Caryll edited the overview of Felicia Bond 2 days ago.
Felicia Bond, illustrator, was born to American parents in Yokohama, Japan, where she lived for two years. Bond grew up in Bronxville, New York and Houston, Texas with her four brothers and two sisters. It was while living in New York that she observed a beam of light coming in her bedroom window at age five and knew that art was her calling. Bond cites numerous inspirations as a child, among them the covers of The New Yorker, the drawings in her Girl Scout Handbook, the sketches her mother drew for her and her siblings, and the art in children's books. Bond was especially drawn to the painterly, expressive style of Ludwig Bemelmans in his Madeline books and the sensitive ink drawings by Garth Williams in Charlotte's Web and Stuart Little. For many years she closely examined the work of Charles Schulz, renowned for his Peanuts comic strip, and credits him as making a lasting impression on her.
At age twenty-two Bond moved to New York City with nine hundred dollars and worked several jobs, including illustrating botanical books, working as a freelance scene painter in a children's museum, and being an art director for Margaret K. McElderry Books. During this time she took classes at The School of Visual Arts and put together a portfolio of work intended for children's books. Bond was offered five contracts in short order and left behind her original idea of pursuing her painting. By the time Felicia Bond was twenty-six the first book she both wrote and illustrated, Poinsetta and Her Family, had been published. Four more books of Bond's own quickly followed before she illustrated If You Give a Mouse a Cookie in 1985. Bond has also illustrated, among other works, Big Red Barn, written by Margaret Wise Brown, The Big Green Pocketbook, written by Candice Ransom, Little Porcupine's Christmas, written by Joseph Slate and The Right Number of Elephants, written by Jeff Sheppard. Felicia Bond is both author and illustrator of numerous other works, including Poinsettia and her Family, Poinsettia and the Firefighters, The Day It Rained Hearts, The Halloween Play, Tumble Bumble, and Big Hugs, Little Hugs.
If You Give a Mouse a Cookie, the first collaborative work written by Laura Numeroff and illustrated by Felicia Bond, quickly became established as a popular favorite and is today considered a contemporary classic, with over four million copies sold. A series of seventeen titles followed, with sales exceeding sixteen million. They have been translated into more than thirteen languages. The If You Give... Book™ series has garnered numerous awards, and their popularity is witnessed by their consistent presence on The New York Times Best Seller List. Many of the books were the #1 best-sellers in the picture book category. The If You Give... Book™ series has become so embedded in our culture that If You Give a Mouse a Cookie was mentioned in the movie Airforce One and Oprah Winfrey chose If You Give a Pig a Pancake as one of her favorite things in 2000. Winfrey also included it on her list Oprah’s Favorite Things from A-Z in that same year. If You Give a Moose a Muffin was the answer to a question on Jeopardy!. Many of the books in the If You Give... Book™ series have been adapted into plays for children's theaters across the country, The Bronx Zoo in New York featured Felicia Bond's art in their Children's Zoo for one year and Bond's artwork has been used to create murals in the wings of children's hospitals. The If You Give... Book™ series has fans of all ages from all over the world including Japan, where an entire Tokyo city bus was painted with Bond's images of Mouse. Mouse also made it to the White House; in Laura Bush's Celebration of American Authors at the 2001 Presidential Inauguration Felicia Bond and Laura Numeroff were among those honored for their If You Give... Book™ series, and the former First Lady writes that the Bush family cat India's favorite book was If You Take a Mouse to the Movies. A bronze sculpture of her sleeping on the book is included in the George W. Bush Presidential Library. First Lady Michele Obama read If You Give a Mouse a Cookie on The White house lawn during the 2009 Easter Egg Roll. The website mousecookiebooks.com, posted by its publisher, HarperCollins, is an interactive site for children, parents, teachers, and librarians alike.
Bond continues to write as well as illustrate, and is currently scheduled to create the art for an upcoming book with HarperCollins, A Mother's Goodnight, written by Margaret Wise Brown. A new book in the If You Give... Book™ series (If You Give a Mouse a Brownie) is due to be published in 2014.
In her illustrations Felicia Bond's signature style is characterized by rich, vibrant watercolor, often with a black line used for graphic effect. Bond's use of white space is often similarly applied, especially in her distinctive design of the books in the If You Give... Book™ series. Bond's book Big Hugs, Little Hugs uses mixed media collage, which reflects her painting style from her early twenties.
Bond personalizes many of her illustrations by discreetly writing the names of family, friends, and pets in the art. She has said she started doing this years ago, inspired by the cross-hatched ink artwork in The New York Times by Al Hirschfeld, who hid his daughter's name, Nina, at least once in almost every drawing.
