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Kid Artists: True Tales of Childhood from Creative Legends (Kid Legends)

Product ID : 16051845


Galleon Product ID 16051845
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About Kid Artists: True Tales Of Childhood From Creative

Product Description Hilarious childhood biographies and full-color illustrations reveal how Leonardo da Vinci, Beatrix Potter, Keith Haring, and other great artists in history coped with regular-kid problems.   Every great artist started out as a kid. Forget the awards, the sold-out museum exhibitions, and the timeless masterpieces. When the world’s most celebrated artists were growing up, they had regular-kid problems just like you.  Jackson Pollock’s family moved constantly—he lived in eight different cities before he was sixteen years old.  Georgia O’Keeffe lived in the shadow of her “perfect” older brother Francis. And  Jean-Michel Basquiat triumphed over poverty to become one of the world’s most influential artists.  Kid Artists tells their stories and more with full-color cartoon illustrations on nearly every page. Other subjects include  Claude Monet,  Jacob Lawrence,  Leonardo da Vinci,  Vincent  van Gogh,  Pablo Picasso,  Frida Kahlo,  Beatrix Potter,  Yoko Ono,  Dr. Seuss,  Emily Carr,  Keith Haring,  Charles Schulz, and  Louise Nevelson. Review “Lively glimpses of formative moments and budding talents.”— Kirkus Reviews “A fun and useful addition, especially for aspiring writers and class projects.”— School Library Journal “This is an ideal gift for aspiring young writers who may need proof that even the most famous authors had to start somewhere.”— Shelf Awareness for Readers “Full of real information, but the author made it fun and funny … I would recommend this book for all people who read books and want to know interesting information about authors, and also for people who want to be authors themselves.”—Michael, age 9   Praise for the Kid Legends series: “Just like history class, only hilarious.”—Tim Federle, author of  Better Nate Than Ever, on Kid Presidents   “Outstanding... Inspiring and entertaining.”— Booklist, starred review , on Kid Athletes “With cartoonish illustrations that will attract fans of Jeff Kinney’s The Diary of a Wimpy Kid and Rachel Renée Russell’s The Dork Diaries, this informative offering leaves no presidential childhood rock unturned.”— School Library Journal, on Kid Presidents “Impressively diverse.”— Booklist, on Kid Artists   “A heartening reminder that 17 unconventional greats—not to mention all the rest—started out as children too.”— Kirkus Reviews, on Kid Artists by David Stabler   “Filled with cute illustrations. . . [and] mini-biographies that are interesting, funny, and, most importantly, relevant to kids today.”— Geek Dad, on Kid Scientists “A funny and inspiring book for children and adults.”— New York Journal of Books, on Kid Scientists “I can think of no better way to convey to children that their heroes were once just like them.”— Fredericksburg Free-Lance Star, on Kid Scientists “Memorably weird childhood moments. . . are likely to stick with readers, as will Horner’s impish cartoons.”— Publishers Weekly, on Kid Artists About the Author Author David Stabler and illustrator Doogie Horner have created several books together, including Kid Presidents (Quirk, 2014), Kid Athletes (Quirk, 2015), Kid Artists (Quirk, 2016), and Kid Authors (Quirk, 2017). Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Charles Schulz: The Shy Guy Long before he created Charlie Brown, Snoopy, and the rest of the Peanuts gang, Charles “Sparky” Schulz was just a quiet kid with a sketchpad who felt uncomfortable sharing his drawings with others. Only by overcoming his shyness could he make the leap from secret doodler to superstar cartoonist.      Charles Schulz’s father, Carl, loved comics. In the 1930s he owned a thriving three-chair barbershop in St. Paul, Minnesota. Every Sunday, Carl would buy four newspapers just so he could follow the adventures of Buck Rogers, Little Orphan Annie, and other cartoon characters who populated the “funny pages.”      Charles, Carl’s only child, came to share his father’s passion for the newspaper comic strips. As a young boy,