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Books, Gifts, CulturePosts by Andy

Early Mornings with Abby (and William Steig)

By January 12, 2012October 2nd, 201331 Comments

For the first four, maybe five, years of Abbyโ€™s life, she would wake up at 5:45 in the morning, leap out of bed, throw her door open and sprint down the hall โ€” bump, bump, bump, bump, bump โ€” and into our bedroom. Depending on who was on Morning Duty that day, Jenny or I would hoist ourselves out of bed, take Abby by the hand, and stagger back to her room to (a) organize her Playmobil farm, (b) play Dora โ€œChutes and Laddersโ€ while fighting off waves of despair, or (c) read a pile ofย books on the floor. In the winter months, when you had an hour and a half to fill before the sun came up, this was tough duty. I know how this will sound to all the early risers out there,ย but this was someย existential stuff. Anyway, most of the time, I took Option C, books. The problem is, you can read a lot of kid books in an hour, and if you choose wrong โ€” if you getย pushed into theย wrong groove โ€” you can be in for a world of hurt. In particular, I remember struggling through Amelia Bedelia and a series of Backyardigans books โ€” really, any TV show spinoff was a serious soul-killer. Cutesy books, with cutesy alliterative characters โ€” Randy the Rooster, Francie the Fairything, Harry theโ€ฆ Holy Momma, those were some dark days. But they were also some good days.ย Because really, when you locked in on the good ones, and Abbyย would sit there in your lap for an hour, turning pages and listening to you read:ย youโ€™d have to have a stone for a heart to complain about that.ย And as for what qualified as good, in the pitch dark, before coffee? The books that made us laugh (thank you, Paper Bag Princess), that were about things (The Red Balloon, which I will write about someday on this blog),ย books thatย gave kids credit for having a brain and being able to understand questions of longing and love andย worry and beauty, books that explored what, even for adults,ย qualifies asย mysterious or unknowable. And, to my mind, the writer that most consistently hit those marks? William Steig. I know, duh. Weโ€™re not breaking news here, but William Steig was one of those guys who could talk to adults and to kids at the same time, with one voice,ย which is a rare quality indeed. I literally wore Sylvester and the Magic Pebble out, read it so many times, it just fell apart. And, later, when the kids were in first and second grade, Steig was a favorite when we would go in and read to the class โ€” the perfect length, a few good laughs along the way, a moment or two where a kid might think, Yup, the world is a lot bigger than I know. Anyway, here are a few of our favorites*, but Iโ€™m sure you have yours, too. I miss these books. I kind of miss the early mornings, too. โ€” Andy

*You wonโ€™t find Shrek here, but thatโ€™s only because the movie ruined it for me.

Sylvester and the Magic Pebble (1969)

CliffsNotes version: Mamaโ€™s boy donkey named Sylvester Duncan (how great is that name?)ย collects pebbles. One day, he finds a magic one: when you hold it and make a wish, the wish comes true. Not being dumb, he immediately sees the potential for good in this, wants to take it home to show his parents. Sees a lion on way home and, freaked and scared of being eaten alive, wishes he was a rock. Turns into rock. Unable to touch magic pebble and wish to be a donkey again, he sits there, inert: a rock. His distraught parents go looking for him. They look for him for a year. Parents eventually go for a walk and have aย picnic on him. Theyย findย the pebble, place itย on the rock, and Sylvester is reborn.

Favorite little moment: โ€œThe sun was shining as if rain had never existed.โ€

Favorite passage: โ€œMr. Duncan walked aimlessly about while Mrs. Duncan set out the picnic food on the rock โ€” alfalfa sandwiches, pickled oats, sassafras salad, timothy compote. Suddenly Mr. Duncan saw the red pebble. โ€˜What a fantastic pebble!โ€™ he exclaimed. โ€˜Sylvester would have loved it for his collection.โ€™ He put the pebble on the rock. They sat down to eat. Sylvester was now as wide awake as a donkey that was a rock could possibly be.โ€

How I might describe it: A book, in some ways, about loss. But with a happy ending.

Gorky Rises (1980)

CliffsNotes version: A frog named Gorky mixes up a magic potion in his parentsโ€™ kitchen one day, as any boy frog would want to do. He drinks it, and begins floating up into the sky. Up through clouds, through a rainstorm, into the heavens, where he is suspended, โ€œlike a coat on a hanger.โ€ Looks down on the world from whence he came, ponders life. Comes back down to earth, lands on 10 million year old Elephant Rock, which suddenly comes alive. Is reuinted with his loving family.

