Matches in DBpedia 2014 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Anita_Lobel> ?p ?o. }
- Anita_Lobel abstract "Anita Lobel (née Kempler; born June 2, 1934) is a Polish-American illustrator of children's books, including A New Coat for Anna, This Quiet Lady, Alison's Zinnia, and On Market Street, which won a Caldecott Honor for illustrations. One Lighthouse, One Moon, one of three books she created about her cat, Nini, is a New York Times Best Illustrated Book. Her childhood memoir, No Pretty Pictures, was a finalist for the National Book Award.She was born in Krakow, Poland, to a merchant family. When she was five years old, World War II began and she, her brother and their nanny, whom they called Niania, were forced into hiding for the next four and a half years, first in the countryside, then in a ghetto, and finally in a convent, where the Nazis caught them. She and her brother were then sent to a concentration camp in Germany. They were rescued in 1945 by the Swedish Red Cross and reunited with their parents in 1947. Though she could read and write, Lobel didn't begin school until age 13. In 1952, her family moved from Sweden to New York where she graduated from high school and earned a B.F.A. in fine arts from Pratt Institute. While taking part in a school play at Pratt, she met her future husband, Arnold Lobel, who was the play's director. After graduation, she worked for several years as a textile designer until Susan Hirschman asked her to make a book. Published in 1965, Sven's Bridge was the first book she wrote and illustrated. The illustrations include examples of Swedish folk designs from the author's childhood. Her third book, Potatoes, Potatoes, is based partly on her childhood in Poland, and her fourth book, The Troll Music, "was mainly inspired by the bottom parts of medieval tapestries with all the vegetation and little animals running around."For many years, she worked with her husband, author-illustrator Arnold Lobel, until his death in 1987. With him she had two children: a daughter, Adrianne, who is married to actor Mark Linn-Baker; a son, Adam; and three grandchildren. Their first and second collaborations were How the Rooster Saved the Day and A Treeful of Pigs. She received a Caldecott Honor in 1982 for another, On Market Street.After her husband's death, she went onto to write and illustrate Alison's Zinnia's and the book Away from Home, a companion piece focusing on boys rather than girls. In 1998, she produced No Pretty Pictures, which is a memoir of her childhood. The story begins in 1939, when she was five years old, and continues through 1947, when she and her brother were reunited with their parents. After that, she illustrated a counting book, One Lighthouse, One Moon. Throughout this time, she has illustrated works of other authors, including Charlotte S. Huck and Kevin Henkes.She has received three Best Illustrated Book selections from the New York Times Book Review, in 1965 for Sven's Bridge, in 1981 for On Market Street, and in 2000 for One Lighthouse, One Moon. How the Rooster Saved the Day is a New York Times Outstanding Book selection for 1977. She received two Boston Globe/Horn Book Awards for illustration, first for On Market Street, and later in 1984 for The Rose in My Garden. On Market Street also received a Caldecott Honor Book Award, a Boston Globe/Horn Book Award (illustration), and is an American Book Award finalist. No Pretty Pictures has also won many awards, including a National Book Award, a Judy Lopez Memorial Medal for Children's Literature, an Orbis Pictus Award, a Golden Kite Award, a Sydney Taylor Award Honor Book, a Booklist editor's choice, a River Bank Review Children's Books of Distinction finalist, an American Library Association Best Books for Young Adults citation, and a Gradiva Award for Best Memoir.".
- Anita_Lobel alias "Kempler, Anita".
- Anita_Lobel birthDate "1934-06-02".
- Anita_Lobel birthName "Anita Kempler".
- Anita_Lobel birthPlace Krak%C3%B3w.
- Anita_Lobel birthPlace Poland.
- Anita_Lobel birthYear "1934".
- Anita_Lobel child Adrianne_Lobel.
- Anita_Lobel education Pratt_Institute.
- Anita_Lobel ethnicity Polish_American.
- Anita_Lobel genre Picture_book.
- Anita_Lobel individualisedGnd "123042518".
- Anita_Lobel lccnId "n/79/021041".
- Anita_Lobel notableWork A_New_Coat_for_Anna.
- Anita_Lobel notableWork Alison's_Zinnia's.
- Anita_Lobel notableWork No_Pretty_Pictures.
- Anita_Lobel notableWork On_Market_Street.
- Anita_Lobel occupation Illustrator.
- Anita_Lobel spouse Arnold_Lobel.
- Anita_Lobel viafId "2473599".
- Anita_Lobel wikiPageExternalLink Book_List.html.
- Anita_Lobel wikiPageExternalLink anita-lobel.
- Anita_Lobel wikiPageExternalLink 6-3lobel.html.
