new posts in all blogs
Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: maurice sendak, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 26 - 50 of 171
How to use this Page
You are viewing the most recent posts tagged with the words: maurice sendak in the JacketFlap blog reader. What is a tag? Think of a tag as a keyword or category label. Tags can both help you find posts on JacketFlap.com as well as provide an easy way for you to "remember" and classify posts for later recall. Try adding a tag yourself by clicking "Add a tag" below a post's header. Scroll down through the list of Recent Posts in the left column and click on a post title that sounds interesting. You can view all posts from a specific blog by clicking the Blog name in the right column, or you can click a 'More Posts from this Blog' link in any individual post.
The Blank on Blank organization has created an animated video starring I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings memoirist Maya Angelou. The video embedded above features an unheard interview that took place in 1970 between the late author and Pulitzer Prize-winning nonfiction writer Louis “Studs” Terkel. In the past, the producers behind this YouTube channel made pieces about Where the Wild Things Are author Maurice Sendak and Infinite Jest novelist David Foster Wallace.
New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.
by Ruth Krauss and Maurice Sendak (HarperCollins, 1953)
School’s been back in the swing of things for a couple weeks, and it has been bananas. But I’ve got this beautiful new space and some read-in-me-for-hours lounge chairs and the kids named our bright new sitting area The Birdhouse. This week: shelves and books. The heart and soul.
That’s why I needed to visit a book that is about all of those things: comfort and wonder and imagination and a very special place.
I love this little dancer-dreamer: dee dee dee oh-h-h.
This book is the hope of yellow and the broken-in-ness of blue overalls and the loose lines of childhood. This book started with two masters but belongs to the rest of us. It’s root in the moodle of our head head heads.
And this is what I want for anyone who finds a story in our very special place:
They and I are making secrets
and we’re falling over laughing
and we’re running in and out
and we hooie hooie hooie
then we think we are some chickens
then we’re singing in the opera then
we’re going going going going ooie ooie ooie.
Tagged:
color,
libraries,
maurice sendak,
ruth krauss,
stories
Google has created a Doodle to celebrate Leo Tolstoy’s 186th birthday. The image pays homage to three works by the famed Russian novelist: War & Peace, Anna Karenina, and The Death of Ivan Ilyich.
Artist Roman Muradov designed the piece. Google has posted an essay Muradov wrote explaining his creative process: ”The language of cartooning, likewise, is the language of reduction; it’s less descriptive than realistic artwork or film, and is less likely to replace the reader’s vision. It seemed fitting to focus on Tolstoy’s central theme of dualism and to highlight his stylistic nuances through the rhythm of the sequences – the almost full moon against the almost starless night, the red of Anna’s handbag, Ivan’s fatal curtains that stand between him and the light of his spiritual awakening.”
(more…)
New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.
By: Marissa Wasseluk,
on 9/9/2014
Blog:
First Book
(
Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags:
Books & Reading,
Maurice Sendak,
First Book,
Where the Wild Things Are,
Back to School,
school supplies,
Virtual Book Drive,
Virtual Book Drives,
back to school fair,
wilson north carolina,
Add a tag
Wendy Moore’s best friends couldn’t wait to give her a special surprise for her 50th birthday. To honor her great love for books, they set up a virtual book drive with First Book and collectively raised over $1200 to purchase brand-new books for kids in Wendy’s hometown of Wilson, NC.
The need for books in Wilson County Schools is high. Located a little over an hour outside of Raleigh, the rural district ranks as Tier One community – a title reserved for the most distressed counties in the state. But Wilson residents like Wendy are committed to their children’s education.
Every year the county hosts a Back-to-School Fair, an event that celebrates education and equips kids with backpacks and school supplies for the upcoming school year.
Journey received one of the free copies of Where the Wild Things Are at the Wilson County Back-to-School Fair. She said the book is her favorite!
The event draws hundreds of the community’s neediest families, many lining up as early as 10 p.m. the night before the fair in order to receive school supplies.
At this year’s fair, Moore joined staff at the Wilson County Schools booth to distribute the books purchased through First Book with the funds raised by her friends. In less than 90 minutes, all 420 copies of her selected book Where the Wild Things Are were in the hands of excited students.
“Hopefully it will inspire at least one kid to dream and do things that go far,” said Moore.
In your hometown and across the nation, kids need books to foster a love of learning. Click here to find out more about hosting your own virtual book drive.
The post A Birthday Surprise: 420 Books for Kids appeared first on First Book Blog.
