Blundell, 1 work, hers) VIAF=107710822 (Cary, 5 works)

Blundell (GNDName, 1 Publ)

Watson (GNDName, 10+6 Publ)

Cray (GNDName, 5 Publ)

de:Regina Medal --DE biographies not yet covered Padraic Colum --EN done --DE "VLG Tasha Tudor --"m Charlotte Zolotow --EN done (needs American book editors; pseud.) --DE "VLG Vera B. Williams --DE PND only

de:Lewis Carroll Shelf Award --DE biographies not yet covered Leo Lionni --EN done --DE "VLG Norma Fox Mazer --EN done --DE PND only VIAF=98043679

FSF awards
import from User:P64/FSF/Sandbox

de: Gandalf (DE biogs 8 of 8), SAGA (DE biogs 15 of 15) also de:Campbell Award (bester Roman) (all but one); de:Theodore Sturgeon Memorial Award;

Gandalf Grand Master Award --GM of Fantasy (8) World Fantasy Award for Life Achievement (57) SFWA Grand Master; (29) (29?/ 27,27,26) Science Fiction Museum and Hall of Fame; (74) (69/ 69,69,68)

E Eaton Award J. Lloyd Eaton Lifetime Achievement Award in Science Fiction [ref name=eaton] – 4 ✅ F World Fantasy Award for Life Achievement [ref name=SFAwards] G Gandalf Grand Master of Fantasy [ref name=SFAwards] – 8 ✅ except Tolkien H HWA Bram Stoker Award for Lifetime Achievement in the Horror genre [ref name=HWA] – 7 SFWA Grand Masters ✅ World Horror Grand Master incidentally S Swordsmen and Sorcerers' Guild of America (SAGA) founding member (source is our article) – 8 originals ✅ yyyy 1996-2012 SFHOF induction [ref name=sfhof....] – 69 ✅ ✅ counts McCaffrey and Norton where I am more ambitious
 * 1) 01-29 SFWA Grand Master of F & SF [ref name=SFWA] – 29 ✅
 * But

Mythopoeic Fantasy Award
Mythopoeic Awards

Adult Lit and Children's Lit from 1992; also Mythopoeic Scholarship Awards

What should be done for each? Mythopoeic award coverage with ref, in prose where suitable ext link ISFDB ref Locus Index {Authority control} {Persondata}


 * YYYY n=number of losing finalists (reported once per author)


 * 1971 0 de- The Crystal Cave by Mary Stewart --nil// -iLAP VLGw
 * 1972 1 de- Red Moon and Black Mountain by Joy Chant --no ref// -iLAP VLnw
 * 1973 2 de- The Song of Rhiannon by Evangeline Walton --no ref// oiLAP VLGw
 * 1974 (1971) —- The Hollow Hills by Mary Stewart
 * 1975 2 de- A Midsummer Tempest by Poul Anderson --no prose SFFHOF // -i AP VLGw
 * 1981 1 de- Unfinished Tales by J. R. R. Tolkien --nil SFFHOF //
 * 1982 0 de- Little, Big by John Crowley --Locus Index only // bi AP VLGw
 * 1983 0 de- The Firelings by Carol Kendall // -iLAP VL-w
 * 1984 (1972) —- When Voiha Wakes by Joy Chant
 * 1985 4 xx- Cards of Grief by Jane Yolen --no ref, one missing // oiLAP VLGw
 * 1986 0 de- Bridge of Birds by Barry Hughart --no ref// oiLAP VLGw
 * 1987 3 de- The Folk of the Air by Peter S. Beagle --no ref // oiLAP VLGw
 * 1988 2 de- Seventh Son by Orson Scott Card --no ref EDWARDS // oiLAP VLGw
 * 1989 1 de- Unicorn Mountain by Michael Bishop --no ref // oi2AP VLGw (2=Philip Lawson)
 * 1990 4 de- The Stress of Her Regard by Tim Powers --no ref // oiLAP VLGw
 * 1991 1 de- Thomas the Rhymer by Ellen Kushner --adequate winner, needs general and finalist refs // oiLAP VLnw; VIAF|305057687 LATVIA needs merge

DE.wiki needs ✅ 0902 Jo Walton, Cashore

need VIAF merge at least Byatt, Cashore, Stroud

EN.wiki needs ac missing: Stewart L: Chant, Kendall, Kushner, LG: Hughart, Clarke, Stroud, Byatt, G: McKillip, Bujold, Jo Walton, Charnas


 * Adult Literature===


 * 1992 0 xx- A Woman of the Iron People by Eleanor Arnason --no ref // biLAP VL-w (blog)
 * 1993 (1985) —- Briar Rose by Jane Yolen
 * 1994 1 xx- The Porcelain Dove by Delia Sherman --no ref // oiLAP VLnw
 * 1995 11 de- Something Rich and Strange by Patricia A. McKillip --no prose; winners and finalists // -iLAP VLGw (fan site only)
 * 1996 1 xx- Waking the Moon by Elizabeth Hand --no ref // oiLAP VLnw
 * 1997 0 xx- The Wood Wife by Terri Windling (combined with Children's Literature award) // oiLAP VLGw
 * 1998 1 de- The Djinn in the Nightingale's Eye by A. S. Byatt --no ref
 * 1999 4,0 de- Stardust by Neil Gaiman and Charles Vess --no prose; no ref // Vess oiLAP VLGw
 * 2000 (1987) —- Tamsin by Peter S. Beagle --no ref
 * 2001 0 --- The Innamorati by Midori Snyder --no ref // oiLAP VL-w (many websites, status unclear)
 * 2002 2 de- The Curse of Chalion by Lois McMaster Bujold --no ref // oiLAP VLGw
 * 2003 (1995) —- Ombria in Shadow by Patricia A. McKillip
 * 2004 6 xx- Sunshine by Robin McKinley --no prose NEWBERY // oi AP VLGw
 * 2005 1 de- Jonathan Strange & Mr. Norrell by Susanna Clarke --no prose // oiLAP VLGw
 * 2006 (1999) —- Anansi Boys by Neil Gaiman
 * 2007 (1995) —- Solstice Wood by Patricia A. McKillip
 * 2008 3 xx- The Orphan's Tales by Catherynne M. Valente --nil // oi2AP VLGw (2=Bethany L. Thomas)
 * 2009 0 xx- Flesh and Spirit and Breath and Bone by Carol Berg --nil // oiLAP V-Gw VIAF|11024961; VL-- VIAF|88102066 needs merge
 * 2010 1 de- Lifelode by Jo Walton --no ref // oiLAP VLGw
 * 2011 0 --- Redemption in Indigo by Karen Lord --incomplete // oiLAP VL-w
 * 2012 1 xx- The Uncertain Places by Lisa Goldstein --no ref // oi2AP VLGw (2=Lisa Glass)
 * 2013 0 --- Digger by Ursula Vernon --prose w ref // 2o-LAP VL-w


 * Children's Literature===

Children's Literature is "books for younger readers (from “Young Adults” to picture books for beginning readers), in the tradition of The Hobbit or The Chronicles of Narnia." Books are allocated to one of the two categories by consensus.


 * 1992 0 de- Haroun and the Sea of Stories by Salman Rushdie --nil
 * 1993 0,0 --- Knight's Wyrd by Debra Doyle and James D. Macdonald --minimal // oiLAP VLGw and oiLAP VLnw; for both LCAuth "search pseudonyms too"
 * 1994 0 de- The Kingdom of Kevin Malone by Suzy McKee Charnas --"Aslan Award" // oiLAP VLGw
 * 1995 0 --- Owl in Love by Patrice Kindl --minimal // oiLAP VLGw
 * 1996 4 de- The Crown of Dalemark by Diana Wynne Jones --adequate inclg finalists GUARDIAN
 * 1997 —- The Wood Wife by Terri Windling (combined with Adult Literature award) --no ref
 * 1998 (1985) —- Young Merlin trilogy (consisting of Passager, Hobby, and Merlin) by Jane Yolen
 * 1999 (1996) —- Dark Lord of Derkholm by Diana Wynne Jones
 * 2000 0 --- The Folk Keeper by Franny Billingsley --no ref // oiLAP VL-w
 * 2001 0 Aria of the Sea by Dia Calhoun --no biography
 * 2002 0 de- The Ropemaker by Peter Dickinson --nil CARNEGIE
 * 2003 0 de- Summerland by Michael Chabon --nil // oiLAP VLGw
 * 2004 1 --- The Hollow Kingdom by Clare B. Dunkle --no ref // oiLAP VL-w
 * 2005 3 de- A Hat Full of Sky by Terry Pratchett --nil CARNEGIE
 * 2006 0 de- The Bartimaeus Trilogy by Jonathan Stroud --nil // oiLAP VLnw; VLG- VIAF|186439584 needs merge
 * 2007 1 xx- Corbenic by Catherine Fisher --no prose // oiLAP VLGw
 * 2008 2 de- Harry Potter series by J. K. Rowling --nil
 * 2009 0 de- Graceling by Kristin Cashore --nil // oiLAP VL-w; V-G- VIAF|95653498 needs merge
 * 2010 0 --- Where the Mountain Meets the Moon by Grace Lin --nil // oiLAP VL-w
 * 2011 0 xx- The Queen's Thief Series consisting of The Thief, The Queen of Attolia, The King of Attolia, and A Conspiracy of Kings by Megan Whalen Turner --nil // oiLAP VLGw
 * 2012 (1994) —- The Freedom Maze by Delia Sherman
 * 2013 0 Vessel by Sarah Beth Durst --no biography

