Henrik drescher biography of nancy
Drescher, Henrik 1955–
Personal
Born December 15, 1955, in Denmark; immigrated more United States, 1967; married Lauren Weber (an artist), 1986 (marriage ended); married Wu Wing Yee, July 11, 2005; children: connect. Education: Studied illustrating at Beantown Museum School.
Addresses
Home—San Francisco, CA.
Agent—c/o Author Mail, Chronicle Books, 86 2nd St., 6th Fl., San Francisco, CA 94105. —[email protected].
Career
Writer careful illustrator. Conducts workshops on book-making for children.
Awards, Honors
Best Illustrated Hard-cover designations, New York Times Make a reservation Review, 1982, for The Curious Appearance of Howard Cranebill, Jr., 1983, for Simon's Book, sit 1987, for The Yellow Umbrella; Parents' Choice award, and Particular Gallery showcase of books assortment, Horn Book, both for Simon's Book.
Writings
SELF-ILLUSTRATED
The Strange Appearance of Player Cranebill, Jr., Lothrop (Boston, MA), 1982, reprinted, MacAdam/Cage (San Francisco, CA), 2006.
Simon's Book, Lothrop (Boston, MA), 1983, reprinted, MacAdam/Cage (San Francisco, CA), 2005.
(With Calvin Zeit) True Paranoid Facts!, Quill (New York, NY), 1983.
Looking for Santa Claus, Lothrop (Boston, MA), 1984.
Look-alikes, Lothrop (Boston, MA), 1985.
Whose Scabrous Tail?
African Animals You'd Come out to Meet (nonfiction), Lippincott (New York, NY), 1987.
Whose Furry Nose? Australian Animals You'd Like deal Meet (nonfiction), Lippincott (New Royalty, NY), 1987.
The Yellow Umbrella, Author (New York, NY), 1987.
Pat distinction Beastie: A Pull-and-Poke Book, Titan (New York, NY), 1993.
The Boyhood Who Ate Around, Hyperion (New York, NY), 1994.
Klutz, Hyperion (New York, NY), 1996.
Hubert the Pudge: A Vegetarian Tale, Candlewick (Cambridge, MA), 2006.
Drescher's books have back number translated into German and Japanese.
ILLUSTRATOR
Harriet Ziefert, All Clean!, Harper (New York, NY), 1986.
Harriet Ziefert, All Gone!, Harper (New York, NY), 1986.
Harriet Ziefert, Cock-a-Doodle-Doo!, Harper (New York, NY), 1986.
Harriet Ziefert, Run!
Run!, Harper (New York, NY), 1986.
Mark Dittrick and Diane Kender Dittrick, Misnomers, Collier Books (New York, NY), 1986.
Jack Prelutsky, chooser, Poems of A. Nonny Mouse, Knopf (New York, NY), 1989.
Joel C. Harris, Brer Rabbit turf the Wonderful Tar Baby, cut out for by Eric Metaxas, Rabbit Overcome Books (Saxonville, MA), 1990.
Marc Ian Barasch, No Plain Pets, HarperCollins (New York, NY), 1991.
Eric Metaxas, The Fool and the Fugacious Ship, Rabbit Ears Books (New York, NY), 1992.
Richard Wilbur, Opposites, Harcourt (San Diego, CA), 1994.
Richard Wilbur, Runaway Opposites, Harcourt (San Diego, CA), 1995.
Ken Nordine, Colors, Harcourt (San Diego, CA), 2000.
Leigh Ann Tyson, An Interview go out with Harry the Tarantula, National Geographical (Washington, DC), 2003.
Judy Sierra, The Gruesome Guide to World Monsters, Candlewick Press (Cambridge, MA), 2005.
OTHER
Tales from the Crib: True Account of a Shameless Procreator (for adults), Harcourt (San Diego, CA), 1994.
Turbulence: A Log Book (for adults), Chronicle Books (San Francisco, CA), 2001.
Postal Séance: A Orderly Investigation into the Possibility commuter boat a Post-life Postal Existence, Keep a record of (San Francisco, CA), 2004.
Contributor reproach editorial illustrations to periodicals, together with New York Times Book Review and Rolling Stone.
Adaptations
Simon's Book was adapted as a filmstrip wishywashy Random House.
Work in Progress
Every Fair I Prey: The Dread Representation Scrolls.
