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Other editions of book Little Black Sambo: Uncensored Original 1922 Full Color Reproduction

  • Little Black Sambo

    Helen Bannerman

    Hardcover (David McKay, Jan. 1, 1931)
    None
  • Little Black Sambo

    Helen Bannerman, Fern Bisel Peat

    Hardcover (John Sherman Bagg, the American Crayon Co., Jan. 1, 1943)
    Contains 5 full page, color illustrations with many black and whie sketches.
  • Little Black Sambo

    Helen Bannerman

    Hardcover (western Publishing Company, Jan. 1, 1961)
    large slim hardcover
  • Little Black Sambo

    Helen Bannerman

    Paperback (The Saafield Publishing Co., Jan. 1, 1933)
    None
  • Little Black Sambo

    Bannerman Helen

    Hardcover (Platt & Munk, Jan. 1, 1960)
    None
  • Little Black Sambo

    Helen Bannerman, Cobb X. Shinn

    Hardcover (Albert Whitman & Company, Sept. 3, 1925)
    The Enlarged Picture Edition of A "Just Right" Book. (The "Just right" edition). Color drawings by Cobb X. Shinn. Color illustrations with text opposite.
  • Little Black Sambo

    Nina R. Jordan, Helen Bannerman

    Hardcover (Whitman, Jan. 1, 1932)
    None
  • Little Black Sambo

    Helen Bannerman

    Hardcover (Duenewald Printing, Jan. 1, 1949)
    None
  • Little Black Sambo

    Helen bannerman

    eBook (, June 17, 2017)
    Sambo is a South Indian boy who lives with his father and mother, named Black Jumbo and Black Mumbo, respectively. While out walking, Sambo encounters four hungry tigers, and surrenders his colourful new clothes, shoes, and umbrella so they will not eat him. The tigers are vain and each thinks he is better dressed than the others. They chase each other around a tree until they are reduced to a pool of ghee (clarified butter). Sambo then recovers his clothes and collects the ghee, which his mother uses to make pancakes.[2]
  • Little Black Sambo

    Helen Bannerman

    eBook (, Sept. 6, 2020)
    The Story of Little Black Sambo is a children's book written and illustrated by Scottish author Helen Bannerman and published by Grant Richards in October 1899. As one in a series of small-format books called The Dumpy Books for Children, the story was a children's favourite for more than half a century.Critics of the time observed that Bannerman presents one of the first black heroes in children's literature and regarded the book as positively portraying black characters in both the text and pictures, especially in comparison to the more negative books of that era that depicted blacks as simple and uncivilised.[1] However, it would become an object of allegations of racism in the mid-20th century, due to the names of the characters being racial slurs for dark-skinned people, and the fact the illustrations were, as Langston Hughes put it, in the pickaninny style. Both text and illustrations have undergone considerable revisions since.
  • LITTLE BLACK SAMBO: ILLUSTRATED

    HELEN BANNERMAN

    eBook (, July 17, 2020)
    First published in London in 1899, this classic tale by Helen Bannerman tells the story of a little boy named Sambo who encounters four hunger tigers, outwits them, and turns them into butter, before returning safely home to eat a 169 pancakes for his supper.
  • Little Black Sambo

    Bannerman

    Hardcover (HarperCollins, Feb. 8, 2003)
    None