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A question about bears?
07 Jun 2015 15:21 #194358
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A question about bears? was created by
Does anyone remember the children's books about the bears? Mama, Papa, Sister, Brother? One of the titles was "He Bear, She Bear". Who were the authors? Jan and Stan Beren.... something
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07 Jun 2015 15:24 - 07 Jun 2015 15:25 #194359
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Replied by on topic A question about bears?
Last edit: 07 Jun 2015 15:25 by .
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07 Jun 2015 15:33 #194362
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Replied by on topic A question about bears?
Aqua,
not sure who you are or how old you are because of "restricted access". I am wondering if anyone else REMEMBERS the name. The one you posted is not what I (and apparently many others) remember.
Sincerely,
BryanJerome
not sure who you are or how old you are because of "restricted access". I am wondering if anyone else REMEMBERS the name. The one you posted is not what I (and apparently many others) remember.
Sincerely,
BryanJerome
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07 Jun 2015 15:40 - 07 Jun 2015 15:41 #194363
by Edan
It won't let me have a blank signature ...
Replied by Edan on topic Re:A question about bears?
You gave the title and aqua gave you a book with the same title, bears and what appears to be the right authors. No need to be short with him.
It won't let me have a blank signature ...
Last edit: 07 Jun 2015 15:41 by Edan.
The following user(s) said Thank You: steamboat28,
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07 Jun 2015 15:44 - 07 Jun 2015 16:06 #194364
by
My age is known, but my 'age' is unknown. It should not matter, I simply do what I will do. I am happy that you are so happy that I could help you. I hope you are able to point out some additional information, year, country of the ISBN number. Maybe additional information like the printer or the version of the book, paper size and translation company or publisher. . .I work in a library, and I know my words, so you should see the correct person in front of you.. I am most sorry if I have offended you in any way.
Always happy to help,
Aqua
-- ABOUT THE AUTHOR --
Stan and Jan Berenstain were already successful cartoonists for magazines and adult humor books when they began writing children’s books. The first story starring the bear family, The Big Honey Hunt, appeared in 1962. Since then, more than 300 Berenstain Bears books have been published, and more than 260 million copies have been sold. What began as an idea sparked by their young sons’ love of reading has become over the years arguably the best-selling children’s book series ever.
Since their inception, the Berenstain Bears stories have expanded to include picture books, beginning readers, and chapter books–even a hit TV show on PBS. Writing and illustrating the books has become a Berenstain family affair. Mike joined with his parents as a creative team in the late 1980s. The Bear family has expanded over the years as well. Sister Bear arrived in 1974, and baby Honey joined the family in 2000.
Since Stan’s death at age eighty-two in 2005, Jan and Mike have continued to write and illustrate wonderful new adventures for Mama, Papa, Brother, Sister, and Honey Bear. They live in an area of Bucks County, Pennsylvania, which looks very much like the sunny dirt road in Bear Country.
______________________
Wikkipedea click here
_____________________
Stan and Jan Berenstain:
Stan Berenstain:
Born: Stanley Melvin Berenstain, September 29, 1923
Place: West Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S.
Died: November 26, 2005 (aged 82) Solebury Township, Pennsylvania, U.S.
Cause of death: Cancer
Occupation Writer, illustrator
Religion Judaism[1]
Jan Berenstain (m. 1946–2005)
Born: Janice Marian Grant, July 26, 1923, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S.
Died February 24, 2012 (aged 88)[2] New Hope, Pennsylvania, U.S.
Cause of death: Stroke
Occupation Writer, illustrator
Religion Episcopalian[1]
Spouse(s) Stan Berenstain (m. 1946–2005), his death
Jan and Stan Berenstain
Stan and Jan Berenstain, often called The Berenstains, were American writers and illustrators best known for creating the children's book series The Berenstain Bears.
Stanley Melvin "Stan" Berenstain (September 29, 1923 – November 26, 2005) was born and raised in a neighborhood of west Philadelphia and died of cancer in Solebury Township, Pennsylvania. Janice Marian "Jan" Berenstain (née Grant; July 26, 1923 – February 24, 2012) was born in Philadelphia and was raised in west Philadelphia and attended Radnor High School. They met on their first day of class at the Philadelphia Museum School of Industrial Art in 1941. During WWII, Stan served as a military medical illustrator while Jan was a draft artist for the Army Corps of Engineers in addition to working in an aircraft factory. She fashioned a pair of wedding rings from spare aluminum collected at the latter job, and the two married on April 17, 1946. Jan died February 24, 2012 after suffering a massive stroke. Her son Mike was at her side.[3] They are survived by their two sons, Mike and Leo.[4]
In an interview about the books, the Berenstains said that a big reason behind their inspiration was some of the difficulties parents faced, as well as some childhood tribulations when they were kids themselves. The Berenstains also noted there were some issues which seemed to appear in every generation, such as kids throwing tantrums in public places, which made important subject matter for their stories. However, they deliberately wanted to steer clear of overly heavy issues, such as violence. In their later years, critics sometimes dismissed the books for having social attitudes stuck in the 1950s along with the bears' clothing styles and penchant for activities such as playing jacks and hopscotch, even though they did change with the times somewhat by introducing things like video games and cell phones.