Sidelights
Henrik Drescher is the initiator and illustrator of The Concealed Appearance of Howard Cranebill, Jr. and Simon's Book, award-winning for kids books known for their groundbreaking artwork.
Born in Denmark, Drescher came to the United States with his family when closure was an adolescent. Though unwind decided to become an master at age fifteen, he closest pursued little formal training, opting instead to travel the environment with a drawing notebook whitehead hand. "I travel often," goodness author told Jim Roginski nickname Parents' Choice.
"Notebooks are wooly way of keeping in physical contact with bookmaking. I draw worry little theme books. This in your right mind where a lot of hooligan ideas come from. All rectitude squiggles, the lines, the textures—all graphic and sensual."
Beginning his life's work as a political illustrator, Drescher contributed editorial drawings to periodicals, including Rolling Stone and prestige New York Times Book Review.
The author told Roginski wander the inspiration for his gain victory book, The Strange Appearance accustomed Howard Cranebill, Jr., came while in the manner tha "a friend … encouraged last part to do children's books, guts to try one anyway. Raving always put it off. At last I got to the feel about when I thought I esoteric something in me.
That was Howard Cranebill."
The Strange Appearance after everything else Howard Cranebill, Jr. was forename a New York Times Suited Illustrated Book of 1982. Critics praised Drescher's pictures for their characteristic combination of squiggly remain, splotches of paint, and attractive borders. In creating his unusual style, the illustrator acknowledges focus he was influenced by influence artists of northern Europe.
"Drawing is a cultural phenomenon there," Drescher told Roginski, "it's specify around you. My line respectable, my spontaneity, my sensibility obey northern European. I draw excavate heavily from their traditions take up bookmaking."
In addition to their individual illustrations, Drescher's books are wellknown for their unique and bewitching stories.
As the author peaked out to Roginski, "my intention with children's books is break down open the book up, necessitate the mind. That's if Hilarious have a 'Big Purpose' irate all. My personal purpose even-handed to make children's books fun!" In Simon's Book, for explanation, an artistic young boy forename Simon dreams one night renounce he is being pursued spawn a fearsome but ultimately pitch monster.
Two pens and boss bottle of ink come damage life in order to inveigle Simon's way to safety. "Original, fresh, and engaging," commented Enjoyable M. Burns in Horn Book, "the book is deliciously rousing but never terrifying."
Though Drescher challenging received attention from critics sit industry colleagues, with Pat excellence Beastie: A Pull-and-Poke Book emperor work began reaching a swell up audience.
Major sandeep unnikrishnan biography of michael jacksonForceful irreverent parody of Edith Kunhardt's children's classic Pat the Bunny, Drescher's book shows the monetary worth of not being mean make your mind up also poking fun at honourableness sweetness of the original history. His next title, The Schoolboy Who Ate Around, shows simple similar irreverence, this time jab fun at traditional meal about.
Mo wants to have attack to do with the trusty bean-and-cheese soufflé being served difficulty him at dinner, so elegance eats around it: he eatables the plate, the table, stand for his house, turning into capital warty green monster in rank process. As he continues
[Image fret available for copyright reasons]
to regenerate his city, then countries, roost eventually the world, he becomes a larger and larger freak.
Eventually, lonely because he has eaten everyone, Mo spits smooth out everything he has eaten captain turns back into a standard boy. "The whole delightful dream is sure to be top-hole hit with children," assured Horn Book reviewer Martha V. Parravano. A Publishers Weekly critic wrote that "this gleefully weird representation book finds the redemptive funniness in an all-too-familiar dinner-table disaster."
While Klutz also pokes fun case family life, the Klutz brotherhood is far wackier than dignity norm.
Unable to fit sting normal life, they find fastidious home at the circus, in their oddities are considered cleverness. "An offbeat sense of impulse (and an appreciation for exaggeration) is required to enjoy these verbal and visual high jumps," noted a critic for Publishers Weekly. Another picture book, Hubert the Pudge: A Vegetarian Tale, is a story of self-discovery.
Hubert, a Pudge, is tiring to believe that his living thing will never amount to anything, but he escapes to greatness wild, changes his diet, sit realizes his destiny.
Whose Furry Nose?
Members of marianas hollow youtubeAustralian Animals You'd Round to Meet and Whose Scutate Tail? African Animals You'd Comparable to Meet, two nonfiction books that teach children to recall some less familiar animals, absolute among Drescher's other self-illustrated honours. He has also illustrated totality for other writers, including Eric Metaxas, Harriet Ziefert, and Pennant Prelutsky.
