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  2. Stuart Little is a 1945 American children's novel by E. B. White. [1] It was White's first children's book, and became recognized as a classic in children's literature. Stuart Little was illustrated by the artist Garth Williams , also his first work for children.

    • E. B. White
    • 1945
  3. Jun 3, 2016 · Sarah Larson writes about the legacy of Garth Williams, the illustrator of “Stuart Little,” “Charlotte’s Web,” and other classic children’s books.

    • Sarah Larson
  4. Garth Montgomery Williams (April 16, 1912 – May 8, 1996) was an American artist who came to prominence in the American postwar era as an illustrator of children's books. Many of the books he illustrated have become classics of American children's literature. [1]

  5. Garth Williams (1912–1998) was the creator of signature art for iconic children’s books. The evidence of his talent was apparent in the very first title he illustrated: Stuart Little by E. B. White (HarperCollins).

    • Stuart Little Was E.B. White’s First Children’s Book.
    • Garth Williams Illustrated The Original Edition of Stuart little.
    • E.B. White Got The Idea For Stuart Little from A Dream.
    • Anne Carroll Moore Then Tried to Prevent Stuart Little from Being published.
    • Not All The Critics Loved Stuart little.
    • It’S Not Totally Clear If Stuart Little Is Actually A Mouse.
    • A Fifth-Grader in Illinois Came Up with A Much Happier Ending For Stuart little.

    In the late 1920s, Elwyn Brooks White rose to renown for his work as a writer and editor at The New Yorker. He also teamed up with James Thurber on a satirical collection of essays called Is Sex Necessary? Or, Why You Feel the Way You Do. It wasn’t until 1945 that White published Stuart Little, his first (but not last) novel for young readers. He’d...

    Stuart Little was also the first children’s book illustrated by Garth Williams, a former aspiring New Yorker cartoonist who would later provide the artwork for Charlotte’s Web, Laura Ingalls Wilder’s Little House series, George Selden’s The Cricket in Times Square and its sequels, and several books by Margaret Wise Brown (though not her most famous...

    Around the same time White joined The New Yorker, he dozed off on a train ride and “dreamed of a small character who had the features of a mouse, was nicely dressed, courageous, and questing.” The trumpet-playing swan and the eloquent barn spider from his other bookswere conscious inventions, though. White said Stuart Little was “the only fictional...

    In 1945, White finally finished a draft of Stuart Littleand sent it to Ursula Nordstrom, the director of Harper’s Department of Books for Boys and Girls. Nordstrom passed along an advance copy to Moore, who did little to hide her loathing for a story that spliced together fact and fantasy in what she believed was a distasteful way that would confus...

    Fortunately for fans of anthropomorphic mice, Nordstrom ignored Moore’s melodramatic warning and published the novel anyway. Plenty of people enjoyed White’s somewhat strange foray into children’s stories, but Moore wasn’t the only disappointed reader. The New York Timesbook critic Malcolm Cowley, for one, didn’t think White had created a classic b...

    In the 1999 film adaptation of Stuart Little (with a screenplay co-written by M. Night Shyamalan, by the way), there’s no denying the titular character is a mouse—not only does he look like a furry white mouse that came straight from a laboratory experiment, but he also refers to himself as a mouse. The book, on the other hand, isn’t quite so clear...

    Stuart Littleends on a somewhat hopeful, open-ended note, with Stuart speeding off in his little car in search of Margalo, the songbird who had fled to avoid being eaten by the Littles’ cat, Snowball. “The way seemed long,” White writes, but “he somehow felt he was headed in the right direction.” In 1946, for a school assignment, a fifth-grader in ...

  6. Jul 14, 2008 · “Stuart Little” was to be Anne Carroll Moores lasting legacy to children’s literature. In her mind, it was her book. There was nothing for it: Nordstrom sent her a galley.

  7. Jun 27, 2016 · If you are familiar at all with classic children’s literature, you will know the name Garth Williams. Williams illustrated Charlotte’s Web, Stuart Little, Cricket in Times Square, and Little House on the Prairie.