You know how folks talk all the time about how more men win the Caldecott Award than women? Well, I’ve always sort of ignored that statement, citing in my head all kinds of women from over the years. Then, this week, I decided that we just haven’t done enough women illustrators on our show. Authors, yes, but the only woman we covered was Diana Souza (extra points if you can remember which famous book she illustrated). Also, Kate hasn’t had a chance to look at a real Gold Medal Caldecott Award winner. Let us change all of that at once! Sounds simple enough, yes? All I had to do was to find a Gold Medal Caldecott Award winning book illustrated by a woman that your average person on the street would be familiar with.
It. Was. Hard. Too hard. Much harder than it should have been. At long last I settled on The Little House by Virginia Lee Burton, which came in at #32 on my 100 Picture Books Poll lo these many years ago. Even then, it’s debatable whether or not this is the best known of all her books. You can find the latest episode on iTunes as well as here on Soundcloud.
Answer to The Little House Question: Here’s what I wrote on the poll about this book –
Just prior to writing The Little House, Burton actually attempted to write a book that can only be described as far and away ahead of her time. In the late 30s, early 40s she noticed that her nine-year-old son loved his comic books. The answer? Calico the Wonder Horse; or, The Saga of Stewy Slinker was an honest-to-goodness picture book in a comic-book format. As Minders of Make-Believe puts it, the book was a “gallant though futile gesture.” The Little House was made soon thereafter and got itself a Caldecott Medal in 1943, so there you go.
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