Mo Willems (www.pigeonpresents.com), a number one New York
Times best-selling author and illustrator, has been publishing
children's books since 2003. He has received three Caldecott Honors
(for Don't Let the Pigeon Drive the Bus!, Knuffle Bunny:
A Cautionary Tale, and Knuffle Bunny Too: A Case of Mistaken
Identity); two Theodor Seuss Geisel Honors (for We Are in a
Book! and I Broke My Trunk!); and two Theodor Seuss
Geisel Medals (for There Is a Bird on Your Head! and Are
You Ready to Play Outside?). His first picture book, Don't
Let the Pigeon Drive the Bus!, was inducted into the Indies
Choice Picture Book Hall of Fame in 2009. Other favorites include
The Duckling Gets a Cookie!? and Leonardo, the Terrible
Monster.
While best known for his work in publishing, Mo began his career
as a writer and animator on Sesame Street, where he garnered
six Emmy Awards. He also created and executive-produced the
animated series Sheep in the Big City and served as head
writer for Codename: Kids Next Door. Additionally, Mo
provided the book and lyrics for Knuffle Bunny: A Cautionary
Musical, which premiered at the Kennedy Center in May 2010. And
his first app, Don't Let the Pigeon Run This App!, was an
iTunes Best of the Year in 2011. See above.
In the foreword to this impressive coffee-table-size art book, Eric
Carle calls Mo Willems "the master of the doodle." Carle provides a
doodle of his own: the iconic hungry caterpillar, waving a heart
flag and proclaiming, "Mo Willems rocks!" A compilation of Mo's
sketchbooks from the past two decades, this offers a
fly-on-the-wall look at where the illustrator's ideas originate.
Fun fact: Pigeon, of Don't Let the Pigeon Drive the Bus!, appeared
in a sketchbook long before his 2003 debut; he was "born in the
corner of a notebook, complaining about how he was better than
other doodles I was making." That sounds like Pigeon alright. In
addition to Mo's general introduction, he briefly introduces each
of the 20 sketchbooks. For instance, Mo tells us that Sketchbook 5,
called "I'm Fine," was inspired by William Steig's The Lonely Ones
(1970). Other entries include "Lazy Day Doodles," "Goldilocks and
the Three Dinosaurs" (now a picture book), and the hysterical
"Olive Hue Show Mutts," in which a drunk, slurring rabbit reminds
adults just how hard it is to learn to read. The clean design and
pastel background colors echo Mo's picture books, and the volume
will delight his numerous fans-his adult fans (but let's not
pigeonhole)-from beginning to end. - Ann Kelley Booklist"
With an engaging, conversational style, wisecracking illustrator
Willems invites readers into the inner workings of his artistic
process as he reflects upon the last twenty years of sketches,
scribbles, and doodles. As a starving artist living in New York,
Willems began drawing cartoons for a 'zine in 1993, eventually
putting his sketches together in a special edition, the first Mo
Willems Sketchbook. The single-panel, editorial-like cartoons that
make up that early publication and its subsequent iterations are
presented here, along with more narratively structured sketches,
several of which eventually led to some of Willems' best hits,
including Don't Let the Pigeon Drive the Bus (BCCB 5/03) and
Leonardo, the Terrible Monster (BCCB 11/05). Overall, though, the
material here is aimed at an older audience; the tendency toward
mischief and naughtiness that threads through so many of Willems'
children's book is given free, adult-oriented rein in this
particular format and his characteristic cleverness is on display
alongside a penchant for dark comedy and existential contemplation
(and a drunken bunny). Eric Carle provides a brief, amiable
foreword, while somewhat adulatory quotes from various authors,
illustrators, and celebrities introduce each chapter. The oversized
pages and clean, focused layout keep the viewer's attention on the
art, mostly black and white sketches that range from frenetically
cartoony to solemnly abstract. While this has potential curricular
use in a high school or college art class, its main audience will
be interested adults; it would certainly make a fine gift book for
those parents who match their children in their enthusiasm for the
antics of Elephant and Piggie. KQG BCCB"
In this collection of sketches, adult fans of the award-winning
Pigeon, KnuffleBunny, and Elephant and Piggie books are treated to
a peek inside the mind of one of the most critically acclaimed and
best-selling children's book creators of our time. Complied from
volumes of The Mo Willems Sketchbook, an annual gift presented to
friends, family, and potential clients, many of the drawings
predate Willems's success as a picture-book author/illustrator. The
early sketchbooks feature single cartoon-style panels and clever
visual gags in the manner of the New Yorker. They crack wise about
such topics as City Life, The Creative Process, and Couples. Some
of the sketchbooks are deeply personal, such as I'm Fine, a darkly
comic journey through self-doubt and fear. Later sketchbooks reveal
Willems's early experiments with the slightly longer narratives and
dynamic page turns that became the springboard for his first
picture books. Adults will appreciate many of the grown-ups-only
read-alouds such as the hilarious and "intoxicatingly hard reader"
Olive Hue Show Mutts. Educators in the fields of children's
literature and art will find interest in seeing the genesis of
characters like The Pigeon and enjoy this rare glimpse into the
often-private world of artist doodles. Kiera Parrott, Darien
Library, CT SLJ"
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