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McCloskey's book Make Way for Ducklings (1941). Robert McCloskey (September 15, 1914 – June 30, 2003) was an American author and illustrator of children's books. McCloskey, well-known for his portrayals of New England, wrote and illustrated eight books, the most famous of which was Make Way for Ducklings. Published in 1941, Make Way for Ducklings tells of a mallard family that comes to live in a pond in the Public Garden in the center of Boston, Massachusetts and how a friendly policeman stops traffic when the mother takes her eight ducklings across the street. This story has become an institution in Boston, and in 2003, it was named the official children's book of Massachusetts. In 1987, sculptor Nancy Schön created a bronze version of Mrs. Mallard and the ducklings in the Public Garden, which are climbed on by thousands of children every year. The park is also the site of an annual Make Way for Ducklings Mother's Day parade, featuring hundreds of children dressed in the costumes of their favorite characters. In McCloskey's hometown of Hamilton, Ohio, there is another statue based on his writing. It depicts Lentil and his dog from Lentil (1940). In the book, the dog is unnamed, but after a competition among schoolchildren, the dog is now known as Harmony. Many of McCloskey's books were set on the Maine coast, including One Morning in Maine and Burt Dow, Deep Water-man. McCloskey was also the author and illustrator of the Homer Price stories, featuring a boy in a small Midwestern city whose curiosity and ingenuity leads him to foil bank robbers, find the world's largest weed and repair a doughnut machine so well that it can't be shut off. A chapter from Homer Price was adapted into a short film, The Doughnuts (1963). The same chapter was adapted for an ABC Weekend Special called "Homer and the Wacky Doughnut Machine" (1977).
[edit] BiographyMcCloskey traveled from his Hamilton, Ohio home to Boston in 1932 after winning recognition from The Scholastic Art & Writing Awards in 1932, which also earned him a scholarship to the Vesper George Art School in Boston. He often told reporters that when he returned to Boston several years later, he spotted a family of ducks amid traffic near Charles Street, an image that he tucked away in his mind. During World War II, he married Margaret (Peggy) Durand, daughter of children's author Ruth Sawyer. They had two daughters, Sarah and Jane, and settled in New York City, spending summers on Scott Island, Maine. That was the setting for his Caldecott Honor book, Blueberries for Sal, whose characters little Sal and her mother are reputed to be based on McCloskey's wife and eldest daughter Sarah. McCloskey's wife Peggy died in 1991. Twelve years later, in 2003, McCloskey died at his home in Deer Isle, Maine. He was survived by his two daughters and by two grandchildren, Samantha and Seth. [edit] AwardsMake Way for Ducklings was the 1942 Caldecott Medal winner. He won a second Caldecott Medal in 1958 for Time of Wonder. He also received Caldecott Honors for Blueberries for Sal in 1949, One Morning in Maine in 1953 and JourneyCake, Ho! in 1954. McCloskey was named a Living Legend by the Library of Congress in 2000. Marc Simont, another Caldecott Medal winner, said of McCloskey in a Horn Book Magazine article:
In 1964, film producer Morton Schindel and Weston Woods Studios (Norwalk, Connecticut) made the 18-minute Robert McCloskey, a documentary which is sometimes screened in art schools. The film shows McCloskey sitting in Boston Public Garden and intercuts pages from his sketchbook drawings for Make Way for Ducklings. The illustrator discusses experiences that have influenced his work and the relationship of craftsmanship to inspiration. [1] [edit] Public works
[edit] Bibliography: author and illustrator
[edit] Bibliography: illustrator only
[edit] References[edit] External links |
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