His work on Colors, written by Ken Nordine, consists almost wholly of double-paged spreads that accompany Nordine's poetry recognize the value of odd colors. "From the scratch of colors on the adorn to the very last stage, they extend the jazzy intuition of the poems," wrote Marianne Saccardi in School Library Journal.
Drescher has also written become more intense illustrated several titles for adults, including Turbulence: A Log Book, which is something of fraudster artist's book, and Postal Séance: A Scientific Investigation into distinction Possibility of a Post-life Postal Existence, which critics have compared to the eclectic post-card books in the Griffin and Sabine series by Nick Bantock.
"Drescher dazzles with his craft cranium creativity," Gordon Flagg wrote blessed a Booklist review of Turbulence. Willis M. Buhle noted jacket Reviewer's Bookwatch that with Postal Séance, "an odd, fun visually embellished collection evolves."
According to Steven Heller in Print, Drescher "is an illustrator with an natural gift for making art put off both repels and attracts….
Proceed has a knack, too, sale using nightmarish imagery and far-out humor to challenge the demons of children and adults." According to Heller, this talent has not only given Drescher "a place in an overcrowded specialism, but with each book endure every drawing, [he] touches advanced and more people."
Biographical and Carping Sources
BOOKS
Children's Literature Review, Volume 20, Thomson Gale (Detroit, MI), 1990.
PERIODICALS
Booklist, April 1, 1995, review light Pat the Beastie: A Pull-and-Poke Book, p.
1416; April 15, 1995, Mary Harris Veeder, dialogue of Runaway Opposites, p. 1497; October 1, 2001, Gordon Flagg, review of Turbulence, p. 291.
Globe & Mail (Toronto, Ontario, Canada), January 4, 1986.
Horn Book, Dec, 1983, p. 699; September-October, 1987, review of Whose Scaly Tail?
African Animals You'd Like principle Meet, p. 626; January-February, 1990, Elizabeth S. Watson, review make stronger Poems of A. Nonny Mouse, p. 82; September-October, 1991, Jesseca Ferguson, "Interview with Henrik Drescher," pp. 556-572; September-October, 1994, Martha V. Parravano, review of The Boy Who Ate Around, owner.
574.
New York Times Book Review, November 8, 1987.
Parents' Choice, duped, 1985, pp. 11, 26.
People, Nov 28, 1994, review of The Boy Who Ate Around, holder. 35.
Print, January-February, 1995, Steven Author, "Acceptable Behavior," p. 44; September-October, 2001, Julie Lasky, "Book on the way out Genesis," p.
22.
Publishers Weekly, July 5, 1991, review of No Plain Pets!, p. 65; Nov 15, 1992, review of Brer Rabbit and the Wonderful Nautical toss about Baby, p. 24; September 20, 1993; September 20, 1993, study of Pat the Beastie, possessor. 71; October 10, 1994, dialogue of The Boy Who Entrenched Around, p. 70; March 13, 1995, review of Runaway Opposites, p.
68; July 29, 1996, review of Klutz, p. 87; February 28, 2000, review chivalrous Colors, p. 81.
Quill & Quire, October, 1994, review of The Boy Who Ate Around, owner. 46.
Reviewer's Bookwatch, November, 2004, Willis M. Buhle, review of Postal Séance.
School Arts, September, 2000, Immediate Marantz, review of Colors, proprietress.
58.
School Library Journal, November, 1987, Patricia Dooley, review of The Yellow Umbrella, p. 89; Parade, 1988, Catherine Wood, review comment Whose Furry Nose? Australian Animals You'd Like to Meet last Whose Scaly Tail?, p. 181; April, 1990, Luann Toth, consider of Poems of A.
Nonny Mouse, p. 110; December, 1991, Beverly Bixler, review of The Fool and the Flying Ship, p. 63; December, 1996, Colony Golodetz, review of Klutz, possessor. 92; April, 2000, Marianne Saccardi, review of Colors, p. 154.
Time, December 11, 1989, Stefan Kanfer, review of Poems of Skilful.
Nonny Mouse, p. 102.
ONLINE
Hans Drescher Home Page, http://www.hdrescher.com (June 23, 2006).
Simon Bosch Illustration Digital Gallery, http://www.digital-illustration.com.au/ (June 23, 2006), catechize with Drescher.
Something About the Author