Bond's writing style varies in content but is often narrative and character based. Poinsettia and Her Family and Poinsettia and the Firefighters came about from her own childhood. Other stories began as an aimless doodle, such as the whimsical The Day It Rained Hearts and the playful Tumble Bumble. Her book Big Hugs, Little Hugs is more conceptual in nature and evolved from a dream that she merged with a comforting story her father told her when she was a child and couldn't fall asleep. In interviews she has said her ideas come from an "impulsive and intuitive place", that she "lives a story" instead of tells it. She works to keep the "mysterious third thing" alive in a book while she hones the narrative ark and pacing of the words and design. She often compares the making of a book to cooking, a musical score, or a dance.
Felicia Bond currently lives in Santa Fe, New Mexico.
Caryll edited the overview of Felicia Bond 2 days ago.
Felicia Bond, illustrator, was born to American parents in Yokohama, Japan, where she lived for two years. Bond grew up in Bronxville, New York and Houston, Texas with her four brothers and two sisters. It was while living in New York that she observed a beam of light coming in her bedroom window at age five and knew that art was her calling. Bond cites numerous inspirations as a child, among them the covers of The New Yorker, the drawings in her Girl Scout Handbook, the sketches her mother drew for her and her siblings, and the art in children's books. Bond was especially drawn to the painterly, expressive style of Ludwig Bemelmans in his Madeline books and the sensitive ink drawings by Garth Williams in Charlotte's Web and Stuart Little. For many years she closely examined the work of Charles Schulz, renowned for his Peanuts comic strip, and credits him as making a lasting impression on her.
At age twenty-two Bond moved to New York City with nine hundred dollars and worked several jobs, including illustrating botanical books, working as a freelance scene painter in a children's museum, and being an art director for Margaret K. McElderry Books. During this time she took classes at The School of Visual Arts and put together a portfolio of work intended for children's books. Bond was offered five contracts in short order and left behind her original idea of pursuing her painting. By the time Felicia Bond was twenty-six the first book she both wrote and illustrated, Poinsetta and Her Family, had been published. Four more books of Bond's own quickly followed before she illustrated If You Give a Mouse a Cookie in 1985. Bond has also illustrated, among other works, Big Red Barn, written by Margaret Wise Brown, The Big Green Pocketbook, written by Candice Ransom, Little Porcupine's Christmas, written by Joseph Slate and The Right Number of Elephants, written by Jeff Sheppard. Felicia Bond is both author and illustrator of numerous other works, including Poinsettia and her Family, Poinsettia and the Firefighters, The Day It Rained Hearts, The Halloween Play, Tumble Bumble, and Big Hugs, Little Hugs.
If You Give a Mouse a Cookie, the first collaborative work written by Laura Numeroff and illustrated by Felicia
Bond, quickly became established as a popular favorite and is today considered a contemporary classic, with over four million copies sold. A series of seventeen titles followed, with sales exceeding sixteen million. They have been translated into more than thirteen languages. The If You Give... Book™ series has garnered numerous awards, and their popularity is witnessed by their consistent presence on The New York Times Best Seller List. Many of the books were the #1 best-sellers in the picture book category. The If You Give... Book™ series has become so embedded in our culture that If You Give a Mouse a Cookie was mentioned in the movie Airforce One and Oprah Winfrey chose If You Give a Pig a Pancake as one of her favorite things in 2000. Winfrey also included it on her list Oprah’s Favorite Things from A-Z in that same year. If You Give a Moose a Muffin was the answer to a question on Jeopardy!. Many of the books in the If You Give... Book™ series have been adapted into plays for children's theaters across the country, The Bronx Zoo in New York featured Felicia Bond's art in their Children's Zoo for one year and Bond's artwork has been used to create murals in the wings of children's hospitals. The If You Give... Book™ series has fans of all ages from all over the world including Japan, where an entire Tokyo city bus was painted with Bond's images of Mouse. Mouse also made it to the White House; in Laura Bush's Celebration of American Authors at the 2001 Presidential Inauguration Felicia Bond and Laura Numeroff were among those honored for their If You Give... Book™ series, and the former First Lady writes that the Bush family cat India's favorite book was If You Take a Mouse to the Movies. A bronze sculpture of her sleeping on the book is included in the George W. Bush Presidential Library. First Lady Michele Obama read If You Give a Mouse a Cookie on The White house lawn during the 2009 Easter Egg Roll. The website mousecookiebooks.com, posted by its publisher, HarperCollins, is an interactive site for children, parents, teachers, and librarians alike.
Felicia
Bond continues to write as well as illustrate, and is currently scheduled to create the art for an upcoming book with HarperCollins, A Mother's Goodnight, written by Margaret Wise Brown. A new book in the If You Give... Book™ series (If You Give a Mouse a Brownie) is due to be published in 2014.
In her illustrations Felicia Bond's signature style is characterized by rich, vibrant watercolor, often with a black line used for graphic effect. Bond's use of white space is often similarly applied, especially in her distinctive design of the books in the If You Give... Book™ series. Bond's book Big Hugs, Little Hugs uses mixed media collage, which reflects her painting style from her early twenties.
