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Nancy Larrick

Nancy Larrick, also known as Nancy Larrick Crosby, was an American author, editor, and educator who served as the first woman president of the International Reading Association. Larrick was a recognized authority on children's literature, best known for A Parent's Guide to Children's Reading (1958), for her 1965 article highlighting the lack of diverse representation in children's books, and for her numerous literature anthologies for children.

Life
Larrick was born and raised in Winchester, Virginia, the only child of Herbert Scaggs Larrick, an attorney, and Nancy Clarke Nulton Larrick, a former Latin teacher. She attended Handley High School and received her undergraduate degree from Goucher College in 1930. Upon her graduation, with few job opportunities available during the Great Depression, Larrick returned to Winchester and taught English in public schools for twelve years. During World War II, from 1942 to 1945, Larrick served as education director for the War Bond Division of the United States Department of the Treasury. After the war, Larrick moved to New York to begin working in the publishing industry, editing magazines and journals about reading and education. The couple lived together first in New York's Greenwich Village, then on a 33-acre farm in Bucks County, Pennsylvania. Throughout the marriage, Larrick continued to use her maiden name in her professional life. == Publishing career ==
Publishing career
Larrick began her career in publishing as editor for the children's magazine Young American Readers (1946–1951) and academic journal The Reading Teacher (1950–1954). In the 1970s, she served as editorial advisor for The Reading Teacher (1970–1976), and poetry editor for the English Journal (1974–1976). The book won the Edison Foundation Award for outstanding contributions to education the following year. Two derivative books, Encourage Your Child to Read (1980) and ''Children's Reading Begins at Home'' (1980), were published for mass market distribution including in grocery stores and sold over 500,000 copies. In 1966, Larrick joined Gwendolyn Brooks, Langston Hughes, Ben Shahn, Benjamin Spock, and others in sponsoring the Council on Interracial Books for Children. Larrick's work to educate parents and the public about children's reading included contributions of articles and book reviews to Library Journal, The New York Times, Parents magazine, Publishers Weekly, and many other national publications. To Ride a Butterfly (1991), co-edited with Wendy Lamb, was published to mark the twenty-fifth anniversary of Reading is Fundamental. At least two of her other anthologies faced censorship challenges over selections of their content. == Recognition and awards ==
Recognition and awards
Larrick was a founding member of the International Reading Association and served as its second president in 1956–1957. In honor of her contributions to children's literature and education, Larrick received the New York University Founder's Day Achievement Award upon earning her doctorate in 1955. She was named one of "70 Women Who Have Made a Difference in the World of Books" by the Women's National Book Association in 1987. == Works ==
Works
Books for adults Printing and Promotion Handbook: How to Plan, Produce, and Use Printing, Advertising, and Direct Mail (1949), co-written with Daniel Melcher, New York: McGraw-Hill. 2nd edition (1956). 3rd edition (1966). • ''A Parent's Guide to Children's Reading'' (1958), Garden City, New York: Doubleday. Revised edition (1964). Revised and enlarged 3rd edition (1969). 4th edition (1975). 