Farewell Maurice

Beloved children’s author Maurice Sendak (who happened to be gay), creator of Where the Wild Things Are, is dead at 83. Here’s some of what The Guardian‘s Michelle Pauli has to say about him.
The wild things of Max’s imagination were based on Sendak’s own relatives. He was born in Brooklyn, New York, to Polish Jewish immigrant parents and was aware, in his early teens, of the death of much of his extended family in the Holocaust. The terrors of his childhood specifically, and childhood more generally, flow through his work. "I refuse to lie to children," he said in an interview with the Guardian last year. "I refuse to cater to the bullshit of innocence."
Sendak also said that the term "children’s illustrator" annoyed him, since it seems to belittle his talent. "I have to accept my role. I will never kill myself like Vincent Van Gogh. Nor will I paint beautiful water lilies like Monet. I can’t do that. I’m in the idiot role of being a kiddie book person," he said.




about 1 year ago
“Where the Wild Things Are” was one of my favorite books when I was little. I saw the movie based on the book, with Max Records, for the first time just this past weekend. Good movie, like reading the book all over again. Weird coincidence!
R.I.P. Maurice Sendak
0922 9.5.12
about 1 year ago
thanks maurice for the book that defined my childhood more then anything else! fare well and RIP
about 1 year ago
He will be missed. Let the wild rumpus begin!
about 1 year ago
Wonderful books and great memories. But I think that was an interview from Hell….as it often is with characters. Obviously, he expressed his life best through his friends, animals and books, not in interviews…lol
about 1 year ago
I loved “where the wild things are”. His drawings are so lush and alive but I have to say this interview was a little tiresome. But, he was a great artist so he’s allowed. =D
about 1 year ago
The interview moved me to tears. Look past the grumpy old man talking and listen to his truth.
about 1 year ago
In memory of him, my parents got a book of his they said was my favorite in preschool, called “In the Night Kitchen.” It features a boy who falls out of his clothes and floats around naked, and eventually gives the big baker men some milk… a true milkboy
about 1 year ago
Unfortunately, children’s literature was not a part of my cildhood and I know so little about such authors. I will have to correct that.
about 1 year ago
That’s unfortunate. Sendak wrote loads of books, anyone of which I’m sure you would have enjoyed as a child.
Try reading “Where the Wild Things Are”, his masterwork, and then watch the movie version. He oversaw the production so that it would stay true to his book. You may be pleasantly surprised, and appreciate the inner workings of his genius mind.
0328 10.5.12
about 1 year ago
Thank you so much.
Bruce
about 1 year ago
Your welcome!
You may find the movie a bit odd in its film style, and some feel it is a downer, but Max Records carries the film very well. He won a Young Artist Award as Leading Young Actor in 2009 for his role.
The book or the movie, you can’t go wrong!
0812 10.5.12
about 1 year ago
Never heard of him befor but it seems from the video that he truly ‘tasted’ of life as well as givtng to it, cant do much more than that. Mikee.
about 1 year ago
That was such an awesome video love how frank people can get with age! On a side note i came out yday to my best mate :)