On This Page
Description
Beloved and award-winning author Jean Little has garnered numerous accolades for her work. Born in Taiwan to Canadian doctors who were serving as missionaries, she was legally blind from birth. Little obtained a B.A. in English Language & Literature from the University of Toronto. She went on to write 44 more works, including novels, picture books, poetry, short stories, and two autobiographical books. She has six honorary degrees and is a Member of the Order of Canada. Little lives in show more Guelph, Ontario, with her family. show lessTags
Recommendations
Member Recommendations
Member Reviews
Wonderful. More like stories from her memory, than a formal autobiography, but as she says in the intro., I have tried to write faithfully of my life as it seemed to me." And isn't that the point of memoirs anyway? When I read a biography I want to learn what shaped the person. And what shaped her is what she perceived - not what an 'objectively accurate' tape-recording of her childhood would expose.
Entertaining and inspirational, accessible to children and illuminating for adults.
A pervading theme is especially interesting to me. Jean was very much loved as a child. Her family, especially her mother, was always available to console & encourage & praise. They did 'push' somewhat, and they were not over-protective or smothering, but show more Jean never faced any real adversity. I suspect that unconditional support at home made her even more sensitive to the cruelties of children and the insensitivity of some teachers outside the home. One could argue that it seemed as if she wasn't being prepared for the hard knocks of the real world. But as it turned out she grew out of her shelter just fine. She may not have been the first nestling to fly, but she did soar eventually. So, to those who say that you can love a child too much, I say 'pooh.'
I own the sequel and look forward to it, but not yet." show less
Entertaining and inspirational, accessible to children and illuminating for adults.
A pervading theme is especially interesting to me. Jean was very much loved as a child. Her family, especially her mother, was always available to console & encourage & praise. They did 'push' somewhat, and they were not over-protective or smothering, but show more Jean never faced any real adversity. I suspect that unconditional support at home made her even more sensitive to the cruelties of children and the insensitivity of some teachers outside the home. One could argue that it seemed as if she wasn't being prepared for the hard knocks of the real world. But as it turned out she grew out of her shelter just fine. She may not have been the first nestling to fly, but she did soar eventually. So, to those who say that you can love a child too much, I say 'pooh.'
I own the sequel and look forward to it, but not yet." show less
Adversity
Ratings
Members
- Recently Added By
Lists
Disabled author's autobiography
36 works; 4 members
Blind/vision impaired author + characters -- children's/YA nonfiction
12 works; 2 members
Author Information

75+ Works 6,209 Members
Jean Little was born in Taiwan in 1932. She was born with a severe eye problem and is severely visually impaired. Little grew up in Ontario and graduated from the University of Toronto. A special "talking" computer assists her with her writing. She has a retired seeing-eye dog named Ritz and a new one named Pippa, with whom she travels. Little has show more written more than 50 children's books. Her childhood experiences inspired her to write books about children with physical disabilities or facing personal difficulties. She won a number of awards, including a Canadian Library Association (CLA) Book of the Year Medal and a Canada Council Children's Literature Award. Little has been writing children's books for over forty years. Listen for the Singing was the Canada Council Children's Literature Award winner in 1977. Mama's Going to Buy You a Mockingbird was the CLA Book of the Year in 1985. Little's first book, Mine for Keeps, won the Little Brown Children's Book Award in 1962 and was republished by Viking Penguin in 1995. Orphan at My Door: The Home Child Diary of Victoria Cope, won the 2001 CLA Book of the Year for Children Award. She awarded the Vicky Metcalf Award for Literature for Young People in 1974 for her entire body of work. She received the Queen's Diamond Jubilee Medal. She was named a member of the Order of Canada in 1993. Jean Little died on April 6, 2020, at the age of 88. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
Awards and Honors
Series
Work Relationships
Is abridged in
Common Knowledge
- Canonical title
- Little by Little: A Writer's Education
Classifications
Statistics
- Members
- 157
- Popularity
- 208,479
- Reviews
- 2
- Rating
- (4.00)
- Languages
- English, German
- Media
- Paper
- ISBNs
- 5



























































