Wild Things
“That Mr. Sendak fears that his work is inadequate, that he is racked with insecurity and anxiety, is no surprise. For more than 50 years that has been the hallmark of his art. The extermination of most of his relatives and millions of other Jews by the Nazis; the intrusive, unemployed immigrants who survived and crowded his parents’ small apartment; his sickly childhood; his mother’s dark moods; his own ever-present depression — all lurk below the surface of his work, frequently breaking through in meticulously drawn, fantastical ways.
“He is not, as children’s book writers are often supposed, an everyman’s grandpapa. His hatreds are fierce and grand, as if produced by Cecil B. DeMille. He hates his uncle (who made a cruel comment about him when he was a boy); he hates anything to do with God or religion, and Judaism in particular (“We were the ‘chosen people,’ chosen to be killed?â€); he hates Salman Rushdie (for writing an excoriating review of one of his books); he hates syrupy animation, which is why he is thrilled with (Spike) Jonze’s coming film of his book “Where the Wild Things Are,†despite rumors of studio discontent. . .”
Maurice Sendak’s Concerns, Beyond Where The Wild Things Are.
September 13th, 2008 at 19:18
The Simpsons had a sweet tribute to Sendak in one episode, where Lisa was left to the comfort of those monsters when Homer left her in a newly-trasferred cemetery (?) next door.