By:
Guest Posts,
on 8/7/2014
Blog:
The Children's Book Review
(
Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags:
Ages 0-3,
Picture Books,
Illustrator Interviews,
Maurice Sendak,
Richard Scarry,
William Steig,
featured,
Ezra Jack Keats,
Shel Silverstein,
Tomi Ungerer,
Remy Charlip,
Ana Juan,
v,
Illustration Inspiration,
Social Graces,
Anna Kang,
Christopher Weyant,
Add a tag
Christopher Weyant’s work has been published worldwide in books, newspapers, magazines, and online. His cartoons are in permanent collection at The Whitney Museum of American Art and The Morgan Library & Museum in New York City. YOU ARE (NOT) SMALL is his first children’s book.
We all hold our favorite childhood books dear, but there's a reason Where the Wild Things Are is one of the most beloved picture books of all time. Of course it's about Maurice Sendak's whimsy, his spare poetry, his imagination. Of course it's about his impeccably detailed illustrations, depicting the beauty of a night of [...]
We’re off tomorrow to spend a few days with the Sendak Fellows, Nora Krug and Harry Bliss, at a farm Maurice owned in upstate New York. (Why did he need a farm? Did he need a place to get away from it all from his place to get away from it all in the wilds of rural Connecticut?). The management tells me my job there is to “be Maurice,” but someone and his pal Wolfie are up in heaven laughing themselves sick at that suggestion. Instead, I imagine myself poking my head around easels, saying “perhaps a little more green there, Nora” or “Harry, you know, Brownie here would make an excellent companion to Bailey, yes?”
I guess the one thing I can tell them about is what Maurice loved and hated–and it was generally one or the other, whether it came to his taste in pictures, movies, TV, books, music or food. “I love it!” “I hate it!” The tricky thing with him, though, is that even though you coulda sworn he’d said he loved something, catch him ten minutes later and his passion had reversed. What I wish I had was Maurice’s talent for contagious enthusiasm: he could make you love what he loved, even if, years later, you finally–secretly and hoping he doesn’t overhear–admit you really don’t find Christa Wolf all that enjoyable.
I’m sure I’ll think of something to say. And we’re going to Tanglewood to meet Lizzie Borden; we’ll show Brownie the land of his birth (he was found wandering in the Berkshire woods); and I’m to be given the opportunity to milk goats. I hope I can see them run!
The post Chicks ‘n ducks ‘n geese appeared first on The Horn Book.
By:
Betsy Bird,
on 5/8/2014
Blog:
A Fuse #8 Production
(
Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags:
Coldplay,
New York Public Library,
Tomas Rivera Awards,
The Velveteen Rabbit,
Fusenews,
diversity in children's literature,
ALSC committees,
Holocaust books for kids,
cool libraries,
library clothes,
Children's Africana Book Award,
Eric Carle Honors,
Irma Black Awards,
Jeff Belanger,
Maurice Sendak,
Add a tag
- This news comes to us less than a week after Coldplay (yes, that Coldplay) hid something in one of the books in my Children’s Center at 42nd Street. Apparently the doors opened that day and people tore into the room demanding, ultimately, Jeff Belanger’s Who’s Haunting the White House? One wonders what Jeff Belanger thinks of all this. Or if sales of his book have gone up. Six copies of the books are now checked out of my system, I see.
- Oh, and it only took a year but The Paris Review finally made it over to NYPL to check out the current children’s book exhibit The ABC of It. They liked it, which is good when you consider that it’s up and running until September now.
- May as well seek out the Secret Libraries of New York City as well, if you happen to be in town. I knew some of these but others (the Conjuring Arts Research Center?!) who wholly new unto mine eyes.
- Unless you resided under a Wi-Fi free rock you may have missed the #WeNeedDiverseBooks campaign that went wholly and totally viral. PW summed the whole thing up with its piece BookCon Controversy Begets Diversity Social Media Campaign. At the time, I didn’t think to alert NYPL to the campaign, but as it turned out the folks there were already on board with it. They whipped a Celebrate Diverse Children’s Books list out of some of the titles that have appeared on our 100 Titles for Reading and Sharing lists over the last three years. It’s a nice list too. Good show.
- There are, of course, children’s awards out there that remain under the radar, no matter how many diversity campaigns spring up. Such is the case with the Children’s Africana Book Award. Their history? According to their site: “In 1991 the Outreach Council of the African Studies Association accepted a proposal from Africa Access to establish awards for outstanding K-12 books on Africa published in the U.S. The awards are designed to encourage the publication of accurate, balanced children’s materials on Africa, to recognize literary excellence and to acknowledge the research achievements of outstanding authors and illustrators. Collectively CABA winners show that Africa is indeed a varied and multifaceted continent. CABA titles expand and enrich our perspectives of Africa beyond the stereotypical, a historical and exotic images that are emphasized in the West.” I was pleased beyond measure to see that Monica Edinger’s Africa Is My Home: A Child of the Amistad won in the Best Book for Older Readers category. Well played, Monica!
