Thomas Rockwell

Thomas Rhodes Rockwell (born March 13, 1933) is an American author of children's books.

Rockwell is the son of the American artist Norman Rockwell and his then-wife Mary Rockwell, an unpublished author. He grew up in Arlington, Vermont, a very rural small town. He attended a one-room schoolhouse; there were 23 students in his high school graduating class. His early mentors were Jim and Clara Edgarton, local farmers. He attended Bard College.

He says he always wanted to write. He was the uncredited ghostwriter of his father's autobiography, ''My Adventures as an Illustrator''. He got the idea of writing children's books when he started reading to his own son. His wife Gail illustrated several of his books.

His best-known book is ''How to Eat Fried Worms'' (1973), about a boy who accepts a bet to eat one worm per day for 15 days. Although it was rejected by 23 publishers before finally coming out in print, the book sold 3 million copies and received the Mark Twain Award, the California Young Reader Medal, and the Sequoyah Book Award. It was made into an animated TV episode of ''CBS Storybreak'' in 1985 and a 2006 film.

He now lives in Poughkeepsie, New York. Provided by Wikipedia
Showing 1 - 7 of 7 for search: Rockwell, Thomas, 1933-
by Rockwell, Thomas, 1933-
Published 1984
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by Rockwell, Thomas, 1933-
Published 2019
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Print Book

by Rockwell, Thomas, 1933-
Published 2016
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eBook

by Rockwell, Thomas, 1933-
Published 2006
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eAudiobook

by Rockwell, Thomas, 1933-
Published 2010
Print Book

by Rockwell, Thomas, 1933-
Published 1998
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Audiobook (CD)

Published 2006
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