After the birth of their son Michael in 1951, the couple published The Berenstains' Baby Book, which dealt with the issues of pregnancy and child-rearing. Although containing practical advice, the book used humor and reminded parents not to take every situation too seriously. They would go on to publish another two books on parenting, How to Teach Your Children About Sex Without Making a Complete Fool of Yourself and Have a Baby, My Wife Just Had a Cigar!.
They produced together the magazine cartoon feature It's All in the Family from 1956 to 1989 in McCall's and Good Housekeeping.[citation needed] Inspired by their children's enthusiasm for Dr. Seuss books, the Berenstains decided to attempt a series with animal protagonists themselves, settling on bears not because of their surname as was commonly believed, but because they found them easy to draw. They published their first book featuring the Berenstain Bears, The Big Honey Hunt, in 1962.[2] At the time, their inspiration, Theodor Geisel (Dr. Seuss), was working as an editor in the children's division of Random House Publishing and eagerly approved the concept. He edited several books in the Berenstain Bears series and created a lasting franchise including many more books, television series, toys, and stage productions.[citation needed] Over 300 books were published in 23 languages.[2] Jan was inducted into Radnor High School's Hall of Fame on October 20, 2006.
The Berenstains' cartoon feature It's All in the Family (unrelated to the similarly named TV series) appeared regularly in McCall's and depicted the antics of a suburban family with mother, father, eldest and youngest sons, and middle daughter. It's All in the Family was not a conventional comic strip in the sense of a sequential progression of panels. Each issue featured a single situation, often seasonally appropriate, such as the daughter preparing, cooking, and serving a family meal for the first time or the costume preparations, rehearsal, and performance of the youngest child's Christmas pageant. Within a given issue, each It's All in the Family drawing was a stand-alone panel with a caption gag, rather than one panel of a sequential strip, but individual panels in order depicted the complete arc (preparation, completion, aftermath) of that issue's family experience.
Stan and Jan Berenstain's younger son Michael Berenstain (born in 1951) is a writer/illustrator and also illustrated many of the books written by his parents. He continued to work with his mother on new projects until her death in 2012, with a focus on promoting Christian religious practices.[4] Stan Berenstain was Jewish and Jan Berenstain was an Episcopalian.[1]
__________________________________
Selected works
See also: List of Berenstain Bears books
The Big Honey Hunt, published in 1962, was the first book to feature The Berenstain Bears. Many of their earlier books featuring these characters were under Dr. Seuss' Beginner Books imprint.
The Berenstains' Baby Book (1951, MacMillan)
Sister (1952, Schuman cartoons)
Tax-Wise (1952, Schuman)
Marital Blitz (1954, Dutton)
Baby Makes Four (1956, MacMillan)
It’s All in the Family (1958, Dutton)
Lover Boy (1958, MacMillan)
And Beat Him When He Sneezes (1960, McGraw Hill)
Have a Baby, My Wife Just Had a Cigar (1960, Dell, retitled reprint)
Bedside Lover Boy (1960, Dell)
Call Me Mrs. (1961, MacMillan)
It's Still in the Family (1961, Dutton)
Office Lover Boy (1962, Dell)
The Facts of Life for Grown-ups (1963, Dell)
Flipsville-Squareville (1965, Delacorte)
Mr. Dirty vs. Mrs. Clean (1967, Dell)
You Could Diet Laughing (1969, Dell)
Be Good or I'll Belt Ya! (1970, Dell)
Education Impossible (1970, Dell)
How to Teach Your Children about Sex without Making a Complete Fool of Yourself (1970, Dutton)
Never Trust Anyone Over 13 (1970, Bantam)
How to Teach Your Children about God without Actually Scaring Them out of Their Wits (1971, Dutton)
The Berenstains' B Book (1971, Random House)
Are Parents for Real? (1972, Bantam)
The Day of the Dinosaur (1987, Random House, First Time Readers); illustrated by Michael Berenstain (Mike)[5]
After the Dinosaurs (1988, Random House, First Time Readers)
What Your Parents Never Told You about Being a Mom or Dad (1995) parenting advice
Down A Sunny Dirt Road (2002) autobiography
The Berenstain Bears and The Bear Essentials (2005) parenting advice
Nothing Ever Happens at the South Pole (2012, HarperCollins, published posthumously) children's book
___________________________________
References
^ Jump up to: a b c "Jan Berenstain, co-creator of the Berenstain Bears children's series, dies at 88". Emily Langer. The Washington Post. February 27, 2012. Retrieved 2012-02-28.