Bond personalizes many of her illustrations by discreetly writing the names of family, friends, and pets in the art. She has said she started doing this years ago, inspired by the cross-hatched ink artwork in The New York Times by Al Hirschfeld, who hid his daughter's name, Nina, at least once in almost every drawing.
Bond's writing style varies in content but is often narrative and character based. Poinsettia and Her Family and Poinsettia and the Firefighters came about from her own childhood. Other stories began as an aimless doodle, such as the whimsical The Day It Rained Hearts and the playful Tumble Bumble. Her book Big Hugs, Little Hugs is more conceptual in nature and evolved from a dream that she merged with a comforting story her father told her when she was a child and couldn't fall asleep. In interviews she has said her ideas come from an "impulsive and intuitive place", that she "lives a story" instead of tells it. She works to keep the "mysterious third thing" alive in a book while she hones the narrative ark and pacing of the words and design. She often compares the making of a book to cooking, a musical score, or a dance.
Felicia Bond currently lives in Santa Fe, New Mexico.
Caryll edited the overview of Felicia Bond 2 days ago.
Felicia Bond, illustrator and children's book author,illustrator, was born on July 14, 1954to American parents in Yokoham, Japan.Yokohama, Japan, where she lived for two years. Bond grew up in Bronxville, New York and Houston, Texas with her four brothers and two sisters. It was while living in New York that she observed a beam of light coming in her bedroom window at age five and knew that art was her calling. SheBond cites numerous inspirations as a child, among them the covers of The New Yorker, the drawings in her Girl Scout Handbook, the sketches her mother drew for her and her siblings, and the art in children's books. SheBond was especially drawn to the painterly, expressive style of Ludwig Bemelmans in his Madeline books,books and the sensitive ink drawings by Garth Williams in Charlotte's Web and Stuart Little. For many years she closely examined the work of Charles Schulz, renowned for his Peanuts comic strip, and credits him as being her greatest direct influence for his wit, graphic style, and genius for saying so much in suchmaking a concise way.lasting impression on her.After graduating from the University of Texas, Austin with a B.F.A. in painting, atAt age twenty-two,twenty-two Bond moved to New York City with nine hundred dollars and worked several jobs, including illustrating botanical books, working as a freelance scene painter in a children's museum, and being an art director for Margaret K. McElderry Books. During this time she took classes at The School of Visual Arts and put together a portfolio of work intended for children's books. SheBond was offered five contracts in short order and left behind her original idea of pursuing her painting. By the time sheFelicia Bond was twenty-six the first book she both wrote and illustrated, Poinsetta and Her Family, had been published. Four more books of herBond's own quickly followed before she illustrated If You Give a Mouse a Cookie in 1985 (written by Laura Numeroff).1985. Bond has also illustrated, among other works, Big Red Barn, written by Margaret Wise Brown, The Big Green Pocketbook, written by Candice Ransom, Little Porcupine's Christmas, written by Joseph Slate and The Right Number of Elephants, written by Jeff Sheppard . SheSheppard. Felicia Bond is both author and illustrator of numerous other works, including Poinsettia and her Family, Poinsettia and the Firefighters, The Day It Rained Hearts, The Halloween Play, Tumble Bumble, and Big Hugs, Little Hugs.
If You Give a Mouse a Cookie, the first collaborative work written by Laura Numeroff and illustrated by Felicia Bond, quickly became established as a popular favorite and is today considered a contemporary classic, with over four million copies sold. A series of seventeen titles followed, with sales exceeding sixteen million. They have been translated into more than thirteen languages. The If You Give...™Give... Book™ series has garnered numerous awards, and their popularity is witnessed by their consistent presence on The New York Times Best Seller List. Many of the books were the #1 best-sellers in the picture book category. The If You Give...™ books haveGive... Book™ series has become so embedded in our culture that If You Give a Mouse a Cookie was mentioned in the movie Airforce One, on the television show The L WordOne and in Mad Magazine. Charles Schulz created two Peanuts strips about If You Give a Mouse a Cookie and in 2000Oprah Winfrey chose If You Give a Pig a Pancake as one of her favorite things for that year, and If You Give a Pig a Pancakein 2000. Winfrey also figuresincluded it on her list Oprah’s Favorite Things from A-Z.A-Z in that same year. If You Give a Moose a Muffin was the answer to a question on Jeopardy!. TheMany of the books in the If You Give... Book™ series have been adapted into plays for children's theaters across the country, The Bronx Zoo in New York featured theFelicia Bond's art in their Children's Zoo for one year and theBond's artwork has been used to create murals in the wings of children's hospitals. The If You Give... Book™ series has fans of all ages from all over the world including Japan, where an entire Tokyo city bus was painted with Bond's images of Mouse. Mouse also made it to the White House; in Laura Bush's Celebration of American Authors at the 2001 Presidential Inauguration Felicia Bond and Laura Numeroff were among those honored for their If You Give...™Give... Book™ series, and the former First Lady writes that the Bush family cat India's favorite book was If You Take a Mouse to the Movies. In 2009A bronze sculpture of her sleeping on the book is included in the George W. Bush Presidential Library. First Lady Michele Obama read If You Give a Mouse a Cookie on The White house lawn during the 2009 Easter Egg Roll. The website mousecookiebooks.com, posted by its publisher, HarperCollins, is an interactive site for children, parents, teachers, and librarians alike.alike.
