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Lynd Ward

Author,Illustrator

(1905 - 1985)

Lynd Ward

Lynd Kendall Ward (June 26, 1905 – June 28, 1985) was an American artist and storyteller, known for his series of wordless novels using wood engraving, and his illustrations for juvenile and adult books. His wordless novels have influenced the development of the graphic novel. Strongly associated with his wood engravings, he also worked in watercolor, oil, brush and ink, lithography and mezzotint. Ward was a son of Methodist minister and political organizer Harry F. Ward.



Bibliography

America’s Mark Twain (1962)

A brief biography of Samuel Clemens centered on his major works.

Read online at archive.org

Author(s): May McNeer
Illustrator(s): Lynd Ward

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America’s Paul Revere (1946)

A vivid history of one of America’s best-loved patriots.

Read online at archive.org

Author(s): Esther Forbes
Illustrator(s): Lynd Ward

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Beowulf (1939)

A famous epic written in Old English about the hero Beowulf and his battles against the monsters of the north.

Read online at archive.org

Author(s): William Ellery Leonard
Illustrator(s): Lynd Ward

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The Biggest Bear (1952)

When Johnny Orchard goes hunting for a bear he comes home with a cub, but that’s not the end of the story.

Read online at archive.org

Author(s): Lynd Ward
Illustrator(s): Lynd Ward

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Book Illustration (1952)

A collection of articles which originally appeared in Publishers’ Weekly.

Author(s): Richard Williamson Ellis
Illustrator(s): James Daugherty
Lynd Ward
Et al

Details »

Bright Island (1937)

The story of Thankful Curtis, her island home, her time at school and her return.

Read online at archive.org

Author(s): Mabel L. Robinson
Illustrator(s): Lynd Ward

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The Children of the New Forest (1930)

A family of Royalist children take to the woods to escape from their Puritan persecuters. A Robinsonnade in Merry England.

Author(s): Frederick Marryat
Illustrator(s): Lynd Ward

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Crime and Punishment (1956)

A young man murders an old woman for her money and is condemned to Siberia where he is redeemed by the love of a woman.

Author(s): Fyodor Dostoevsky
Illustrator(s): Lynd Ward

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Dragon Run (1955)

This time travel adventure takes Chris Mason and Mr. Wicker back to colonial days.

Author(s): Carley Dawson
Illustrator(s): Lynd Ward

Details »

Five Plays from Shakespeare (1964)

Abridged versions for performance by young people, including The Tempest, A Midsummer Night’s Dream, The Comedy of Errors, The Tragedy of Macbeth, and The Tragedy of Julius Caesar.

Author(s): William Shakespeare
Illustrator(s): Lynd Ward

Details »

Hi, Tom (1962)

On his way home from school to his home on Hermit Mountain, Tom likes to call his name and hear the echo - then one day he hears some one else call his name.

Read online at archive.org. 

Author(s): Nanda Ward
Illustrator(s): Lynd Ward

Details »

Idylls of the King (1952)

A cycle of poems on Arthurian themes.

Author(s): Alfred Tennyson
Illustrator(s): Lynd Ward

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Illustrators of Children’s Books: 1744-1945 (1947)

Essays on children’s book illustrators along with extensive bibliographies.

Read online at archive.org

Author(s): Robert Lawson
Bertha E. Mahony
May Massee
Lynd Ward
Et al
Illustrator(s): Arthur Rackham
Lynd Ward
Et al

Details »

James Henry Daugherty (1975)

A short biography and a very complete bibliography of the artist-author.

Author(s): Edward Kemp
Elaine Kemp
Lynd Ward
Et al
Illustrator(s): James Daugherty

Details »

John Wesley (1951)

A brief biography of the Protestant founder of Methodism.

  1. Read online at archive.org

Author(s): May McNeer
Illustrator(s): Lynd Ward

Details »

Johnny Tremain: A Novel for Old and Young (1943)

When Johnny’s hand injury prevents him working as a silversmith’s apprentice, he joins the American rebels as a messenger.

Read online at archive.org. 

Author(s): Esther Forbes
Illustrator(s): Lynd Ward

Details »

Kidnapped (1948)

When David Balfour comes to his uncle to claim his inheritance, he is kidnapped and put on a ship for the Carolinas. He escapes and, in company with Alan Breck Stewart, adventures about the Highlands of Scotland.

Read online at archive.org

Author(s): Robert Louis Stevenson
Illustrator(s): Lynd Ward

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Les Misérables (1938)

A man who cannot escape his past is pursued by an obsessed detective. Published in one, two, and five volume editions.

Author(s): Victor Hugo
Illustrator(s): Lynd Ward

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Little Blacknose: The Story of a Pioneer (1929)

Early American railroading as seen through the eyes of the Dewitt Clinton, the first steam engine built for the New York Central Railroad.

Read online at archive.org

Author(s): Hildegarde Hoyt Swift
Illustrator(s): Lynd Ward

Details »

Lord Jim (1959)

Driven from the sea by a youthful act of cowardice and betrayal, Jim makes a new life for himself, but is again faced with a life and death decision on which hinges the fate of many innocents.

Author(s): Joseph Conrad
Illustrator(s): Lynd Ward

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