- In other news the Tomás Rivera Book Award Winners which honors, “authors and illustrators who create literature that depicts the Mexican American experience” were announced and amongst the winners was Diego Rivera: An Artist for the People by Susan Goldman Rubin. Woohoo!
- Just to round out the awards, the winners of the 2014 Irma Black Award were announced and the results were absolutely splendid. PAR-ticularly The Cook Prize for the best STEM picture book. The Boy Who Loved Math was a shoo-in to my mind, but it’s nice to see folks agreeing on that count.
- And here I thought I knew the bulk of the Maurice Sendak illustrated classics. So how is it that only now I’m hearing about the fact that he illustrated The Velveteen Rabbit? The technique is fascinating. Like he wanted it to look as if a child had scribbled all over the book at strategic moments. See, here’s what I mean:
- There are just too many folks to congratulate with the recent bout of 2014 ALSC Election Results but I will give one or two shout-outs just for the heck of it. Big time congrats and woohoos to Andrew Medlar, our bright and shiny new Vice-President/President Elect. On the Caldecott committee, our fair GreenBeanTeenQueen Sarah Bean Thompson will be serving (yay, bloggers!). The Newbery committee is seeing the delightful Allie Bruce of the Bank Street College of Education (did you see her latest SLJ article?) and Christine Scheper, my Materials Specialist colleague at the Queens Library System. Well done, everyone!
- The issue of when one should begin telling kids about the Holocaust has come up time and time again in conversation. How young is too young? What makes a book appropriate or deeply inappropriate for a given age? Well, Marjorie Ingall over at Tablet Magazine has some thoughts on the matter, even as she examines two very recent Holocaust titles that she admires (and that I need to read stat). As Marjorie puts it, “A lot of us drag our heels when it comes to discussing the subject at all. We tell ourselves we want our kids to maintain their innocence for as long as possible. But what avoidance means, practically speaking, is that someone else often does the educating.”
- This is fun. Recently I took part in a Facebook chat on the subject of getting kids into summer reading as well as various topics books can cover (the stars, science fiction, and camping, amongst others). With that in mind the illustrious Lori Ess and I created the Reading Under the Stars Pinterest page. A collection of spooky, camping, and space titles, it covers ages 0-18 and has a little something for everyone.
- Woo-hoo! I love hearing whom The Eric Carle Museum of Picture Book Art will honor at their yearly gala. This year marks the ninth annual gala and fundraiser and so they’ll be honoring the following folks:
Artist: Jerry Pinkney
Angel: Reach Out and Read represented by Brian Gallagher and Dr. Perri Klass
Mentor: Henrietta Smith
Bridge: Françoise Mouly
For what it’s worth, I had the honor of hearing Dr. Perri Klass speak recently at the opening of a new NYU library and she was fan-friggin’-tastic. So pleased she’s getting her due! Henrietta Smith, for her part, is a children’s librarian so cool she has her own Wikipedia page. And she served under Augusta Baker! Man! I wanna meet her stat.
- When I was asked if I had heard about the anthology Altered Perceptions I had to confess that I had not. And here I thought I knew all the anthologies out in 2014. Turns out, Altered Perceptions is a unique case. Thirty-one authors ranging from Shannon Hale and Sara Zarr to Lauren Oliver and Brandon Mull have joined together to help out writer Robison Wells. Rob suffers from four different mental illnesses, so his friends have donated writing to help him out of his financial debt. It’s sort of a win-win situation. You buy a book that includes work from one of your favorite authors and you help a guy out. They’re halfway to their stated goal with only 17 days left to raise the funds. Be a sport. Help a guy out.
- When I hear that the Huffington Post has an article out with a title like 50 of the Best Kids’ Books Published in the Last 25 Years all that I ask of the universe is that when I open the dang thing I don’t immediately cringe upon seeing the picture book image they used to headline it. So I opened this piece up and . . . yep. Sure as shooting. Cringeworthy. Now add in the factual mistakes (the Galdone version of The Three Billy Goats Gruff came out in 1973, folks, not 1989). Most of the books are fantastic, but man oh geez it’s an odd little list.
I’ve blogged the Little Golden Book Gown before on this site, so the fact that it exists shouldn’t be too much of a surprise. What I did not know was that it’s about to be on display here in NYC on May 30th.