Cooper biography
What was your childhood like? I was born into the peaceful green countryside of Buckinghamshire, in England, four years before World War II broke out, and by the time I started going to school, life had become very noisy. There was an anti-aircraft post at the end of our road firing at the German planes that were dropping bombs overhead, and we spent a lot of nights in the family air-raid shelter. These shelters were like a little cave in the back lawn that everyone’s Dad had dug out and lined with Government-issue corrugated iron, replanting the piece of lawn on its roof. I’d lie on the top bunk in our shelter, listening to my mother reading to my little brother and me by candlelight. The candle was stuck to a saucer, on a box in the middle of the earth floor, and its flame shook every time a bomb fell.

There were two things about that childhood that helped to turn me into a writer of fantasy. Since we weren’t allowed out after dark (every house in England was blacked out at night, to be invisible to the bombers) and there was no television, I read everything I could find, from fairy stories to Dickens. And since every air-raid was a reminder that an enemy was trying to kill us, I developed a very strong sense of us and them, good and evil, the Light and the Dark.

What are your ties to Wales? I have deep roots there. My Welsh grandmother—my mother’s mother—had been sent up to London at age 14 to “go into service” after her sailor father drowned, and in London she had married an Englishman. This fact did two things for me: it gave me enough Welsh blood to fall in love with Wales, and it gave me my Grandad—imposing, bookloving and stagestruck—who took his seven children to the very first production of “Peter Pan” and recited terrifying Victorian monologues to us grandchildren at family parties. My parents were Londoners who had moved out into the country. My mother was a teacher, and my father was the third generation of his family to work for the Great Western Railway, whose trains ran from London to the West Country and to Wales. We used to take one of those trains to Wales for summer holidays sometimes, to the village of Aberdovey (Aberdyfi, in Welsh) where my grandmother had been born—and which much later became home, since my parents moved there for the last 20 years of their lives.

When did you first start writing? There were no writers in the family, but my brother Rod and I grew up with words, and we both became writers. My mother knew large chunks of Tennyson, Browning and the Romantic poets by heart, and even my father, who had no literary bent whatsoever (though he had the most beautiful handwriting I have ever seen, and could play almost anything by ear on the piano) would launch sometimes into a spirited rendering of “La Belle Dame Sans Merci.”

I read endlessly, wrote plays for a puppet theatre operated by the boy next door, and decided at 14 that since adults clearly didn’t understand the young, I should write my autobiography, which would be called Fourteen. It went very slowly, however, and by the time the title had changed to Sixteen I gave up the idea. Instead I edited the school magazine and then went to Oxford to do a degree in English.

What led you to Oxford? This accomplishment was due almost entirely to my wonderful high school headmistress, who was determined that I should go either to Oxford or Cambridge. I had a State Scholarship to go to any university that wanted me, but the entrance examinations included my worst subject, Latin—which I failed. This didn’t deter the headmistress, who pointed out to my nervous parents that since I was only 17, I could spend an extra year at school, with some extra tutorials in Latin, and try again.

So I did, with tutorials from the wife of our local vicar—whose house I used a decade later, lock, stock and barrel, as the house of Will Stanton’s family in The Dark Is Rising. The vicar’s wife improved my Latin, and off I went to Oxford, where I spent three of the happiest years of my life.

Is it true that Tolkien was one of your professors? J.R.R. Tolkien and C.S. Lewis were both teaching when I was at Oxford and without a doubt influenced the lives of all of their students. As dons, they had set the rule that the Oxford English syllabus stop at 1832 and that it be heavy on Middle English and writers like Malory and Spenser, so, as a friend of mine says, they taught us to believe in dragons. They were both often to be seen drinking beer in a pub called the Eagle and Child, known as the Bird and Baby. I never personally met Tolkien or Lewis, and I’d never heard of Narnia, but we were all waiting eagerly for the third volume of The Lord of the Rings to come out, and I loved going to Lewis’s booming lectures on Renaissance literature. Tolkien lectured on Beowulf and was rather mumbly, except when declaiming the first lines of the poem in Anglo-Saxon, beginning with a great shout of “Hwaet!”

Did you start writing books right away? I was always writing, but I decided that the only way to earn a living by writing was to become a journalist. After editing the Oxford university newspaper Cherwell, which no woman had done before, I was lucky enough to get a job on the London Sunday Times. At first I worked partly for a column put together by Ian Fleming, who was just starting to write the James Bond books, and after that as a reporter and feature-writer interviewing everybody from crooks to Presidents to the Archbishop of Canterbury. I had a wonderful time, working and playing in the London of the early Sixties. (One of my boyfriends was a jazz trombonist from Liverpool, scornful of a new group just emerging from his hometown; they were called The Beatles!) But I was always writing on the side.

How did you manage begin a journalist and a fantasist at the same time? The observational skills and the discipline required of a journalist turned out to be just as valuable for a novelist. When I began writing novels in my spare time, the first one was realistic and very bad; the second was a fantasy, Mandrake, which was better. Since it was a story about the end of civilization, set in an England of the future (1980!), it was published as science fiction.

Meantime, between doing interviews with film stars and politicians for the paper, I’d been contributing pieces to a weekly feature called Mainly For Children, and one day the Literary Editor dropped a piece of paper on my desk and said, “You ought to try that.” It was a notice from a children’s book publisher offering a prize of £1,000 for a “family adventure story.” This was more than I earned in a year, so of course I began to write—but by the end of Chapter Two the book turned itself into a fantasy. It became a quest story, full of Arthurian echoes, dealing—though not yet by name—with the Light and the Dark, and it was called Over Sea, Under Stone. I never did submit it for the writing prize. It was published by Jonathan Cape instead, in 1965, after I’d moved to America. I had a feeling that the story would lead somewhere further, but the sequels didn’t happen until much later.

Next I wrote a book about the war, Dawn of Fear, which is totally autobiographical except that I turned myself into a boy, and for nine years I wrote a weekly column called “Susan Cooper In America” for a Welsh newspaper. I also wrote a biography of the English author J.B. Priestley. For me, combining journalism and fiction in my writing life worked quite well.

Why would someone so British move to the United States? I suppose it was my own family adventure! Before Over Sea Under Stone was published, my newspaper had sent me to the USA for four months as a correspondent. I had a great time, but came back convinced that neither the British nor the Americans understood each other, so I wrote a series of articles called “Behind the Golden Curtain.” Four separate publishers suggested that I turn the articles into a book, and by the time I signed a contract with one of them, I was living in the USA.

To the horror of my family, my friends and my editor, I had married a widowed American professor from MIT, whom I’d met while doing interviews for the book; he was 19 years older than me and had three teenage children, and lived in Massachusetts. I was so homesick that when I went home to Wales to visit my parents a few months after moving, my husband later said he was afraid I wouldn’t come back.

How did you come to write the Dark is Rising sequence? The homesickness influenced my writing, certainly. Life improved after my son Jonathan was born in 1966, and my daughter Kate 18 months later. I learned to drive, to ski, to cook enormous meals for teenagers and graduate students, and tried (rather less successfully) to understand American football. I returned regularly to England for visits. But my homesickness never went away.

It bubbled up into The Dark Is Rising, a fantasy about the Light and the Dark that is at the same time intensely English, every inch of it set in the part of Buckinghamshire where I grew up. Before I began the book I had realized that it was not only connected—by the Merlin-figure Merriman Lyon—to my earlier book Over Sea, Under Stone, but that they were both part of a sequence of five. So I took a piece of paper and wrote down the names of all five books, their characters, the places where they would be set, and the times of the year. The Dark Is Rising would be at the winter solstice and Christmas, the next book Greenwitch would be in the spring, at the old Celtic festival of Beltane...

On another piece of paper I wrote the very last half-page of the entire story, and then I spent the next six years writing the rest of the sequence—and pulled out that half-page when I reached the end of Silver on the Tree.

