If You Give... If You Give a Mouse a Cookie, published in 1985 and illustrated by
Felicia Bond, was the book that launched the hit
If You Give... series. It was rejected by publishers nine times before it was finally accepted by Harper. These stories use a
circular story format, presenting to the reader a chain of events. At the end of the story, the reader discovers that the characters have ended up at the same transaction that they started with. The entire story is an "If ____________ , then ___________" scenario. If
You Give a Mouse a Cookie led to other books about a moose, a cat, a pig, and a dog. File:If You Give a Mouse a Cookie (11), illustrated by Felicia Bond.JPG|Mouse File:If You Give a Pig a Pancake, illustrated by Felicia Bond, illustrator of the If You Give... series.jpeg|Pig File:If You Give a Dog a Doughnut (6), illustrated by Felicia Bond (illustrator, children's book illustrator), and written by Laura Numeroff.JPG|Dog File:If You Give a Moose a Muffin, illustrated by Felicia Bond, illustrator of the If You Give... series.jpeg|Moose
What...Do Best The first book in this series by Numeroff,
What Mommies Do Best/What Daddies Do Best, published in April 2008, was illustrated, in watercolors, by Lynn Munsinger. The series was written for children ages 4 – 8. This children's book is a two part story. On one side of the book is
What Mommies Do Best. This book demonstrates many of the things that mothers do, such as give piggyback rides, teach children how to ride a bicycle, and sew a button on a teddy bear. Following
What Mommies Do Best, the book can be flipped to reveal
What Daddies Do Best. This side illustrates things that fathers do with their children. The stories are identical. Both parents do the same things in each book. Subsequent books are about grandparents, aunts and uncles.
The Jellybeans Bitsy, a pig wearing purple, loves to draw, color, paint and make art. Emily, a dog wearing pink, loves to dance. Anna, a rabbit wearing yellow, loves to read books. Nicole, a cat wearing blue, loves to play soccer. The first letters of their names spell the word "BEAN", and they love jellybeans, their favorite candy from Petunia's, their favorite place.
Other works An animal lover, Numeroff had always wanted to write a book about service dogs. In 2016, Numeroff and co-creator Sean Hanrahan released
Raising a Hero, illustrated by Lynn Munsinger. The book is about a young boy raising a puppy to become a service dog in order to help children with disabilities. Proceeds from
Raising a Hero supported Canine Companions, a non-profit devoted to training service dogs for people with disabilities. ''Laura Numeroff's Ten Step Guide to Living with Your Monster'', illustrated by Nate Evans, was published in April 2002 and was intended for children aged 4 to 8. The book explains to readers how to make a monster a good pet, rather than being afraid of monsters. A portion of the profits from the book were donated to
The Michael J. Fox Foundation for Parkinson's Research. ==Awards and recognition==