Stats about the dress include the fact that the paper skirt is comprised entirely of the original book illustrations sewn together with metallic gold thread and that the bodice is made from the books’ foil spines backed by tape adhesive. So if anyone wants to lend this to me for an upcoming Newbery/Caldecott Banquet . . . hey, I’m totally game!
Newbery Medal-winning author Neil Gaiman headlined “a semi-secret late-night event” during the TED 2014 conference. Brain Pickings reports that Gaiman performed recitations of a ghost story and an essay entitled “Ghost in the Machine.”
Here’s an excerpt from Gaiman’s readings: “We have been telling each other tales of otherness, of life beyond the grave, for a long time; stories that prickle the flesh and make the shadows deeper and, most important, remind us that we live, and that there is something special, something unique and remarkable about the state of being alive. Fear is a wonderful thing, in small doses.”
Press play in the Soundcloud player embedded above to listen. In his essay, Gaiman discusses human society’s history with terrifying tales and the value of ghost stories. During the event, Gaiman also talked about why he agrees with J.R.R. Tolkien and Maurice Sendak’s idea that “there is no such thing as ‘children’s’ books” and “the ghosts of today that terrify” him.
New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.
Google has created a Doodle to celebrate John Steinbeck’s 112th birthday. Throughout his writing career, Steinbeck penned many beloved works including East of Eden, Of Mice & Men, and the Pulitzer Prize-winning title, The Grapes of Wrath.
To this day, Steinbeck is a widely respected and read author. According to SFGate, the organizers behind the Steinbeck Festival plan to celebrate the 75th anniversary of The Grapes of Wrath at this year’s event. In April, the Of Mice & Men play starring James Franco and Chris O’Dowd will open on Broadway.
continued…
New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.
Previously on A Fuse #8 Production . . .
In 2012 I came up with a crazy idea. We all love Dr. Seuss. We all know his work. So for fun I asked folks to illustrate a scene from their favorite Seuss book in the style of a different children’s author. The result: The Re-Seussification Project. And that, ladies and gentlemen, was going to be the end of that.
Then Phil Nel had a notion.
What if The Niblings (Travis from 100 Scope Notes, Phil from Nine Kinds of Pie, Jules from Seven Impossible Things Before Breakfast, and myself) were to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the publication date of Where the Wild Things Are? Truthfully, we didn’t know the precise date that it hit bookstore and library shelves nationwide. What we did know was that it was in the fall, possibly October. So October 15th just seemed a good stand-in date to celebrate. Today you will find that each one of us has come up with an interesting and original way of celebrating the man and his legend. In my particular case, I do it by exploiting the talents of others. I feel no shame.
Back in April, you see, I put out the call. Folks were to redo a scene from a Sendak illustration in the style of another artist in the field. It could be something he illustrated, something he wrote, anything. I wondered if folks would all do the same books and illustrators or if they’d shake it up a bit. I never expected what I received. You’re in for a treat.
And now, the moment you’ve all been waiting for . . . the results!
Where the Wild Things Are in the style of Saul Bass
Art by Jim Averbeck
Alligators All Around in the style of Tomie de Paola
Art by Bernie Mount
Where the Wild Things Are in the style of Jules Feiffer
Art by Nick Bruel
Where the Wild Things Are in the style of Oliver Jeffers
Art by Ken Min
In the Night Kitchen in the style of Kevin Henkes
Art by Susanne Lamb
Where the Wild Things Are in the style of Clement Hurd
Art by Airlie Anderson
Where the Wild Things Are in the style of Crockett Johnson
Art by Minh Le
Really Rosie in the style of Ezra Jack Keats
Art by Cecilia Cackley
Where the Wild Things Are in the style of Robert Lawson
Art by Mike Boldt
Chicken Soup With Rice in the style of Laura Numeroff
Art by Deirdre Jones
Where the Wild Things Are in the style of Miroslav Sasek
Art by Nancy Vo
Mrs. Piggle-Wiggle’s Farm in the style of Miroslav Sasek
(For those of you unfamiliar with the original, Mr. Burks was kind enough to pass along the original Sendak image, seen here:)
Art by James Burks
Bumble-Ardy in the style of Richard Scarry
Art by K-Fai Steele
Pierre in the style of Chris Van Allsburg
Art by Nathan Hale
And that might have been the end, had I not received the following email from Bernie Mount, a librarian at the St. Rita Catholic School:
“So, I had my 7th grade students try their hand at the Re-Sendakify project. It’s funny to see them try to think outside the box and really grasp the concept . . . They had a good time and I was happy to introduce them to Maurice Sendak. It was amazing how many of them only knew “Where the Wild Things Are” and some only the movie version.”
