
Even prior to the election, Time magazine reported that “anxiety and depression in high school kids have been on the rise since 2012 after several years of stability.” And shortly after the election, the Southern Poverty Law Center’s Teaching Tolerance project conducted an online survey of K-12 educators from across the United States. Whichever side of the political divide you find yourself on, one thing is certain: the times, they are a changin’.Ĭhildren are feeling those changes, too. For others, it feels just the opposite-this new world looks like a dark, dangerous place that threatens to undo much of the progress that has been made. For some, that feels like a good thing-they see things in our world that frighten or disgust them and believe that huge changes are needed to set us back on the right course. "About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.This past November, the world shifted. The author invites us into the very special world of Maurice Sendak, a place of fantasies and wonderment, a land where adults can be children-and never grow up.

The book's rich text is exemplary-based on interviews, conversations, and extensive research by Sendak's close friend Selma Lanes. Three huge fold-outs make for an extra-special treat. Virtually every page contains another Sendak gem-be it a quick sketch, an exquisite portrait of his mother or sister, or the preliminary drawings from Where the Wild Things Are. Always the artistic adventurer, Sendak experiments with many different forms-from the fairy-tale-like pen-and-ink drawings of Higglety Pigglety Pop! to the beautiful watercolor pieces that illustrate Mr.

Even a stuffy physics textbook from 1947 is given the Sendak touch, as atoms, molecules, and chain reactions take on the form of people jiving and swinging. He was talented from the cradle, and his early works from the 1940s are given due recognition here-reflecting his fascination with the small intricacies of being human, and his devilish sense of humor. Sendak, best known for the charming and timeless Where the Wild Things Are, never fails to amuse and astonish with his creative wizardry. Page after page of lavish full-color illustrations and black-and-whites from one of America's best-loved children's artists adorn this hefty volume. In a nutshell, The Art of Maurice Sendak is simply stunning.