Felicia Bond continues to write as well as illustrate, and is currently scheduled to create the art for an upcoming book with HarperCollins, A Mother's Goodnight, written by Margaret Wise Brown. A new book in the If You Give...™Give... Book™ series (If You Give a Mouse a Brownie) is due to be published in 2014.
In her illustrations Felicia Bond's signature style is characterized by rich, vibrant watercolor, often with a black line used for graphic effect. HerBond's use of white space is often similarly applied, especially in her distinctive design of the books in the If You Give...™Give... Book™ series. HerBond's book Big Hugs, Little Hugs uses mixed media collage, which reflects her painting style from her early twenties.SheBond personalizes many of her illustrations by discreetly writing the names of family, friends, and pets in the art. She has said she started doing this years ago, inspired by the cross-hatched ink artwork in The New York Times by Al Hirschfeld, who hid his daughter's name, Nina, at least once in almost every drawing.
Bond's writing style varies in content but is often narrative and character based. Poinsettia and Her Family and Poinsettia and the Firefighters came about from her own childhood. Other stories began as an aimless doodle, such as the whimsical The Day It Rained Hearts and the playful Tumble Bumble. Her book Big Hugs, Little Hugs is more conceptual in nature and evolved from a dream that she merged with a comforting story her father told her when she was a child and couldn't fall asleep. In interviews she has said her ideas come from an "impulsive and intuitive place", that she "lives a story" instead of tells it. She works to keep the "mysterious third thing" alive in a book while she hones the narrative ark and pacing of the words and design. She often compares the making of a book to cooking, a musical score, or a dance.
Felicia Bond currently lives in Santa Fe, New Mexico.
(see also - http://feliciabond.brandyourself.com/)
Caryll edited the overview of Felicia Bond 2 days ago.
Felicia Bond, illustrator and children's book author, was born on July 14, 1954 in Yokoham, Japan. Bond grew up in Bronxville, New York and Houston, Texas with her four brothers and two sisters. It was while living in New York that she observed a beam of light coming in her bedroom window at age five and knew that art was her calling.<2>calling. She cites numerous inspirations as a child, among them the covers of The New Yorker, the drawings in her Girl Scout Handbook, the sketches her mother drew for her and her siblings, and the art in children's books. She was especially drawn to the painterly, expressive style of Ludwig Bemelmans in his Madeline books, and the sensitive ink drawings by Garth Williams in Charlotte's Web and Stuart Little. For many years she closely examined the work of Charles Schulz, renowned for his Peanuts comic strip, and credits him as being her greatest direct influence for his wit, graphic style, and genius for saying so much in such a concise way.
After graduating from the University of Texas, Austin with a B.F.A. in painting, at age twenty-two, Bond moved to New York City with nine hundred dollars and worked several jobs, including illustrating botanical books, working as a freelance scene painter in a children's museum, and being an art director for Margaret K. McElderry Books. During this time she took classes at The School of Visual Arts and put together a portfolio of work intended for children's books. She was offered five contracts in short order and left behind her original idea of pursuing her painting. By the time she was twenty-six the first book she both wrote and illustrated, Poinsetta and Her Family, had been published. Four more books of her own quickly followed before she illustrated If You Give a Mouse a Cookie in 1985 (written by Laura Numeroff). Bond also illustrated, among other works, Big Red Barn, written by Margaret Wise Brown, The Big Green Pocketbook, written by Candice Ransom, Little Porcupine's Christmas, written by Joseph Slate and The Right Number of Elephants, written by Jeff Sheppard . She is both author and illustrator of numerous other works, including Poinsettia and her Family, Poinsettia and the Firefighters, The Day It Rained Hearts, The Halloween Play, Tumble Bumble, and Big Hugs, Little Hugs.