Well, with an intro like that I couldn’t help but wonder what the kids had come up with. I’m grateful to anyone that turns one of my pet projects into a school assignment. What’s also very interesting to me here is that at least two of the kids’ images think along the same lines as the artists above. It makes you wonder what it is about certain illustrators that you would naturally equate Pierre with Van Allsburg or Harold with Max. Here, in any case, is the work of some truly talented kids:
A Hole is to Dig in the style of Kevin Henkes
Analee A., Savana S., and Gabby S.
Where the Wild Things Are in the style of Crockett Johnson
Quinn B., Kevin P., & Matthew W.
Little Bear’s Visit in the style of Jon Klassen
Carson W., Nicholas J., & John Alfred Z.
Where the Wild Things Are in the style of Ian Falconer
Helen H. & Maggie K.
One Was Johnny in the style of James Dean
Maddy M., Paige M., Molly F.
Pierre in the style of Chris Van Allsburg
Lauryn S.
Where the Wild Things Are in the style of Melanie Watt
Christopher R., Barrett L., & Luke H.
Thanks one and all to the talented artists that spend untold gobs of time to put these together. One could not hope for a better celebration of the man and his works than this. And be sure to see posts from Travis from 100 Scope Notes, Phil from Nine Kinds of Pie, and Jules from Seven Impossible Things Before Breakfast for more 50th anniversary high hilarity.
By: Kathy Temean,
on 9/9/2013
Blog:
Writing and Illustrating
(
Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags:
Places to sumit,
Real Simple Essay Contest,
Contest,
Maurice Sendak,
Posters,
authors and illustrators,
opportunity,
No fee Contest,
Life Lessons,
earn money,
Add a tag
Maurice Sendak’s Little-Known and Lovely Posters Celebrating Books and the Joy of Reading
http://www.brainpickings.org/index.php/2013/09/03/maurice-sendak-posters-reading-books/
Real Simple – Sixth Annual Life Lessons Essay Contest
What’s the bravest thing you’ve ever done?
Maybe, in the course of your life, you’ve had an Erin Brockovich moment: say, the time you stood up to a bully in second grade, or the day you ended a long-standing friendship that had turned toxic. Or maybe your acts of courage have been less dramatic but no less powerful: moving to a new country. Daring to fall in love a second time around. Leaving a settled career to embark on a risky new venture. Whatever your story, share it with us.
Enter Real Simple’s sixth annual Life Lessons Essay Contest and you could have your essay published in Real Simple and receive a prize of $3,000.
Send your typed, double-spaced submission (1,500 words maximum, preferably in a Microsoft Word document) to [email protected].
Contest runs through 11:50 P.M. EST on September 19, 2013.
All submitted essays must be nonfiction. Open to legal residents of the United States age 19 or older at time of entry. Void where prohibited by law. (Entries will not be returned.)
Read This Year’s Winning Essays
Frequently Asked Questions
Q. How should I format my entry? A. Essays should be submitted in English at a maximum of 1,500 words and typed and double-spaced on 8½-by-11-inch paper. Essays exceeding this length or handwritten may not be considered. If submitted by e-mail, we prefer that you send the essay in a Microsoft Word document; however, we will also consider essays that are pasted into the body of the e-mail itself.
Also be sure to include your name, address, and phone numbers (home, work, cell) in the body of the e-mail and on any copies or attachments of the essay itself.
Q. How do I submit my entry? A. You have two options.
- E-mail your submission to [email protected].
- Mail your entry to the following address: Essay Contest Real Simple 1271 Avenue of the Americas, 9th floor New York, NY 10020
Each e-mail submission will receive a return message verifying that the essay was received. Please be aware that due to the volume of submissions, we cannot send verification that we have received your specific submission by mail. Additionally, please note that winners and runners-up will be notified in and around January 7, 2014. If you are not contacted, you are free to submit your piece elsewhere.
Q. What happens if I go over the word limit? A. Your essay can be excluded from consideration. And although there is no word minimum, we strongly encourage all contest participants to submit at least 1,000 words to maximize their chances of winning.
Q. Can I choose to remain anonymous? A. Unfortunately, we cannot consider anonymous entries for this contest.
Q. My piece has been previously published. Will you consider it? A. No. All entries must be original pieces of work and not be previously published.
