Liesel Moak Skorpen

Liesel Moak Skorpen was a German-born children's author. Ms. Skorpen moved to the United States at a young age.

Liesel Moak Skorpen
Born(1935-07-01)1 July 1935
Germany
Died8 May 2013(2013-05-08) (aged 77)
Maine
OccupationChildren's Book Writer
LanguageEnglish
NationalityAmerican
GenreChildren's literature
Notable worksOld Arthur, My Mother's Dog, Elizabeth, We Were Tired of Living In a House, Outside My Window, Charles
SpouseErling Skorpin (7 children)

Her works include Old Arthur, We Were Tired of Living In a House, His Mother's Dog, Elizabeth and Outside My Window. Her illustrator for Old Arthur was Wallace Tripp.

Born in Germany, to Walter and Elizabeth Moak, she came to the US with her family, was raised and educated in Cleveland, Ohio.[1] Liesel graduated from Wells College, Aurora, New York, and went on to Yale University where, while studying philosophy, she met a scholar named Erling Skorpen. When he completed his Ph.D. in philosophy, they wed and moved to Nevada to start their family. Together, Liesel and Erling built a family of seven children, two of whom they adopted, one from Korea and the other off an Indian reservation. After suffering the loss of a young son, Per Anders, they moved to Maine - See more at: http://obituaries.bangordailynews.com/obituaries/bdnmaine/obituary.aspx?pid=164727431#fbLoggedOut

Selected bibliography

  • Outside My Window (Coward-McCann, 1968) (illustrated by Mercer Mayer) ISBN 0-06-050774-8 (for the 2004 reprint)
  • That Mean Man (Harper & Row, 1968) (illustrated by Emily McCully)
  • We Were Tired of Living in a House (Coward-McCann, 1969 version illustrated by Doris Burn, ISBN 0-698-30394-6 & reprinted by Putnam in 1999 with illustrations by Joe Cepeda, ISBN 0-399-23016-5)
  • Elizabeth (Harper & Row, 1970) (illustrated by Martha G. Alexander) ISBN 0-06-025708-3
  • All the Lassies (Dial Press, 1970)(illustrated by Bruce M. Scott)
  • Charles (Harper & Row, 1971) (illustrated by Martha G. Alexander) ISBN 0-06-025712-1
  • Plenty For Three (Coward-McCann, 1971) (illustrated by Margot Tomes)
  • Old Arthur (World's Work, 1973) (illustrated by Wallace Tripp) ISBN 0-437-74673-9
  • Mandy's Grandmother (Dial Press, 1975) (illustrated by Martha G. Alexander) ISBN 0-8037-4962-7
  • Michael (Harper & Row, 1975)(illustrated by Joan Sandin) ISBN 0-06-025719-9
  • Bird (HarperCollins, 1976) (illustrated by Joan Sandin) ISBN 0-06-025693-1
  • His Mother's Dog (Harper & Row, 1978) (illustrated by Mary Ellen Mullin) ISBN 0-06-025722-9
gollark: I agree.
gollark: Personally, I'm pretty dissatisfied with the state of the phone market, since user control is being taken away constantly because "sEcUriTy", the lack of standardization on ARM and monolithic design of Android makes actually getting updates after a while unlikely, and I don't like the "entire front is screen except there's randomly a bit missing for a camera" aesthetic which is a thing now, or the fact that battery life is somehow stagnant despite increasingly good battery tech.
gollark: Oh, the magisk app or whatever it is too, right.
gollark: F.lux, Termux, ... I think that's it?
gollark: Yes, and not that many and they're pretty trustworthy.

References

  1. "Elizabeth Frackelton Moak Skorpen - Obituary". Bangor Daily News. May 11, 2013. Retrieved 9 August 2013.

Resources

Author biography

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