5th edition, completely revised (1982). • ''A Teacher's Guide to Children's Books'' (1960), Columbus, Ohio: Charles E. Merrill. • ''A Parent's Guide to Children's Education'' (1963), New York: Trident. • ''Children's Reading Begins at Home: How Parents Can Help Their Young Children'' (1980), Winston-Salem: Starstream. • ''Encourage Your Child to Read: A Parent's Primer'' (1980), illustrations by Susan Gray, New York: Dell. • ''Let's Do a Poem!: Introducing Poetry to Children through Listening, Singing, Chanting, Impromptu Choral Reading, Body Movement, Dance, and Dramatization; Including 98 Favorite Songs and Poems'' (1991), New York: Delacorte. . Edited Collections for Adults What Is Reading Doing to the Child? Highlights from the Sixteenth Annual Reading Conference of Lehigh University (1967), co-edited with John A. Stoops, Danville, Illinois: Interstate. • ''Reading, Isn't It Really the Teacher? Highlights of the Seventeenth Annual Reading Conference of Lehigh University'' (1968), co-edited with Charles J. Versacci, Danville, Illinois: Interstate. • Somebody Turned on a Tap in These Kids: Poetry and Young People Today (1971), New York: Delacorte. Books for children and adolescents See for Yourself, a First Book of Science Experiments (1952), illustrations by Frank Jupo, New York: Aladdin. • Color ABC (1959), illustrations by Rene Martin, New York: Platt & Munk. Republished as First ABC (1965). • Rockets into Space (1959), co-written with Alexander L. Crosby, illustrations by Denny McMains, New York: Random House. • Junior Science Book of Rain, Hail, Sleet and Snow (1961), illustrations by Weda Yap, Champaign, Illinois: Garrard. • Rivers, What They Do (1961), co-written with Alexander L. Crosby, illustrations by William Preston, Racine, Wisconsin: Whitman. Anthologies for children and adolescents • Poems for Young Children (1965), in ''The Illustrated Treasury of Children's Literature'', 2 volumes, edited by Margaret E. Martignoni, illustrations by Kay Lovelace Smith, Chicago : F. E. Compton. • Piper, Pipe That Song Again!: Poems for Boys and Girls (1965), illustrations by Kelly Oechsli, New York: Random House. • Poetry for Holidays (1966), illustrations by Kelly Oechsli, Champaign, Illinois: Garrard. • ''Green Is like a Meadow of Grass: An Anthology of Children's Pleasure in Poetry'' (1968), illustrations by Kelly Oechsli, Champaign, Illinois: Garrard. • On City Streets: An Anthology of Poetry (1968), photographs by David Sagarin, New York: M. Evans. • Piping down the Valleys Wild: Poetry for the Young of All Ages (1968), illustrations by Ellen Raskin, New York: Delacorte. • I Heard a Scream in the Street: Poems by Young People in the City (1970), photographs by students, New York: M. Evans. • The Wheels of the Bus Go Round and Round: School Bus Songs and Chants (1972), illustrations by Gene Holtan, San Carlos, California: Golden Gate Junior. . • Male and Female under 18; Frank Comments from Young People about Their Sex Roles Today (1973), co-edited with Eve Merriam, New York: Discus Books. . • More Poetry for Holidays (1973), illustrations by Harold Berson, Champaign, Illinois: Garrard. . • Room for Me and a Mountain Lion: Poetry of Open Space (1974), New York: M. Evans. . • Crazy to Be Alive in Such a Strange World: Poems about People (1977), photographs by Alexander L. Crosby, New York: M. Evans. . • Bring Me All of Your Dreams: Poems (1980), photographs by Larry Mulvehill, New York: M. Evans. . • Tambourines! Tambourines to Glory!: Prayers and Poems (1982), illustrations by Geri Greinke, Philadelphia: Westminster. . • When the Dark Comes Dancing: A Bedtime Poetry Book (1983), illustrations by John Wallner, New York: Philomel. . • Cats Are Cats (1988), illustrated by Ed Young, New York: Philomel. . • Songs from Mother Goose: With the Traditional Melody for Each (1989), illustrations by Robin Spowart, New York: Harper & Row. . • The Merry-Go-Round Poetry Book (1989), illustrations by Karen Gundersheimer, New York: Delacorte. . • Mice Are Nice (1990), illustrated by Ed Young, New York: Philomel. . • To the Moon and Back: A Collection of Poems (1990), illustrated by Catharine O'Neill, New York: Delacorte. . • The Night of the Whippoorwill: Poems (1992), illustrations by David Ray, New York: Philomel. . • To Ride a Butterfly: Original Pictures, Stories, Poems, & Songs for Children (1991), co-editor with Wendy Lamb, New York: Bantam Doubleday Dell. . == References ==
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