Favorite little moment: โ€œWhat a magical, cloverous smell!โ€

Favorite passage: โ€œHe hung there a long, long time, wondering where he was โ€” exactly what spot on the map he was over. There was nothing around him but the secret, silent night, the sea of blinking stars. Dreamily, he began asking himself questions he could not answer: Did anyone know where he was? Did God, for example, know? Did his parents? He wished he were home with them now, asleep in his feather bed. He was tired.โ€

How I might describe it: An exploration of our dreams of escape, of transcending our circumstances and striking outโ€ฆonly to take comfort in home. William Steig books always come home.


Tiffky Doofky (1978)

CliffsNotes version: Trash collector dog named Tiffky Doofkyย stops, on his daily rounds, to get his fortune told. On this day, the fortune teller tells him, he will meet the love of his life. He goes on to meet the love of his life. Endures several strange encounters, and is almost strangled to death by a large boa constrictor named Dolores, only to be saved by a white poodle and snake charmer named Estrella โ€” who turns out, naturally,ย to be the love heโ€™s been looking for. And the daughter of a garbage collector, as well.

Favorite little moment: โ€œWhy worry and get wrinkles? It would happen.โ€

Okay, another favorite little moment: โ€œMadam Tarsal knew her onions after all.โ€

Favorite passage: โ€œTiffky Doofky jumped to his feet. He was wide awake and in the coils of a boa constrictor! He tugged at the powerful snake, but it only tightened its hold. โ€˜Help!โ€™ he shouted. โ€˜Help!โ€™ But soon he could shout no longer. The breath of life was being pressed out of him. He decided to face death with dignity. The sun was now on the rim of the earth, about to leave this gruesome scene. โ€˜Goodbye, dear world,โ€™ said Tiffky in his mind. โ€˜Goodbye, great sun. And goodbye, love, whoever, wherever you are!'โ€

How I might describe it: Faith.

Amos and Boris (1971)

CliffsNotes version: Sea-loving mouse named Amos builds a boat and sets sail. Destination: the other side of the water. (Love that.) One night, admiring stars on deck, falls overboard. Endures a long night, abobย in the โ€œvast loneliness,โ€ confronts death, and is rescued and befriended by a whale of โ€œabounding friendlinessโ€ named, of course, Boris. Amos climbs aboard Borisโ€™s back and, together, they journey home. Along way, become the best of friends. Years later, Boris is beached during a terrible storm. Amos finds him there, dying. Amos locates two elephants (just go with it)ย to help push Boris back into deep water and save his life.

Favorite little moment: โ€œMorning came, as it always does.โ€

Favorite passage: โ€œHe began to wonder what it would be like to drown. Would it take very long? Would it feel just awful? Would his soul go to heaven? Would there be other mice there? As he was asking himself these awful questions, a huge head burst through the surface of the water and loomed up over him. It was a whale. โ€˜What sort of fish are you?โ€™ the whale asked. โ€˜You must be one of a kind!โ€™ โ€˜Iโ€™m not a fish,โ€™ said Amos. โ€˜Iโ€™m a mouse, which is a mammal, the highest form of life. I live on land.โ€™ โ€˜Holy clam and cuttlefish!โ€™ said the whale. โ€˜Iโ€™m a mammal myself, though I live in the sea. Call me Boris.'โ€

How I might describe it: That, right there, isย friendship.

Brave Irene (1986)

CliffsNotes version: A dressmaker is sewing a gown for a duchess to wear to some kind of royal ball. But the dressmaker becomes ill and it falls to her young daughter, Irene, to deliver the dress. Problem: there is an epic, driving snowstorm, Irene is little, and the dress is a large thing to lug across a dark and stormy forest. An โ€œill-temperedโ€ wind batters Irene, tears into her, forces her to walk backwards, but Irene is determined. She canโ€™t let her mother down. Then the dress is ripped form her hands, and flies away, stolen by the wind. She continues on, through the night, nearly freezing to death. She is lost. The dress, youโ€™ll be glad to know, is magically delivered. Irene is hailed by royal typesย as a โ€œbrave and lovingโ€ person. And again (detecting some themes?) she is reuinted with her mother.

Favorite little moment: โ€œHow could anything so terribly wrong be allowed to happen?โ€

Favorite passage: โ€œSoon night took over. She knew in the dark that the muffled snow was still falling โ€” she could feel it. She was cold and alone in the middle of nowhere. Irene was lost. She had to keep moving. She was hoping sheโ€™d come to a house, any house at all, and be taken in. She badly needed to be in someoneโ€™s arms.โ€

How I might describe it: A parable about perseverance. And an argument for being nice to your mom when sheโ€™s not feeling so good.

