Art Linkletter - Works

Works

  • Linkletter, Art (1957). Kids Say the Darndest Things!. Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall. OCLC 336428.
  • Linkletter, Art (1960). The Secret World of Kids. New York: Pocket Books. ASIN B0007FZ0X0.
  • Linkletter, Art (1962) . Confessions of a Happy Man. with Dean Jennings. New York: Pocket Books. OCLC 21491400.
  • Linkletter, Art (1962). Kids Sure Rite Funny!. Bernard Geis Associate. ASIN B001KZ1FU8.
  • Linkletter, Art (1962). Kids STILL say the Darndest Things!. Pocket Books, Inc.. ASIN B0007FZWBA.
  • Linkletter, Art (1965). A Child's Garden of Misinformation. Random House. ASIN B0007DSKPW.
  • Linkletter, Art (1968). I Wish I'd Said That! My Favorite Ad-Libs of All Time. Doubleday. ASIN B000MTRRQO.
  • Linkletter, Art (1968). Oops! Or, Life's Awful Moments. Pocket Books. ASIN B0007FBEFS.
  • Linkletter, Art (1970). Linkletter Down Under. Kaye Ward. ASIN B000KP2O3Q.
  • Linkletter, Art (February 1970). "We Must Fight the Epidemic of Drug Abuse!". Reader's Digest: 56–60.
  • Linkletter, Art (1973). Drugs at my Door Step. W Publishing Group. ISBN 0-87680-335-4.
  • Linkletter, Art (1974). Women are My Favorite People. Doubleday. ISBN 0-385-05226-X.
  • Linkletter, Art (1974). How to be a Super Salesman: Linkletter's Art of Persuasion. Prentice-Hall. ISBN 0-13-396606-2.
  • Linkletter, Art (1990). Yes, You Can!. Spire. ASIN B000O8ZB8O.
  • Linkletter, Art (1980). I Didn't Do It Alone: The Autobiography of Art Linkletter as Told to George Bishop. Ottawa, Illinois: Caroline House Publishers. ISBN 0-89803-040-4. OCLC 6899386.
  • Linkletter, Art (1990). Old Age is Not for Sissies. Bookthrift Co. ISBN 0-7917-1479-9.
  • Linkletter, Art (2006). How to Make the Rest of Your Life the Best of Your Life. with Mark Victor Hansen. Thomas Nelson. ISBN 0-7852-1890-4.

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    His character as one of the fathers of the English language would alone make his works important, even those which have little poetical merit. He was as simple as Wordsworth in preferring his homely but vigorous Saxon tongue, when it was neglected by the court, and had not yet attained to the dignity of a literature, and rendered a similar service to his country to that which Dante rendered to Italy.
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