Did your source of inspiration change after you wrote The Dark is Rising? After the five Dark Is Rising books, when everyone expected something similar, I wrote a very different fantasy called Seaward. It was written during an awful year when my marriage broke up and both my parents died, but it has hope in it all the same—and one character who still haunts me, a strange little creature named Peth. My book ideas since have all been very different from each other, and gradually I turned my storytelling towards theatre and film as well.

Did you always write for the theatre as well? Probably due to my grandfather’s influence, I always had a love for drama, whether it was poetry, a stage production, a radio play, or the Christmas pantomime. I had written some plays for radio in the UK, but I didn’t write professionally for the theatre until I was about 40. I discovered that because writing a novel is a long lonely business, collaboration on something else can make a nice change—and what could be more collaborative than theatre?

It started with a phenomenon called Revels. In 1973, my publisher brought me to see a performance and introduced me to its creator, the singer-director Jack Langstaff, who cried, “But I’ve read your books! You should be writing for the Revels!” So for the next two decades I wrote lyrics, poems, short plays and stories for those astonishing, joyous celebrations of the solstice. My chapter book The Magician’s Boy is adapted from one of my Revels plays, and I recently published a biography of Jack. But my written collaborations were all with my second husband, the actor Hume Cronyn.

What did you write with Hume Cronyn? We wrote two successful screenplays together, but the Foxfire play was our first collaboration. In 1979 I met Hume and his wife Jessica Tandy on vacation, and we became friends. They had been married and performing together for four decades, and when they were devising a joint program of readings, I sent Hume my favorite bits from the Foxfire books. He didn’t include them but he too fell in love with the material, and together we used some of it to write a play—called, of course, Foxfire. A few years later I turned it into a television script for Hallmark, and Jess won an Emmy.

By that time I had accidentally become a screenwriter, because Jane Fonda had liked our dialog in Foxfire and asked Hume and me to write her a TV script from Harriette Arnow’s Appalachian book The Dollmaker (for which Jane, too, won an Emmy.) Then I wrote several other TV films, independently. I never managed an Emmy myself, just a couple of nominations, but I was very happy when the ladies got them. Have you worked on other collaborations? Every book is a collaboration between author, editor and illustrator. My editor, the late legendary Margaret K. McElderry, paired me with wonderful artists—notably Ashley Bryan and Warwick Hutton for some of my picturebooks, and Michael Heslop and Trina Schart Hyman for jacket art. Also I’ve worked on musical collaborations with composers, which has been great fun, and on multi-author anthologies. The latest project with the NCBLA, “The Exquisite Corpse Adventure,” was actually a collaborative game, which I encourage young writers to try for themselves.

How did your other fantasy novels come about? At the same time that I was working on screenplays, I wrote picture books—retellings of folktales from the British Isles full of myth and magic: The Silver Cow, The Selkie Girl, and Tam Lin. For a long time I wanted to write a story about the invisible mischief-making spirit known in Britain as a boggart, and suddenly when I was on vacation in Scotland with a friend we saw a castle where I instantly knew my boggart lived! So out of that came two cheerful fantasy novels in the 1990s: The Boggart and The Boggart and the Monster.

Eventually the theatre and the writing sides of my life came together in my head, and I found I wanted to write a story about a modern American boy actor who finds himself onstage with William Shakespeare at the Globe Theatre, in London. At first I pushed this idea away, since I knew it would mean lengthy research into 17th century English life, not to mention Shakespeare, but I had made the mistake of mentioning it to Jack Langstaff, who proceeded to remind me of it enthusiastically at monthly intervals for a year. So I finally wrote King of Shadows, and sent the very first copy to Jack.

The next book was a fantasy called Green Boy, which came out of twenty years of visits to the Exuma Cays, in the Bahamas. When one beautiful, untouched little cay came under threat from development, I put both the threat and the island into this fantasy novel. James Lovelock's Gaia hypothesis, which suggests that the whole earth is a living organism, also haunts the book—as it did my very first novel, Mandrake. (You can find the hypothesis in Lovelock’s fascinating books, starting with Gaia.)

Having written a timeslip book that gave me the chance to meet my greatest hero, Shakespeare, I thought again about a tiny long-ago incident that had been floating about my head for years. Another hero, if you’re English, is Admiral Lord Nelson, who was killed at the Battle of Trafalgar while helping to save his country from being conquered by France and Spain, and somewhere I had read that the crew of his flagship H.M.S. Victory carried its tattered flag in his funeral procession through the streets of London. As his coffin was lowered into the crypt of St Paul’s Cathedral, the sailors were supposed to fold the flag to go down too— but they couldn’t bear it, because the flag was all they had left of him. So they ripped it apart, and each one of them kept a piece.

I thought: suppose one of those sailors was a ship’s boy, and suppose he kept his piece of flag all his life—and suppose it comes down to the present, to another boy—no, to a girl—and suppose— So I wrote Victory, about 18th century Sam and 21st century Molly, and it gave me the chance to meet Nelson.

As for what’s next.... Readers often ask writers where their ideas come from, incredulously, as if they already know it must be from an elusive and mysterious source. You can read my essays in Dreams & Wishes for my thoughts on imagination, and creating story.

Where do you currently live and work? I lived in Cambridge, Massachusetts for a long time, then moved to Connecticut for the seven years that I was married to Hume Cronyn—but when he died in 2003, I moved back to Massachusetts to be close to my kids and the four grandchildren (not to mention the six “step” grandkids and their children!).

I live on an almost-island in a saltmarsh in Marshfield, accessible to the mainland only when the tide is out. Here I sit and work, looking out at the Atlantic.

On the window sill there’s a magic talisman, a round green glass float once attached to a fisherman’s net, that I rescued from the beach. Not a beach here in America, but beyond the horizon—in Wales.

M. E. Kerr
Meaker was persuaded to try young adult fiction at the suggestion of author Louise Fitzhugh (Harriet the Spy), and chose to do so after reading Paul Zindel's The Pigman. She chose the pen name M. E. Kerr, as a phonetic play on her last name. Although the audience was different from Vin Packer's, Kerr's approach to her stories and characters seemed to vary little. She still addressed topics not usually covered by children's books —racism, AIDS, homosexuality, absent parents, social class differences— and her characters still had problems that had no easy solutions. She said of this direction, "I tend to write about people who struggle, who try to overcome obstacles, who usually do, but sometimes not. People who have all the answers and few problems have never interested me, not to write about, not to befriend." Kerr's books addressed functions and dysfunctions in relationships between parents and children, teachers and students, friends, and she often wrote about first loves.

Kerr's debut was extremely successful. Dinky Hocker Shoots Smack! was published in 1972 and was about an overweight girl whose mother is so preoccupied with assisting people addicted to drugs that she virtually ignores her own daughter. It was listed by the School Library Journal's 20th century 100 most significant books for children and young adults. The story was inspired by a class Meaker taught by going into high schools and talking to students about writing. One overweight girl wrote stories Meaker characterized as, "really grotesque"; when her mother, a local do-gooder, found out Meaker was encouraging her, she complained that Meaker was trying to get her daughter to "write weird." The novel would later be turned into an ABC Afterschool Special (as "Dinky Hocker)" in 1979 with Wendie Jo Sperber in the title role.

Is That You, Miss Blue?, published in 1975, involves a girl in a Virginia Episcopal boarding school who develops a crush on her religiously devout teacher. Kerr modeled the story on her own experiences in boarding school when she developed a crush on one of her own teachers.

1978's Gentlehands is about a young man who becomes involved with a young woman from a much wealthier family. When he tries to get to know his estranged grandfather, he learns that the man was a Nazi who killed Jews at Auschwitz. The premise for the book, stated Kerr, was, "I wanted to provoke the idea of what if you meet a nice guy, a really nice man, and what if you find out that in his past he wasn't such a nice man? How would you feel?"

In 1994's Deliver Us From Evie, 16-year-old Parr tells the story of his 18-year-old sister Evie's relationship with another girl and also of his own interest in a girl whose family rejects homosexuality as immoral. Kerr again addressed homosexuality in 1997's "Hello," I Lied, about a young man who finds himself pulled in multiple directions.

Her instructional book, Blood on the Forehead: What I Know About Writing (1998), arose in part from these experiences as a writing instructor.

Meaker received a lifetime achievement award as M. E. Kerr in 1993, the annual Margaret A. Edwards Award from the American Library Association, recognizing the "significant and lasting contribution to young adult literature" of four cited books: Dinky Hocker Shoots Smack! (1972), Gentlehands (1978), Me Me Me Me Me: Not a Novel (1983), and Night Kites (1986).

Joint biography
/Joint

--(81) 2014-02-28

who still needs Caldecott Medal]] refs?