If You Give a Mouse a Cookie, illustrated by Felicia Bond, quickly became established as a popular favorite and is today considered a contemporary classic, with over four million copies sold. A series of seventeen titles followed, with sales exceeding sixteen million. They have been translated into more than thirteen foreignlanguages. The If You Give...™ series has garnered numerous awards, and their popularity is witnessed by their consistent presence on The New York Times Best Seller List. Many of the books were the #1 best-sellers in the picture book category. The If You Give...™ books have become so embedded in our culture that If You Give a Mouse a Cookie was mentioned in the movie Airforce One, on the television show The L Word and in Mad Magazine. Charles Schulz created two Peanuts strips about If You Give a Mouse a Cookie and in 2000 Oprah Winfrey chose If You Give a Pig a Pancake as one of her favorite things for that year, and If You Give a Pig a Pancake also figures on her list Oprah’s Favorite Things from A-Z. If You Give a Moose a Muffin was the answer to a question on Jeopardy!. The books have been adapted into plays for children's theaters across the country, The Bronx Zoo in New York featured the art in their Children's Zoo for one year and the artwork has been used to create murals in the wings of children's hospitals. The series has fans of all ages from all over the world including Japan, where an entire Tokyo city bus was painted with images of Mouse. Mouse also made it to the White House; in Laura Bush's Celebration of American Authors at the 2001 Presidential Inauguration Felicia Bond and Laura Numeroff were among those honored for their If You Give...™ series, and the former First Lady writes that the Bush family cat India's favorite book was If You Take a Mouse to the Movies. In 2009 First Lady Michele Obama read If You Give a Mouse a Cookie on The White house lawn during the 2009 Easter Egg Roll. The website mousecookiebooks.com, posted by its publisher, HarperCollins, is an interactive site for children, parents, teachers, and librarians alike. Bond continues to write as well as illustrate, and is currently scheduled to create the art for an upcoming book with HarperCollins, A Mother's Goodnight, written by Margaret Wise Brown. A new book in the If You Give...™ series (If You Give a Mouse a Brownie) is due to be published in 2014.
In her illustrations Bond's signature style is characterized by rich, vibrant watercolor, often with a black line used for graphic effect. Her use of white space is often similarly applied, especially in her distinctive design of the books in the If You Give...™ series. Her book Big Hugs, Little Hugs uses mixed media collage, which reflects her painting style from her early twenties.
She personalizes many of her illustrations by discreetly writing the names of family, friends, and pets in the art. She has said she started doing this years ago, inspired by the cross-hatched ink artwork in The New York Times by Al Hirschfeld, who hid his daughter's name, Nina, at least once in almost every drawing.
Bond's writing style varies in content but is often narrative and character based. Poinsettia and Her Family and Poinsettia and the Firefighters came about from her own childhood. Other stories began as an aimless doodle, such as the whimsical The Day It Rained Hearts and the playful Tumble Bumble. Her book Big Hugs, Little Hugs is more conceptual in nature and evolved from a dream that she merged with a comforting story her father told her when she was a child and couldn't fall asleep. In interviews she has said her ideas come from an "impulsive and intuitive place", that she "lives a story" instead of tells it. She works to keep the "mysterious third thing" alive in a book while she hones the narrative ark and pacing of the words and design. She often compares the making of a book to cooking, a musical score, or a dance.
Felicia Bond currently lives in Santa Fe, New Mexico.
(see also - http://feliciabond.brandyourself.com/)
Caryll edited the overview of Felicia Bond Tuesday, March 26, 2013.
Felicia Bond, illustrator and children's book author, was born on July 14, 1954 in Yokoham, Japan. Bond grew up in Bronxville, New York and Houston, Texas with her four brothers and two sisters. It was while living in New York that she observed a beam of light coming in her bedroom window at age five and knew that art was her calling.<2> She cites numerous inspirations as a child, among them the covers of The New Yorker, the drawings in her Girl Scout Handbook, the sketches her mother drew for her and her siblings, and the art in children's books. She was especially drawn to the painterly, expressive style of Ludwig Bemelmans in his Madeline books, and the sensitive ink drawings by Garth Williams in Charlotte's Web and Stuart Little. For many years she closely examined the work of Charles Schulz, renowned for his Peanuts comic strip, and credits him as being her greatest direct influence for his wit, graphic style, and genius for saying so much in such a concise way.
After graduating from the University of Texas, Austin with a B.F.A. in painting, at age twenty-two, Bond moved to New York City with nine hundred dollars and worked several jobs, including illustrating botanical books, working as a freelance scene painter in a children's museum, and being an art director for Margaret K. McElderry Books. During this time she took classes at The School of Visual Arts and put together a portfolio of work intended for children's books. She was offered five contracts in short order and left behind her original idea of pursuing her painting. By the time she was twenty-six the first book she both wrote and illustrated, Poinsetta and Her Family, had been published. Four more books of her own quickly followed before she illustrated If You Give a Mouse a Cookie in 1985 (written by Laura Numeroff). Bond also illustrated, among other works, Big Red Barn, written by Margaret Wise Brown, The Big Green Pocketbook, written by Candice Ransom, Little Porcupine's Christmas, written by Joseph Slate and The Right Number of Elephants, written by Jeff Sheppard . She is both author and illustrator of numerous other works, including Poinsettia and her Family, Poinsettia and the Firefighters, The Day It Rained Hearts, The Halloween Play, Tumble Bumble, and Big Hugs, Little Hugs.
