In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:

  • Contributors and Editors

Michelle Ann Abate is co-editor of Children's Literature and an assistant professor of English at Hollins University. Her book Tomboys: A Literary and Cultural History was published by Temple University Press in 2008.

Ruth B. Bottigheimer has published numerous studies of fairy tales, bible stories rewritten for children, and early British literature for children and adolescents. Her Bibliography of British Books for Children & Adolescents 1470–1770 (2008) is available at <http://hdl.handle.net/1951/43009>.

Emily Cardinali Cormier is a PhD candidate in Literature at the University of Connecticut, where she studies and teaches children's literature and young adult literature. She is currently working on her dissertation, "Gender and Labor in the Child's Farm Novel."

R. H. W. Dillard, editor-in-chief of Children's Literature and editor of The Hollins Critic, is a professor of English at Hollins University and academic adviser to the director of the Hollins Graduate Program in Children's Literature. A novelist and poet, he is also the author of two critical monographs, Horror Films and Understanding George Garrett, as well as articles on Ellen Glasgow, Vladimir Nabokov, Federico Fellini, and others, and the introduction to the Signet Classic edition of Treasure Island.

Christine Doyle is a professor of English at Central Connecticut State University, where she teaches children's literature, storytelling, and courses on nineteenth-century women writers.

Rachel Fordyce retired as vice chancellor for academic affairs at the University of Hawai'i, Hilo, and is former executive secretary of the Children's Literature Association. She is the author of six books—on late Renaissance literature, children's theater and creative dramatics, and Lewis Carroll.

Margaret R. Higonnet is a professor of English and Comparative Literature at the University of Connecticut, as well as past president of the American Comparative Literature Association and the American Conference on Romanticism. Her work ranges from children's literature to feminist theory, and from suicide to the literature of World War I. She has co-edited Children's Literature (1985–1991) and most recently Comparatively Queer (2010). Currently she is working on a photographic memoir from World War I.

Martha Hixon is a professor of English at Middle Tennessee State University, where she teaches courses in children's literature and folk- and fairy tales. She has written and published on contemporary versions of fairy tales and on fantasy literature for children and young adults.

Susan Honeyman is an associate professor of English at the University of Nebraska at Kearney. She teaches children's/adolescent literature and has recently taken interest in food studies, folklore, graphic novels, and children's rights. She is the author of Consuming Agency in Fairy Tales, Childlore, and Folkliterature (Routledge, 2009).

Ann F. Howey is an associate professor at Brock University in St. Catharines, Ontario, Canada. She researches and teaches in the areas of post-Victorian Arthurian literature, fantasy fiction, and literature for young people. Among her publications are articles on the Arthurian aspects of Anne of Green Gables in Making Avonlea: L. M. Montgomery and Popular Culture (University of Toronto Press, 2002), and in Children's Literature Association Quarterly. [End Page 291]

John Hutton is an associate professor of art history at Salem College in Winston-Salem, North Carolina. He illustrated The White House ABC (White House Historical Association, 2004) and is currently completing an illustrated novel about eighth-century Anglo-Saxon monks in a Crane-inspired Art Deco style.

Benjamin Lefebvre is a Leverhulme Visiting Fellow at the University of Worcester. He recently edited L. M. Montgomery's rediscovered final book, The Blythes Are Quoted (Viking Canada, 2009), and co-edited Anne's World: A New Century of Anne of Green Gables (University of Toronto Press, 2010).

Michael Levy is a professor of English and chair of the English and Philosophy Department at the University of Wisconsin-Stout, where he teaches children's literature and science fiction. Recent publications have included work on David Almond, Octavia Butler, Margaret Mahy, and Philip Pullman. He co-edits the scholarly journal Extrapolation.

Andrew Loman, an assistant professor at Memorial University of Newfoundland, is the author of "Somewhat on the Community-System": Fourierism in the Works of Nathaniel...

pdf

Share