Simon Bartram Explained
Simon Bartram is an English illustrator and writer of children's picture books. He was one runner-up for the Mother Goose Award in 1999 for Pinocchio and for the Kate Greenaway Medal in 2002 for Man on the Moon: A Day in the Life of Bob. In 2004, Man on the Moon was voted "best illustrated book to read aloud" by a panel of Blue Peter viewers and also named the Blue Peter Book Award Book of the Year.[1]
References
- Book: Mendlesohn, Farah. The inter-galactic playground: a critical study of children's and teens' science fiction. https://books.google.com/books?id=du6JxLaEKeEC&dq=Simon+Bartram&pg=PA236. 2009. McFarland & Co.. Jefferson, N.C. . 236–238. The Golden Age of Science Fiction is Three. 978-0-7864-3503-6 .
- Book: Sipe. Lawrence R. . Pantaleo. Sylvia Joyce . Postmodern picturebooks: play, parody, and self-referentiality. 14 February 2012. 2008. Routledge. WE BEGIN WITH KATE COWAN'S RESEARCH USING SIMON BARTRAM'S DOUGAL'S DEEP- SEA DIARY WITH FIVE- AND SIX-YEAR-OLDS. Simon Bartram has been hailed as one of the most original picturebook artists to emerge in recent years.. 978-0-415-96210-0. 208.
Notes and References
- News: Blue Peter name book award winner . . 27 November 2004 . 14 February 2012 .