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Phyllis Krasilovsky

Phyllis Krasilovsky
Phyllis Krasilovsky 1951 Ladies' Home Journal outtake.jpg
Born (1926-08-28)August 28, 1926
Died February 26, 2014(2014-02-26) (aged 87)
Nationality American
Occupation Writer
Known for Children's books

Phyllis Louise Manning Krasilovsky (August 28, 1926 – February 26, 2014) was an American writer of children's books.

Phyllis Louise Manning was born in Brooklyn and graduated from its James Madison High School. She recalled that she started telling children's stories to her then-fiancé William M. Krasilovsky's five-year-old cousin, who was dying of cancer. Kravilovsky was first published after she walked into the Doubleday offices and insisted she must see an editor immediately before the couple left for Alaska. Children’s book editor Margaret Lesser heard the confrontation at the front desk, invited her in, read the manuscript and accepted The Man Who Didn’t Wash His Dishes a few minutes later. Krasilovsky’s husband, at the time still a student at Cornell Law School, carefully studied the contract before approving.

Then they headed for Alaska. Their Crossley miniature car was so small, the wheel span was too narrow for the wooden tracks they occasionally encountered on the unpaved Alaska Highway. They had to hitch over the bridges with the car on the back of trucks. Phyllis subsequently used her power of persuasion in the Yukon to get them overnight lodging in a jail when they had nowhere else to stay. They were featured in an article in Ladies' Home Journal, "How America Lives: Newcomers to Alaska".

Over the years Krasilovsky published 20 books for children, including The Very Little Girl and Scaredy Cat and perhaps best remembered, The Cow Who Fell in the Canal and Benny’s Flag. She described her The Popular Girls Club as "one of the first books about mean kids." Her books were translated into fourteen languages.

In the late 1960s, Krasilovsky was part of an initiative of eminent children’s book authors who pressed for foreign rights to their works to be negotiated separately from domestic publishing contracts. The first meeting, including Maurice Sendak, Margret Rey and H. A. Rey, Ruth Krauss, Remy Charlip, and Crockett Johnson, was held in her living room in Chappaqua, New York.


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