Talk:Margery Williams

Latest comment: 6 years ago by InternetArchiveBot in topic External links modified

Comment on April 30, 2006 edit

Could someone format this list or compile a new one so it is not a copyright violation?

Limited author catalog, copied from http://www.buriedantiques.com/20th_century_authors/margery_williams_bianco.htm

  • The Velveteen Rabbit, illustrated by William Nicholson, Doran, 1922
  • The Little Wooden Doll, illustrated by Pamela Bianco, Macmillan, 1925
  • Poor Cecco: The Wonderful Story of a Wonderful Wooden Dog Who Was the Jolliest Toy in the House Until He Went Out to Explore the World, illustrated by Arthur Rackham, Doran, 1925
  • The Apple Tree, illustrated by boris Artzybasheff, Doran, 1926
  • The Adventures of Andy, Doran, 1926
  • The Skin Horse, illustrated b Pamela Bianco, Doran, 1927
  • The Candlestick, Doubleday, 1929
  • Other People's Houses, Viking, 1930
  • The House that Grew Smaller, Illustrated by Rachel Field, Macmillan, 1931
  • A Street of Little Shops, Doubleday, 1932
  • The Hurdy-Gurdy Man, illustrated by Robert Lawson, Oxford, 1933
  • The Good Friends, Viking, 1934
  • Winterbound, illustrated by Kate Seredy, Viking, 1936
  • Green Grows the Garden, Macmillan, 1936
  • Franzi and Gizi, Messner, 1941
  • Penny and the White Horse, Platt and Munk, 1947

Comment on August 31, 2007 edit

Incorrect Summary The description of the content, or summary, of The Velveteen Rabbit is completely incorrect. The boy did not reject the rabbit for a masculine toy, nor did he turn the rabbit real by the fireplace. Even the entry on Wikipedia for The Velveteen Rabbit contradicts this entry. I'm fixing it.

The Velveteen Rabbit has a huge following and it justly deserves all the recognition it has ever received as a famed children's book, yet I believe this passion still has no place to bias the text against her other works. This wiki-author blatantly compares her works with no reference, explaining that another book is more entitled to classic status, even though the summary of the first title is completely wrong.

This is an explanation of my changes to the text. ~ Asher

Comment on August 27, 2008 edit

She also wrote "The thing in the woods" published in england in 1913 and published in the US under the pen name "Harper Williams" . —Preceding unsigned comment added by 81.91.217.80 (talk) 20:48, 27 August 2008 (UTC)Reply

NPOV edit

  • The only part of the entire article that appears to be neutral is the lead section. Erpert blah, blah, blah... 08:51, 14 June 2014 (UTC)Reply

External links modified edit

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