If You Give a Mouse a Cookie, illustrated by Felicia Bond, quickly became established as a popular favorite and is today considered a contemporary classic, with four million copies sold. A series of seventeen titles followed, with sales exceeding sixteen million. They have been translated into more than thirteen foreign languages. The If You Give...™ series has garnered numerous awards, and their popularity is witnessed by their consistent presence on The New York Times Best Seller List. Many of the books were the #1 best-sellers in the picture book category. The If You Give...™ books have become so embedded in our culture that If You Give a Mouse a Cookie was mentioned in the movie Airforce One, on the television show The L Word and in Mad Magazine. Charles Schulz created two Peanuts strips about If You Give a Mouse a Cookie and in 2000 Oprah Winfrey chose If You Give a Pig a Pancake as one of her favorite things for that year, and If You Give a Pig a Pancake also figures on her list Oprah’s Favorite Things from A-Z. If You Give a Moose a Muffin was the answer to a question on Jeopardy!. The books have been adapted into plays for children's theaters across the country, The Bronx Zoo in New York featured the art in their Children's Zoo for one year and the artwork has been used to create murals in the wings of children's hospitals. The series has fans of all ages from all over the world including Japan, where an entire Tokyo city bus was painted with images of Mouse. Mouse also made it to the White House; in Laura Bush's Celebration of American Authors at the 2001 Presidential Inauguration Felicia Bond and Laura Numeroff were among those honored for their If You Give...™ series, and the former First Lady writes that the Bush family cat India's favorite book was If You Take a Mouse to the Movies. In 2009 First Lady Michele Obama read If You Give a Mouse a Cookie on The White house lawn during the 2009 Easter Egg Roll. The website mousecookiebooks.com, posted by its publisher, HarperCollins, is an interactive site for children, parents, teachers, and librarians alike. Bond continues to write as well as illustrate, and is currently scheduled to create the art for an upcoming book with HarperCollins, A Mother's Goodnight, written by Margaret Wise Brown. A new book in the If You Give...™ series (If You Give a Mouse a Brownie) is due to be published in 2014.
Felicia Bond currently lives in Santa Fe, New Mexico.
(see also - http://feliciabond.brandyourself.com/)
Caryll edited the overview of Felicia Bond Tuesday, March 26, 2013.
Felicia BondBond, illustrator and children's book author, was born on July 14, 1954 in Yokoham, Japan. SheBond grew up in Bronxville, New York and Houston, Texas with her four brothers and two sisters. It was while living in New York that she observed a beam of light coming in her bedroom window at age five and knew that art was her calling.<2> She cites numerous inspirations as a child, among them the covers of The New Yorker, the drawings in her Girl Scout Handbook, the sketches her mother drew for her and her siblings, and the art in children's books. She was especially drawn to the painterly, expressive style of Ludwig Bemelmans in his Madeline books, and the sensitive ink drawings by Garth Williams in Charlotte's Web and Stuart Little. For many years she closely examined the work of Charles Schulz, renowned for his Peanuts comic strip, and credits him as being her greatest direct influence for his wit, graphic style, and genius for saying so much in such a concise way.
After graduating from the University of Texas, Austin with a B.F.A. in painting, at age twenty-two, Bond moved to New York City with nine hundred dollars and worked several jobs, including illustrating botanical books, working as a freelance scene painter in a children's museum, and being an art director for Margaret K. McElderry Books. During this time she took classes at The School of Visual Arts and put together a portfolio of work intended for children's books. She was offered five contracts in short order and left behind her original idea of pursuing her painting. By the time she was twenty-six the first book she both wrote and illustrated, Poinsetta and Her Family, had been published. Four more books of her own quickly followed before she illustrated If You Give a Mouse a Cookie in 1985 (written by Laura Numeroff). Bond also illustrated, among other works, Big Red Barn, written by Margaret Wise Brown, The Big Green Pocketbook, written by Candice Ransom, Little Porcupine's Christmas, written by Joseph Slate and The Right Number of Elephants, written by Jeff Sheppard . She is both author and illustrator of numerous other works, including Poinsettia and her Family, Poinsettia and the Firefighters, The Day It Rained Hearts, The Halloween Play, Tumble Bumble, and Big Hugs, Little Hugs.
