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William Maxwell Reed

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

William Maxwell Reed (January 12, 1871 in Bath, Maine – September 1962) was a pioneering U.S. author of illustrated science books for children.[1]

After schooling at Harvard, he taught astronomy at Harvard and Princeton University.

Reed later went into the steel industry.

Beginning as a series of letters to his nephew, his first book, The Earth for Sam, was published in 1929. The book remains popular and was republished in 2005.

Earth was followed by a series of popular children's information books, many published by Harcourt, Brace.

Books

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  • The Earth for Sam; the story of mountains, rivers, dinosaurs and men (1929). Illustrated by biologist/artist James Howard McGregor.
  • The Stars for Sam (1931). Illustrated by Karl Moseley.
  • And that's why (1932)
  • The Sea for Sam (w/ Wilfred S. Bronson) (1935)
  • Animals on the March (w/ Jannette May Lucas) (1937)
  • America's Treasure (1939)
  • The Sky is Blue (illustrated by James MacDonald) (1940)
  • Patterns In The Sky: The Story Of The Constellations (1951)

References

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  1. ^ Facts about Reed, William Maxwell, as discussed in Britannica Compton's Encyclopedia. Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved 14 March 2010.