Dominic (1972)

CliffsNotes version: First off, this is a chapter book, probably more for 2-4th graders, 146 pages of pure joy. Dominic is a โ€œlively one,โ€ aย dog who sets out on his own โ€”ย with a righteous ensemble of hats and his trusty piccolo โ€” to see the world. Along the way, he runs into a roving band of bad guys, known as the ย Doomsday Gang. They try to lure Dominic over to the dark side. This gang, it turns out, has been stirring up a lot of bad juju out in the larger animal world, and Dominic sets out toย make things right. Includes an unbelievably beautiful moonlight serenade of mice carryingย Japanese lanterns.ย Thatโ€™s right.

Favorite little moment: โ€œOne could not be happy among the good ones unless one fought the bad ones.โ€

Favorite passage: โ€œThe peacock spread his gorgeous tail about him and listened. Dominic did not know how long he played. And when the music was over, there was no stopping him; he had to sit down on his haunches and yield to some deeply felt howling, not harsh, pent-up howls this time, but soft, yodeling ululations, expressive of feelings that affirmed his presence in an ancient yet young universe. The peacock attended respectfully till Dominic was done.โ€

How I might describe it: Life can be hard, but thereโ€™s a crazy amount of beauty in it, too.

Abelโ€™s Island (1976)

CliffsNotes version: Another chapter book with a four-legged protagonist. Abelโ€™s a mouse, aย trust fund dandy,ย newly married to a girl mouse named Amanda. One day, while picnicing (Steig loved a picnic) on watercress, quail eggs, caviar and champagne (Steig loved food), a hurricane blows through (Steig loved storms) and snatched the scarf from Amandaโ€™s neck, prompting Abel to leave her (you get the idea re: Steigโ€™s obsessions) and rescue her scarf. He is, instead, swept away by the storm and washes up on a small island in a river, where a sweet and beautiful version of kid book Survivor unspools. Abel is forced, for the first time, to make his ownย way in life: to make new friends, to fend for himself, to find aย new home and, at the same time,ย a way back to his love.

Favorite little moment: โ€œThe toasted each other, and everything else, with a bright champagne which was kept cool in a bucket of ice.โ€

Favorite thing about that little moment: The word โ€œbright.โ€

Favorite passage: There are too many to say, and Iโ€™ve blabbered on too long.

How I might describe it: You are capable of so much more than you think. That, and itโ€™s amazing what weโ€™ll endure for love.

31 Comments

  • Avatar Essie says:

    Aaaaaaaah, this totally made me cry! Weโ€™re enjoying the early morning reading too, and are amazed at how many excellent picture books there are out there. I never realized before I had kids! If only we could get the twins to stop eating books and just listen the story like their big sister.

  • Avatar Kendra says:

    Beautiful, wonderful, perfect post, Andy. Well-done!

  • Mrs. MidAtlantic says:

    Abelโ€™s Island! I had completely forgotten about that book till just now. How could I forget? It was the first chapter book I read by myself! I need to get to the bookstore and stock up on William Steig for my daughter.

  • Avatar 654carroll says:

    Yesterday, I was in a book store (buying Madeline and the Gypsies, and A Gift of Nothing) and a woman was there on the ratty couch with her son and started reading Amos and Boris and i thought to myselfโ€“Get out of here before you start crying! (I am going to go out on a limb, or a whale tale, and say: it might be a better friendship story than Charlotteโ€™s Web.)

    Also, because I am a nutbag, Iโ€™ve spent more time than i care to admit googling โ€œCast Awayโ€ โ€œAbelโ€™s Islandโ€ โ€œZemeckisโ€โ€“that movie is such a rip-gyp rip off of Steig! could they really not have acknowledged the influence anywhere in print?

    And: The last pages of that book! That is becomes a graphic novel in a way, and you donโ€™t even need the words.

  • Avatar Paige says:

    This post made me want to spend time with theoretical nieces and nephews and sons and daughters so I could brighten and expand their theoretical little lives. Lovely. Thank you.

  • Robin (noteverstill) says:

    Our favorite Steig was Dr. De Soto โ€“ do you know that one? The noble little mouse dentist who treats the fox with the tooth injury and escapes being eaten with some clever thinking and teamwork with his wife. We love it so, so much ๐Ÿ™‚ Sylvester is a close second, though.

  • Avatar Cecilia Madden says:

    Oh my! Some good ones that I havenโ€™t had a chance to read yet. Thanks for sharing. (And I love everyoneโ€™s enthusiasm!)

  • Avatar Debi says:

    How can you leave out Peteโ€™s a Pizza?! Granted itโ€™s for the younger set but itโ€™s amazing โ€“ โ€œthe pizza gets captured and huggedโ€ chokes me up every time.

  • Avatar Tara says:

    All great books. That image you provided from Abelโ€™s Island zapped me instantaneously back to childhood. I havenโ€™t thought about that book in ages, and have never read it with my kids.

