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TIMELINE OF

CHILDREN’S LITERATURE
1485-2013
Heysha Díaz Meléndez 09.17.13
"The more that you read,
the more things you will know.
The more you learn,
the more places you'll go."
— Dr. Seuss, I Can Read With My Eyes Shut!

"I have always imagined that paradise


will be a kind of library."
— Jorge Luis Borges
Late 15th century – 17th century
 1484 William Caxton
prints Subtyl Historyes and
Fables of Esop
 1485 Sir Thomas Malory Le
Morte D’arthur
 1563 John Foxe Actes and
Monumentes, popularly known as
the Book of Martyrs. Used for
over three centuries as a source in
many books for Protestant
children, including the New-
England Primer.
 1601 John Weever An Agnus
Dei (A Lamb of God), an abridged
New Testament in rhymed
couplets; a very early example of
the miniature books known as
Thumb Bibles.
Late 15th century – 17th century
 1659 Visible World, the first
English translation of Johann
Amos Comenius's Orbis
Sensualium Pictus, an educational
compendium with a pictorial
alphabet arranged according to
sounds.
 1660 Thomas White A Little Book
for Little Children. Set out
Puritan ideals for children;
published as part of his Manual
for Parents.
 1668 Jean de La
Fontaine's Fables choisies, mises Original and
en vers (Selected Fables, Set in Modern versions
Verse); first translated into of the collection
English in 1734.
Late 15th century – 17th century

 1678 John Bunyan The Pilgrim's


Progress

 1697 Charles Perrault Histoires


ou contes du temps passé (Stories
or Tales of Past Times). Often
considered the first major
collection of fairy tales for
children. The book was first
published in English in 1729;
many of the tales were separately
published as chapbooks and later
as picture books for children. The
collection was sometimes given
the title "Tales of Mother Goose."
18th century
 1719 Daniel Defoe Robinson
Crusoe

 1726 Jonathan Swift Gulliver's


Travels

 1744 John Newbery A Little


Pretty Pocket-Book

 1749 Sarah Fielding The


Governess; or, The Little Female
Academy. One of the first books
published specifically for girls; it
contains two didactic fairy tales.
19th century (1800-1849)
 1805 William Godwin Fables
Ancient and Modern, an
adaptation for young children.
 1819 Washington Irving "Rip Van
Winkle" and "The Legend of
Sleepy Hollow“
 1823 Edgar Taylor German
Popular Stories, a translation of
selected tales from Jacob and
Wilhelm Grimm's Kinder- und
Hausmärchen (1812-
15, Children's and Household
Tales)
19th century (1800-1849)
 1823 “A Visit from St. Nicholas”
aka “The Night Before
Christmas” was published
anonymously; authorship later
attributed to Clement Clarke
Moore.
 1843 Charles Dickens A
Christmas Carol
 1846 Mary Howitt's translation
of Wonderful Stories for
Children by Hans Christian
Andersen; one of the first English
translations of Andersen's fairy
tales, which began appearing in
Danish in 1835.
19th century (1850-1899)
 1863 Jules Verne Cinq semaines
en ballon, voyage de découvertes
en Afrique (Five Weeks in a
Balloon), the first major science
fiction novel.
 1865 Lewis Carroll Alice's
Adventures in Wonderland
 1868 Louisa May Alcott Little
Women
 1877 Anna Sewell Black Beauty
 1881 Robert Louis
Stevenson Treasure Island
19th century (1850-1899)
 1884 Mark Twain The Adventures
of Huckleberry Finn

 1892 First U.S. comic


strip, "Little Bears and
Tykes," San Francisco Examiner

 1894-95 Rudyard Kipling The


Jungle Book
20th century (1900-1910)
 1900 L. Frank Baum The Wizard
of Oz
 1902 Beatrix Potter The Tale of
Peter Rabbit
 1903 Jack London The Call of the
Wild; Howard Pyle's The Story of
King Arthur and His Knights.
 1904 J. M. Barrie Peter Pan, or
The Boy Who Wouldn't Grow
Up premiers in London
(1929 First definitive publication
of J. M. Barrie's play Peter Pan;
or The Boy Who Would Not Grow
Up)
20th century (1900-1910)
 1905 Frances Hodgson Burnett A
Little Princess

 1906 Jack London White Fang

 1908 L. M. Montgomery's Anne


of Green Gables

 1908 Kenneth Grahame The Wind


in the Willows
20th century (1911-1920)
 1911 Frances Hodgson
Burnett The Secret Garden

 1922 Margery Williams The


Velveteen Rabbit

 1926 A. A. Milne Winnie-the-


Pooh
20th century (1921-1940)
 1930 Carolyn Keene Nancy Drew
Mystery Stories (Original series
published between 1930-2003)
Carolyn Keene is a pseudonym
for the various ghostwriters used
to create the series.