We have no consensus re joint biography. Template talk:Authority control/Archive 2

Edgar Parin d'Aulaire


 * 1) REDIRECT Ingri and Edgar Parin d'Aulaire {redirect to joint biography}

Edgar Parin D'Aulaire


 * 1) REDIRECT Ingri and Edgar Parin d'Aulaire {R from cap}

{redirect to joint biography}

{R from person}

Redirects from individual names [2013-06-28][updated 2013-07-01]

1
 * Ingri d'Aulaire; Edgar Parin d'Aulaire --have all dates

--other forms Ingri D'Aulaire (R from cap); Ingri Parin d'Aulaire (R from alt name); Ingri Parin D'Aulaire; Ingri Parin; --other forms Edgar d'Aulaire; Edgar Parin D'Aulaire (R from cap); Edgar Parin Talk:Ingri and Edgar Parin d'Aulaire --AC done Ingri

(another Edgar) - not on the Talk page --GNDname only 2
 * Leo Dillon; Diane Dillon --Y cats, Diane living

Talk:Leo and Diane Dillon --ISFDB; Further reading interview

3
 * Alice Provensen; Martin Provensen --Y cats, Alice living

Talk:Alice and Martin Provensen --LC, WorldCat http://www.rmichelson.com/Artist_Pages/Provensen/Alice-Provensen.html

(another Martin) --GNDname only 4
 * Berta Hader; Elmer Hader --Y cats

Talk:Berta and Elmer Hader --UMN, UOre; LC, WorldCat

(2 berta) --GNDname only

(2 elmer) --GNDname only 5
 * Maud Petersham; Miska Petersham --Y cats

Talk:Maud and Miska Petersham --de Grummond, UMN; LC, WorldCat

6
 * Janet Ahlberg; Allan Ahlberg --Y cats, A living

Talk:Janet and Allan Ahlberg --Allan ISFDB; LC, WorldCat (daughter Jessica) 16:27, 18 May 2013‎ Kolja21 (talk | contribs)‎. . (17,875 bytes) (-45)‎. . (→‎External links: All 3 GND are wrong: not a single person, just a container for the name.) 7
 * Joe Krush; Beth Krush --Y cats, Joe living --

Category:University of the Arts (Philadelphia) alumni Talk:Joe and Beth Krush --ISFDB-joe (beth redundant); de Grummond, UMN (2); LC, WorldCat joe CZ joe CA

beth undiff beth CA 8
 * Mary Buff; Conrad Buff II -- Y cats [joint biography lacks Mary DoD, PoD]

Talk:Mary and Conrad Buff --deGrummond --includes Authority control completed for the family including Conrad III and Conrad IV

9
 * Greg Hildebrandt; Tim Hildebrandt --Y cats (and many)

--other form {R from people} Greg and Tim Hildebrandt Talk:Brothers Hildebrandt --ISFDB (Greg 8024 Tim 25736 not in the article) (tim de:Tim Hildebrandt)

Couples with biography of one that covers the other [2013-06-28]
 * Nonny Hogrogian; David Kherdian

Talk:Nonny Hogrogian

(The latter GND includes no German national library records but the VIAFs seem to be distinct; both certainly pertain to him.)
 * Lynn Poole; Gray Johnson Poole --other form Gray Poole

Talk:Lynn Poole now redirects End report 2013-06-28
 * updated 2013-07-01


 * Christo; Jeanne-Claude

Talk:Christo and Jeanne-Claude includes both AC templates

10
 * Stan Berenstain; Jan Berenstain --have all dates

--other form Berenstain; The Berenstains; Stanley berenstain; Janice Berenstain Talk: Stan and Jan Berenstain Mike Berenstain --other form Michael Berenstain --deGrummond
 * [//worldcat.org/identities/lccn-n79-131973 Works by or about Jan Berenstain] in libraries (WorldCat catalog)
 * Jan Berenstain at LC Authorities
 * [//worldcat.org/identities/lccn-n79-131972 Works by or about Stan Berenstain] in libraries (WorldCat catalog)
 * Stan Berenstain at LC Authorities
 * [//worldcat.org/identities/lccn-n80-035014 Works by or about Mike Berenstain] in libraries (WorldCat catalog)
 * Mike Berenstain at LC Authorities

Mike

Jan3=Stan5 Jan101=Stan103 Jan201=Stan204 Jan302=Stan304 --the last 2008 listing, two years after Stan's death; Stan301,303 are "with Mike Berenstain"
 * 2009 Jan 10, Stan 2
 * 2010 Jan 16, Stan 5
 * 2011 Jan 16, Stan 6
 * 2012 Jan 19, Stan 5
 * 2013 Jan 8, Stan 7

Most recent listings (by search and sort separately Jan; Jan & Mike; Mike)
 * Berenstain bears: thanksgiving all around
 * 2012 J&M http://lccn.loc.gov/2011927583
 * 2013-05 J&M http://lccn.loc.gov/2012950646
 * 2013-10 M http://lccn.loc.gov/2013935049
 * 2014-02 M http://lccn.loc.gov/2013944040

H. A. Rey; Margret Rey


 * Margot Zemach (no longer a Stub); Harve Zemach=>Margot (primary) --other form Harvey Fichstrom=>Margot (secondary)

Harve Z --no VIAF listings for Harvey Fichstrom

Hannelore Hahn

Louise Fatio apparently valid; Roger Duvoisin GNDname hits 203 records

old
Couples
 * Ingri and Edgar Parin d'Aulaire 1940
 * no:Ingri Parin d'Aulaire evidently shows no ac data


 * Leo and Diane Dillon 1976 1977
 * Alice and Martin Provensen 1984


 * couples who do have authority control information
 * Berta and Elmer Hader 1949 Berta at VIAF(no link->EN.wiki) --why added by VIAFbot?
 * LCCN VIAF= berta VIAF= elmer
 * DNB VIAF= berta VIAF= elmer(both undiff; no publ)


 * Maud and Miska Petersham 1946 Miska at VIAF(no link->EN.wiki) --why added by VIAFbot?
 * Maud at VIAF

Edgar

Ingri


 * Janet and Allan Ahlberg --with two R to joint biography, both in some cats
 * Joe and Beth Krush --with two R to joint biography, both in some cats
 * Mary and Conrad Buff --not in cat ; with joint Infobox writer
 * Brothers Hildebrandt --with one joint PERSONDATA and one Infobox comics creator under that name; in cat
 * VIAF Greg Hildebrandt, 1939- ->EN.wiki and so edited by VIAFbot November 2012; four interwiki joint biographies, no interwiki DE.wiki
 * DE.wiki covers only de:Tim Hildebrandt (deceased) PND: 12373908X | LCCN: n50033739
 * -- that is outdated template

= GND check August 2013 = test

WikiData contributions
 * http://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Special:Contributions/140.247.128.221
 * http://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Special:Contributions/P64

VIAF look back
EN.wiki biographies add {Authority control}

look back 2013-10-02, forward from 2013-09-01

Add links "You need to be logged in on this wiki and in the central data repository to use this feature." [login at both EN.wiki and WikiData does not help]

09 02 Kenneth Oppel 03 Margery Sharp 03 Lancelot Hogben 03 Andrew Taylor (author) 06 W J Corbett 07 Jason Wallace 09 Ian Wallace (illustrator)
 * By design from this time, my edit summary includes '{Authority control}' (preceded by word 'add' or symbol '+' or otherwise) iff I insert the template. If I revise a.c. template parameters only, then edit summary includes VIAF, LCCN, or GND but does not name the template. Previously my edit summary routinely or occasionally includes the term '{Authority control}' when I revise template parameters only.

Wallace, Wallace, and Corbett show no interwiki links, and nominally offer the option "Add links" rather than "Edit links". --Nominally they do, but the response to "Add links" is "You need to be logged in on this wiki and in the central data repository to use this feature." Login at both EN.wiki and WikiData does not help. Our biography and VIAF link reciprocally for Ian Wallace only. I don't know whether any WikiData entity corresponds to any of these three. Does the nominal option imply that?

At WikiData search 'Ian Wallace' returns eight hits that can be interpreted only by visiting the target pages. One of them is a match. Search for Jason Wallace returns no hits. Search for W J Corbett or W. J. Corbett returns 1 bad hit (Boston Corbett). Search for William J Corbett and William Jesse Corbett return no hits. Search for William Corbett returns 9 hits that do not match. One is our William Corbett disambiguation but this Corbett is not listed there or in the Corbett disambiguation en:Corbett (surname).

Taylor, Hogben, Sharp, and Oppel show the option "Edit links". Our biography and WikiData link reciprocally. For Oppel WikiData links inappropriate VIAF.

Edit summary 'WikiData' only two in this time Ulrich Biel and Louis Gaillait, both 0905. Another editor fixed Gaillait at WD soon after I used the example here.

