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Books published by publisher J.P. Lippincott

  • To Kill a Mocking Bird

    Harper Lee

    Hardcover (J. B. Lippincott, Aug. 16, 1960)
    Book
  • Animals of the Bible

    Helen Dean Fish, Dorothy P. Lathrop

    Hardcover (J. B. Lippincott, March 15, 1965)
    Dorothy Lathrop's Animals of the Bible won the very first Caldecott Medal when it was originally published in 1937. Now, in honor of the sixtieth anniversary of this prestigious medal and its first recipient, comes this special deluxe edition of Lathrop's award-winning collection of some of the Bible's most extraordinary animals. Thirty richly detailed black-and-white drawings illustrate the favorite stories of the Creation, Noah's Ark, the first Christmas, and many others. A glorious tribute to a great tradition in children's literature, this special anniversary edition will be a keepsake to treasure for years to come.
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  • Science experiments you can eat

    Vicki Cobb

    Hardcover (Lippincott, Jan. 1, 1972)
    Experiments with food demonstrate various scientific principles and produce an eatable result. Includes fruit drinks, grape jelly, muffins, chop suey, yogurt, and junket.
  • Wheel on the Chimney

    Margaret Wise Brown, Tibor Gergely

    Hardcover (J.P. Lippincott, April 15, 1985)
    First there is one stork, then there are two. They build their nest on a wheel that a Hungarian farmer has tied to his chimney. The farmer is glad. Storks bring great honor and good luck to the house where they choose to build their nest.All summer long the storks raise their family of two small white silent storks in the nest on the wheel on the chimney. Then autumn comes and joined by thousands of other storks they silently fly south, always south, heading for the deep warm wilderness of Africa, their winter home. And when springtime returns, the storks fly north, build new nests on wheels on chimneys, and their story begins all over again.Wheel on the Chimney is the result of a wonderful collaboration between artist and author. Tibor Gergely had always wanted to do a picture book about the beautiful storks of Hungary, his native land. And when Margaret Wise Brown saw his lovely paintings, she was eager to write the story of the marvelous, brave birds whose cycle of migration brings them back each spring to build their nests on farmers' chimneys.
  • The Story of Doctor Dolittle

    Hugh Lofting, Hugh Walpole

    Hardcover (J. B. Lippincott Co., March 15, 1948)
    The Story of Doctor Dolittle by Hugh Lofting. Introduction by Sir Hugh Walpole. 1948 hardcover published by J. B. Lippincott Co. Black-and-white illustrations by the author.
  • Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark: Collected from American Folklore

    Alvin Schwartz

    Paperback (J.P. Lippincott, Oct. 1, 1981)
    Alvin Schwartz’s Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark opens with a legend similar to my scar-inducing "Tailypo," "The Big Toe." Less sinister than severing a woodland creature's tail, in Schwartz’s version, a little boy innocently uncovers a large toe sticking up in the garden. Not exploring further, he wrenches it from the ground (or a corpse) and gives it to his mother to cook, as one does. After dinner and settling into bed for sleep and digesting, a voice stalks the house, calling out for its missing toe. Whether zombie or ghost we can’t be sure, as some versions end with the storyteller pouncing on a listener, and others with a figure in the chimney who returns the favor of having its toe consumed by eating the little boy. This is the perfect opening for a book set to scar children for life, because what is scarier than the idea of being devoured? Children know they won't stay children forever, that the ever-looming threat of adulthood stands in the shadows, ready to devour playtime and naps. To a child, play is synonymous with the self, and therefore maturity threatens to consume that self. Don't even have a taste of that toe, kids - once adulthood knows you're there, it will come knocking, forks drawn. As a child, I feared being devoured literally thanks to Tailypo and the grandma-eating Big Bad Wolf. As I got older this fear evolved into a biologically absurd terror at sharks that (I believed) swam in the freshwater lakes where my family would water-ski. In high school, my Asian Studies teacher gave a lecture on the film Jaws and the great white as metaphor for our own terror at things deep (and buried – like a corpse!) in our psyche rising up from the darkness to consume us, transforming us into the monsters we know we’re capable of being, (the fact that the shark was a great white shark devouring victims is a post for another day). At 17, this lecture blew my mind and resparked my interest in horror,
  • Tom's Midnight Garden

    Philippa Pearce, Susan Einzig

    Hardcover (J. P. Lippincott, July 1, 1984)
    Tom is furious. His brother, Peter, has measles, so now Tom is being shipped off to stay with Aunt Gwen and Uncle Alan in their boring old apartment. There'll be nothing to do there and no one to play with. Tom just counts the days till he can return home to Peter.Then one night the landlady's antique grandfather clock strikes thirteen times leading Tom to a wonderful, magical discovery and marking the beginning of a secret that's almost too amazing to be true. But it is true, and in the new world that Tom discovers is a special friend named Hatty and more than a summer's worth of adventure for both of them. Now Tom wishes he could stay with his relativesand Hatty -- forever...
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  • Rembrandt : Art for Children

    Ernest Lloyd Raboff

    Hardcover (J. B. Lippincott, Sept. 1, 1987)
    A brief biography of Rembrandt Van Rijn accompanies fourteen color productions and critical interpretations of his work
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  • The Twelve Clever Brothers and Other Fools: Folktales from Russia

    Mirra Ginsburg, Charles Mikolaycak

    Hardcover (J.B. Lippincott, March 15, 1979)
    Fourteen traditional folktales from the different peoples of Russia featuring both clever and silly fools.
  • The Empty Copper Sea

    John D MacDonald

    Hardcover (Lippincott, March 15, 1978)
    MacDonald, John D, Empty Copper Sea
  • Too Much Magic

    Betsy Sterman, Samuel Sterman, Judy Glasser

    Hardcover (J.P. Lippincott, Jan. 1, 1987)
    Two brothers have a grand time wishing for all sorts of things with the help of a magic cube the younger brother finds in the playground.
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  • Diego Rodriguez de Silva y Velasquez

    Ernest Lloyd Raboff

    Hardcover (Lippincott, Jan. 1, 1988)
    A brief biography of the seventeenth-century Spanish painter accompanies fifteen color reproductions and critical interpretations of his works.