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Hooray for Diffendoofer Day!

Amazon.com Price:  $3.97 (as of 01/05/2019 10:12 PST- Details)

Description

Started by Dr. Seuss, finished by Jack Prelutsky, and illustrated by Lane Smith, Hooray for Diffendoofer Day! is a joyous ode to individuality starring unsinkable teacher Miss Bonkers and the quirky Diffendoofer School (which will have to prove it has taught its students how to think–or have them sent to dreary Flobbertown). Included is an introduction by Dr. Seuss’s longtime editor explaining how the book came to be and reproductions of Dr. Seuss’s original pencil sketches and hand-printed notes for the book—a true find for all Seuss collectors!  Jack Prelutsky and Lane Smith pay homage to the Good Doctor in their own distinctive ways, the result of which is the union of three one-of-a-kind voices in a brand-new, completely original book that is greater than the sum of its parts. For all of us who will never put out of your mind our school days and that special teacher, here is a book to give and to get.
With the release of Hooray for Diffendoofer Day! readers young and old are afforded a dazzling glimpse into the genius of Theodor “Dr. Seuss” Geisel. The book is based on 14 rough drawings and verses Geisel’s secretary gave to the writer’s editor, Janet Schulman, after his death in 1991. In these scribbled sketches and scratched-out lines, we witness the Seussian process in building a story. When brainstorming the name of what resulted in the Diffendoofer School, he jots down several conceivable names–“William Wilkins Woofer Junior,” “Woodrow Watkins Woofer,” “Zoofendorf Elementary,” “J. Ebeneezer Bomberg Jr.”–all of a fairly different cadence and rhythm, which he tests like a composer writing a new concerto.

A small collection of Geisel’s rough sketches would be plenty to thrill even the Grinchiest of readers, but there’s a lot more to this marvelous book. Renowned children’s poet Jack Prelutsky and award-winning illustrator Lane Smith were called to action by Schulman to pull these sketches into a complete story that would make Dr. Seuss fruffulous with glee. Prelutsky’s delicious verse is uncannily Seussian, and it is inexplicably sensational when exploring the Diffendoofer School to discover good old Horton, a platter of green eggs and ham, and a couple of Whos from Who-ville scattered across the surreal and fascinating landscape of Smith’s artwork. Lane and Prelutsky have gone above and beyond the call of duty, maintaining the characters and themes Geisel was just beginning to develop, but enhancing them with their own delightful stylistic stamps.

Above all, this improbable book is an ode to unorthodox, unusually creative teachers, and the innovative thinking they encourage in young minds. (Miss Twining, for example, teaches “how to tell chrysanthemums from miniature poodles.”) This can be a noble theme, and one that Geisel surely had in mind when he concocted these preliminary sketches. Both new Dr. Seuss aficionados and those who keep in mind that The Cat in the Hat‘s 1957 debut will cherish this book for its message, artwork, and poetry, and most of all, as a tribute to the man who inspired thousands of readers. (Age 3 and older)


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