Astrid Lindgren Memorial Award
Hartnett, Pullman - lindgren Lindgren identifiers 11, 11, 11

Astrid Lindgren Memorial Award

Category:Astrid Lindgren Memorial Award winners

13 winners in 11 years; 11 people
 * DE missing 2005a and two institutions

VIAF: 11 LCCN: 11 GND : 11 2013-08-17 GNDcheck and 2013 coverage

Hans Christian Andersen Award

 * one book 1956/60 (runners-up one book 1960/64); body of work from 1962
 * prepare dossier, send 5-10 books to every jury member and two executives 7-11 people, from 2002 13 people = 35-130 books
 * 2002, split juries
 * English language proceedings and translations of books in less familiar languages
 * Zurich 1956/70(Jella lepman's lifetime)
 * Basel 1990, 92, 96, 00, 02
 * Bologna 1980/88, 2012
 * 7 from outside North American and Europe, first 1974
 * From 1994 presentation of all candidates in special issue spnsored by Nissan

The Hans Christian Andersen Awards 1956–2002. IBBY. Copenhagen: Gyldendal. 2002. Written and edited by Eva Glistrup (with Sus Rostrup)

Hosted by Austrian Literature Online, University of Innsbruck, Austria. (c) 2002–2012.
 * Eva Glistrup, primary researcher and writer in Danish (Sus Rostrup wrote 10 of 44)
 * Patricia Crampton, translator into English
 * Image 7 = page 11, Foreword p11
 * 13, Introduction by EG p13
 * 44 portraits with selected bibliographies of 5 (or 6) works
 * 14–21, Half a Century of the Hans Christian Andersen Awards by EG p14-21
 * 22-109, 44 @ two pages each
 * "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, University of Innsbruck, Austria. Retrieved 2013-07-14.
 * "Hans Christian Andersen Award jury members 1956–2002". The Hans Christian Andersen Awards, 1956–2002. IBBY. Gyldendal. 2002. Pages 119–24.

Hosted by Austrian Literature Online, University of Innsbruck, Austria. Retrieved 2013-02-28.

Farjeon

 * The 1955 Carnegie Medal for British children's books and the inaugural, biennial Hans Christian Andersen Medal in 1956 both cited The Little Bookroom
 * She also received the first biennial, international Hans Christian Andersen Medal in 1956, which has become the highest lifetime recognition available to creators of children's books. Prior to 1962 the award cited a single book published during the preceding two years.

Lindgren

 * In 1958, Lindgren became the second recipient of the Hans Christian Andersen Award, an international award for youth literature.

The biennial Hans Christian Andersen Award conferred by the International Board on Books for Young People is the highest recognition available to a writer or illustrator of children's books. Bauer received the illustration award in 2010.

Pippi Longstocking (book); sv: Pippi Långstrump (bok); Oetinger 1949

Astrid Lindgren "speaks" to fans

Wikipedia talk:Plagiarism

Kästner

 * (lead) ... and children's literature. For the latter contributions he received the biennial, international Hans Christian Andersen Award in 1960.
 * The International Board on Books for Young People conferred its biennial Hans Christian Andersen Award for Writing in 1960, recognising his "lasting contribution to children's literature". [no ref]

Talk:The 35th of May, or Conrad's Ride to the South Seas
 * re E. Nesbit; Lion witch wardrobe

Andersen writers
Category:Hans Christian Andersen Award for Writing winners

Category:Hans Christian Andersen Award for Illustration winners

NO.wiki provides some coverage of all no:Template:HCAndersenprisen
 * DE missing -- 1968b, 2012
 * EN missing -- none

--late February generation CatScan Category:Hans Christian Andersen Award for Writing winners (31 pages; 30 biographies) Category:Wikipedia articles with VIAF identifiers = 30 of 30 biographies Category:Wikipedia articles with LCCN identifiers = 30 Category:Wikipedia articles with GND identifiers = 30

VIAF: 30 LCCN: 30 GND : 30 2013-08-17 GNDcheck (no error reports)

Waddell (ROI) is incorrect ✅ [reported at NO.wiki 2013-05-17]

"m one VIAF record covers both (") and EN.wiki=DE.wiki (m)

2013-08-17 writers done but this not checked: Machado records seem to be divided at DNB and VIAF seems to mix three people in two records.

For his lasting contribution he received the biennial, international Hans Christian Andersen Award for Writing in 1980.


 * occupation  = Writer, illustrator
 * nationality = American
 * period      =
 * genre       = Children's picture books
 * subject     =
 * notableworks = {{plainlist|
 * awards      = {{awd |Hans Christian Andersen Award for Writing | }}


 * is this for biographies of crime fiction authors?

{{tlx|WikiProject Novels|class=Start|importance=mid
 * crime-task-force=yes
 * crime-importance=}}

Andersen illustrators
Category:Hans Christian Andersen Award for Illustration winners

NO.wiki provides some coverage of all no:Template:HCAndersenprisen
 * DE only -- 1976, 1980, 1994, 1996, 2008 (missing 6)
 * EN only -- 1972, 1984, 1986 (missing 8)

--late February generation CatScan was 13 biographies; 9 VIAF; 3 LCCN; 3 GND Category:Hans Christian Andersen Award for Illustration winners (17 pages; 16 biographies) Category:Wikipedia articles with VIAF identifiers = 16 of 16 biographies Category:Wikipedia articles with LCCN identifiers = 16 : also missing Mesghali Category:Wikipedia articles with GND identifiers = 16 :

VIAF: 16 LCCN: 16 GND : 15 (Mesghali) 2013-08-19 GNDcheck (no error reports)

English-speaking nominees
pages 110–18

Natalie Babbitt


 * =highly commended; **=finalist

DE.wiki needs ✅ 0831 (only two)
 * ok Babbitt (need VIAF merge)
 * Tony Ross


 * Kenneth Oppel

VIAF {done}

2012: 27 + 30 ill; 32 nations 2014: 29 + 31 ill; 34 --Travis News Service 2013-04-17
 * AU 2013-04-07 2011-05-13 US 2013-06-15


 * 1980 1982 1986 1990 1992 Nominees booklets at ALO (literature.at)
 * 2002 "2002 (Hans Christian Andersen Awards 2002)". --speeches not found (ALO.uibk.ac.at)
 * 2004 "2004 (Hans Christian Andersen Awards 2004)". --with laudatio and two acceptance speeches 5 September 2004
 * 2006 "2006 (Hans Christian Andersen Awards 2006)".
 * IBBY Announces the Winners of the Hans Christian Andersen Awards 2006" Press Release 9 / 2004-2006. 27 March 2006. --with laudatio 21 September 2006
 * 2008 "2008 (Hans Christian Andersen Awards 2008)".
 * "IBBY Announces Winners of 2008 Hans Christian Andersen Awards" News Release 9 / 2006-2008. 31 March 2008. --with laudatio and two acceptance speeches 7 September 2008
 * 2010 "2010 (Hans Christian Andersen Awards 2010)". --with p s by Zohreh Ghaeni, acceptance speech by Bauer, and other contemporary material
 * "2010 HCA Winners and Finalists" --with laudatio and two acceptance speeches 11 September 2010
 * 2012 still current

Winners done --without using the available speeches and IBBY profiles as sources
 * 2002 Chambers, Blake (speeches missing)
 * 2004 Waddell, Velthuijs
 * 2006 Mahy, Erlbruch (speeches missing)
 * 2008 Schubiger[STUB] (Innocenti no biog)
 * 2010 Almond, Bauer[STUB]
 * 2012 Andruetto, Sis

2012 wri
 * 2012 capsule biographies
 * (no bio) "Christobel Mattingley"
 * Tim Wynne-Jones
 * Philip Pullman
 * Paul Fleischman

2012 ill
 * Bob Graham
 * (no bio) "Stéphane Jorisch"
 * John Burningham – Finalist
 * Chris Raschka

2014 wri
 * 2014 capsule biographies [EMPTY 2013-07-19]
 * "Nadia Wheatley"
 * "Kenneth Oppel"
 * "Jacqueline Wilson". IBBY.
 * "Jacqueline Woodson"

2014 ill [EMPTY 2013-07-19]
 * "Ron Brooks"
 * (no bio) "Philippe Béha"
 * "John Burningham"
 * "Bryan Collier"

Carnegie Medal
Carnegie Medal (literary award)

2013-05-24 all clear cases have been merged/redirected at VIAF

Sheena Porter LCCat has 4 bibliographic records, no LCCN as person

David Rees (author)