    I will say, that being a really sensitive kid, I was fairly horrified by Sylvester. Really, I think it gave me nightmares. My childโ€™s mind thought: โ€ Turned into a rock? For a year? Grieving parents? What is this guy thinking?โ€

    Funny that my ten year-old son encountered the same book recently and announced from the back seat of the car, โ€œMom, I know you donโ€™t like this word, but, really, I hate that book. Itโ€™s horrible. Who would write a book for kids about a kid being turned into a rock for a whole year and kept from his parents? That picture of the wolf howling on top of the Sylvester rock? Thatโ€™s just awful. I think Iโ€™m going to have nightmares about it.โ€

    Clearly the apple didnโ€™t fall too farโ€ฆ

    Oh, and @ Debi, LOVED Peteโ€™s a Pizza. Loved it!

  • Avatar AC says:

    My favorite is _Spinky Sulks_. The older kid version of Peteโ€™s a Pizza, sort of. Thanks for the reminders of all the great books!

  • Avatar Nancy says:

    Shrek ๐Ÿ™‚

  • Avatar cheka says:

    We were also early morning readers, and HUGE Dr. DeSoto fans! Itโ€™s another great โ€œread to the classโ€ bookโ€ฆ

  • Avatar Regina S says:

    Thanks for this one. We are in the weeds, getting up at 5:30 and not even up to the story books yet. The early riser is only 17 months old. Iโ€™m looking forward to the William Steig days, but for now itโ€™s all โ€œCars and Trucks and Things that Go.โ€

  • Lori@ In My Kitchen, In My Life says:

    Thank you so very much for promoting-by-writing-about real books. Books with real, satisfying words. Books with big thoughts.

  • Avatar cmr16 says:

    Thanks so much for honoring Steig. he is truly the best. I also am a huge fan of Dr. Desoto and Peteโ€™s a Pizza.

  • Avatar Tracy says:

    Ohhhhh . . .this post. How lovely. And revealed to me how much I love coming here. I was cominโ€™ for a reicpe, maybe some mealtime inspiration, and instead was treated to the gentle reminder of these books. As a preK teacher (and parent), reading a book you kinda endure can feel so restless. Dr. Desoto is a fav, as is Sylvester and the Magic Pebble. Now I immediately want to read (and own!) them all. What a wonderful way to start my Friday. Thank you. (And this week I once again made โ€œSix Kid Crowdpleaserโ€ chicken. Works like a charm every time.)

  • Becky says:

    Oh how we loved โ€œPaper Bag Princessโ€. When it was my turn to read to her preschool/kindergarten/firstgrade/secondgrade class, that was my daughterโ€™s request. Sheโ€™s 10 and still keeps it by her bedside.

    โ€œWeโ€™re going on a Bear Huntโ€ was also a much loved book. I can still recite it.

  • Lorile says:

    Thank you for this list! I have been looking beyond Scholastic for great books for my kindergartener. Canโ€™t wait to get them!

  • Avatar Shirley Boulay says:

    Great stuff. Thank you so much for posting these sensitive, inspiring reviews.

  • Avatar Natalie says:

    OMG โ€“ Sylvester and the Magic Pebble was one of my favorite books when I was little. Iโ€™d forgotten all about it and this just gave me flashbacks of being young and asking my mom to read it to me. Amazing list today โ€“ even though I donโ€™t have any kids of my own yet, I look forward to your book review posts soo much!

  • Avatar Anna says:

    As the daughter of a dentist, I adored Dr. DeSoto!

  • Avatar ladidah says:

    i love steig and havenโ€™ t read a few of these, so thank you for this post. i have always thought of steig as the anti-roald dahl.

  • Avatar Leah says:

    As always, Andy, you were spot on with your choices and your words. I did miss Dr. DeSoto on here, and The Amazing Bone, another weird yet brilliant one. When I studied childrenโ€™s literature in Boston years ago, people spoke in awed tones of spotting the grand old man himself, out for a walk in the Public Garden. Itโ€™s a good thing I never saw him โ€” I would have completely embarrassed us both by embracing him!

  • Avatar Sam says:

    Abelโ€™s Island was the best! I donโ€™t have kids of my own yet, but I canโ€™t wait to one day read all of those amazing books that shaped my childhood to my little ones. Great childrenโ€™s books have so much magic and mystery. My favorites were always by Bill Peet and Roald Dahl.

  • Avatar annie says:

    Ugh. Breakfast. If you and Jenny have any tips for how to get through that meal, Iโ€™d be all ears. One kid eats some sort of carb with peanut butter and the other has cheerios. Iโ€™m dying. Eggs! Steel-cut oats! Scones! Please help.

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