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Caldecott Medal - First Edition Identification



 
 
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  #1  
Old June 5th 06, 04:55 AM posted to rec.collecting.books
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Default Caldecott Medal - First Edition Identification

The Man Who Walked Between Two Towers (2003)

The Man Who Walked Between Two Towers, written & illustrated by
Mordicai Gerstein; Roaring Brook Press, 2003

2004 Caldecott Medal

Children's Picturebook Price Guide Value: $70 Fine

Essential identifying point
Copyright page: Must have two complete number lines, as follows

ISBN 0-7613-1791-0 (trade edition)
1 3 5 7 9 10 8 6 4 2
ISBN 0-7613-2868-8 (library binding)
1 3 5 7 9 10 8 6 4 2

Book design by Filomena Tuosto
Printed in the United States of America
First Edition

Essential Identifying Point
Page 13: In later printings, "five-eighths" was changed to
"seven-eighths" in the following line

"To his end of the stronger line, Philippe tied the cable on which he
would walk. It was five-eighths of an inch thick."

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  #2  
Old June 5th 06, 04:56 AM posted to rec.collecting.books
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Default Caldecott Medal - First Edition Identification

Ferdinand (1936)

Ferdinand; written by Munro Leaf, illustrated by Robert Lawson
Viking Press; 1936

Children's Picturebook Price Guide Value: $5,000 VG+

Essential identifying point
Copyright page: Line with "FIRST PUBLISHED SEPTEMBER 1936". with no
additional printings listed.

Non-essential
DJ flap price "$1.00"

Background Information
Ferdinand was a national phenomenon in the late 1930's after it's
publication. The anti-fight message struck a chord with a world
infected with war. By 1938, in it's first two years of publication,
Ferdinand was reprinted over ten times. In 1938, Disney released an
animated film "Ferdinand The Bull". Life Magazine, the leading
periodical of it's time, published articles on the book and it's
creators in two separate issues. The Feb. 21, 1938 issue featured a
story titled "Ferdinand, The Bull Who Loves Flowers, Is Now A
Grownups Hero" (Bibliophiles will love the Carl Sandburg cover; the
article, however is about Sandburg singing folk songs?). The Nov. 28,
1938 issue highlighted the Disney film, along with photographs showing
the multitude of toys and other cross-promotional material being
merchandised. The magnitude of merchandising material would be common
place today, however was ground breaking at the time.

Ferdinand was the highlight of author Munro Leaf's career. He was
writer and illustrator for a series of "Can Be Fun" books (i.e.
Manners Can Be Fun, Safety, Grammar, etc...), and did author a
Caldecott Honor winning book, however nothing came close to the
notoriety he garnered for Ferdinand. Illustrator Robert Lawson did
have significant commercial success after Ferdinand, both as an
illustrator and as an author. In 1937, he won a Caldecott Honor award
for his illustrations for Four And Twenty Blackbirds, then won another
Caldecott Honor in 1938 for Wee Gillis, which was authored by Munro
Leaf. Lawson was the illustrator for Mr. Popper's Penguins, which
won a Newbery Honor award in 1938.

In 1940, Lawson won the Caldecott Medal for They Were Good And Strong,
a book he both wrote and illustrated. Lawson was the illustrator for
the 1942 Newbery Medal book, Adam Of The Road. Finally, Lawson won the
Newbery Medal in 1944 for Rabbit Hill, a book he both wrote and
illustrated. (Lawson also did the decorations and endpapers for
Putnam's 1939 publication of T.H. White's Sword In The Stone, which
was later turned into a Disney feature film.)

Ferdinand has been in print since it's publication in 1936, and has
been translated into a number of foreign languages. How many fiction
books published since 1936 have been translated into Latin? The
anti-fight sentiment still rings true today.

  #3  
Old June 5th 06, 04:59 AM posted to rec.collecting.books
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Default Caldecott Medal - First Edition Identification

Abraham Lincoln (1939)

Abraham Lincoln; authored and illustrated by Ingri & Edgar Parin
d'Aulaire
Doubleday, Doran & Co. ; 1939

1940 Caldecott Medal

Children's Picturebook Price Guide Value: $1,600 VG+

Essential identifying point
Copyright page: Line with "FIRST EDITION".

  #4  
Old June 7th 06, 05:48 AM posted to rec.collecting.books
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Default Caldecott Medal - First Edition Identification

Looking for first edition identification points on the following
Caldecott Medal winning books:

1943 The Little House
1949 The Big Snow
1963 The Snowy Day
1965 May I Bring A Friend?
1970 Sylvester And The Magic Pebble
1971 A Story, A Story
1972 One Fine Day

Please don't use Baumgarten as reference; would like actual title page
or copyright page information (whichever is applicable) and dj price,
plus dj flap info if needed for first identification.

thanks,
Stan
www.1stedition.net

 




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