^ Jump up to: a b c "Berenstain Bears Co Creator Jan Berenstain Dies". News & Record. Associated Press. February 27, 2012. Retrieved 2012-02-27.
Jump up ^ Minovitz, Ethan (February 28, 2012). "Jan Berenstain, 88, co-created Berenstain Bears". Big Cartoon News. Retrieved 2012-02-28.
^ Jump up to: a b "About Mike Berenstain". BerenstainBears.com. May 15, 2009. He's often asked which is his favorite Berenstain Bear book. The answer is The Bears' Picnic, created when he was twelve.
Jump up ^ The day of the dino
official website: http://berenstainbears.com/
Stan and Jan Berenstain Papers 1954–1965] at Syracuse University (primary source material for several books and Sister)
http://library.syr.edu/digital/guides/b/berenstain_s_j.htm
Stan and Jan Berenstain Bibliography
http://frontiernet.net/~bmariska/bears/bibliography.doc
Replied by on topic A question about bears?
BryanJerome wrote: Aqua,
not sure who you are or how old you are because of "restricted access". I am wondering if anyone else REMEMBERS the name. The one you posted is not what I (and apparently many others) remember.
Sincerely,
BryanJerome
My age is known, but my 'age' is unknown. It should not matter, I simply do what I will do. I am happy that you are so happy that I could help you. I hope you are able to point out some additional information, year, country of the ISBN number. Maybe additional information like the printer or the version of the book, paper size and translation company or publisher. . .I work in a library, and I know my words, so you should see the correct person in front of you.. I am most sorry if I have offended you in any way.
Always happy to help,
Aqua
-- ABOUT THE AUTHOR --
Warning: Spoiler!
Stan and Jan Berenstain were already successful cartoonists for magazines and adult humor books when they began writing children’s books. The first story starring the bear family, The Big Honey Hunt, appeared in 1962. Since then, more than 300 Berenstain Bears books have been published, and more than 260 million copies have been sold. What began as an idea sparked by their young sons’ love of reading has become over the years arguably the best-selling children’s book series ever.
Since their inception, the Berenstain Bears stories have expanded to include picture books, beginning readers, and chapter books–even a hit TV show on PBS. Writing and illustrating the books has become a Berenstain family affair. Mike joined with his parents as a creative team in the late 1980s. The Bear family has expanded over the years as well. Sister Bear arrived in 1974, and baby Honey joined the family in 2000.
Since Stan’s death at age eighty-two in 2005, Jan and Mike have continued to write and illustrate wonderful new adventures for Mama, Papa, Brother, Sister, and Honey Bear. They live in an area of Bucks County, Pennsylvania, which looks very much like the sunny dirt road in Bear Country.
______________________
Wikkipedea click here
_____________________
Stan and Jan Berenstain:
Stan Berenstain:
Born: Stanley Melvin Berenstain, September 29, 1923
Place: West Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S.
Died: November 26, 2005 (aged 82) Solebury Township, Pennsylvania, U.S.
Cause of death: Cancer
Occupation Writer, illustrator
Religion Judaism[1]
Jan Berenstain (m. 1946–2005)
Born: Janice Marian Grant, July 26, 1923, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S.
Died February 24, 2012 (aged 88)[2] New Hope, Pennsylvania, U.S.
Cause of death: Stroke
Occupation Writer, illustrator
Religion Episcopalian[1]
Spouse(s) Stan Berenstain (m. 1946–2005), his death
Jan and Stan Berenstain
Stan and Jan Berenstain, often called The Berenstains, were American writers and illustrators best known for creating the children's book series The Berenstain Bears.
