


Books in series

The Sesame Street Library Vol. 1
1978

The Sesame Street Library Volume 2
1978

The Sesame Street Library Volume 3
1978

The Seame Street Library featuring the letters G, H and I and the number
1978

The Sesame Street Library with Jim Henson's Muppets Vol 5
1978

The Sesame Street Library Volume 6
1978

The Sesame Street Library
Volume 7
1978

The Sesame Street Library, Volume 8
Featuring the Letters Q and R and the Number 8
1978

The Sesame Street Library Vol 9
1978

the sesame street library with jim henson's muppets vol 10
1978

The Sesame Street Library Volume 11
1978

The Sesame Street Library Volume 12
1978

The Sesame Street Library Volume 13
1979

The Sesame Street Library Volume 14
1979
Authors

Emily Perl Kingsley is a writer who joined the Sesame Street team in 1970 and has been writing for the show ever since. She is well-known for her essay, Welcome to Holland , about having a child with a disability.

Stone graduated from Williams College in 1952. He received a master's degree from the Yale University School of Drama in 1955, at which time he joined a CBS training program. Before helping to create Sesame Street, he worked on the popular children's television show Captain Kangaroo for CBS. He also worked on several other Muppet projects before and during his time on Sesame Street, and was the author of several books including the popular "The Monster at the End of this Book". He was married for 9 years to actress Beverly Owen. Stone was Sesame Street's principal director until 1996. Working with Jim Henson, he helped to create many of the Muppet characters, including Big Bird and Cookie Monster. He was also responsible for the show's format and setting. Stone contributed occasional announcer voices (such as the soap opera promo spoof "School in the Afternoon"), and served similar duty on two Muppet Meeting Films. In April 1990, Stone hosted and directed a television special titled Sing! Sesame Street Remembers Joe Raposo and His Music. The special was created as a tribute to Joe Raposo, who passed away from lymphoma in February 1989. Jon Stone died of complications from Lou Gehrig's disease on March 30th, 1997. In his New York Times obituary, Joan Ganz Cooney describes Stone as "probably the most brilliant writer of children's television material in America."