Picture of author.

Kate Seredy (1899–1975)

Author of The Good Master

15+ Works 6,684 Members 73 Reviews 10 Favorited

About the Author

Image credit: photo:oklahoma.net

Series

Works by Kate Seredy

The Good Master (1935) 2,134 copies, 23 reviews
The Singing Tree (1939) 1,646 copies, 15 reviews
The White Stag (1937) 1,554 copies, 21 reviews
The Chestry Oak (1948) 464 copies, 4 reviews
A Tree for Peter (2004) 390 copies, 1 review
Philomena (1955) 239 copies, 4 reviews
The Open Gate (1943) 70 copies
Lazy Tinka (1962) 43 copies
The Tenement Tree (1959) 43 copies
Finnegan II: His Nine Lives (1953) — Illustrator, some editions; Illustrator — 27 copies, 1 review
A Brand-new Uncle (1961) 25 copies, 1 review
Gypsy (1951) 24 copies, 3 reviews
Listening (1941) 23 copies
various 1 copy

Associated Works

Caddie Woodlawn (1935) — Illustrator, some editions — 8,178 copies, 61 reviews
The Illustrated Treasury of Children's Literature, Volumes 1-2 (1955) — Contributor — 474 copies, 4 reviews
The Prince Commands (1934) — Illustrator, some editions — 197 copies, 2 reviews
Adopted Jane (1947) — Illustrator, some editions — 160 copies, 5 reviews
Little Vic (1954) — Illustrator, some editions — 125 copies, 2 reviews
Smiling Hill Farm (1995) — Illustrator, some editions — 97 copies, 1 review
Told Under the Christmas Tree (1941) — Contributor — 84 copies, 3 reviews
The Christmas Anna Angel (1944) — Illustrator — 82 copies, 2 reviews
Winterbound (1936) — Illustrator, some editions — 79 copies, 2 reviews
Young Walter Scott (1935) — Illustrator — 78 copies
The Wonderful Year (1946) — Illustrator — 61 copies, 4 reviews
Stories for Five Year Olds and Other Young Readers (1973) — Contributor: The Little Rooster and the Diamond Button — 54 copies
We Are Neighbors (1948) — Illustrator — 44 copies
Finding New Neighbors (1957) — Illustrator — 38 copies
The Easter Book of Legends and Stories (1993) — Contributor — 34 copies
Pilgrim Kate (1949) — Illustrator, some editions — 29 copies
Open the Door (1965) — Contributor — 22 copies
A Dog Named Penny (1955) — Illustrator — 21 copies, 1 review
Mademoiselle Misfortune (1936) — Illustrator, some editions — 18 copies
Michel's Island (1942) — Illustrator — 9 copies
Mary Montgomery, Rebel (1948) — Illustrator — 9 copies
Friendly Stories (1933) — Illustrator — 8 copies
Bible Children: Stories from the Bible (1937) — Illustrator — 7 copies
Writing Books for Boys and Girls (1952) — Contributor, some editions — 5 copies
The Gunniwolf and Other Merry Tales (1936) — Illustrator — 5 copies
An Ear for Uncle Emil (1939) — Illustrator — 4 copies
With Harp and Lute (1935) — Illustrator — 4 copies
Happy Days — Illustrator — 2 copies
Who Is Johnny? (1939) — Translator, some editions — 2 copies
Living Together at Home and at School (1944) — Illustrator — 2 copies
The Broken Song — Illustrator — 1 copy
Hoot-owl (1936) — Illustrator — 1 copy

Tagged

19th century (105) adventure (87) Ambleside (54) American history (64) AO (46) award (47) chapter book (98) children (201) children's (393) children's books (58) children's fiction (127) children's literature (186) Christmas (48) classic (75) classics (65) family (103) fantasy (79) fiction (890) historical (79) historical fiction (792) history (122) horses (65) Hungary (331) juvenile (113) juvenile fiction (128) literature (87) Newberry (52) Newbery (298) Newbery Honor (158) Newbery Medal (337) novel (50) pioneer (56) pioneers (139) read (72) Sonlight (79) to-read (144) Wisconsin (189) WWI (125) YA (78) young adult (90)