Philip Turner

" -- adequately merged at VIAF
 * DE coverage

- Ransome || 67261752 || " VIAF missing Garnett || 20607289 || "(no - Streatfeild || Susan Scarlett pseud. || " 14893012 VIAF missing Doorly || 79281124 || (no || EN, VIAF include nameholder Barne ||  59529178 || (no || EN, VIAF include nameholder Treadgold ||  45800428 || (no || EN, VIAF include nameholder - BB || 42761443 || "redirects LCCN missing - Linklater || 44337081 || "m - Goudge || 24602168 || "m - De La Mare || 2502254 || "m de:Walter de la Mare missing from Carnegie Medal record  Armstrong || 101370091 || (no || no GND record identified Allen || (no biog) Vipont ||  85084405 || (no || VIAF includes nameholder Foulds, Elfrid Vipont rather than namehold Vipont, Elfrida http://d-nb.info/gnd/107641623  - Harnett || 39971545 nameholder || Normdaten missing ||  - Norton || 17343096 || "m Osmond || (no biog) Welch/Oliver || 67814154 || (no || EN, VIAF have nameholder - Farjeon || Andersen - Lewis || 22144877 || "m - Mayne || 51693218 || mismatch || EN.wiki, VIAF have nameholder; should have GND=1021026190 - Pearce || 71395925 || "m - Sutcliff || 22178414 || "m Cornwall || (no biog) Boston || 111655690 || "(no - Clarke || 19168870 nameholder || "m after EN fix Burton || (no biog) Porter || 516527 || EN, VIAF include nameholder (no LCCN record) Turner ||  27596086 || "(no - Garner || 130767 || "m Peyton || 40116635 || "(no Harris || 95323122 Harris-Wijngaard nameholder || britische Schauspielerin MISTAKEN IDENTITY - Garfield || 111275537 || "m Blishen ||  76409325 || "(no - Southall || 62752550 || "m - Adams || 71386171 || "m - Lively || 108497462 || "redirect Hunter || 108983174 || "(no - Westall 2 || 39385373 || "m Mark 2 || 4941838 || "(no Kemp || 85107115 || "(no Rees ||  95332481 || "(no || VIAF includes nameholder - Dickinson 2 || 9845559 || "m  - Mahy 2 || 108802576 || "m - Crossley-Holland || 66502419 || "m - Doherty 2 || 39406261 || "m Price || 34497452 || "(no - McCaughrean || 54191408 || "m - Fine 2 || 113439390 || "redirect - Cross || 13038315 || "m - Swindells || 85102991 || "redirect - Breslin || 69168704 || "now ok - Pullman || 115199438 || "m - Burgess || 115547666 || "mismatch || now ok; VIAF=29617888 AU - Bowler || 30391984 || "m - Almond || Andersen - Chambers || Andersen - Naidoo || 32654422 || "m - Pratchett || 76382712 || "m - Creech || 22297876 || "m - Donnelly || 44538574 || "redirect - Cottrell Boyce || 85573412 || "mismatch || now ok; VIAF=54353070 PT - Peet || 20802687 || "m - Rosoff || 79549905 || "redirect - Reeve || 69155234 || "now ok - Dowd || 79557464 || "m - Gaiman || 103859257 || "redirect - Ness || 88114296 || "redirect - Gardner || needs 2013 coverage

Greenaway Medal
Kate Greenaway Medal

2013-05-24 all repaired at VIAF

2013-08-16 VIAF revisited for GND check ✅
 * GND unlink: *Stobbs, *Kennaway, Haley, *Grey
 * GND fix: *Rose


 * Stub per article tag

Category: Kate Greenaway Medal winners Category:Wikipedia articles with VIAF identifiers = 30 of 30 articles (31 including Janet Ahlberg redirect) Category:Wikipedia articles with LCCN identifiers = 30 Category:Wikipedia articles with GND identifiers = 26 (having unlinked 4)

DE.wiki 9 biographies, 13 medals Wildsmith || "m Burningham || "m Baynes || 101872923 || "now ok Blake || andersen Browne 2 || andersen Lee || "ok Child || "now ok Riddell 2 || "m Gravett 2 || "m

2013-08-20 DEcheck needs 2013 coverage

2013-08-22 DE.wiki edits done

Guardian Prize
48 winners (33 at DE) 18 carnegie (16 at DE)

GND unlink (*stub tag): Willard, Cawley, *Pilling, *Schlee

VIAF: 48 LCCN: 48 GND : 43 Branford plus four listed above 2013-08-20 GNDcheck

2013-08-22 DE.wiki edits done

Garfield || carnegie Garner || carnegie Aiken || "m Peyton || carnegie Christopher || LCCN Youd || LCCN Christopher || VIAF=66465191 bundle includes neither; contrast VIAF=197028078 http://viaf.org/viaf/197028078/
 * see also http://viaf.org/viaf/12830964/#Winchester,_Stanley
 * Wikipedia talk: Wikidata

Avery || "m Adams || carnegie Willard || VIAF list nameholder Cawley || VIAF list nameholder Bawden || "m Dickinson || carnegie Jones || "ok Davies || "m Schlee || VIAF list nameholder Carter || "now ok Magorian || "m Desai || "redirect King-Smith || "m Hughes || "redirect Pilling || VIAF list nameholder Aldridge || "m Thomas || "m McCaughrean || carnegie Fine || carnegie Westall || carnegie Anderson || "m Mayne || carnegie Waugh || "m Howarth || "m Pullman || carnegie Prince || "m Burgess || carnegie Branford || -- no GND Price || carnegie Wilson || "m Crossley-Holland || carnegie Hartnett || "m Haddon || 85413157 "now ok Rosoff || carnegie Thompson || VIAF missing ; wrong birthdate (see LCCN) Kate Thompson (author) ok except GND=124402151 Kate Thompson (romantic novelist) {Authority control |VIAF=85313000 |LCCN=nr/2002/033427 |GND=124402046} ✅ Reeve || carnegie Valentine || "now ok Ness || carnegie Peet || carnegie Paver || "m Mulligan || "m Cottrell Boyce || carnegie

2013 top page -- nearly empty, under old website structure, not sure it will be used -- http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/guardian-children-s-fiction-prize-2013

2012 change of website/URL structure http://www.guardian.co.uk/childrens-books-site/guardian-children-s-fiction-prize-2012

Category: Guardian Children's Fiction Prize winners
 * 2013-05-31 count 48
 * 30 who did not win the Carnegie Medal

Aiken the Guardian Children's Fiction Prize, a once-in-a-lifetime book award judged by a panel of British children's writers,

judged by a panel of British children's writers recognises the year's best book by an author who has not yet won it.

With five exceptions we call the GCFP winners simply "British" or "English" (none Scottish or Welsh).
 * 1986 James Aldridge, AU-british — born 1918 AU, moved to London 1938, lives there
 * 1983 Anita Desai, Indian — born 1937 India, mother tongue German; teaches creative writing, MIT and elsewhere NY/NE from 1993
 * 2002 Sonya Hartnett, AU — born 1968 Victoria, debut novel 1983; many books publ US/UK but resides Australia
 * 2008 Patrick Ness, US-born dual cit — VA army base 1971, debut story 1997, first novel underway at move to London 1999
 * 2004 Meg Rosoff, US-born London — Boston 1956, England 1977-80 and from 1989

Henrietta Branford --done  identity unknown  search VIAF Peter Carter (author) --done WORLDCAT conflates two Anita Desai -ok first non-resident winner Mark Haddon --done ; also  DNB needs attention there;  AU    Sonya Hartnett --done GUARDIAN PRIZE first Australian? if not whom? when opened to commonwealth writers? --yes first Australian as Aldridge 1986 was a 30-year resident of Britain; second non-resident winner Lesley Howarth --done  AU shortlist 1994 The Flower King Jeff Cummins NE  US  DE

Andy Mulligan (author) --done  FR

K. M. Peyton --GUARDIAN FOR TRILOGY MAY NEED SOURCE --now needed only in main article Guardian Prize

Samuel Youd --done

John Christopher Stanley Winchester --also VIAF=289662001 NE others --others VIAF=287595903; etc

Printz Award
Printz Award the annual Michael L. Printz Award from the American Library Association recognizing the year's "best book written for teens, based entirely on its literary merit".

some winner citations or speeches
 * Chambers 2003 (speech not available 2013-10-01) "2003 Printz Award". Young Adult Library Services Association (YALSA). American Library Association. (ALA).

