Maps of Enchanted Places

Maps of Enchanted Places

Posted on February 11, 2012 at 8:00 am

The Awl has a wonderful illustrated story by Victoria Johnson featuring maps of the imaginary worlds of children’s literature.  The maps of The Phantom Tollbooth, The Princess Bride, Winnie the Pooh, The Wizard of Oz, The Hobbit, and more are as inviting as the stories that take place there.  And when the publisher and author neglect to include a map, sometimes the fans will supply their own.  Johnson points to some fan maps of the land in The Hunger Games.

I love this description of the map in The Princess Bride.  (If you are a fan of the movie and have not read the book — full title The Princess Bride: S. Morgenstern’s Classic Tale of True Love and High Adventure — please give it a try.)  Johnson writes:

 

The map is a doozy—jammed full of details, landmarks, labels, and with no perspective whatsoever. I mean, the Sun is on this map. The trees are the same size as the ships.

As a map: The map is deliberately evoking the feel of a Medieval illuminated manuscript, as this is an exaggerated version of how many maps looked around the times of princesses and feudal castles. Though examples of these kingdom-level maps are abundant and accessible, I’d like to particularly draw your attention to collection of sixteenth-century maps of Jerusalem, made available by The Jewish National University Library. The gallery beautifully illustrates the diversity to be found in this type of region-specific map. While none of them include the Sun, like Goldman’s map, they often use multiple perspectives to show the mapped lands.

 

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Gift Guide 2011

Gift Guide 2011

Posted on December 1, 2011 at 8:00 am

Some gift idea to keep in mind as you think of your friends and family this holiday season:

For the sports fan:

ESPN Films: 30 for 30 Limited Edition Collector Set These brilliant films by some of today’s top directors have all the thrills and triumphs and gripping story lines any sports lover could ask for.  The collector set includes all of these outstanding films and five hours of extras.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9Tqv8ujQgMA

For those who loves thrills and chills:

Midnight Madness: The History of Horror, Fantasy and Sci-Fi Films From the golden age of Universal Studios through the explosion of digital effects, this 2-DVD set will take you through all the categories of scary movie magic, with interviews of the people who were there.

For PBS fans:

Masterpiece Classic: Downton Abbey This instant classic miniseries about a wealthy country family on the brink World War I is brilliantly acted by a cast that includes Dame Maggie Smith and Elizabeth McGovern.  Season two is coming in January, so this is a good opportunity to get up to speed or enjoy all over again to prepare for what comes next.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lOSwVm1jRME

Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy The feature film remake is fine but it can’t touch the original miniseries, possibly the best ever shown on television.  Alec Guiness plays George Smiley, a veteran spy called back to service to find a mole in the highest levels of British intelligence.

For classic movie buffs:

Meet Me in St. Louis One of the all-time family musical classics is this story of the Smith family in the year before the 1904 World’s Fair.  Judy Garland sings “The Trolly Song” and “Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas.”

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5g4lY8Y3eoo&feature=related

TCM Greatest Classic Films Collection: Romantic Comedies (Adam’s Rib / Woman of the Year / The Philadelphia Story / Bringing Up Baby)  Turner Classic Movies has a whole series of highly affordable classics and this is one of the best, with four Katherine Hepburn comedies featuring her two best co-stars, Spencer Tracy and Cary Grant.

TCM Classic Movie Trivia: Featuring More Than 4,000 Questions to Test Your Trivia Smarts See how well you know the movies — and find some good titles for your Netflix queue.

For the romantic:

Midnight in Paris Woody Allen’s best film in years is the story of a writer whose trip to Paris with his fiancée and her family takes an unexpected turn.

Jane Eyre This most recent re-telling of the classic Charlotte Brontë story about the shy governess and the stormy, mysterious employer stars Mia Wasikowska and Michael Fassbender.

Beginners I predict Christopher Plummer will get an Oscar nomination for his performance as a man in his 70’s who comes out for the first time after the death of his wife. Ewan McGregor plays his son, who is a bit mystified but supportive, and inspired by his father to take some risks in his own romantic life.

For the new Blu-Ray owner:

These two sets include not just the iconic movie series that both rank at the top of box office winners but lots and lots of fabulous extras.

Star Wars: The Complete Saga

The Lord of the Rings: The Motion Picture Trilogy

For 3-8 year-olds and their families:

Winnie The Pooh Disney’s loving adaptation of the A.A. Milne classic has beautiful hand-drawn animation and a charming story that lovingly captures the magic of the stories that have enchanted children for 85 years.

Scholastic Storybook Treasures: Treasury of 100 Storybook Classics and Scholastic Storybook Treasures: Treasury of 100 Storybook Classics Two My very favorite series for young children and their families has the very best in children’s books read aloud by the very best in voice talent with lovely musical accompaniment and some gentle animation. These also make a great gift for a school or library.

