Maurice Sendak has been called "one of the most important, if not the most important, writers and artists to ever work in children's literature."
The famous author and illustrator, best known for his celebrated books "Where the Wild Things Are" and "In The Night Kitchen", has released a new children's book about a pig's chaotic birthday party. It is the first book he has both written and illustrated for 30 years. "Bumble-Ardy" follows a 9-year-old orphan pig named Bumble who throws the ultimate birthday-cum-costume party at his aunt's house while she is away. Bumble has been deprived of birthday parties his entire life so this party is to make up for all the birthdays he never had.
The Brooklyn-born author spoke with the New York Times from his Connecticut home saying that he has been working on the "Bumble-Ardy" book for two-to-three years, but the first incarnation of the story was actually for a Sesame Street episode in 1970. That episode featured an animated short that played on the rhyme between nine and swine and depicted a boy celebrating a raucous ninth birthday.
Sendak's work has a history of resonating with children more than with some of their parents. "Where the Wild Things Are," and many books that followed, had some parents saying they were too scary for young children.
At one point in "Bumble-Ardy", Sendak introduces the Grim Reaper, not an image that every parent wants her children dwelling on as they go to sleep. One reviewer on Amazon.com wrote that "Bumble-Ardy" was a "disturbing book in so many ways.
The book, about a pig's crazy birthday party, has gotten some parents worked up, reports the Washington Post. Sendak - who experienced pushback from parents for his book "Where the Wild Things Are" - tells the New York Times, "You mustn't scare parents. And I think with my books, I managed to scare parents."
Of the three reviews on Amazon.com, two are negative, giving the book one star out of five. The third review is glowing.
In the new book, "Bumble-Ardy," the party - thrown at an aunt's house while she's away (eek!) - gets a visit from the Grim Reaper and features some grotesque masks, reports the Washington Post.
The Post posits that "Bumble-Ardy" is possibly more fun than "Where the Wild Things Are." What do you think? Will you get it for your kids?
Sendak sees it the other way around. It is parents who are scaredy cats, he argues, frightened to deal with the nightmarish fantasies and even murderous impulses with which children are familiar and which books such as "Alice in Wonderland” explore.
The famous author and illustrator, best known for his celebrated books "Where the Wild Things Are" and "In The Night Kitchen", has released a new children's book about a pig's chaotic birthday party. It is the first book he has both written and illustrated for 30 years. "Bumble-Ardy" follows a 9-year-old orphan pig named Bumble who throws the ultimate birthday-cum-costume party at his aunt's house while she is away. Bumble has been deprived of birthday parties his entire life so this party is to make up for all the birthdays he never had.
The Brooklyn-born author spoke with the New York Times from his Connecticut home saying that he has been working on the "Bumble-Ardy" book for two-to-three years, but the first incarnation of the story was actually for a Sesame Street episode in 1970. That episode featured an animated short that played on the rhyme between nine and swine and depicted a boy celebrating a raucous ninth birthday.
Sendak's work has a history of resonating with children more than with some of their parents. "Where the Wild Things Are," and many books that followed, had some parents saying they were too scary for young children.
At one point in "Bumble-Ardy", Sendak introduces the Grim Reaper, not an image that every parent wants her children dwelling on as they go to sleep. One reviewer on Amazon.com wrote that "Bumble-Ardy" was a "disturbing book in so many ways.
The book, about a pig's crazy birthday party, has gotten some parents worked up, reports the Washington Post. Sendak - who experienced pushback from parents for his book "Where the Wild Things Are" - tells the New York Times, "You mustn't scare parents. And I think with my books, I managed to scare parents."
Of the three reviews on Amazon.com, two are negative, giving the book one star out of five. The third review is glowing.
In the new book, "Bumble-Ardy," the party - thrown at an aunt's house while she's away (eek!) - gets a visit from the Grim Reaper and features some grotesque masks, reports the Washington Post.
The Post posits that "Bumble-Ardy" is possibly more fun than "Where the Wild Things Are." What do you think? Will you get it for your kids?
Sendak sees it the other way around. It is parents who are scaredy cats, he argues, frightened to deal with the nightmarish fantasies and even murderous impulses with which children are familiar and which books such as "Alice in Wonderland” explore.
No comments:
Post a Comment