If You Give a Mouse a CookieCookie, illustrated by Felicia Bond, quickly became established as a popular favorite and is today considered a contemporary classic, with four million copies sold. A series of seventeen titles followed, with sales exceeding sixteen million. They have been translated into more than thirteen foreign languages. The If You Give...™ series has garnered numerous awards, and their popularity is witnessed by their consistent presence on The New York Times Best Seller List. Many of the books were the #1 best-sellers in the picture book category. The If You Give...™ books have become so embedded in our culture that If You Give a Mouse a Cookie was mentioned in the movie Airforce One, on the television show The L Word and in Mad Magazine. Charles Schulz created two Peanuts strips about If You Give a Mouse a Cookie and in 2000 Oprah Winfrey chose If You Give a Pig a Pancake as one of her favorite things for that year, and If You Give a Pig a Pancake also figures on her list Oprah’s Favorite Things from A-Z. If You Give a Moose a Muffin was the answer to a question on Jeopardy!. The books have been adapted into plays for children's theaters across the country, The Bronx Zoo in New York featured the art in their Children's Zoo for one year and the artwork has been used to create murals in the wings of children's hospitals. The series has fans of all ages from all over the world including Japan, where an entire Tokyo city bus was painted with images of Mouse. Mouse also made it to the White House; in Laura Bush's Celebration of American Authors at the 2001 Presidential Inauguration Felicia Bond and Laura Numeroff were among those honored for their If You Give...™ series, and the former First Lady writes that the Bush family cat India's favorite book was If You Take a Mouse to the Movies. In 2009 First Lady Michele Obama read If You Give a Mouse a Cookie on The White house lawn during the 2009 Easter Egg Roll. The website mousecookiebooks.com, posted by its publisher, HarperCollins, is an interactive site for children, parents, teachers, and librarians alike. Bond continues to write as well as illustrate, and is currently scheduled to create the art for an upcoming book with HarperCollins, A Mother's Goodnight, written by Margaret Wise Brown. A new book in the If You Give...™ series (If You Give a Mouse a Brownie) is due to be published in 2014.
(see also - http://feliciabond.brandyourself.com/)
Caryll edited the overview of Felicia Bond Monday, March 18, 2013.
Felicia Bond was born on July 14, 1954 in Yokoham, Japan. She grew up in Bronxville, New York and Houston, Texas with her four brothers and two sisters. It was while living in New York that she observed a beam of light coming in her bedroom window at age five and knew that art was her calling.<2> She cites numerous inspirations as a child, among them the covers of The New Yorker, the drawings in her Girl Scout Handbook, the sketches her mother drew for her and her siblings, and the art in children's books. She was especially drawn to the painterly, expressive style of Ludwig Bemelmans in his Madeline books, and the sensitive ink drawings by Garth Williams in Charlotte's Web and Stuart Little. For many years she closely examined the work of Charles Schulz, renowned for his Peanuts comic strip, and credits him as being her greatest direct influence for his wit, graphic style, and genius for saying so much in such a concise way.
After graduating from the University of Texas, Austin with a B.F.A. in painting, at age twenty-two, Bond moved to New York City with nine hundred dollars and worked several jobs, including illustrating botanical books, working as a freelance scene painter in a children's museum, and being an art director for Margaret K. McElderry Books. During this time she took classes at The School of Visual Arts and put together a portfolio of work intended for children's books. She was offered five contracts in short order and left behind her original idea of pursuing her painting. By the time she was twenty-six the first book she both wrote and illustrated, Poinsetta and Her Family, had been published. Four more books of her own quickly followed before she illustrated If You Give a Mouse a Cookie in 1985 (written by Laura Numeroff). Bond also illustrated, among other works, Big Red Barn, written by Margaret Wise Brown, The Big Green Pocketbook, written by Candice Ransom, Little Porcupine's Christmas, written by Joseph Slate and The Right Number of Elephants, written by Jeff Sheppard . She is both author and illustrator of numerous other works, including Poinsettia and her Family, Poinsettia and the Firefighters, The Day It Rained Hearts, The Halloween Play, Tumble Bumble, and Big Hugs, Little Hugs.
If You Give a Mouse a Cookie quickly became established as a popular favorite and is today considered a contemporary classic, with four million copies sold. A series of seventeen titles followed, with sales exceeding sixteen million. They have been translated into more than thirteen foreign languages. The If You Give...™ series has garnered numerous awards, and their popularity is witnessed by their consistent presence on The New York Times Best Seller List. Many of the books were the #1 best-sellers in the picture book category. The If You Give...™ books have become so embedded in our culture that If You Give a Mouse a Cookie was mentioned in the movie Airforce One, on the television show The L Word and in Mad Magazine. Charles Schulz created two Peanuts strips about If You Give a Mouse a Cookie and in 2000 Oprah Winfrey chose If You Give a Pig a Pancake as one of her favorite things for that year, and If You Give a Pig a Pancake also figures on her list Oprah’s Favorite Things from A-Z. If You Give a Moose a Muffin was the answer to a question on Jeopardy!. The books have been adapted into plays for children's theaters across the country, The Bronx Zoo in New York featured the art in their Children's Zoo for one year and the artwork has been used to create murals in the wings of children's hospitals. The series has fans of all ages from all over the world including Japan, where an entire Tokyo city bus was painted with images of Mouse. Mouse also made it to the White House; in Laura Bush's Celebration of American Authors at the 2001 Presidential Inauguration Felicia Bond and Laura Numeroff were among those honored for their If You Give...™ series, and the former First Lady writes that the Bush family cat India's favorite book was If You Take a Mouse to the Movies. In 2009 First Lady Michele Obama read If You Give a Mouse a Cookie on The White house lawn during the 2009 Easter Egg Roll. The website mousecookiebooks.com, posted by its publisher, HarperCollins, is an interactive site for children, parents, teachers, and librarians alike. Bond continues to write as well as illustrate, and is currently scheduled to create the art for an upcoming book with HarperCollins, A Mother's Goodnight, written by Margaret Wise Brown. A new book in the If You Give...™ series (If You Give a Mouse a Brownie) is due to be published in 2014.
