This section needs more complete citations for verification. He was the first recipient of the Southern California Council on Children's Literature award for distinguished contribution to the field. Bulla received the first award of the Southern California Council on Children's Literature. These materials include his grand piano which is located on the first floor of the library, original illustrations from the illustrators of several of his books, including works from Don Freeman and Lois Lenski, and personal correspondence. Kirkpatrick Library at the University of Central Missouri, whose Children's Literature Festival welcomed him as a presenter twenty-two times. There are also materials held at the James C. The manuscripts for many of his historical novels are in University of Oregon Libraries, Special Collections and University Archives. Joseph Gazette in which he tied with 100 others for third-place to write about a grain of wheat. The book referred to an essay he wrote in 1924 for the St. His autobiography, A Grain of Wheat: A Writer Begins, was published in 1985. His first book, The Donkey Cart, was published in 1946. He finished his first book shortly after his graduation from high school and then went to work on a newspaper as a columnist and a typesetter. He received his early education in a one-room schoolhouse where he began writing stories and songs. May 23, 2007, Warrensburg, Missouri) was an American writer who wrote over fifty books for children. Clyde Robert Bulla (born January 9, 1914, near King City, Missouri, United States, d.
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