But, as
I say, I found no Maurice Sendak books in my shop last week. This is the nature
of dealing with used books (the majority of my business): every day is potluck.
Then
Peter Sieruta of “Collecting Children’s Books” gave me a broad hint, something I
should have remembered myself, which is that over the years Sendak illustrated
many books written by other authors. I raced to the shelves, and sure
enough—there was an old library copy of The Singing Hill, by Meindert DeJong,
illustrated by Maurice Sendak.
And
look at this dedication:
Peter Sieruta had written that Sendak’s early book illustrations were in various different styles, so I was pleased to see that for this book by DeJong the style of the drawings was recognizably and distinctly Sendak. What is decidedly un-Sendak is this author’s story. Adults in The Singing Hill are comforters and protectors. Here is the main character, little Ray (not yet school age), first with his mother (left), then with his father (below).
Naturally,
Ray harbors secret worries from time to time. What child does not? His older
brother and sister’s squabbling and teasing and tall tales feed some of his worries, while
others arise simply from the situation of the moment, and there are adventures
and secrets galore in the family's new life in the country, but along the way and in the end
Ray’s parents come through for him.
This
little book pleases me. It pleases me that the author dedicated it to the
illustrator and that Sendak, exercising his always-wild imagination, was able
to create these loving family portraits. He did, after all, have a lot of love
in his life. He loved life, and life loved him back.
8 comments:
Sweet story and images!
Nice to see these illustrations.. they are beautiful. We will miss him. I always think though, of the children of artists like him, that they are so lucky to have such a body of work done by their parent!
Sendak did not have children of his own. (Some gay men do, but he did not.) He did have a young woman caretaker toward the end of his life who stood somewhat in the place of a daughter.
Little Ray got into some pretty scary and dangerous situations in this story, but it was all for the sake of a horse, and the ending was very happy. I was surprised and delighted to have the story turn into a horse story! Nothing in the title had given me any expectation like that.
Thanks for your comment on my Sturgeon Bay post. Somehow, it ended up trapped by the spam filter. I just found it now and made sure it shows.
This is a tender tribute to Sendak. I think he would have liked it very much.
Thanks, Gerry. And dmarks, I'm glad my comment turned up. I thought maybe I hadn't been able to leave it.
This really is the best tribute to Sendak that I've read.
You are too kind, Helen. Many have written and spoken more eloquently than I on Sendak's life and work, but each of us from a different personal viewpoint. When I come back to this post, I read it now as a preview to my later tribute to Peter D. Seiruta, whom we also lost this year. Unlike Maurice Sendak, Peter and I were were Facebook friends and commented on each other's blogs, so I feel his lost more acutely.
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