Stanley Melvin "Stan" Berenstain (September 29, 1923 – November 26, 2005) was born and raised in a neighborhood of west Philadelphia and died of cancer in Solebury Township, Pennsylvania. Janice Marian "Jan" Berenstain (née Grant; July 26, 1923 – February 24, 2012) was born in Philadelphia and was raised in west Philadelphia and attended Radnor High School. They met on their first day of class at the Philadelphia Museum School of Industrial Art in 1941. During WWII, Stan served as a military medical illustrator while Jan was a draft artist for the Army Corps of Engineers in addition to working in an aircraft factory. She fashioned a pair of wedding rings from spare aluminum collected at the latter job, and the two married on April 17, 1946. Jan died February 24, 2012 after suffering a massive stroke. Her son Mike was at her side.[3] They are survived by their two sons, Mike and Leo.[4]
In an interview about the books, the Berenstains said that a big reason behind their inspiration was some of the difficulties parents faced, as well as some childhood tribulations when they were kids themselves. The Berenstains also noted there were some issues which seemed to appear in every generation, such as kids throwing tantrums in public places, which made important subject matter for their stories. However, they deliberately wanted to steer clear of overly heavy issues, such as violence. In their later years, critics sometimes dismissed the books for having social attitudes stuck in the 1950s along with the bears' clothing styles and penchant for activities such as playing jacks and hopscotch, even though they did change with the times somewhat by introducing things like video games and cell phones.
After the birth of their son Michael in 1951, the couple published The Berenstains' Baby Book, which dealt with the issues of pregnancy and child-rearing. Although containing practical advice, the book used humor and reminded parents not to take every situation too seriously. They would go on to publish another two books on parenting, How to Teach Your Children About Sex Without Making a Complete Fool of Yourself and Have a Baby, My Wife Just Had a Cigar!.
They produced together the magazine cartoon feature It's All in the Family from 1956 to 1989 in McCall's and Good Housekeeping.[citation needed] Inspired by their children's enthusiasm for Dr. Seuss books, the Berenstains decided to attempt a series with animal protagonists themselves, settling on bears not because of their surname as was commonly believed, but because they found them easy to draw. They published their first book featuring the Berenstain Bears, The Big Honey Hunt, in 1962.[2] At the time, their inspiration, Theodor Geisel (Dr. Seuss), was working as an editor in the children's division of Random House Publishing and eagerly approved the concept. He edited several books in the Berenstain Bears series and created a lasting franchise including many more books, television series, toys, and stage productions.[citation needed] Over 300 books were published in 23 languages.[2] Jan was inducted into Radnor High School's Hall of Fame on October 20, 2006.
The Berenstains' cartoon feature It's All in the Family (unrelated to the similarly named TV series) appeared regularly in McCall's and depicted the antics of a suburban family with mother, father, eldest and youngest sons, and middle daughter. It's All in the Family was not a conventional comic strip in the sense of a sequential progression of panels. Each issue featured a single situation, often seasonally appropriate, such as the daughter preparing, cooking, and serving a family meal for the first time or the costume preparations, rehearsal, and performance of the youngest child's Christmas pageant. Within a given issue, each It's All in the Family drawing was a stand-alone panel with a caption gag, rather than one panel of a sequential strip, but individual panels in order depicted the complete arc (preparation, completion, aftermath) of that issue's family experience.
Stan and Jan Berenstain's younger son Michael Berenstain (born in 1951) is a writer/illustrator and also illustrated many of the books written by his parents. He continued to work with his mother on new projects until her death in 2012, with a focus on promoting Christian religious practices.[4] Stan Berenstain was Jewish and Jan Berenstain was an Episcopalian.[1]
__________________________________
Selected works
See also: List of Berenstain Bears books
The Big Honey Hunt, published in 1962, was the first book to feature The Berenstain Bears. Many of their earlier books featuring these characters were under Dr. Seuss' Beginner Books imprint.
The Berenstains' Baby Book (1951, MacMillan)
Sister (1952, Schuman cartoons)
Tax-Wise (1952, Schuman)
Marital Blitz (1954, Dutton)
Baby Makes Four (1956, MacMillan)
It’s All in the Family (1958, Dutton)
Lover Boy (1958, MacMillan)
And Beat Him When He Sneezes (1960, McGraw Hill)
Have a Baby, My Wife Just Had a Cigar (1960, Dell, retitled reprint)
Bedside Lover Boy (1960, Dell)
Call Me Mrs. (1961, MacMillan)
It's Still in the Family (1961, Dutton)
Office Lover Boy (1962, Dell)
The Facts of Life for Grown-ups (1963, Dell)
Flipsville-Squareville (1965, Delacorte)
Mr. Dirty vs. Mrs. Clean (1967, Dell)
You Could Diet Laughing (1969, Dell)
Be Good or I'll Belt Ya! (1970, Dell)
Education Impossible (1970, Dell)
How to Teach Your Children about Sex without Making a Complete Fool of Yourself (1970, Dutton)
Never Trust Anyone Over 13 (1970, Bantam)
How to Teach Your Children about God without Actually Scaring Them out of Their Wits (1971, Dutton)
The Berenstains' B Book (1971, Random House)
Are Parents for Real? (1972, Bantam)
The Day of the Dinosaur (1987, Random House, First Time Readers); illustrated by Michael Berenstain (Mike)[5]
After the Dinosaurs (1988, Random House, First Time Readers)
What Your Parents Never Told You about Being a Mom or Dad (1995) parenting advice
Down A Sunny Dirt Road (2002) autobiography
The Berenstain Bears and The Bear Essentials (2005) parenting advice
Nothing Ever Happens at the South Pole (2012, HarperCollins, published posthumously) children's book
___________________________________
References
^ Jump up to: a b c "Jan Berenstain, co-creator of the Berenstain Bears children's series, dies at 88". Emily Langer. The Washington Post. February 27, 2012. Retrieved 2012-02-28.