Common Knowledge

Canonical name
Seredy, Kate
Birthdate
1899-11-10
Date of death
1975-03-07
Burial location
Cremated
Gender
female
Nationality
Hungary
USA
Birthplace
Budapest, Hungary
Place of death
Middletown, New York, USA
Places of residence
Budapest, Hungary
Montgomery, New York, USA
Education
Academy of Arts, Budapest, Hungary
Occupations
writer
children's book author
illustrator
young adult writer
artist
Awards and honors
Newbery Medal (1938)
Newbery Honor (1936, 1940)
Caldecott Honor (1945)
Short biography
Kate Seredy was born in Budapest to a multi-lingual family. Her grandparents were French, German, Slovakian, and Turkish, and all were active in some sort of political, religious, or personal rebellions. She earned an art teacher's degree at the Academy of Arts in Budapest. During World War I, she served as a nurse, then continued her studies around Europe. In 1922, she emigrated to the USA. She learned English quickly, ran a children's bookstore, and worked as a commercial illustrator and painter. In 1935, she met the children's editor at Viking Press, who encouraged her to write about her childhood in Hungary. Kate Seredy produced The Good Master, which she both wrote and illustrated. It was named a Newbery Honor book in 1935, a runner-up to Caddie Woodlawn, which Kate Seredy had also illustrated; another runner-up that year was Young Walter Scott, for which she had designed the book jacket and endpapers. In the course of her subsequent career, Seredy illustrated about 60 books and wrote a few more of her own, though she never considered herself a writer and thought of her stories as "an excuse for making pictures." One of her most famous is The White Stag, which won the Newbery Medal in 1938. She lived for many years at Listening Hill, a 100-acre farm near Montgomery, New York.

Note: There are differing years given for her birth year online, but both Wikipedia's sources, Encyclopedia Britannica, and the site hosting her archive gives it as 1899.

Members

Reviews

sort of intergenerational friendship...
 
Flagged
Cheryl_in_CC_NV | Oct 18, 2024 |
(First, don't trust the misleading low rating of this book, or reviews of a book by Sixsmith that was made into a movie. Readers of that read a different book entirely. Hopefully things will get straightened out somehow someday.)

This is a funny and sunny children's story about an orphan with courage who is hard-working, kind, optimistic, and faithful... and is justly rewarded. Nowadays it can be enjoyed as historical fiction. A perfect book for a family who home-schools, a wonderful book for any of us who are nostalgic for believable, not overly-sweet stories about people who try to do right by their families, their communities, and themselves & God. (To clarify, though, it's not a Christian book per se, and I love it even though I am atheist.) I would have read this over and over when I was a child.

And the illustrations are, of course, marvelous. The end-papers, all yellow and pink, full of dancing people and pets, and a cheery baba yaga house, are vibrantly decorative as well as being amusing. The image of old Babushka playing a traditional guitar is a hoot, as is the image of the corrupt & snooty butler who appropriates most of Philomena's wages. My favorite picture, though, is probably the one in which country girl Philomena gets all wrathful on two bad boys and rescues a kitten from them.

Highly recommended. Check this out from your library; do not let them cull it for lack of circulation! If they don't have it, track it down somehow.
… (more)
 
Flagged
Cheryl_in_CC_NV | 3 other reviews | Oct 18, 2024 |
The author actually claims in the back that it's "real" but apparently she means in the same sense as "Yes Virginia there is a Santa Claus." Too bad. Books should be either fiction or not. I mean, I know history is subject to various inaccuracies due to various issues, but Seredy seems to want this book to be used in history class, not in literature, and that's just too much of a stretch, imo.

Starts out very slow, imo. So much Proud Brave Hungarians just like so many other works by Seredy. But I persevered, and the ending, though awfully happy, was engaging, and made the journey worthwhile. The Americans, salt of the earth you know, are proud and brave, too. I just wish Michael were a bit older, so he could be more believable... nothing would have been different as far as I could see. And I'm not sure about Pop's action at the end because there are different kinds of oaks, and who's to say an American of whatever species could pass for a Hungarian? And there seemed to be a confusion of languages - all too often it seemed that *everyone* knew both English and Hungarian.

Beautifully written. The craftsmanship of the sentences, the grace of the metaphors, the effortless flow of the songs and ritual verses... just lovely. I'm not sure if that's enough to engage youngsters today, and I know I wouldn't have liked this when I was a child, but I do like it now and recommend it to interested adults.
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Flagged
Cheryl_in_CC_NV | 3 other reviews | Oct 18, 2024 |
• 216 pages, small pages but lots of words per page
• Historical Fiction
• Newberry Honor Book

Set in Hungary in the early 1900’s, a story of a Hungarian farming family with one son, Jansci, who takes in a cousin, Kate, who starts off as a rebellious handful but soon grows to love farming life and learns the value of family and hard work

Well-written (written in 1935) book appropriate for strong 4th graders. Drags a little.

When Easter is celebrated, there is no mention of God but much made of the harvest.… (more)
 
Flagged
vchandler | 22 other reviews | Oct 9, 2024 |

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Statistics

Works
15
Also by
35
Members
6,684
Popularity
#3,659
Rating
4.0
Reviews
73
ISBNs
67
Favorited
10

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