For 8-14 year-olds and their families:

Dolphin Tale Inspired by the true story of Winter, the dolphin with the prosthetic tail, this is a beautiful and inspiring family film.

Anne of Green Gables The miniseries based on the classic books about the red-headed heroine of Prince Edward Island has been digitally remastered for DVD.

The Rocketeer The 20th anniversary edition of this exciting sage of a dashing hero who fights the Nazis by wearing a special jet-pack is gorgeous to look at lots of fun.

One of my favorite picture books is The Mysteries of Harris Burdick by Chris Van Allsburg.  It is supposed to be the portfolio of drawings left behind by an artist with no other clues about what was going on in the stories they illustrated.  I loved to try to come up with my own ideas about what was going on.  Now, a group of top writers have given us their ideas with The Chronicles of Harris Burdick: Fourteen Amazing Authors Tell the Tales / With an Introduction by Lemony Snicket and stories by Sherman Alexie, M.T. Anderson, Kate DiCamillo, Cory Doctorow, Jules Feiffer, Stephen King, Tabitha King, Lois Lowry, Gregory Maguire, Walter Dean Myers, Linda Sue Park, Louis Sachar, Jon Scieszka, Lemony Snicket, and Chris Van Allsburg himself.

For teens and their families:

Rise of the Planet of the Apes This excellent prequel to the tells us how an experimental treatment for Alzheimer’s led to the rise of the apes and the fall of the humans.

For everyone:

Celebrate the 50th anniversary of one of the greatest children’s books of all time with The Annotated Phantom Tollbooth and be on the lookout for the new documentary film featuring author Norton Juster, illustrator Jules Feiffer, and fans including authors, critics, teachers, and kids.

http://vimeo.com/30575133

The Best of the Muppet Show The new generation that has fallen in love with the Muppets will enjoy sitting down with the older generation that remembers them well to enjoy these highlights from the original series.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z-_QLNkh-zI

Now that the story is done, Potterphiles of all ages will appreciate Harry Potter: The Complete 8 Film Collection, including the sensationally satisfying final chapter.

 

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A New (Old) Book from Dr. Seuss

A New (Old) Book from Dr. Seuss

Posted on November 1, 2011 at 8:00 am

On Boing Boing, Cory Doctorow reviews a new collection of stories from Dr. Seuss, published for the first time in book form: The Bippilo Seed and Other Lost Stories.  Doctorow says, “The illustrations are classic Seuss and full of wit and irreverence, though the ratio of words to pictures is a lot wordier than the typical Seuss, owing, I suppose, to the constraints of the original magazine publication.”  He especially recommends The Great Henry McBride, “about a young fellow who can’t make up his mind on a single career and demands that the world accommodate his wish for excitement and novelty through his whole life.”  And there’s an audio book, with Neal Patrick Harris, Anjelica Huston, Joan Cusack, Jason Lee, Edward Hermann, Peter Dinklage, and William H Macy as an “indispensable companion.”

 

 

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Interview: Andy Borowitz of The 50 Funniest American Writers*

Interview: Andy Borowitz of The 50 Funniest American Writers*

Posted on October 25, 2011 at 3:59 pm

Andy Borowitz really understands what it means to be funny.  He is the first recipient of the National Press Club’s humor award and his @BorowitzReport Twitter feed is constantly circulated with LOLs.  His new book is The 50 Funniest American Writers*: An Anthology of Humor from Mark Twain to The Onion, an instant best-seller and sure to be a popular gift for the holidays.  It is filled with favorites, surprises, and surprises from favorites, like a gem of a short story by the late John Hughes that has not been in print for decades and was the beginning of his “Vacation” series of films.  This book provides guaranteed happy laughter for anyone who reads it.

Who was the first author you read who made you laugh?

Woody Allen.  It was the early 1970’s, when his first prose collections, Getting Even and Without Feathers, came out.  I couldn’t believe someone could be that funny.  I still can’t.

What made Twain’s approach to humor so different from earlier writers?

I sometimes think Twain is like America’s Shakespeare because he writes about human beings in a universal way that transcends time and geography.  You read humorists who came before Twain – and after, for that matter – and they seem very bound to their time and place.  We recognize ourselves in Twain’s characters.  And even his political humor, which one would expect to seem dated, isn’t.  Example: “Suppose you were an idiot.  And suppose you were a member of Congress.  But I repeat myself.”

Is there an American style of humor?

I’ll defer to Mark Twain on that one.  He wrote in his essay “How to Tell a Story” that American humor was essentially deadpan – the storyteller is funny because he appears to be serious.  That’s true of Twain, and also true of The Onion – so maybe he has a point there.

Do funnier politicians win more elections?

Almost always the opposite is true.  Case in point: Bob Dole.  He was elected to the Senate many times, but whenever he ran for national office, his taste for a mean or cutting remark seemed to undermine him.  You always got the feeling that Dole would sacrifice a million votes if it meant getting a really good one-liner off.  I think if I were a politician I would be just like him.  I would lose big-time.

