![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() To date, it has been read by over four million people across the globe.Īmy lived with her family on a tree-lined street in Chicago. It immediately went viral, and became one of the most-read essays that year. Ten years ago, Amy Krouse Rosenthal burst into childrens books with Little Pea, a book destined to become a classic. Her final essay, You May Want to Marry My Husband, was published in the New York Times Modern Love column ten days before she died in March 2017. ![]() She was a contributor to the TED conference and NPR. Her viral videos include The Beckoning of Lovely, The Money Tree, The Kindness Thought Bubble, The Wisdom Project, and Life is a Marathon. Her second interactive memoir, Textbook Amy Krouse Rosenthal, was the first of its kind. Amy Krouse Rosenthal was a person who liked to make things.Īccording to The New York Times, Amy's award-winning children's books "radiate fun the way tulips radiate spring: they are elegant and spirit-lifting." Her 30+ books for children include Little Pea, Uni the Unicorn, I Wish You More, Exclamation Mark, Spoon, Chopsticks, Duck! Rabbit!, The OK Book, Cookies: Bite-Size Life Lessons, Plant a Kiss, and Dear Girl, which she co-authored with her daughter.Īs for her adult work, Amazon named Encyclopedia of an Ordinary Life one of the top 10 memoirs of the decade. ![]()
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