Draft:Elisabeth Hubbard Lansing

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E. H. Lansing, Elisabeth Lansing and Elisabeth H. Lansing should link here

Elisabeth Hubbard Lansing (1911–2002) was an American author of children's books. She published with Thomas Y. Crowell's Thomas Y. Crowell Co.

Also wrote under the pseudonym Margaret Irwin Simmons. (Draft:Margaret Irwin Simmons)

Early life

Elisabeth Hubbard was born in Connecticut in 1911. She graduated from

Simmons College
.

Career

Ezra Jack Keats illustrated some of her books.

She taught at the Writers School in Westport.

She died at her home in Cornwall, Connecticut on March 21, 2002.[1] She was preceded in death by her husband Tod Lansing.

Writings

  • Seeing New York (1938)
  • Nancy Naylor Flies South (1943)
  • Cathy Carlisle (1948)
  • Nancy Naylor: captain of flight nurses (1946)
  • The Pony That Ran Away, Thomas Y Crowell, New York (1951)[2]
  • The Pony That Kept A Secret Thomas Y Crowell, New York (1952)
  • A Pony Worth His Salt, Thomas Y Crowell, New York (1953) illusrated by Barbara Cooney
  • The Pony That Kept A Secret, Thomas Y Crowell, New York (1952) illustrated by Barbara Cooney
  • Deer Mountain Hideaway (1953)
  • Lulu's Window (1954)[3][4]
  • Sure Thing for Shep, Thomas Y Crowell (1956) illustrated by Ezra Jack Keats
  • Jubilant for Sure illustrated by Ezra Jack Keats
  • Shoot for a Mule, Thomas Y Crowell (1951) illustrated by Susanne Suba
  • Lulu Herself
  • The Small Circus (1957)
  • The Secret of Dark Entry (1961)[5]
  • Liza of the Hundredfold (1968) by Elisabeth Hubbard Lansing and Dorothy Bayley Morse
  • Leonardo: Master of the Renaissance by Elisabeth Hubbard Lansing, William Sharp, Hendrik Willem Van Loon
  • Jonathans Geheimnis (1969)[6]
  • The Sumerians: Inventors and Builders (1971)[7]
  • Rider of the Mountains
  • The pony that kept a secret
  • Sally Wins Her Wings
  • A House for Henrietta... (1958)

References

  1. ^ "Paid Notice: Deaths: Lansing, Elizabeth Hubbard". The New York Times. 2002-03-27. p. A21. Retrieved 2023-01-20.
  2. ^ "Book Reviews, Sites, Romance, Fantasy, Fiction". Kirkus Reviews.
  3. ^ Friedman, Rose (November 7, 1954). "Young Dictator; LULU'S WINDOW. By Elisabeth Hubbard Lansing. Illustrated by Grace Paull. 148 pp. New York: Thomas Y. Crowell Company. $2.50" – via NYTimes.com.
  4. ^ Lansing, E. H. (Elisabeth Hubbard) (January 21, 1954). "Lulu's window;". New York, Crowell – via Internet Archive.
  5. ^ "Elisabeth Hubbard Lansing". Open Library.
  6. ^ Lansing, E. H. (1969). "Jonathans Geheimnis".
  7. .