Why are writers like George Ade and S.J. Perelman so often overlooked?

In general, humor is an evanescent thing.  When I was reading material for the book, I came across many humorists who were huge in their day and are practically forgotten today.  It was one of the joys of this assignment to be able to resurrect some of them.  George Ade’s most popular series of humor pieces were called “Fables in Slang,” and it’s not hard to see why humor pieces written in turn-of-the-century American slang are a little hard to get now.  As for S.J. Perelman, he specialized in literary parody, and some of the things he was parodying aren’t so well known today.  In general, I think humor falls out of fashion more quickly than other genres.  Some of the funny writing that’s beloved today may be incomprehensible to readers fifty years from now.

 

How did you find that early piece by John Hughes?

I met John Hughes in Hollywood in the early 1980’s, right before his first film, Sixteen Candles, came out.  (We were going to work on a movie together but like many things in Hollywood, it never happened.)  He told me about his days as an advertising copywriter – a job he hated – and how he submitted pieces to National Lampoon to get his start in comedy.  So when I started working on the anthology, I went back through the National Lampoon archives looking for Hughes pieces.  The one I chose, Vacation ’57, is one of the funniest short stories ever written, in my opinion.  (It also was the basis of the successful Vacation films starring Chevy Chase.)  It hasn’t appeared in print since the 1970’s, when it appeared in the Lampoon.  Some readers have said that The 50 Funniest American Writers is worth buying for this piece alone.  I heartily agree.

Molly Ivins wrote very topical and often very local pieces.  What makes her work so funny for people who have no connection to the politicians she wrote about?

She has a real kinship with Mark Twain, I think, in that she finds the universal in the specific scoundrels she’s writing about.  A few years before she died, I did a show with her in Austin and every joke out of her mouth slayed the audience.  I love this one: “Next time I tell you someone from Texas should not be President of the United States, please pay attention.”  Eerily timely today.

You made the unusual choice to include stand-up comedy.  Do you think that reads as well as it comes across when it is delivered live?

Well, I didn’t exactly do that.  I didn’t write down transcripts of stand-up routines, because that would be totally lame.  It’s obviously much better to enjoy stand-up comedy in performance, and thanks to DVDs and YouTube, that’s very easy to do now.    I only considered published writing by stand-ups.  (An arbitrary distinction, I know, but everything about this anthology is arbitrary.)  I read books written by comedians – George Carlin, Wanda Sykes, Bernie Mac, Larry Wilmore and Lenny Bruce are included – and only used selections that were funny on the page.  In the case of Bruce and Wilmore, the writing I chose was never a part of their stand-up acts – it was written to be read, not performed.  As for George Carlin, he was a bestselling author many times over because his writing is laugh-out-loud funny.

Where should we look for today’s best humorous writing?

I love The Onion, although I usually avoid reading it because I don’t want any of my fake news at The Borowitz Report to overlap with theirs (sometimes we do come up with similar ideas, which is inevitable).  Young writers like Sloane Crosley keep churning out funny books (Sloane also writes a funny blog for The New York Times).  The New Yorker, which has published everyone from James Thurber and Dorothy Parker to Woody Allen and David Sedaris, is always finding new comic voices, like Yoni Brenner and Amy Ozols, who I think are hilarious.  And there are always funny new writers turning up on Twitter and elsewhere online.  The nice thing about the Internet is that the magic of crowdsourcing acts as kind of a curator: if someone is writing something funny somewhere, it’s only a matter of time before people find it and share it with others.

Was it as much fun to curate this book as it seems?

I’m glad that the fun of the project comes through.  I had a blast.  The Library of America is the best publisher I’ve ever worked with.  It’s a nonprofit, too, so none of us were in this to make money – we just put all our hearts into it and tried to put together something we’d love and be proud of.  What’s surprised me is that at the end of the day, the book turned out to be a bestseller.  On its very first day of publication, the book was #8 on Amazon and the #1 humor book in America.  That totally took me by surprise.  I guess the lesson for me in all of this is that if I want a bestseller I should get Mark Twain and The Onion to write it for me.

Will you do a sequel?

It’s possible.  I write in the introduction that this book is by no means definitive; it’s just a playlist of fifty pieces of writing that make me laugh.  Do I have enough favorites for The 50 Other Funniest American Writers?  Absolutely.

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Halloween Books for Kids from Reading Rockets

Halloween Books for Kids from Reading Rockets

Posted on October 22, 2011 at 8:00 am

Reading Rockets has ten books for families about Halloween, including A Newbery Halloween : A Dozen Scary Stories by Newbery Award-Winning Authors, Hoodwinked (a little witch finds a surprising pet), and Pumpkin Pumpkin (a tiny seed grows into a pumpkin which makes its own seed to be planted next year).  Happy Halloween!

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