Draw a crazy picture,
Write a nutty poem
Sing a mumble-gumble song,
Whistle through your comb.
Do a Loony-goony dance
‘Cross the kitchen floor,
Put something silly in the world
That ain’t been there before.
Sheldon Allan Silverstein (1930-1998)
Author, playwright, poet, songwriter
Shel Silverstein started cartooning at seven, and started getting his work published in Stars & Stripes after he was drafted. He was selling hotdogs at Chicago ballparks and writing on spec when, in his mid-twenties, a collection of his Army cartoons came out in paperback and was picked up by Ballantine Books.
He became a cartoonist for Playboy in 1957; the magazine, in its heyday, was his home base for twenty years. He did a long series of offbeat illustrated travelogues for the magazine, which sent him to odd places around the globe.
In the 1970s his book editor, the legendary Ursula Nordstrom, talked Silverstein into trying a children’s book of poetry. It was an immediate hit, and Silverstein’s loopy, Feifferesque illustrations combined with his offbeat verse to create a new market in kids’ publishing.
He wrote over 100 one-act plays, collaborating with the likes of Jean Shepherd and David Mamet; TV and movie screenplays; and scores of hit pop and country songs.
Silverstein is best remembered today as a children’s author; his books in that genre- including The Light in the Attic, The Giving Tree, and A Giraffe and A Half- remain in print and have sold over twenty million copies. They are also regular targets of book-banners, most of them the people who adore his country music songs, like “A Boy Named Sue.”
_____________________
Most every day is a literary birthday for Henry Bemis Books. Join sin the celebrations at www.henrybemisbookseller.blogspot.com. #RareBooks #HenryBemisBooks #ShelSilverstein
No comments:
Post a Comment
We enjoy hearing from visitors! Please leave your questions, thoughts, wish lists, or whatever else is on your mind.