Q. Should I send in photos or other memorabilia that relate to my essay? A. Please don’t. The essays are judged on the following criteria: originality (25 percent), creativity (25 percent), use of language (25 percent), and appropriateness to contest theme (25 percent). No supporting materials will be considered, and they cannot be returned to you.
Q. Is there anything else you can tell me about how to stand out from the crowd? A. Certainly. Here are a few pointers from the Real Simple editors who judge the contest.
- Stick to the theme of the contest. Sounds obvious, right? But every year we get many entries that diverge—sometimes wildly—from the stated topic. You may have an amazing essay in the bottom drawer of your desk, but if it doesn’t cover the contest theme, it’s not going to win.
- But don’t feel the need to parrot back the exact wording of the contest theme in your essay. For example, if the theme is “What was the most important day in your life?” try not to begin the piece with “The most important day of my life was…”
- Check your spelling. Double-duh, or so you’d think. But as many as one in five entries has multiple misspellings.
- Avoid clichés. (And please don’t try to work the phrase ‘real simple’ into your essay. It almost never works.)
- Try writing on a less-expected subject. Many submissions cover similar ground: pregnancies, weddings, divorces, illnesses. Many of these essays are superb. But you automatically stand out if you explore a more unconventional event. In one year’s batch of submissions, memorable writers described the following: a son leaving for his tour of duty; getting one’s braces off; and learning that an ex-wife was remarried.
For more information, see the official contest rules.
What do you have to lose? Fifteen Hundred Words is easy and you only have to email it in. Who knows you could put a little extra cash in your pocket.
Talk tomorrow,
Kathy
Filed under:
authors and illustrators,
Contest,
earn money,
opportunity,
Places to sumit Tagged:
Life Lessons,
Maurice Sendak,
No fee Contest,
Posters,
Real Simple Essay Contest
I, blessedly, had very good parents. But, not everyone has very good parents. Parents try to be good - for the most part. But sometimes we/they are not.
Here is an illustrated interview with Maurice Sendak on how hard it is to be a child. He is truly missed.
Thanks to Betsy at
Fuse#8 for sharing this. Check out her other Sunday videos.
By: Jerry Beck,
on 7/3/2013
Blog:
Cartoon Brew
(
Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags:
Brad Bernstein,
Illustration,
Steven Heller,
Landmark Films,
Jules Feiffer,
documentary,
Feature Film,
Maurice Sendak,
Tomi Ungerer,
Brandon Dumlao,
Far Out Isn't Far Enough,
Add a tag
In the 1950s, when the pages of the Saturday Evening Post and McCall’s were dominated with the realist paintings of Norman Rockwell and Bernie Fuchs, French-born illustrator Tomi Ungerer brought in his loose, graphic drawing style and absurdist sensibilities and changed the direction of American illustration. In the new documentary film Far Out Isn’t Far Enough: The Tomi Ungerer Story, we learn about Ungerer’s early life in Alsace, France as a young artist encouraged by the Nazi party during their French occupation, to his journey to America in search of new opportunities, and his subsequent blacklisting from the children’s book industry.
Featuring interviews with Steven Heller, Jules Feiffer and the late Maurice Sendak, Far Out Isn’t Far Enough is a buoyant and vivid documentary film, painting an inspiring picture of an award-winning illustrator, trilingual author, brilliant satirist, and dedicated humanitarian advocate. Ungerer upended social and professional morays in the pre-pre-Internet era, delighting (and offending) editors, critics and readers by breaking taboos, back when there was still a better assortment of taboos waiting to be broken.
Ungerer’s portrayal is both of an unstable-but-good spirited neighborhood kook and avuncular storyteller, grinning from behind a freshly lit joint and admiring a recently found dismembered baby doll appendage. “Children should be traumatized,” he grins. “If you want to give them an identity, children should be traumatized.” And he speaks from personal experience; socially paranoid, emotionally erratic and “oblivious,” as recounted by Sendak, he represents that classic tortured artist, except that instead of wringing his hands over how best to suffer for his creations, he suffered, survived and then created.
“When I draw it’s a real need,” says Ungerer. “It’s the kind of need like, if you’re hungry, you have to eat, or you have to go to the toilet—it’s got to go out.” His early children’s books, The Mellops Go Flying and Crictor, about pigs and a boa constrictor, respectively, set the tone for the work that would follow: “detestable” creatures (a vulture, a bat, an ogre) cleverly depicted as unlikely heroes, providing children with much needed provocative subject matter.
