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From
the July/August 2005 issue of The Horn Book Magazine
Kevin Henkes—Twenty-five Years
BY SUSAN HIRSCHMAN
am lucky. Over the past twenty-five years, I have known Kevin Henkes
as a very young author, a new husband, a brand-new father, a newly
successful author-artist, an experienced father, an extremely successful
author and supremely successful author-artist, a non-temperamental
star on business trips, a joyous companion on holidays, and, always,
a much-loved and loving friend.
It all started when Kevin was nineteen and came
to New York with his portfolio and the dummy for his first picture
book. He had made a list, in order of preference, of his choices
of publishers. Greenwillow was number one. I remember looking up
and seeing this apparent child walk into my office. I said something
like, “What did your mother say when you told her you were
coming to New York?” He looked slightly embarrassed and said,
“Well, she cried.” Then I looked at his portfolio. It
was the work of a young man, but it was the work of someone who
knew what he was doing and where he wanted to go. There was nothing
tentative or out of place. And the dummy—a completely finished
dummy of his first book, All Alone — showed that
he knew what a picture book was, and that it was an art form in
which he was completely at home.
I remember thinking that talent like this did not
stay undiscovered for long. “Where is your next appointment?”
I asked. And when he said “Harper,” I accepted the dummy
on the spot. Then I went to the telephone to call his mother.
A few weeks later, Kevin called to tell me he planned
to drop out of college and devote himself to working on his book.
“You can’t,” I said. I predicted every doom I
could think of. A college degree was obligatory. How could he support
himself? It was a precipitate and crazy decision. He was polite—and
adamant. And as on so many other occasions over the years, he knew
what he was doing.
In those early years, Kevin came to New York once
or twice a year. We would give him an empty office, and he would
write. By the end of the visit, his next book would be well under
way. He would also help my assistant with the mail, read and report
(brilliantly) on the unsolicited manuscripts (years later, he was
the first reader of Suzanne Freeman’s The Cuckoo’s
Child, and I will always remember his excitement when he told
me about it), go out to get coffee for anyone who would let him,
read every Greenwillow F&G and bound galley, and lunch with
the younger members of the department, all of whom were his friends.
He found Manhattan stimulating and wonderful. He went to the theater,
he walked all over, he conquered the subway, and he stayed in a
hostel run by nuns and paid $8.50 a night for his room.
I remember when he first showed that he could be
funny in his books — when the little boy in Clean Enough
iced the soap with his father’s shaving cream. I remember
when he enlarged Margaret & Taylor from a brief picture
book to an early chapter book — presaging the novels to come.
I remember when he changed his human characters to his signature
mice — which allowed them the freedom to act in ways that
are acceptable for mice but questionable for humans. And I remember
when he wrote Words of Stone.
It was the winter of 1991. I read it, Elizabeth
Shub read it, and oh, we talked. It needed work. Lots of work. But
Kevin was becoming known for his mice, had written several very
interesting shorter novels, and his popularity was growing. Would
he listen to us, or would he want to show the novel to another publisher?
And would they publish it as it stood, in order to have him on their
list? It is a perennial problem for publishers, and in this case
the ending was a happy one for Greenwillow. I did not know then
what a perfectionist Kevin is. I did not know that there is no limit
to the amount of work he will do to make something right. But I
learned. And I think he learned. He never again showed us anything
until he felt that each word, each sentence, each punctuation mark
was exactly as he wanted it. I have known him to go over a picture-book
manuscript for weeks and even months, refining, perfecting, honing,
reading it aloud, listening, and listening some more. He is always
open to suggestion, but he trusts himself, and certainly that trust
has proved to be merited.
One of the things that distinguished Kevin as a
young author, and has continued and grown as the years have passed,
is his love and respect for the children’s books that came
before. When I first knew him, he was a regular at the Cooperative
Children’s Book Center in Madison. He was a passionate admirer
of Crockett Johnson, Ruth Krauss, Margaret Wise Brown, Marvin Bileck,
James Marshall, and many other authors and artists from the forties,
fifties, and sixties. Of course that thrilled me, having grown up
at Harper and learned almost everything I knew from Ursula Nordstrom.
Kevin was always willing to listen to a “When I Was Young
at Harper” story. And his was not an academic love. Recently
he and his children, now aged ten and seven, made a list of the
books he had read aloud to the two of them in the last couple of
years. There were fifty-four novels on the list, including Mr.
Popper’s Penguins, Freddy the Detective, all
the Ramona books, The Moffats, Gone-Away Lake,
and The Twenty-One Balloons. Both kids are avid readers
on their own, and both kids have always been read to separately
as well as together.
Kevin and his wife, Laura Dronzek, live in a big
house at the end of their street. The large yard is a gathering
place for the neighborhood children. Laura is a superb painter as
well as a children’s book artist. She is talented, generous,
wise, funny, loving, unflappable—and the best cook I know.
When Olive’s Ocean was named a Newbery Honor Book,
she picked up the phone, and every friend and neighbor arrived at
the house that evening to celebrate. Laura bakes with the ease of
someone opening a jar of peanut butter, and there was a huge cake
with a facsimile of the Newbery Honor Medal, cookies, and champagne.
I think the neighborhood was as excited and as happy as the Henkes
family. And I understand that this year the celebration was even
bigger and better. A friend of theirs recently wrote me, “Sometimes
I just can’t believe the amount of artistic talent, grace,
and friendliness that dwells in that house.” Anyone who has
read his novels or his picture books knows how important family
is to Kevin. Parents are three-
dimensional and interesting. Children are respected and thoughtful.
They enjoy each other, and they listen, eat, laugh, work, and play
— together. Lilly, Julius, and their parents; Fanny and her
father; Owen and his parents; Martha Boyle and her mother, father,
grandmother, and siblings; Spoon, Joanie, and the other Gilmores;
Sheila Rae and Louise — families all. Just like Kevin, Laura,
Will, and Clara.
Kevin is almost as old now as I was when we first
met. And his son, Will, is just nine years younger than Kevin was
on his first trip to New York. Time is a funny thing. But what has
not changed in all these twenty-five years is Kevin’s joy
in his work, his appreciation of what preceded him, and his excitement
at the possibilities of perfecting his craft. At any signing, people
tell him about their daughter Lilly or their son Owen. And in the
last few years they have begun telling him that they grew
up on his books. They tell him what his books have meant to them
and to their children. The emotion in the air is love. But then,
that is the emotion that surrounds Kevin — from family, friends,
readers, librarians, colleagues, teachers, and booksellers.
Someone once asked me, years ago, if I knew from
the very beginning where Kevin was going and what he would do in
the future. I said I had always known he was bursting with talent
but no, I had had no idea of what the future would hold. That is
equally true today. But I knew then, and I know now, that whatever
it is, it will be worth the wait. And for now, all I can say is,
“WOW.”
Susan
Hirschman founded Greenwillow Books in 1974. Until she retired
in 2001, she was Kevin Henkes’s only editor. |
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