Mo Willems remembers author Maurice Sendak | PRI.ORG

Mo Willems remembers author Maurice Sendak

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Maurice Sendak died this week. He's credited with changing the landscape for children's books. (Photo by Reuters.)

Maurice Sendak inspired a generation of authors with his picture books, serious enough to reinvent the medium but inviting enough to be favorites for millions of children. Mo Willems, a children's author today, says he was inspired by Sendak's work and his trailblazing.


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American literature lost one of its literary giants this week.

Best known for his breakthrough 1963 picture book Where the Wild Things Are, Maurice Sendak's long, colorful career involved one wild rumpus after another. Sendak’s work was often powerfully dark, in the manner of the old Grimms’ fairy tales.

Wild Things might be a nightmare, with its chaotic dreamscape and its ferocious, smothering monsters, but children loved it, critics loved it, parents loved it. It changed the way America thought about books.

"You have to remember, he's from a generation where picture books were considered trash," said Mo Willems, an acclaimed children's book author who was reared on Sendak. "We don't have that problem anymore. I don't have to worry about whether somebody considers my work art or not."

When Willems set out to write his first book, Don’t Let the Pigeon Drive the Bus!, he turned instinctively to Sendak.

 “Because I didn’t really know what I was doing I needed to steal some material,” Willems said. “So the best place to go was Where the Wild Things Are to find inspiration, particularly in terms of design and craft.”  

Sendak was frequently ill as a child and confined to bed. The Holocaust loomed large in the minds of his immigrant Jewish family. He hid his homosexuality for much of his life. This early exposure to disillusioning experiences crept into Sendak's books in fantastical ways — as in In the Night Kitchen, where a child is put in an oven to bake. 

"He was called ‘Morose Sendak’ by most of his friends," Willems says.

But he also believed children were capable of dealing with the disappointments of the world.

"Even as a child, I was well aware that childhood sucks!” Willems said. "I felt a kinship with Max in Where the Wild Things Are. I felt put upon.” 

Although Willems’ books are much more lighthearted, like the Pigeon series and the Knuffle Bunny trilogy, they’re informed by that melancholy.

"It's just not easy to be a child," he said. "If you're doing something you want to do and somebody doesn't want you to do it, they can literally, physically lift you up and fly you into another room. You have to ask permission to go to the bathroom. I mean, it's a terrible time."

Sendak’s Max — sent to bed without supper, embarking on death-defying adventures, and finally, arriving home to find supper waiting for him, still hot — gave generations of childhood permission to acknowledge that life can be hard.

"I don't think I saw it as grim,” Willems recalled, “so much as liberating."

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Martha Heineman Pieper, Ph.D. 13 May, 2012 10:51:49
When Maurice Sendak wrote Where the Wild Things Are, it was much more acceptable to send children to bed without dinner for melting down. Now, however, we realize that we should not punish children for behaving like children. I am a child psychotherapist who has written a children's book about bad dreams which takes a more up to date approach. In Mommy, Daddy, I Had a Bad Dream! (www.mommydaddyihadabaddream) Joey, a bouncy, happy, kangaroo has a series of bad dreams which his parents lovingly help him understand.
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GZ 15 May, 2012 10:15:49
@Pieper

Where the Wild Things Are is not a parenting manual and Sendak never suggested that children should be punished for any reason. His work was groundbreaking and remains vital because he tells the truth - that young children experience such things as pain, confusion, and anger. Furthermore, he regarded his books as art rather than mere didactic or therapeutic material. Such works need not depict 'ideal' circumstances (viz. two loving parents who explain the bad dreams) or have a specific moral in order to have worth.

Even if Sendak's work did not help children cope or learn it would still yield experiences of beauty and mystery - both of which children are fully capable. Deny this capacity and we curse our youth with tedious, pandering pablum.

By the way, spraying your name on a master's grave to sell books is inappropriate and in very poor taste.
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