MinuteMan Library Network is one source for ISBN with edition data and such as "Jean Karl book"
Hollis Catalog numbers
- Jennifer 1st 0689702965 Gutman PZ7.K7
- Mixed-Up (c1968) Gutman PZ7.K7 Fr
- Bagels (1969 1st) Gutman PZ7.K7 Ab
- Dep ALB 3527.1101
- Shadows 1st 0689307144 Gutman PZ7.K7 Th 1979
- Jericho 068931194X Gutman PZ7.K8352 Up 1986
- Saturday 1st 068980993X Gutman PZ7.K8352 Vi 1996 "A Jean Karl Book"
- Silent 0689836023 (pbk.)2002 Gutman PZ7.K8352 Si 2000
The Outcasts dedication: "This book is for David and for Jean, who cheered its conception but sadly left it an orphan before birth."
- ELK's forever editor Jean Karl died 2000-03-30.
- Presumably David is her husband David Konigsburg.
Present at wikipedia
edit- Jennifer, Hecate, Macbeth, William McKinley, and Me, Elizabeth (1967)
- From the Mixed-Up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler (1967)
- The Second Mrs. Giaconda (1975)
In or related to Epiphany, New York
- The View from Saturday (1996)
- Silent to the Bone (2000)
- The Outcasts of 19 Schuyler Place (2004)
- The Mysterious Edge of the Heroic World (2007)
Missing at wikipedia
editDaughter
editPittsburgh vicinity
Author | E. L. Konigsburg |
---|---|
Illustrator | E. L. Konigsburg |
Language | English |
Genre | Children's novel |
Publisher | Atheneum Books |
Publication date | 1976 |
Publication place | United States |
Media type | Print (hardcover & paperback) |
Pages | 118 pp (paper) |
ISBN | 978-1-4169-5500-9 (paper) |
Back cover:
- Winston Carmichael has it all: a big house, servants, vacations in Palm Beach, and a fancy private school. But with overprotective parents and a sense of responsibility for his younger sister, Heidi, Winston sometimes feels more as if he's living in a prison than a dream.
- Then one day a woman appears at the front door claiming to be Caroline--Winston's half sister, who was kidnapped and presumed dead long before he and Heidi were born. Is she really Caroline? Is she an impostor? Or is she somethig far more complicated than either? And does she hold the key that could unlock the doors to Winston's prison?
Dragon
editFoxmeadow, Gainesboro
Author | E. L. Konigsburg |
---|---|
Illustrator | E. L. Konigsburg |
Cover artist | E. L. Konigsburg |
Language | English |
Genre | Children's novel |
Publisher | Atheneum Books (first) Aladdin Paperbacks |
Publication date | 1974 |
Publication place | United States |
Media type | Print (hardcover & paperback) |
Pages | 111 pp (paper) |
ISBN | 0-689-82328-2 (paper) |
Back cover:
- Andy's not your average resident of exclusive Foxmeadow -- whenever he sits down to draw something, it turns out to be a dragon. And he wants to be a [cool] detective when he grow up -- not just an ordinary, everyday police detective, but a tough, cool, famous detective like theones he reads about in mystery novels.
- Everyone knows a famous detective needs a sidekick, but Mrs. Edie Yakots, a lonely new bride who's just moved into Foxmeadow, isn't exactly what Andy had in mind -- he sometimes has a hard time just figuring out what's she's talking about. But she's the only volunteer for the job, and before he knows it, she's led him right into the middle of his first real crime -- in an inner-city [Gainesboro] neighborhood a short drive, and light years away, from Foxmeadown [another ghetto].
Eleanor
editTalk:The Second Mrs. Giaconda#Scholastic interview selections concerning history and her two historical novels.
Author | E. L. Konigsburg |
---|---|
Illustrator | E. L. Konigsburg |
Cover artist | E. L. Konigsburg |
Language | English |
Genre | Children's novel |
Publisher | Atheneum Books |
Publication date | 1973 |
Publication place | United States |
Media type | Print (hardcover) |
Pages | 201 pp (first) |
ISBN | 0-689-30111-1 |
Inside front cover:
- Eleanor of Acquitaine is in Heaven, waiting to learn whether or not her second husband, King Henry II of England, will be able to join her. Henry had died even before Eleanor, but he still has not won admission to Heaven. Waiting with Eleanor are Henry's mother, Matilda-Empress, and William the Marshal. A chance encournter with Abbot Suger, an old friend of Eleanor's from the time of her first marriage, starts the four of them remembering times past. Each person in turn tells a part of Eleanor's life, vividly illustrating the excitement of living in twelfth-century England and France, and expecially the excitement of being Eleanor. Wife of two Kings, mother of two others, Richard the Lion Heart and John, she set the tone of court life for her times, sponsored poets and musicians, established the legend of King Arthur as a romantic feature of English literature, set the Rules of Courtly Love, and helped rule a kingdom that spanned from Scotland to the Pyrenees. ANd she did all this in a time when a king could keep his queen a prisoner--and did!
- This book is a novel, fiction, fantasy even. But everything in it about Eleanor and her family and her times is true.
There are four "Tales" between five interludes "(Back) in Heaven"