Maurice Sendak

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About Maurice Sendak
For more than forty years, the books Maurice Sendak has written and illustrated have nurtured children and adults alike and have challenged established ideas about what children's literature is and should be. The New York Times has recognized that Sendak's work “has brought a new dimension to the American children's book and has helped to change how people visualize childhood.” Parenting recently described Sendak as “indisputably, the most revolutionary force in children's books.”
Winner of the 1964 Caldecott Medal for Where the Wild Things Are, in 1970 Sendak became the first American illustrator to receive the international Hans Christian Andersen Award, given in recognition of his entire body of work. In 1983, he received the Laura Ingalls Wilder Award from the American Library Association, also given for his entire body of work.
Beginning in 1952, with A Hole Is to Dig by Ruth Krauss, Sendak's illustrations have enhanced many texts by other writers, including the Little Bear books by Else Holmelund Minarik, children's books by Isaac Bashevis Singer and Randall Jarrell, and The Juniper Tree and Other Tales from Grimm. Dear Mili, Sendak's interpretation of a newly discovered tale by Wilhelm Grimm, was published to extraordinary acclaim in 1988.
In addition to Where the Wild Things Are (1963), Sendak has both written and illustrated
The Nutshell Library (1962), Higglety Pigglety Pop! (1967), In the Night Kitchen (1970), Outside Over There (1981), and, We Are All in the Dumps with Jack and Guy (1993). He also illustrated Swine Lake (1999), authored by James Marshall, Brundibar (2003), by Tony Kushner, Bears (2005), by Ruth Krauss and, Mommy? (2006), his first pop-up book, with paper engineering by Matthew Reinhart and story by Arthur Yorinks.
Since 1980, Sendak has designed the sets and costumes for highly regarded productions of Mozart's The Magic Flute and Idomeneo, Janacek's The Cunning Little Vixen, Prokofiev's
The Love for Three Oranges, Tchaikovsky's The Nutcracker, and Hans Krása's Brundibár.
In 1997, Sendak received the National Medal of Arts from President Clinton. In 2003 he received the first Astrid Lindgren Memorial Award, an international prize for children's literature established by the Swedish government. Maurice Sendak was born in Brooklyn in 1928. He now lives in Connecticut.
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Titles By Maurice Sendak
And the king said to himself, "All the queens of my acquaintance have youngsters, some 3, a few seven, and some as many as twelve; and my queen has now not one. I sense ill-used." So he made up his thoughts to be cross along with his wife about it. But she bore all of it like a terrific patient queen as she became. Then the king grew very cross certainly. But the queen pretended to take it all as a shaggy dog story, and a superb one too.
"Why don't you have any daughters, at the least?" stated he. "I don't say sons; that is probably an excessive amount of to expect."
"I am positive, dear king, I am very sorry," said the queen.
"So you ought to be," retorted the king; "you aren't going to make a virtue of that, absolutely."
But he became no longer an unwell-tempered king, and in any depend of less moment would have allow the queen have her own way with all his coronary heart. This, but, turned into an affair of nation.
The queen smiled.
"You have to have persistence with a female, you understand, expensive king," stated she.
She turned into, indeed, a totally fine queen, and heartily sorry that she couldn't oblige the king right away.