Among the Wild Things

Among the Wild Things [Review by Nat Hentoff]

In the past few years, I have become increasingly interested in Sendak’s work, reading his books for my own pleasure as well as for the amusement of my children. His drawings, I have found, are oddly compelling. Intensely, almost palpably alive, they seem to move on the page and, later, in memory. This…

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Here, Nat Henkoff reviews the children's book author Maurice Sendak. Brooklyn-born Sendak (1928–2012) was born to Sarah (Schindler) and Philip Sendak, first-generation immigrants from Eastern Europe whose trauma he struggled to understand. He learned to address these and other ever-present stressors—the Holocaust, child kidnapping, bullying, and his undisclosed homosexuality—through illustrations and fantasy. He illustrated his first book, Maxwell Leigh and Hyman Ruchlis Eidinoff’s Atomics for the Millions (1947), while in high school, and his first children’s book, Marcel Aymé’s The Wonderful Farm, in 1951. Sendak illustrated more than one hundred books, many of his own creation, received the Caldecott Medal (1964) for Where the Wild Things Are (1963), and numerous other awards for his literary and theatrical contributions.

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