The Complete Adventures of Snugglepot and Cuddlepie

Publisher details

Author
May Gibbs
Publisher
Scholastic
Genre
Children’s Picture Book
Released
01 December, 2020
ISBN
9781760974367

The Complete Adventures of Snugglepot and Cuddlepie

Buy now

Retail partners

Synopsis

The Complete Adventures of Snugglepot and Cuddlepie combines May Gibbs’ much-loved classics, The Tales of Snugglepot and Cuddlepie and its two sequels, Little Ragged Blossom and Little Obelia. First published over 100 years ago in 1918, these delightful tales of iconic Australian folklore have never been out of print. This new hardback edition of Australia’s best-loved children’s books includes the original, hand-drawn illustrations, bringing alive the enchanting world of the gumnut babies and other bush characters for today’s generation.
May Gibbs
About the author

May Gibbs

Cecilia May Gibbs was one of Australia’s foremost children’s authors and illustrators and is best known today for the iconic Australian children’s story, The Complete Adventures of Snugglepot and Cuddlepie, featuring two gumnut babies and their escape from the big bad Banksia men.May Gibbs was born on 17 January 1877 in Sydenham, Kent, in England to parents Herbert Gibbs and Cecilia Rogers. She migrated with her family to Australia when she was four years old, settling in Perth, Western Australia. After several journeys back to England to pursue her artistic interests, May finally settled in Sydney, Australia in 1913. Here she designed covers for magazines, provided illustrations, designed postcards and published the first of her gumnut books, Gumnut Babies. Following her marriage in 1919 to mining agent, James Ossoli Kelly, the couple moved into Nutcote, the house designed for them by architect BJ Waterhouse in Neutral Bay, on the shores of Sydney Harbour, in 1925.May continued her career as an author and illustrator, writing numerous other stories and publishing her popular weekly comic strips Bib and Bub and Tiggy Touchwood for many years. Her work remained extremely popular. After the death of her husband in 1939, she lived on at Nutcote with her dogs, (mainly Scots Terriers), publishing her last book Prince Dande Lion in 1953. She died without having had children, in 1969, leaving her estate to UNICEF, the Spastic Centre of NSW (now Cerebral Palsy Alliance) and the NSW Society for Crippled Children (now Northcott Disability Services.)

Books by May Gibbs

Related articles

PODCAST: Francesca Albanese on War and Power

Podcast

1 June 2026

PODCAST: Francesca Albanese on War and Power

    PODCAST: Dervla McTiernan on Ruthless Editing and Finding Home in Australia

    Podcast

    25 May 2026

    PODCAST: Dervla McTiernan on Ruthless Editing and Finding Home in Australia

      What Should You Read Next? Let WAYR? The App Decide

      News

      19 May 2026

      What Should You Read Next? Let WAYR? The App Decide

        The Best Podcast Episodes You’ll Find on WAYR? The App

        News | Events & Festivals

        19 May 2026

        The Best Podcast Episodes You’ll Find on WAYR? The App

        How to Download What Are You Reading? The App

        News

        19 May 2026

        How to Download What Are You Reading? The App

        PODCAST: Antoinette Lattouf on Books, Battles and Breaking Barriers

        Podcast

        18 May 2026

        PODCAST: Antoinette Lattouf on Books, Battles and Breaking Barriers

          3 Reasons Why You Should Read The Farmer's Pyjamas by Ruth Paul

          News

          11 May 2026

          3 Reasons Why You Should Read The Farmer's Pyjamas by Ruth Paul

          Q&A: Judith Katherine, Author of Simply Beside Herself

          News | Author Related

          11 May 2026

          Q&A: Judith Katherine, Author of Simply Beside Herself

            PODCAST: Ann Mossop on the 2026 Sydney Writers’ Festival

            Podcast

            11 May 2026

            PODCAST: Ann Mossop on the 2026 Sydney Writers’ Festival

              The Culture of WAYR? The App

              News

              6 May 2026

              The Culture of WAYR? The App

                COMMENTS

                Leave a Reply

                Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *