Sale!

When I Grow Up

Amazon.com Price:  $6.37 (as of 05/05/2019 03:24 PST- Details)

Description

Grammy Award winner and pop culture icon “Weird Al” Yankovic delivers his first picture book, bringing his trademark wit, wordplay, and silliness to a story that explores the timeless question “What do you need to be when you grow up?” Funny and charming, this is a celebration of creativity and possibility. 

An Amazon Best Book of the Month! “The farce and parody make this a rare book with appeal to both kids and adults” (Booklist).

It’s Show-and-Tell time in Mrs. Krupp’s class, and Billy just can’t wait for his turn! Today the class is discussing what they want to be when they grow up, and our exuberant eight-year-old hero is bursting to tell everyone about his future career plans.

In dazzling wordplay and delicious rhymes, Billy regales his patient teacher and amazed classmates with tales of the variety of careers he wants to pursue—each more outlandish and wildly imaginative than the last!

Amazon Best Books of the Month, February 2011: Eight-year-old Billy gives a flamboyant show-and-tell presentation, reciting for the class and his hapless teacher Mrs. Krupp, all the professions he has in mind for his future. From master snail trainer to dinosaur-dusting museum curator, the possibilities he imagines are seemingly endless. Billy’s great-grandfather is his inspiration, having had many different jobs and who, at age 103, still doesn’t know what he wants to be. Billy’s carefree enthusiasm is contagious, and the bubbling rhythm of When I Grow Up makes it a full of life read-aloud.–Seira Wilson

Amazon Exclusive: A Q&A with Al Yankovic

Q: Did you know what you wanted to be when you were Billy’s age?

Yankovic: When I used to be eight? I think chronologically that was sometime after I wanted to design miniature golf courses but before I wanted to be a writer for MAD magazine. I’ll guess that was about the time when I wanted to be a fireworks-maker. Thankfully I didn’t blow any fingers off.

Q: What is the weirdest job you’ve ever had?

Yankovic: I used to be an accordion repo man. All through my summer breaks from college, I had a job giving accordion lessons to kids at a local music school. The kids usually didn’t own their own accordions, so we had to lend the instruments out . . . for so long as they were still taking lessons. If they ever stopped taking lessons and didn’t return the instrument, it was a job for . . . Accordion Repo Man!

Actually, it wasn’t all that difficult—usually they were more than happy to hand the accordions back.

Q: Kids talk about being “grown up” a lot. Heck, we all do. What does it mean to be “grown up”?

Yankovic: I think it by hook or by crook involves the ability to grow hair in disgusting places.

Being “grown up” obviously means different things to different people. To most folks, I assume the definition has something to do with the added responsibilities of adulthood and the ability to make more important decisions about one’s own life. Growing up is an important transition, and with a bit of luck a very positive one—even though, strangely, whenever somebody told me to “Grow up!” as a kid, it was rarely meant as loving, constructive advice.

Of course, if you define “growing up” as having to jettison every last shred of one’s childlike wonder of the world . . . well, then I hope I never grow up.

Q: At one point Billy ponders becoming an “artist who sculpts out of chocolate mousse.” That sounds scrumptious . . . and hard! If you could sculpt something out of mousse, what would you create?

Yankovic: Well, of course, I’d make the mousse into a moose! What else? I mean, I hate to be obvious, but I just can’t resist homonyms…

Q: Do you have any advice for kids who are already thinking about what to be when they “grow up”?

Yankovic: Hey, it’s a terrific thing to think about. By all means, explore your options. Find your passions in life. And all the time needless to say: It’s never too late to change your mind.


Recent Products