85877029

14 winners from 2000; 13 biog (7 of first 12 at DE.wiki) 2013-03-08 Category: Michael L. Printz Award winners Category:Wikipedia articles with VIAF identifiers = 13 of 13 Category:Wikipedia articles with LCCN identifiers = 13 Category:Wikipedia articles with GND identifiers = 12 (John Corey Whaley)

GND unlink: Yang

VIAF: 13 LCCN: 13 GND : 12 2013-08-20 GNDcheck; DE.wiki needs 2012 2013

AC complete in biographies; no work on book articles

Caldecott
--early February generation CatScan in about 80 seconds by the "more powerful rewrite" Category:Caldecott Medal winners (68 pages; 67 biographies) Category:Wikipedia articles with authority control information = only 58 of 67 with the following 9 oversights --mid February 2013-02-21 Category:Wikipedia articles with VIAF identifiers = 64 of 67 biographies, with three joint biography oversights and two errors Category:Wikipedia articles with LCCN identifiers = 59 Category:Wikipedia articles with GND identifiers = 56

2013-08-20: [of 66 biographies, 5 joint] 61, 61, 37

at DE.wiki (18, should be 15 with GND link) Lawson || || "m McCloskey 2 || || " LCCN VIAF missing Ward || || "m Bemelmans || || "m Brown 3 || || --VIAF nameholder Feodor Stepanovich Rojankovsky || "m missing at DE Caldecott Sendak || || andersen Montresor || || "m Emberley || || "m Steig || || "redirect --Kolja, what is the long list of "Selected titles" displayed by VIAF (not DNB) http://viaf.org/viaf/190380684/ Lobel || || "m Van Allsburg 2 || || " extra-large bundle (cf Bauer); GND=172431018 needs merge with the other at at DNB Macaulay || || "m Wiesner 3 || 79087089 || " LCCN VIAF missing Rathmann || || --VIAF nameholder Taback || || "m Selznick || || "m Klassen || || --DE,VIAF nameholder

2013-08-22 DE.wiki edits done

GND unlink (3): BROWN, *RATHMANN, KLASSEN (with DE.wiki biographies)

GND unlink (15): Burton, Jones, Politi(unreferenced), Milhous, *Ets, Ness, Lent, Egielski, Schoenherr, *McCully, Wisniewski, *Azarian, *Rohmann, *Krommes, Pinkney GND nolink (4): *Handforth, Goble, Diaz, Stead; GND ? link (1): Gerald E. McDermott (GNDName for Gerand and Gerald R., neither has been linked here)

2013-08-24 61, 61, 39; ISNI 5 (McCloskey Sendak Steig Van Allsburg Handforth)

Handforth is one of 5 altho that one is not in the ISNI category

Politi is one of 39 altho that one is not in the GND category

VIAF present
CALDECOTT
 * 38-39 j [41]42-44 *j 47 *j (three and 0 of 12)
 * ** 52-57 " 59 * 61 "* 64-69 (four and 0 of 20)
 * & [71] " 73 **jj* 79 " 81-82 "j 85 "&* 89 (four and two of 20)
 * 90-94 & 96 * 98 * 00-01 "*& 05-06 "&**&" 13 (five and four of 24)

not at DE.wiki; not joint (43)

Newbery
Runners-up, History

Marshall in progress 2013-07-13

Charles Boardman Hawes (~done), Bernard Marshall, William Bowen, Padraic Colum, Cornelia Meigs (~done),

Frederic G. Melcher; Anne Carroll Moore (stub section) history - diversity Thu 6:00-7:30 ; Children's Book Council (United States) (ultra-stub); American Booksellers Association (nil)

--early January generation CatScan in about 40 seconds by the "more powerful rewrite" Category:Newbery Medal winners (86 biographies) Wikipedia articles with authority control information = only 80 of 86 with the following 6 oversights 2013-01-29, coverage is 87 of 87 following update for 2013 Medal

2013-02-21 Wikipedia articles with VIAF identifiers 87 (all) Wikipedia articles with LCCN identifiers 86 -- Laura Amy Schlitz Wikipedia articles with GND identifiers 84 -- Schlitz, Monica Shannon, Maia Wojciechowska

2013-02-02
Notes subsequent to reading the manual, asking some questions, etc, --manually visiting these people at DE.wikipedia


 * 1) Avi --Edward Irving Wortis (reciprocal); DE gives VIAF=32085543 that links to a distinct page (Avi Wortis) with FR data(!) fixed
 * 2) De Jong --Meindert DeJong (reciprocal); DE gives VIAF=100238939 which redirects to our value fixed
 * 3) O'Brien --Robert C. O’Brien (reciprocal); DE gives VIAF=100252716 that links to a distinct page with AU,CZ,NL data(!) fixed
 * 4) Sachar --Louis Sachar (reciprocal) among many; DE gives VIAF=14937012 which redirects to our value
 * 5) Sorensen --Virginia Sorensen only; no DE biography, mis-spelled Sorenson on some pages including disambiguation! fixed

--WorldCat "Vanderpool, Clare" links to LC Authority at errol.oclc.org and to VIAF http://viaf.org/viaf/101414162/ "This VIAF Cluster has been deleted. It is no longer part of VIAF."
 * Clare Vanderpool --no DE biography

K. M. Peyton WorldCat link to Wikipedia are missing although it recognizes this pseud. for KWH & M Peyton

No German-language translation? 36. 40. 41. 48^ 49 53 60. 61* 65. 70. 76. 78^ 83. 85. 87. 94. 05.

. confirmed ^ GND missing
 * Green Knowe books 1-3 only

this includes four (of five?) that concern WWII in Europe, mainly the English homefront: 40 41 78 05 (and 76 concerns RAF)

VIAF present
Newbery Medal

Latham, Jean Lee
 * http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n81104001.html
 * http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/no2007078689.html
 * http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/no2007084719.html

Category:American children's writers Category:American historical novelists

NEWBERY no problem except perhaps lack of DE.wiki or GND coverage
 * 1922-23 ** 26-28 * 30-31 * 33-39 (four of 18 tabulated below)
 * 1940-46 * 48-54 &*& 58-59 (two and two of 20 tabulated below)
 * " 61 " 63-67[68-69 previously revised by p64]
 * 70-71 & 73[74]75-76 * [78]79-80 " 82-83[84] * 86-89 (two and one of 30)
 * 90-93 " [95]96[97]98 &
 * 00-01 *& 04-05 *** [09] *& [12-13] (five and three of 24)
 * Totals tabulated below, 13 and 6 of 92

Wilde, O. The ballad of Reading gaol, 1928.

Will at VIAF is not ours: http://viaf.org/viaf/64723918/#Will,_1927-2000

WorldCat maintains separate
 * Will http://worldcat.org/identities/lccn-n50-53682
 * William Lipkind http://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-nr95-034483 [new record 1995?] "controlled identity Will,1904-"

Der kleine Honigbär Lipkind, William. - Freiburg i. Br. : Herder, 1969

2013-02-15 Nicholas (broken) http://viaf.org/viaf/search?query=local.names+all+%22mordvinoff%22&stylesheet=/viaf/xsl/results.xsl&sortKeys=holdingscount&maximumRecords=100

DE.wiki needs
 * Lofting VIAF missing

EN.wiki GND unlink (1): O'BRIEN

GND unlink (21): Hawes, Finger, Kelly, Lewis, Meigs, Seredy, Sperry, Lenski, Bailey, Estes, Latham, Sorensen, Neville, Hunt, Rylant, Perkins, Patron, Schlitz, Stead, Vanderpool, Gantos GND nolink (2): Shannon, Wojciechowska

2013-08-24 after GNDcheck work at EN.wiki VIAF: 87 LCCN: 87 GND : 71 (expecting 63) inclg those eight listed below ISNI: 21 incl Seredy, O'Brien, Hunt, Estes, Lenski, Sperry, Neville, Sorensen

at DE.wiki Lofting VIAF, Persondaten

Arthur Bowie Chrisman --ok without incident although DNB lists no publ

2013-02-04 edit outstanding at DE
 * Avi

WorldCat: 'there you are' WorldCat: 'blowing cogs' [http://www.avi-writer.com/books/categories/whatsnew.html Avi: "What's New?"

Wilder Medal
In 1989 she received the Laura Ingalls Wilder Medal from the U.S. professional librarians for her "substantial and lasting contributions to children's literature". At the time it was awarded every three years.

Seuss: His cartoons strongly supported President Roosevelt's handling of the war, combining exhortations to ration goods and contribute to the war effort with frequent attacks on Congress

Sendak: The Rosenbach Museum & Library (ext link)

{dead} Washington Post, Toronto National Post, The Contemporary Jewish Museum

Laura Ingalls Wilder Medal;

19 winners in sixty years from 1954 (7 of first 12 in DE.wiki) cycle length 6; 5 5 5 5; 3 3 3 3 3 3 3; 2 2 2 2 2 2 2013-03-10 Category: Laura Ingalls Wilder Medal winners Category:Wikipedia articles with VIAF identifiers = 19 Category:Wikipedia articles with LCCN identifiers = 19 Category:Wikipedia articles with GND identifiers = 18 (Judson)

at DE.wiki - nothing to fix unless main article VIAF: 19 LCCN: 19 GND : 17 (Brown, Judson) --dePaola via Wikidata 2013-08-25

GND check 2013-08-25
 * unlink: Judson --ISNI, dePaola

Edwards Award
Banned & Challenged Books. ALA.
 * 100 authors by decade 1990-1999, 2000-2009
 * books by year

ALA press releases (recent)

Press releases from the previous year are located at the American Libraries Magazine website.

