BN AUTAPP
Internet, http://authorities.loc.gov/, 2011-08-04
Information trouvée : autorité : Seuss, Dr. et non Dr. Seuss
Internet,www.forbes.com, 2004-11-04
Information trouvée : Décès1991-09-24
https://www.thoughtco.com/dr-seuss-and-theo-lesieg-626858, 2025-06-24
Information trouvée : Theodor "Ted" Seuss Geisel wrote more than 60 children's books and became one of the
most famous children's authors of all time. He used a few pen names, but his most
popular one is a household name: Dr. Seuss. He penned a number of books under other
names, such as Theo LeSieg and Rosetta Stone. He began publishing under aliases, such
as L. Pasteur, D.G. Rossetti '25, T. Seuss, and Seuss. Once he left school and became
a magazine cartoonist, he began signing his work as “Dr. Theophrastus Seuss” in 1927.
Although he did not finish his doctorate in literature at Oxford as he had hoped,
he still decided to shorten his pen name to “Dr. Seuss” in 1928. He used Dr. Seuss
for children's books that he both wrote and illustrated. Theo LeSieg (Geisel spelled
backward) is another name he used for books he wrote. Most of the LeSieg books were
illustrated by someone else. Rosetta Stone is a pseudonym he used when he worked with
Philip D. Eastman. "Stone" is an homage to his wife Audrey Stone.