Frontispiece
Samstag, 7. Oktober 2017
Lucy Fitch Perkins: Illustrations for A Midsummer-Night's Dream
Lucy Fitch Perkins (July 12, 1865 – March 18, 1937) was an American illustrator and writer of children's books. In 1906, Perkins published her first work, The Goose Girl, a collection of children's rhymes. A year later, she followed with A Book of Joys: A Story of a New England Summer, but both works had limited popular appeal. In 1911, she published The Dutch Twins, her first major work. The book was inspired by friend Edwin Osgood Grover,
who saw a picture Perkins drew of a pair of Dutch children. Grover
suggested to Perkins that she design a series centered around the twins.
Perkins took the advice, and the Twins series were a popular success. She published 26 books in the Twins series for the Houghton Mifflin Company.
For each book, Perkins would try to interview an individual who grew up
in the given country to gain an understanding of the particular
customs. Later books in the series, such as The American Twins of the Revolution, supplanted history for geography as the basis of the twins' backgrounds (Wikipedia).
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