- Anita_Lobel wikiPageID "34929036".
- Anita_Lobel wikiPageRevisionID "605613822".
- Anita_Lobel alternativeNames "Kempler, Anita".
- Anita_Lobel birthDate "1934-06-02".
- Anita_Lobel birthName "Anita Kempler".
- Anita_Lobel birthPlace Krak%C3%B3w.
- Anita_Lobel birthPlace Poland.
- Anita_Lobel children "Adrianne Lobel, Adam Lobel".
- Anita_Lobel dateOfBirth "1934-06-02".
- Anita_Lobel education Pratt_Institute.
- Anita_Lobel ethnicity Polish_American.
- Anita_Lobel genre "Children's picture books".
- Anita_Lobel gnd "123042518".
- Anita_Lobel hasPhotoCollection Anita_Lobel.
- Anita_Lobel lccn "n/79/021041".
- Anita_Lobel name "Anita Lobel".
- Anita_Lobel name "Lobel, Anita".
- Anita_Lobel nationality "American".
- Anita_Lobel notableworks "* Alison's Zinnia's * On Market Street * No Pretty Pictures * A New Coat for Anna".
- Anita_Lobel occupation Illustrator.
- Anita_Lobel placeOfBirth "Krakow, Poland".
- Anita_Lobel shortDescription "American children's illustrator and writer".
- Anita_Lobel spouse Arnold_Lobel.
- Anita_Lobel viaf "2473599".
- Anita_Lobel website "anita-lobel.com".
- Anita_Lobel description "American children's illustrator and writer".
- Anita_Lobel description "American children's illustrator and writer".
- Anita_Lobel subject Category:1934_births.
- Anita_Lobel subject Category:American_children's_writers.
- Anita_Lobel subject Category:Jewish_American_writers.
- Anita_Lobel subject Category:Living_people.
- Anita_Lobel subject Category:People_from_Kraków.
- Anita_Lobel subject Category:Pratt_Institute_alumni.
- Anita_Lobel type Alumnus109786338.
- Anita_Lobel type AmericanChildren'sWriters.
- Anita_Lobel type CausalAgent100007347.
- Anita_Lobel type Communicator109610660.
- Anita_Lobel type Intellectual109621545.
- Anita_Lobel type JewishAmericanWriters.
- Anita_Lobel type LivingPeople.
- Anita_Lobel type LivingThing100004258.
- Anita_Lobel type Object100002684.
- Anita_Lobel type Organism100004475.
- Anita_Lobel type PeopleFromKrak%C3%B3w.
- Anita_Lobel type Person100007846.
- Anita_Lobel type PhysicalEntity100001930.
- Anita_Lobel type PrattInstituteAlumni.
- Anita_Lobel type Scholar110557854.
- Anita_Lobel type Whole100003553.
- Anita_Lobel type Writer110794014.
- Anita_Lobel type YagoLegalActor.
- Anita_Lobel type YagoLegalActorGeo.
- Anita_Lobel type Agent.
- Anita_Lobel type Artist.
- Anita_Lobel type Person.
- Anita_Lobel type Writer.
- Anita_Lobel type Person.
- Anita_Lobel type Q215627.
- Anita_Lobel type Q5.
- Anita_Lobel type Agent.
- Anita_Lobel type NaturalPerson.
- Anita_Lobel type Thing.
- Anita_Lobel type Person.
- Anita_Lobel comment "Anita Lobel (née Kempler; born June 2, 1934) is a Polish-American illustrator of children's books, including A New Coat for Anna, This Quiet Lady, Alison's Zinnia, and On Market Street, which won a Caldecott Honor for illustrations. One Lighthouse, One Moon, one of three books she created about her cat, Nini, is a New York Times Best Illustrated Book. Her childhood memoir, No Pretty Pictures, was a finalist for the National Book Award.She was born in Krakow, Poland, to a merchant family.".
- Anita_Lobel label "Anita Lobel".
- Anita_Lobel label "Anita Lobel".
- Anita_Lobel sameAs Anita_Lobel.
- Anita_Lobel sameAs m.05x5401.
- Anita_Lobel sameAs Q2653051.
- Anita_Lobel sameAs Q2653051.
- Anita_Lobel sameAs Anita_Lobel.
- Anita_Lobel wasDerivedFrom Anita_Lobel?oldid=605613822.
- Anita_Lobel givenName "Anita".
- Anita_Lobel homepage anita-lobel.com.
- Anita_Lobel isPrimaryTopicOf Anita_Lobel.
- Anita_Lobel name "Anita Lobel".
- Anita_Lobel name "Lobel, Anita".