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Tana Hoban (1917–2006)

Author of I Read Signs

64+ Works 9,505 Members 328 Reviews 3 Favorited

About the Author

Tana Hoban was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. She has also lived in Holland and England. Hoban graduated from Moore College of Art in Philadelphia in 1938, and painted in Europe as a recipient of the John Frederick Lewis Fellowship. When she returned to Philadelphia, she worked as a free-lance show more advertising artist and magazine illustrator. By 1950 her work was included in the permanent collection of the Museum of Modern Art in New York City, and in 1953 she was the only woman mentioned in a Time magazine portfolio on "Half a Century of U.S. Photography." In 1959 she was named one of the Top Ten Women Photographers by the Professional Photographers of America. Hoban worked as an instructor in photography at the Annenberg School of Communications at the University of Pennsylvania from 1966 to 1968. In 1967 she produced and filmed Catsup, an award-winning film which was shown at the Venice Film Festival. By 1955, she had written a book on photographing children, and in 1970 she combined her skills as a photographer with her interest in children to produce her first juvenile picture book, Shapes and Things. In 1973, Hoban served as project photographer for Beginning Concepts, a series of sound filmstrips produced by Scholastic Magazines, Inc. From 1974 to 1976 she taught photography at New York University. As of 1990, five of her books had been listed as ALA Notables. She has received awards for her entire body of work three separate times. In 1991, she was awarded an Honorary Doctorate of Fine Arts from her alma mater, the Moore College of Art. Her works are included in the Kerlan Collection at the University of Minnesota and the Bibliotheque Nationale in Paris, among other collections in both the United States and France. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

Works by Tana Hoban

I Read Signs (1983) 1,116 copies, 8 reviews
26 Letters and 99 Cents (1987) 1,012 copies, 31 reviews
Shapes, Shapes, Shapes (1986) 721 copies, 23 reviews
Of Colors and Things (1989) 485 copies, 11 reviews
Is It Red? Is It Yellow? Is It Blue? (1978) 450 copies, 19 reviews
Black on White (1993) 408 copies, 14 reviews
Exactly the Opposite (1990) 405 copies, 16 reviews
Cubes, Cones, Cylinders, & Spheres (2000) 278 copies, 3 reviews
Look Look Look (1988) 269 copies, 3 reviews
Black & White (2007) 260 copies, 14 reviews
Over, Under and Through (1973) 250 copies, 4 reviews
White on Black (1993) 238 copies, 6 reviews
Is It Larger? Is It Smaller? (1985) 218 copies, 8 reviews
Count and See (1972) 183 copies, 8 reviews
Construction Zone (1997) 170 copies, 4 reviews
More, Fewer, Less (1998) 169 copies, 21 reviews
So Many Circles, So Many Squares (1998) 163 copies, 13 reviews
Dots, Spots, Speckles, and Stripes (1987) 131 copies, 3 reviews
Look Book (1997) 130 copies, 9 reviews
I Read Symbols (1983) 127 copies, 3 reviews
Shadows and Reflections (1990) 126 copies, 4 reviews
Push, Pull, Empty, Full: a Book of Opposites (1972) 125 copies, 3 reviews
Round&Round&Round (1983) 119 copies, 5 reviews
A Children's Zoo (1985) 119 copies, 4 reviews
CIRCLES, TRIANGLES AND SQUARES (1974) 118 copies, 7 reviews
Is It Rough? Is It Smooth? Is It Shiny? (1984) 117 copies, 6 reviews
Colors Everywhere (1995) 109 copies, 13 reviews
What Is That? (1985) 106 copies, 1 review
One Little Kitten (1979) 104 copies
Who Are They? (1994) 104 copies, 2 reviews
LOOK AGAIN! (1971) 103 copies, 9 reviews
Let's Count (1999) 102 copies, 11 reviews
Red, Blue, Yellow Shoe (1986) 89 copies, 4 reviews
Dig, Drill, Dump, Fill (1975) 78 copies, 3 reviews
Where Is It? (1974) 73 copies, 2 reviews
A, B, see! (1982) 68 copies, 8 reviews
Spirals, Curves, Fanshapes and Lines (1992) 67 copies, 1 review
All About Where (1991) 51 copies, 4 reviews
Take another look (1981) 50 copies
Look Up, Look Down (1992) 49 copies, 3 reviews
Animal, Vegetable, or Mineral? (1995) 47 copies, 8 reviews
I Walk and Read (1984) 46 copies, 3 reviews
1, 2, 3 Board Book (1985) 46 copies, 2 reviews
Shapes and Things (1970) 42 copies, 2 reviews
Just Look (1996) 30 copies, 1 review
Panda Panda (1986) 22 copies
Big ones, little ones (1976) 22 copies
More Than One (1981) 21 copies, 1 review
Look Closer! (1999) 9 copies
Black & White in Color (2024) 5 copies
Bianco e nero (2024) 1 copy
Look! 1 copy
Empty, Full 1 copy
Qu'est-ce que c'est ? (2024) 1 copy
Noir et blanc (2025) 1 copy