(see also - http://feliciabond.brandyourself.com/)
Caryll edited the bio of Felicia Bond Monday, March 18, 2013.
Caryll changed Felicia Bond's author image Monday, March 18, 2013.
Caryll edited the overview of Felicia Bond Monday, March 18, 2013.
Felicia Bond was born on July 14, 1954 in Morristown "ever sinceYokoham, Japan. She grew up in Bronxville, New York and Houston, Texas with her four brothers and two sisters. It was while living in New York that she observed a beam of light coming in her bedroom window at age five and knew that art was her calling.<2> She cites numerous inspirations as a little girlchild, among them the covers of The New Yorker, the drawings in her Girl Scout Handbook, the sketches her mother drew for her and her siblings, and the art in children's books. She was especially drawn to the painterly, expressive style of Ludwig Bemelmans in his Madeline books, and the sensitive ink drawings by Garth Williams in Charlotte's Web and Stuart Little. For many years she closely examined the work of Charles Schulz, renowned for his Peanuts comic strip, and credits him as being her greatest direct influence for his wit, graphic style, and genius for saying so much in such a concise way.
After graduating from the University of Texas, Austin with a B.F.A. in painting, at age twenty-two, Bond moved to New York City with nine hundred dollars and worked several jobs, including illustrating botanical books, working as a freelance scene painter in a children's museum, and being an art director for Margaret K. McElderry Books. During this time she took classes at The School of Visual Arts and put together a portfolio of work intended for children's books. She was offered five contracts in short order and left behind her original idea of pursuing her painting. By the time she was drawingtwenty-six the first book she both wrote and illustrated, Poinsetta and sketching"Her Mother says. But whenFamily, had been published. Four more books of her own quickly followed before she got older she putillustrated If You Give a Mouse a Cookie in 1985 (written by Laura Numeroff). Bond also illustrated, among other works, Big Red Barn, written by Margaret Wise Brown, The Big Green Pocketbook, written by Candice Ransom, Little Porcupine's Christmas, written by Joseph Slate and The Right Number of Elephants, written by Jeff Sheppard . She is both author and illustrator of numerous other works, including Poinsettia and her Family, Poinsettia and the drawing to workFirefighters, The Day It Rained Hearts, The Halloween Play, Tumble Bumble, and Big Hugs, Little Hugs.
If You Give a Mouse a Cookie quickly became established as a popular favorite and drewis today considered a contemporary classic, with four million copies sold. A series of seventeen titles followed, with sales exceeding sixteen million. They have been translated into more than thirteen foreign languages. The If You Give...™ series has garnered numerous awards, and their popularity is witnessed by their consistent presence on The New York Times Best Seller List. Many of the books were the #1 best-sellers in the picture book category. The If You Give...™ books have become so embedded in our culture that If You Give a Mouse a Cookie was mentioned in the movie Airforce One, on the television show The L Word and in Mad Magazine. Charles Schulz created two Peanuts strips about If You Give a Mouse a Cookie and in 2000 Oprah Winfrey chose If You Give a Pig a Pancake as one of her favorite things for that year, and If You Give a Pig a Pancake also figures on her list Oprah’s Favorite Things from A-Z. If You Give a Moose a Muffin was the answer to a question on Jeopardy!. The books have been adapted into plays for children's theaters across the country, The Bronx Zoo in New York featured the art in their Children's Zoo for one year and the artwork has been used to create murals in the wings of children's hospitals. The series has fans of all ages from all over the world including Japan, where an entire Tokyo city bus was painted with images of Mouse. Mouse also made it to the White House; in Laura JoffeBush's Celebration of American Authors at the 2001 Presidential Inauguration Felicia Bond and Laura Numeroff writingwere among those honored for their If You Give...™ series, and the former First Lady writes that the Bush family cat India's favorite book was If You Take a Mouse to the Movies. In 2009 First Lady Michele Obama read If You Give a Mouse a Cookie on The White house lawn during the 2009 Easter Egg Roll. The website mousecookiebooks.com, posted by its publisher, HarperCollins, is an interactive site for children, parents, teachers, and librarians alike. Bond continues to write as well as illustrate, and is currently scheduled to create the art for an upcoming book with HarperCollins, A Mother's Goodnight, written by Margaret Wise Brown. A new book in the If You Give...™ series (If You Give a Mouse a Brownie) is due to be published in 2014.