
The Horn Book Radio Review
Rosemary Wells interviewed by Anita
Silvey
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Anita Silvey (AS):
I’m Anita Silvey, editor and chief of Horn Book Magazine.
Books for babies, often called board books because they are printed
on cardboard, have proliferated at an amazing rate in the past
ten years. But it is only recently that books of any quality for
the very young have been published. The chief creator of them
is our guest today, Rosemary Wells. Her books about Max have virtually
become classics in a few years. Unlike other board books which
identify numbers or objects, her books convey emotions, and grew
out of her own experience with her two children.
Rosemary Wells (RW):
As an avid reader to my children, I couldn’t find a single
thing appropriate for either of my girls when they were very young.
I had the dialogue — I had the example of a young baby and
an older child who was trying very hard and being very bossy,
right there in front of me. Max and Ruby, I believe, are the quintessence
of an older and younger sibling relationship. They are universal,
and I had it in my house and it became a book.
AS: Do you do
most of your picture books out of emotion and character or out
of story idea? How are they generated?
RW: All of them
are out of emotion or character because I think that that’s
what makes a story. Emotion and character and humor are what makes
a children’s book right. And it’s what makes it original,
and it’s what makes it want to be read again and again.
Children’s books must be written — published to be
read a hundred or two hundred times because they want to sit down
and read it again and again. Children love to read about themselves,
to read about their older or younger brothers and sisters, to
read about their place in the family, and parents and librarians
who sit on beds and read or do story hours like to have something
funny and brief and very understandable in their hands.
AS: Is the text
very crucial to you in what you do, every word in the text crucial?
RW: The story
comes first, the pictures come second and there’s a trend
now in children’s books to to make it so that the story
is a vehicle for pictures. This is a very bad idea, because children
want the story. Remember, children — young children are
listening most of the time. If you can go back to the finest children’s
books in the past thirty or forty years you will find that the
classics that stand up are always books where the story is wonderful.
AS: Rosemary,
I know you do a lot of talking to aspiring artists and illustrators.
What books do you use when you talk to be the finest examples
of picture books that you can thing of?
RW: I always use
one book first, and it was published in I think 1969, somewhere
around there, because it is a true classic of learning. It’s
called Whose Mouse Are You? published by Macmillan. Robert
Kraus wrote it and Jose Aruego illustrated it. It’s sixteen
lines long. It has every ounce of emotion that an adult novel
could have. It is, to my way of thinking, one of the most perfect
picture books ever written. It’s very brief. Other than
that, I would direct people to, more recently, Cynthia Rylant’s
When I was Young in the Mountains because the text is
absolutely like poetry — like the finest poetry. I can’t
leave Maurice Sendak and Bill Steig out of this, and I would say
Slyvester and the Magic Pebble, Dr. DeSoto and
particularly Amos and Boris, which is so touching. These
are all books that have a very wonderful story: humorous, dramatic
— and if there is such a thing as a picture book that you
can’t put down, Bill Stieg writes them, and that’s
a direction I would advise young aspiring writers to take.
AS: Rosemary Wells,
author of Max’s Breakfast, Max’s Bath,
Max’s Bedtime and other delightful titles about
Max and his bossy older sister Ruby, all published by Dial. I’m
Anita Silvey, editor and chief of Horn Book Magazine.
MUSIC
Child’s voice:
This series of reviews is produced by Greg Fitzgerald and is made
possible by the Horn Book Incorporated, publishers of the Horn
Book Magazine and books on children’s literature.
MUSIC

This program originally aired on
National Public Radio in July or August of 1986. The Radio Review
was moderated by Anita Silvey and produced by Greg Fitzgerald.

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