^ Jump up to: a b c "Berenstain Bears Co Creator Jan Berenstain Dies". News & Record. Associated Press. February 27, 2012. Retrieved 2012-02-27.
Jump up ^ Minovitz, Ethan (February 28, 2012). "Jan Berenstain, 88, co-created Berenstain Bears". Big Cartoon News. Retrieved 2012-02-28.
^ Jump up to: a b "About Mike Berenstain". BerenstainBears.com. May 15, 2009. He's often asked which is his favorite Berenstain Bear book. The answer is The Bears' Picnic, created when he was twelve.
Jump up ^ The day of the dino
official website: http://berenstainbears.com/
Stan and Jan Berenstain Papers 1954–1965] at Syracuse University (primary source material for several books and Sister)
http://library.syr.edu/digital/guides/b/berenstain_s_j.htm
Stan and Jan Berenstain Bibliography
http://frontiernet.net/~bmariska/bears/bibliography.doc
Last edit: 07 Jun 2015 16:06 by .
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07 Jun 2015 16:19 #194366
by
Replied by on topic A question about bears?
Not offended at all.... Sorry if I came off as such. Just.... curious. The topic has been somewhat problematic for me of late. I have the book. Copyright 1974. Your reply, therefore, offered nothing I didn't already have. I'm asking for you to remember.... not recite.
"Science should welcome your questions, because science itself should question everything"
"Science should welcome your questions, because science itself should question everything"
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07 Jun 2015 16:24 - 07 Jun 2015 16:31 #194367
by
Replied by on topic A question about bears?
"Mmm. Lost a planet Master Obi-wan has. How embarrassing. How embarrassing."
Your age is relative to the situation, whether you care to believe it is or not.... If something was lost before your ability to remember it, how can you find it without at least assistance from someone who knows where it is buried?.... Probabilities are slim.
The problem in this particular case centers around circa 1992...if you weren't born in 1987 or earlier, I feel it is very relative to the situation. Which is not to say your input is not appreciated.
I'm the one who may have lost a planet, and people are concerned I'm being short. Jeepers. So sensitive, lol.
Your age is relative to the situation, whether you care to believe it is or not.... If something was lost before your ability to remember it, how can you find it without at least assistance from someone who knows where it is buried?.... Probabilities are slim.
The problem in this particular case centers around circa 1992...if you weren't born in 1987 or earlier, I feel it is very relative to the situation. Which is not to say your input is not appreciated.
I'm the one who may have lost a planet, and people are concerned I'm being short. Jeepers. So sensitive, lol.
Last edit: 07 Jun 2015 16:31 by . Reason: fuler explanation, need for empathy and such
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07 Jun 2015 16:31 #194368
by
Replied by on topic A question about bears?
You guys, you're misinterpreting what Bryan is asking.
He knows what the book is called. And, he knows who the authors are. He purposefully didn't give the information because he wanted us to "remember" the books on their own merit and recall the experience of reading them.
To answer your question, Bryan, I have never read any of the books. But, I did watch the television show when I was a kid.
It was a lovely series. Dealt with some cool stuff.
He knows what the book is called. And, he knows who the authors are. He purposefully didn't give the information because he wanted us to "remember" the books on their own merit and recall the experience of reading them.
To answer your question, Bryan, I have never read any of the books. But, I did watch the television show when I was a kid.

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07 Jun 2015 16:32 #194369
by
Replied by on topic A question about bears?
What name do you remember Connor?
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07 Jun 2015 16:33 #194370
by
Replied by on topic A question about bears?
I'm simply trying to find the center of gravity

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