His political posters were motivated by his fascination with the American civil rights movement and the global conflicts of the 1960s: Uncle Sam shoving Lady Liberty down the throat of a Vietnamese man, a black figure and a white figure devouring each other from opposite ends, a military plane dropping silhouetted bombs under a curtain of pink ribbon presents with the label “Give,” all of which retain their graphic resonance to this day.
And his erotic works, which served as a personal rebellion against his puritanical upbringing, began with a personal relationship that involved “a bit of bondage,” and evolved into titles like Fornicon, a collection of erotica and “mechanical sex recipes.”
While the diversity of his work is one of the most unique aspects of his career, it was this sort of simultaneous co-habitation of creative worlds that eventually worked against him, getting his children’s books (unofficially) banned from libraries for over twenty-five years. His detractors have finally come around and he has received recognition for his body of work as a children’s book author and illustrator. In 1998, Ungerer was presented the Hans Christian Anderson award for his “lasting contribution to children’s literature” and named Ambassador for Childhood and Education by the 47-nation Council of Europe.
If anything, the film may leave you longing for the Golden Age of Publishing in the 1950s and ’60s, where any talented newcomer with the right portfolio—or in Ungerer’s case, a Trojan condom box—could go from door to door peddling their illustrations, and become an industry darling.
Far Out Isn’t Far Enough is directed by Brad Bernstein, and features motion graphics supervised by Brandon Dumlao. The film is distributed by First Run Features and is continuing to open in theaters across the country.
By: Joy Chu,
on 6/18/2013
Blog:
got story countdown
(
Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags:
Society of Illustrators,
Margaret Wise Brown,
BookBuilders West,
Clement Hurd,
A Countdown Quickie,
Patrick McDonell,
Illustrator,
Children's Books,
Interviews,
illustration,
Goodnight Moon,
art,
drawing,
photography,
painting,
Maurice Sendak,
National Book Awards,
graphic design,
media,
Print,
Publishers Weekly,
Society of Children's Book Writers and Illustrators,
AIGA,
Add a tag
* NOTE: The above is from an interview that was featured in UCSD Extension's Blog last fall, just before I began teaching the on-line version of my class, "Illustrating Books for Children"/Winter 2013 Quarter. — JC
50 Book Pledge | Book #24: My Brother’s Book by Maurice Sendak |
In honour of National Poetry Month, I present “Touch Me” from Collected Poems by Stanley Kunitz.
Summer is late, my heart.
Words plucked out of the air
some forty years ago
when I was wild with love
and torn almost in two
scatter like leaves this night
of whistling wind and rain.
It is my heart that’s late,
it is my song that’s flown.
Outdoors all afternoon
under a gunmetal sky
staking my garden down,
I kneeled to the crickets trilling
underfoot as if about
to burst from their crusty shells;
and like a child again
marveled to hear so clear
and brave a music pour
from such a small machine.
What makes the engine go?
Desire, desire, desire.
The longing for the dance
stirs in the buried life.
One season only,
and it’s done.
So let the battered old willow
thrash against the windowpanes
and the house timbers creak.
Darling, do you remember
the man you married? Touch me,
remind me who I am.
I can't stop crying after watching this.
What an honest, honest man Maurice was.
The world is missing out without him here.
The Invention of Hugo Cabret author Brian Selznick has created the beautiful 2013 Children’s Book Week poster embedded above, a tribute to authors and illustrators Remy Charlip and Maurice Sendak.
Schools and libraries can get free copies of the poster during April and May, encouraging kids to keep reading. To order a copy, you must pay for shipping. Here’s more information:
To receive a free poster(s) with activity guide, please send a 9 x 12 self-addressed envelope (for 1 or 10 posters) or a 10 x 13 self-addressed envelope (for 25 posters) with appropriate postage affixed. Note that Postal regulations have changed. Please use the USPS Postage Price Calculator to determine postage cost, or ask for help at your local post office … There is a 25 poster maximum per person. Due to the volume of poster requests, we cannot process any poster orders that do not include a self-addressed, stamped envelope.
continued…
New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.
My friend Robin Rosenthal, talented designer and illustrator, emailed me a couple of weeks ago with some exciting yet still unofficial news regarding a new Public School in Park Slope, Brooklyn, NY. She, and other members of the pre-PTA, were trying to get all the necessary approvals in order to name the school after Maurice Sendak.
I believe this is the first school named after him (who was born in Brooklyn in 1928), and I am very curious to see how many others will follow in the next years.