Associated Works

The Big Book For Our Planet (1993) — Contributor — 155 copies
Who Says Quack? (1991) — Photographer — 155 copies, 1 review
The wonder of hands (1970) — Illustrator — 26 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1917-02-20
Date of death
2006-01-27
Gender
female
Education
Moore College of Art and Design
Occupations
photographer
children's book illustrator
Relationships
Hoban, Russell (brother)
Short biography
Tana Hoban was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania to a Russian immigrant family. Her brother Russell Hoban grew up to become a writer. Tana attended high school in Lansdale, and took art classes at the Philadelphia School of Industrial Art on weekends. In 1938, she graduated from the School of Design for Women, now Moore College of Art and Design. She won a scholarship to travel and study painting in England and The Netherlands. She began taking photos for the window of her mother's shop. She worked briefly as a freelance graphic artist and illustrator before embarking on a career in photography. In 1946, Tana and her first husband Edward Gallob opened a studio in West Philadelphia. She took photos as illustrations for magazines, including The Saturday Evening Post, and then became an advertising photographer.
She also published her photos in books; among the earliest was a do-it-yourself book called How to Photograph Your Child (1953). She contributed to the Greystone Encyclopedia of Photography in 1963. Her photographs of children, which became her specialty, eventually were exhibited at the Museum of Modern Art and at various shows mounted in Philadelphia, New York, Paris and Berlin. She progressed from photographs of children to photographs for children.
Beginning in 1970, she wrote, designed, illustrated and published more than 110 children's books, which won many awards, such as the Children’s Literature Citation from Drexel University and the Free Library of Philadelphia in 1983, and a lifetime achievement award from the American Society of Media Photographers in 1998. Her pioneering works for children ranged from alphabet books like A, B, See! (1982), to primers like 26 Letters and 99 Cents (1986), to books that taught children about the world around them such as Circles, Colors and Squares (1974), Is It Larger? Is It Smaller? (1985), More Than One (1981), and I Read Symbols (1984).
Nationality
USA
Birthplace
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA
Places of residence
Paris, Île-de-France, France
Place of death
Paris, Île-de-France, France
Associated Place (for map)
Paris, Île-de-France, France

Members

Reviews

343 reviews
I thought that this book was okay. I liked the photographs, and I loved the guessing game aspect of the book, but some of the pictures were a little tricky, and the book lacked a key. Additionally, readers are supposed to guess whether items in the photos are animals, minerals, or vegetables; however, vegetables are typically thought of as being food, and as I don't know anyone who eats cotton, sunflowers, or thistles, I think that simply using the term "plant" might have been more show more appropriate. I liked the concept of this book, but I wish that the author had included a key and perhaps even an explanation of why these things fall into the categories that they do (e.g. is honey an animal, vegetable, or mineral, and why?). I think that kids might get very confused if reading this book on their own (I was confused about some of the pictures), so I would definitely recommend using this book to prompt classroom discussions as opposed to having students look at it independently. show less
I read this book to some high school students and the discussions that we had about it was very thought provoking. One student examined that their were no words and asked how were we going to read this. I explained that the reader simply looks at the pictures and either ask questions or make assumptions of what's happening. By this being a math book we can also look for similarities, differences, see whether there are more, fewer, or less objects in the pictures compared to the ones before show more or after. Cool book, I really love how its sparks the imagination and sorta lets you tell your own story from the images. show less
Exactly Opposites, by Tana Hoban is a wordless book that simply uses pictures to illustrate opposites. The book is designed to be open-ended so that a child and adult can have a conversation depending on what they see in the pictures. It is thought provoking for a young mind as an adult can ask questions as to what they think is happening in the “story”. I would say it is somewhat of a discovery book as children are taught to confront pictures and make conclusions about what they see. show more The illustrations are colorful and unpredictable. Unlike many other picture books that use a child model, this book uses children, objects, and even elements. For example one of the pictures illustrate a simple white gate that is open on one page, and then the same white gate closed on the next page. Another page shows two children playing; one page illustrates how on child is pushing and the other page illustrates how the child is pulling. Lastly, one page is a picture of a smoldering fire while the next picture is a pile of ice.
Since the picture book is wordless, it may be told in any particular language depending on the preference of the reader.
Ages: 1-5
show less
½
Colors Everywhere shows us how colorful the world really is. Between different color clothing, shoes, decorations, the whole world is like a rainbow. I feel like in this day and age, we are so busy on social media and technology that we don't realize how beautiful and colorful the world really is and how many different colors can make up one thing! In my opinion, this book taught me to let go of the technology and social media sometimes and just sit back and enjoy the world and all the show more colors involved in it. This book can be a little confusing however because there aren't any pictures so you have to interpret the book by looking at the pictures. show less

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Statistics

Works
64
Also by
3
Members
9,505
Popularity
#2,525
Rating
½ 3.5
Reviews
328
ISBNs
242
Languages
5
Favorited
3

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