Find press releases issued prior to April 10, 2010. Press Release Archive

Example (2012)

Margaret A. Edwards Award; Edwards Award de:Margaret A. Edwards Award; de:Benutzer:P64de/Margaret A. Edwards Award

25 winners in 26 years from 1988; 25 biogs (no other languages) no category

Note: see Hinton, Peck

GNDcheck 2013-08-25 needs DE fix : Duncan, Crutcher, Card needs EN fix : update (2): Crutcher, Lipsyte ✅

The ALA Margaret A. Edwards Award recognizes one writer and a particular body of work for "significant and lasting contribution to young adult literature". Voigt won the annual award in 1995, citing seven books: Homecoming, Dicey's Song, A Solitary Blue, Building Blocks, The Runner, Jackaroo, and Izzy, Willy-Nilly (published 1981 to 1986).

(‡) The young-adult librarians cited five books when Zindel won the 2002 Edwards Award.

(YALSA 2005 page incorporates 2005 press release --as do 2008 to 2013)

Scarecrow Studies in Young Adult Literature: Richard Peck at Google Books

Batchelder Award
Mildred L. Batchelder Award; de:Mildred L. Batchelder Award (more than half of more than 40)

DE problems Steiner, Frank, Nilsson, Bondoux ✅ Schami VIAF=98183931 GNDName=1033042609 Reuter VIAF=85802227 GNDName=177155388 need report: Steiner two GNDPerson

Leftover reported to Kolja21: de:Daniella Carmi

EN problems redirect: Toshi (upgrade done) add AC: Richter, Hartling, Reuter, Schami, Funke (all complete; little/no other work except Persondata) VIAF only: Zei, Baumann, Miyabe, Uehashi (all except Uehashi complete)

‡ Originalsprache deutsch ‡ Erich Kästner ANDERSEN Babbis Friis-Baastad Alki Zei 3 --(no DE biog)-- VIAF links GNDName=178106372; should be VIAF=79038347 ‡ Hans Baumann (writer) --DE "VLG ‡ Hans Peter Richter --DE "VLG S. R. Van Iterson Zei Alexsander Linevskii ‡ Ruth Hürlimann Cecil Bødker ANDERSEN none 1978 (two 1979) ‡ Christine Nöstlinger ANDERSEN ‡ de:Jörg Steiner CH --DE V:LG --DE lists mismatch  and thus GNDPerson=120990415 VIAF search Steiner Zei de:Els Pelgrom NL [Else Koch] --DE "VLG Harry Kullman Maruki Toshi --EN redirect --DE "VLG Astrid Lindgren ANDERSEN Uri Orlev 4 ANDERSEN Christophe Gallaz, illus. de:Robert Innocenti ‡ de:Rudolf Frank (Schriftsteller) DE --what is this DE page? de:Ulf Nilsson (Autor) SE --DE LG VIAF=112283789 missing ‡ Peter Härtling --DE "VLG  Bjarne Reuter 2   --DE VLG  VIAF bad ‡ Rafik Schami   -- DE VLG  VIAF bad Orlev none, 1993 Pilar Molina Llorente Reuter Orlev Kazumi Yumoto ‡ de:Josef Holub (Autor) 2 DE --DE "VLG ‡ Schoschana Rabinovici Anton Quintana de:Daniella Carmi IS --DE VL GNDName=103432272 (7 Publ) GNDName=1037390040 ["Carmi, Daniella" 1 link, hers] GNDName=176160140 ‡ de:Karin Gündisch DE --DE "VLG ‡ Cornelia Funke --DE "VLG Orlev Joëlle Stolz ‡ Holub Jean-Claude Mourlevat Miyuki Miyabe --DE "VLG Nahoko Uehashi --(no DE biog) de:Annika Thor SE --DE "VLG de:Anne-Laure Bondoux FR --DE V:Lbad:G LCCN=n2004042074 de:Bibi Dumon Tak NL --DE "VLG ‡ de:Anne C. Voorhoeve DE --DE "VLG

Phoenix Award
Phoenix Award

28 awards in 28 years; 25 people
 * EN missing 1 -- 2002 (have 24 of 25 biographies)
 * DE missing 9 -- 1986 88 91 92 95 99 2000 02 12 (16 of 25 biogs)

2013-08-26 need fix DE.wiki: unlink GND: Burch, Haugaard fix GND: Engdahl need error report DNB?: Hunter, O'Neal

Whitbread
Whitbread Award; Costa Book Awards


 * Children's literary prizes and awards at CCL
 * from 2006 Costa Children's Book Award at CCL


 * 1980-2005 Whitbread Children's Book Award at Christchurch City Libraries
 * 1972-1996 The Whitbread Children's Book of the Year --dkbrown at ucalgary.ca

DE.wiki done main article

EN.wiki done add {ac}: Wallace (with Talk and email to him!), Corbett add LG: Aldridge, Gavin add L: Kelley, Newbery

distinct creators -LAP J Wallace VGmixed "VL  two LCCN need merge IDENTITY UNCERTAIN email to the children's writer 2013-09-06 S2- AP A Kelley VL S2ILAP L Newbery VL; VIAF links GNDName +3+1 S2ILAP J Gavin "VLG 2i AP de:Roland Dahl "m VLG S i AP WJCorbett VL; VIAF links GNDName +5 S2iLAP A Aldridge VLG; "VG links here; "VL is distinct

also William Jason Wallace, 1970- VLGname  GNDperson; two VIAF need merge
 * William Jason Wallace at Library of Congress Authorities — with 1 catalogue records

S2IL also Moira Young (redirects) VLGname  GNDperson; two VIAF need merge
 * Moira Young at Library of Congress Authorities — with 2 catalogue records (Dust Lands series 1, 2)

C13 2012 Sally Gardner, Maggot Moon 2011 Moira Young (redirects), Blood Red Road, debut 2010 Jason Wallace, Out of Shadows, debut 2009 Patrick Ness, The Ask and the Answer (Walker); Chaos Walking, book two 2008 Michelle Magorian, Just Henry 2007 Ann Kelley, The Bower Bird (Luath) 2006 Linda Newbery, Set in Stone (novel) (David Fickling) 2005 Kate Thompson (author), The New Policeman Frank Cottrell Boyce, Framed Geraldine McCaughrean, The White Darkness Hilary McKay, Permanent Rose 2004 Geraldine McCaughrean, Not the End of the World 2003 David Almond, The Fire-Eaters (Hodder) Book of the Year (not Children's): Mark Haddon, The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time 2002 Hilary McKay, Saffy's Angel 2001 Philip Pullman, The Amber Spyglass (Book of the Year) Eoin Colfer, Artemis Fowl Eva Ibbotson, Journey to the River Sea Terry Jones, The Lady and the Squire 2000 Jamila Gavin, Coram Boy 1999 J K Rowling, Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban (Bloomsbury) C98 1998 David Almond, Skellig 1997 Andrew Norriss, Aquila 1996 - Anne Fine, The Tulip Touch — w shortlist summaries of all the nominated books -dkbrown 1995 - Michael Morpurgo, The Wreck of the Zanzibar 1994 - Geraldine McCaughrean, Gold Dust C92 1993 - Anne Fine, Flour Babies 1992 - Gillian Cross, The Great Elephant Chase 1991 - Diana Hendry, Harvey Angell 1990 - Peter Dickinson, AK 1989 - Hugh Scott [?], Why Weeps the Brogan? 1988 - Judy Allen, Awaiting Developments 1987 - Geraldine McCaughrean, A Little Lower Than the Angels 1986 - Andrew Taylor [b. 1944], The Coal House 1985 - Janni Howker, The Nature of the Beast 1984 - Barbara Willard, The Queen of the Pharisees' Children --no mention 1983 - Roald Dahl, The Witches (book) 1982 - W J Corbett, The Song of Pentecost 1981 - Jane Gardam, The Hollow Land 1980 - Leon Garfield, John Diamond C79 1979 - Peter Dickinson, Tulku 1978 - Philippa Pearce, ill. by Alan Baker, The Battle of Bubble and Squeak (Bubble and Squeak) 1977 - Shelagh Macdonald, No End to Yesterday 1976 - Penelope Lively, A Stitch in Time 1975 - No Award 1974 - Russell Hoban and Quentin Blake, ill., How Tom Beat Captain Najork and His Hired Sportsmen (Cape) — picture book and Jill Paton Walsh, The Emperor's Winding Sheet 1973 - Alan Aldridge, ill., and William Plomer, verse, The Butterfly Ball and the Grasshopper's Feast — picture book adaptation of Roscoe, 1802 1972 - Rumer Godden, The Diddakoi 1971 no Children's Book award

41 winning works in 42 years to 2012 (none 1971 1975, two 1974)
 * 79 90 Dickinson
 * 87 94 04 McCaughrean
 * 93 96 Fine
 * 98 03 Almond