Joe Krush (born May 18, 1918) and Beth Krush (March 31, 1918 – February 2, 2009) were an American husband-and-wife team of illustrators who worked primarily on children's books. They may be known best for the U.S. editions of all five Borrowers books by Mary Norton, published by Harcourt 1953–1961 and 1982, a series inaugurated very early in their careers.
Beth was born March 31, 1918 in Washington, DC. As a girl she enjoyed visiting the city institutions and special events and drawing at home. Joseph Krush was born May 18, 1918 in Camden, New Jersey, and raised there. As a boy he won some prizes for drawings of boats and planes.
Beth and Joe both studied at the Philadelphia Museum School of Art, where they met on the first day of class. They married during World War II and settled in Wayne, Pennsylvania, south of the city, in 1948. They still lived there when Beth died in 2009 (in Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania).
The Krushes had one son, the musician Jay Paul Krush.
Joe worked as a graphic designer for O.S.S. during the war. He was a courtroom sketch artist at the Nuremberg Trials 1945–1946. Beth taught illustration and drawing at Moore College of Art in Philadelphia, for at least 15 years.
Both of the Krushes illustrated books that Harcourt, Brace published in 1947. Joe did Windwagon Smith and Other Yarns, a collection of short stories by Wilbur Schramm. Beth did Mr. Doodle by Sally Scott. Sarah Scott Fisher, the daughter of Dorothy Canfield Fisher, was a prolific writer of children's picture books whom Harcourt teamed with multiple illustrators. The Library of Congress online catalog lists 16 Sally Scott and Beth Krush collaborations published from 1947 to 1963.