By:
Betsy Bird,
on 1/12/2013
Blog:
A Fuse #8 Production
(
Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags:
Videos,
Maurice Sendak,
The Hobbit,
Bruce Coville,
Charlotte's Web,
Christoph Niemann,
Monica Edinger,
Russell Hoban,
Video Sunday,
stage adaptations,
Cheery Russians,
The Mouse and the Motorcycle,
Add a tag
Now this is really neat. There’s a series called BOOKD through THINKR (apparently E’s are considered gauche these days) that will take a topic and really go into it with a panel of experts. In this particular case the question is whether or not you should re-read Charlotte’s Web. Author Bruce Coville and teacher/blogger/author Monica Edinger (amongst others) give their two cents. Really nicely edited and shot, don’t you think?
In other news, I had no idea that the Royal Shakespeare Company had created a staged adaptation of The Mouse and His Child by Russell Hoban. Hoban died just last year in 2012. I feel a bit miffed that he didn’t get to see this. Maybe he got a sneaky peak in some way. At any rate, it look fantastic (love the ending on the second video). I just wonder how they pulled off The Caws of Art. I’ve two videos here for the same production. Love them both for very different reasons.
Thanks to Stefan for the links!
Sometimes I like to step into an alternate universe where I grew up in the USSR and watched television like this version of The Hobbit. Instead I grew up on the old Rankin & Bass version. Which was better? Um . . .
Thanks to Educating Alice for the link!
And kudos to The New York Times for this lovely Christoph Neimann illustrated video of an interview Sendak conducted with NPR.
When I die, let’s do that. That would be fun. Make a note of it.
And finally, for the off-topic part, gold gold goldy gold. I don’t even know if you could label it “Off-Topic” since it involves a child reading. Or rather, a three-year-old child “reading”. I know it’s three minutes but I seriously sat down and watched the whole thing because it’s a fascinating case study in what words kids pick up on when they hear stories. The “but then” particularly amuses.
Many thanks to Stephany Aulenback for sharing that.
By Gerardo Blumenkrantz, 2012 Sendak Fellow.
AbeBooks has released its annual list of the most expensive books sold by the used and rare books dealer.
This year, an 1603 astronomy text by Johann Bayer topped the list–selling for $47,729. An inscribed first edition of Ian Fleming’s Casino Royale took third place as a $46,000 purchase. We’ve collected the top five books below, with Louisa May Alcott and Maurice Sendak tied for fifth place.
Here’s more from AbeBooks: “In third place is Franz Kafka’s novel Die Verwandlung (aka The Metamorphosis), which sold for $30,000.The original German edition is highly sought after because of Kafka’s ability to deliver unexpected impact at the end of his sentences. This effect has been difficult for English translators to replicate so the original German script is essential for Kafka collectors.”
continued…
New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.
I've never been a fan of the cliche about famous old people who say all kinds of dreadful things and everyone thinks they're honest and charming because, I guess, they're old and famous. So I probably didn't appreciate the interview with Maurice Sendak in The Believer as much as other readers will. Or maybe I should say that I appreciated it differently.
I have to admit, I roared when Sendak complained heartily--and graphically--about Salman Rushdie and claimed he called the Ayatollah about him. And like Sendak, I am not a fan of Roald Dahl. Over all, though, articles like this make me determined to continue watching VH-1 and reading books columns with the hopes that keeping up with the world will prevent me from spending my declining years going on about how good things used to be back in t he golden days of my youth.
By: Sadie Stein,
on 9/28/2012
Blog:
PowellsBooks.BLOG
(
Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags:
Craig Boreth,
Jeffrey Stoodt,
Molly ONeill,
Tamasin Day Lewis,
Wilder,
Maurice Sendak,
Tasha Tudor,
Molly Wizenberg,
Laurie Colwin,
Russell Hoban,
the paris review,
Sadie Stein,
Felicity Dahl,
Cooking and Food,
Original Essays,
Add a tag
I am of the school that likes to read while eating. (Is that even a "school"? And of what — reading?) No, needs to read while eating. I know this is both very bad manners and apparently bad for the waistline, too: I have read that the dieter should eat without distraction, so as to [...]
View Next 25 Posts
Thanks, Betsy!
And WAH, the cheapest tix to the fashion show at which the Little Golden Book Gown is being shown are $96! Hell yeah they need to lend it to you, so mere mortals have a chance to see it!
Thanks for the shout-out Betsy!!
Great stuff here!
Thanks, Betsy!
Hmmm–a book about a bunny in which the illustrator “wanted it to look as if a child had scribbled all over the book at strategic moments.” Does that mean the good Mr. Sendak predated Battle Bunny by about 40 or 50 years?
Oooooo. How odd that it didn’t even occur to me. We are looking at the proto-Battle Bunny indeed. Sendak, man. Dude had vision.