 1932 Laura Ingalls Wilder Little


House in the Big Woods

 1933 Marjorie Flack The Story


about Ping
20th century (1921-1940)
 1936 Munro Leaf and Robert
Lawson The Story of Ferdinand

 1937 J.R.R. Tolkien The Hobbit

 1939 Ludwig Bemelmans


Madeline

 1939 Robert L. May


Rudolph the
Red-Nosed
Reindeer
20th century (1941-1950)
 1941 H.A. Rey Curious George

 1942 Margaret Wise


Brown Runaway Bunny

 1947 Margaret Wise


Brown Goodnight Moon

 1950 C. S. Lewis The Lion, the


Witch, and the Wardrobe, the first
of the seven Narnia chronicles
(1950-56)
20th century (1951-1960)
 1951 J. D. Salinger The Catcher
in the Rye

 1952 Anne Frank Diary of a


Young Girl

 1952 E. B. White Charlotte's Web

 1955 Beverly Cleary Beezus and


Ramona (the Ramona Quimby
series continued until the final
installment, Ramona’s World was
published in 1999)
20th century (1951-1960)
 1955 Kay Thompson Eloise

 1957 Dr. Seuss The Cat in the Hat

 1960 Scott O’Dell Island of the


Blue Dolphins

 1960 P.D. Eastman Are You My


Mother?
20th century (1961-1970)
 1961 Roald Dahl James and the
Giant Peach
 1961 P.D. Eastman Go Dog Go
 1963 Madeleine L'Engle A
Wrinkle in Time
 1963 Maurice Sendak Where the
Wild Things Are
 1964 Shel Silverstein The Giving
Tree
 1964 Ronald Dahl Charlie and
the Chocolate Factory
20th century (1961-1970)
 1967 Bill Martin Brown
Bear, Brown Bear, What Do You
See?

 1967 S.E. Hinton The Outsiders

 1968 Eric Carle The Very Hungry


Caterpillar

 1968 Don Freeman Corduroy

 1970 Judy Blume Are You


There, God? It's Me, Margaret
20th century (1971-1980)
 1972 Judith Viorst Alexander and
the Terrible, Horrible, No
Good, Very Bad Day
 1974 Shel Silverstein Where the
Sidewalk Ends
 1975 Natalie Babbitt Tuck
Everlasting
 1977 Katherine Paterson Bridge
to Terabithia
 1978 Judi Barrett Cloudy With a
Chance of Meatballs
20th century (1981-1990)
 1981 Chris Van Allsburg Jumanji
 1981 Shel Silverstein A Light in the
Attic
 1983 Francine Pascal Sweet Valley
High series
 1985 Chris Van Allsburg The Polar
Express
 1985 Laura Numeroff If You Give A
Mouse A Cookie
 1986 Graeme Base Animalia
 1986 Robert Munsch Love You Forever
 1989 Jon Scieszka The True Story of
the Three Little Pigs
20th century (1981-1990)
20th century (1991-1999)
 1992 Jon Scieszka The Stinky
Cheese Man
 1992 Marc Pfister The Rainbow
Fish
 1993 Janell Cannon Stellaluna
 1993 Lois Lowry's The Giver
 1994 Sam McBratney Guess How
Much I Love You
 1995-2000 Philip Pullman His
Dark Materials trilogy
 1997 J. K. Rowling Harry Potter
and the Philosopher's Stone (U.S.
title: Harry Potter and the
Sorcerer's Stone)
21st century (2000-2013)
 2000 Ian Falconer Olivia
 2000 Doreen Cronin
Click, Clack, Moo Cows That
Type
 2003 Kate DiCamillo The Tale of
Desperaux
 2005 Stephenie Meyer Twilight
 2005 Rick Riordan The Lightning
Thief (Percy Jackson and the
Olympians)
 2005 Jane O’Connor Fancy
Nancy
 2007 Jeff Kinney Diary of a
Wimpy Kid
21st century (2000-2013)
 2008 Suzanne Collins The
Hunger Games
 2009 Grace Lin Where the
Mountain Meets the Moon
 2010 Clare Vanderpool Moon
Over Manifest
 2011 Jack Gantos Dead End in
Norvelt
 2012 K.A. Applegate The One
and Only Ivan
 2013 Susan Cooper Ghost
Hawk
References
 American Library Association. (2013). Newberry medal and honor books,
1922 to present. Retrieved from
http://www.ala.org/alsc/awardsgrants/bookmedia/newberymedal/newb
eryhonors/newberymedal
 Children's Book Guide. (2013). Top 100 children's books of all time.
Retrieved from http://childrensbooksguide.com/top-100
 The norton anthology of children's literature timeline index. (2005).
Retrieved from
http://www.wwnorton.com/college/english/nacl/index.html
 Note: My most important references cannot be named individually. They
are all the teachers I had through the years who took the time to either
read the majority of these books to me in class or to provide me with class
time to read them myself. Thank you! Please READ to your children
and to your students. It makes a difference 
"Once you learn to read,
you will be forever free."
— Frederick Douglass

THANK YOU FOR YOUR


ATTENTION!

"Oh, magic hour, when a child first knows she can read printed words!"
— A Tree Grows in Brooklyn, 1943

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