Dave Eggers is the author of What Is the What, among other books. He is the editor of McSweeney’s, an independent publishing house in San Francisco, and is the cofounder of 826 National, a network of nonprofit writing and tutoring centers for youth with locations in San Francisco, Los Angeles, New York, Chicago, Boston, Ann Arbor, and Seattle. With his high school students he edits The Best American Nonrequired Reading, a yearly anthology, and with his brother Toph he cowrites the Haggis-on-Whey series of semi-informative books, which includes Giraffes? Giraffes!, Animals of the Ocean (in Particular the Giant Squid), and Cold Fusion.
Once Max reaches the island of the beasts, Eggers goes for broke.
We get a writhing Technicolor landscape of carnivorous vines, lava
beds, mini-tornadoes, mutant snakes, and, of course, the beasts
themselves, a motley bundle of brawn and neuroses.... The real
question, when it comes to literature, is whether a particular
author is interested in hustling us through a breakneck plot (a la
Dan Brown) or investigating the internal lives of his or her
creations. The best books--and I happily include The Wild Things on
this list--manage to do both.... Eggers has written a book for
readers of all ages, without dumbing down his prose. But his
highest achievement is in having found a fresh way to tell us a
story we already know so well, about the monstrous forces of love
and hate that mark every childhood--and pursue us howling into
adulthood.
-- Steve Almond, Boston Globe Eggers, in this funny and touching
novelization of Maurice Sendak's picture book, is brilliant at
portraying the exuberance and chaos of a young boy's mind and
heart.
-- San Francisco Chronicle Not content to reinforce the foundation
of Sendak's Where the Wild Things Are, Eggers instead architects
entirely new additions. Young Max's psyche is fully formed, and the
Wild Things themselves are given wonderfully eclectic
personalities, ensuring each new chapter is greeted with a sweet
sense of anticipation.
-- Powells.com Staff Pick Dave Eggers has created a novel like
childhood itself: sometimes weird, sometimes dark, and full of
wonder.... Like the original, this is far from the cosy world kids
are often fed, but it has real heart--Eggers uses simple but
superbly effective prose to suggest that childhood has to be lived
without cosseting for us to grow up with any semblance of a normal
personality.
-- Doug Johnstone, the Independent Eggers makes us privy to Max's
thoughts, fears and desires. He lets us feel the boy's confusion
and horror as anger results in shocking behaviour....[Wild Things]
is not only a wonderful read, but a lovely product. McSweeney's is
known for the care it takes in producing its books. From the cover
illustrations by Rachel Sumpter to the quality paper and printing,
to the informative postscript by the author/publisher, this does
Sendak's original picture book proud. (It's for all ages, by the
way, not just for kids.)
-- Bernie Goedhart, Montreal Gazette Everything is in the spirit of
Sendak's book. There are knowing nods--Max carves his name on the
boat during the boring trip to the island--and the monsters retain
their utter, incomprehensible difference. There is far more
emotion: the monsters are petulant, panicky, selfish, vulnerable
and violent. 'We want what we want. We want all the things we want,
' says one, 'oh, and we want no more want.' Without being too
grandiose, Max learns that 'uneasy lies the head that wears a
crown.' His attempts to govern the monsters slip from rumpus to
warfare to disillusionment. More than in the original, Max learns
what it feels like to let others down, although this moral is not
forced nor mawkish. The parting is affecting. It won't just be Max
and the monsters that end in 'a mess of tears.'"
-- Stuart Kelly, The Scotsman
Eggers's adult novelization of Maurice Sendak's 1963 children's book, Where the Wild Things Are, also inspired by the 2009 Spike Jonze-directed film adaptation of the same name (whose screenplay Eggers coauthored) is depressing and lacks the charm of the children's book. But in this audio edition, actor/narrator Dion Graham (see Behind the Mike, LJ 11/1/09) does a commendable job of portraying confused and lonely Max, his angst-filled teenaged sister, and their stressed-out mother. For adults wanting a metaphor for growing up; not meant as a children's literature selection. [See "Great Discoveries," LJ 7/09; see also Joanna M. Burkhardt's review of Eggers's Zeitoun, p. 63.-Ed.]-J. Sara Paulk, Fitzgerald-Ben Hill Cty. Lib., Fitzgerald, GA Copyright 2010 Reed Business Information.
Once Max reaches the island of the beasts, Eggers goes for broke.
We get a writhing Technicolor landscape of carnivorous vines, lava
beds, mini-tornadoes, mutant snakes, and, of course, the beasts
themselves, a motley bundle of brawn and neuroses.... The real
question, when it comes to literature, is whether a particular
author is interested in hustling us through a breakneck plot (a la
Dan Brown) or investigating the internal lives of his or her
creations. The best books--and I happily include The Wild
Things on this list--manage to do both.... Eggers has written a
book for readers of all ages, without dumbing down his prose. But
his highest achievement is in having found a fresh way to tell us a
story we already know so well, about the monstrous forces of love
and hate that mark every childhood--and pursue us howling into
adulthood.
-- Steve Almond, Boston Globe
Eggers, in this funny and touching novelization of Maurice
Sendak's picture book, is brilliant at portraying the exuberance
and chaos of a young boy's mind and heart.
-- San Francisco Chronicle Not content to reinforce the
foundation of Sendak's Where the Wild Things Are, Eggers
instead architects entirely new additions. Young Max's psyche is
fully formed, and the Wild Things themselves are given wonderfully
eclectic personalities, ensuring each new chapter is greeted with a
sweet sense of anticipation.
-- Powells.com Staff Pick Dave Eggers has created a novel
like childhood itself: sometimes weird, sometimes dark, and full of
wonder.... Like the original, this is far from the cosy world kids
are often fed, but it has real heart--Eggers uses simple but
superbly effective prose to suggest that childhood has to be lived
without cosseting for us to grow up with any semblance of a normal
personality.
-- Doug Johnstone, the Independent Eggers makes us privy to
Max's thoughts, fears and desires. He lets us feel the boy's
confusion and horror as anger results in shocking
behaviour....[Wild Things] is not only a wonderful read, but
a lovely product. McSweeney's is known for the care it takes in
producing its books. From the cover illustrations by Rachel Sumpter
to the quality paper and printing, to the informative postscript by
the author/publisher, this does Sendak's original picture book
proud. (It's for all ages, by the way, not just for kids.)
-- Bernie Goedhart, Montreal Gazette Everything is in the
spirit of Sendak's book. There are knowing nods--Max carves his
name on the boat during the boring trip to the island--and the
monsters retain their utter, incomprehensible difference. There is
far more emotion: the monsters are petulant, panicky, selfish,
vulnerable and violent. 'We want what we want. We want all the
things we want, ' says one, 'oh, and we want no more want.' Without
being too grandiose, Max learns that 'uneasy lies the head that
wears a crown.' His attempts to govern the monsters slip from
rumpus to warfare to disillusionment. More than in the original,
Max learns what it feels like to let others down, although this
moral is not forced nor mawkish. The parting is affecting. It won't
just be Max and the monsters that end in 'a mess of tears.'"
-- Stuart Kelly, The Scotsman
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