Available Formats
Corduroy Lost and Found
By (Author) Don Freeman
By (author) B.G. Hennessy
Illustrated by Jody Wheeler
Penguin USA
Viking Books for Young Readers
14th September 2006
United States
Children
Fiction
Childrens / Teenage fiction: Action and adventure stories
Hardback
32
Width 238mm, Height 210mm, Spine 9mm
306g
A new adventure for a classic teddy bear! Corduroy the beloved bear slips out very early one morning to get a birthday present for Lisa. He spies what he thinks is a yellow balloon up in the sky, thinking that would be perfect for her. But when the sun rises, the balloon (really the full moon) disappears. And now Corduroy is lost. Lisa finds him, but not before Corduroy succeeds in getting just the right gift-a lollipop as yellow and round as the moon. Written in the whimsical style of Don Freeman and illustrated in the exact scratchboard technique he used to create Corduroy and A Pocket for Corduroy. 2018 is Corduroy's 50th anniversary, making this the perfect time for a new Corduroy adventure!
B.G. Hennessy grew up in Wantagh on Long Island, NY. At the University of Wisconsin in Madison, she majored in fine art and learned how to design, print and bind handmade books. She also took courses in Children's Literature. The combination of form and content in the picture book format fascinated her and after graduation she headed for NYC where she worked for 17 years in children's book publishing as a designer and art director. She is the author of Road Builders and The First Night, as well as many books starring Corduroy, the loveable toy bear created by Don Freeman. She now lives with her family in Arizona. Don Freeman(1908-1978) was the author and illustrator of many popular books for children, includingCorduroy,A Pocket for Corduroy, and the Caldecott Honor BookFly High, Fly Low. During his career as an artist, sketching impressions of Broadway shows for theNew York TimesandThe Herald Tribune,he was introduced to the world of children's literature when William Saroyan asked him to illustrate several books. Soon after, he began to write and illustrate his own books, a career he settled into comfortably and happily. Through his writing, he was able to create his own theater- "I love the flow of turning the pages, the suspense of what's next. Ideas just come at me and after me. It's all so natural. I work all the time, long into the night, and it's such a pleasure. I don't know when the time ends. I've never been happier in my life!" He created many beloved characters in his lifetime, perhaps the most beloved among them a stuffed, overall-wearing bear named Corduroy.