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December 11, 2015 08:56 am PST

What Jules Feiffer taught me about writing for kids

ruben

25 years into creating my comic strip Tom the Dancing Bug, Ive just embarked on another venture: writing books for kids. My series of books, The EMU Club Adventures, began in April with Alien Invasion in My Backyard, and the second installment, Ghostly Thief of Time, was released last month.

Now, Tom the Dancing Bug is certainly not for kids, but writing for kids was something Ive always wanted to do. I love kids literature and culture, and I love kids; if Im at a gathering of friends and family, youll probably find me laughing it up with the kids.

But as I started this new task, I was kind of worried about whether I could write for an audience that wasnt me. My comic strip is pretty much what I would want to read would consciously writing for another audience render the work stilted, off-target, or even pandering?

I once saw Maurice Sendak, one of the very greatest childrens authors ever, tell Stephen Colbert in an interview, I dont write for children. I write and somebody says, Thats for children!

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Well, Ive spent a lot of years showing myself what I write, and its usually satirical or absurdist takes on things like income inequality, religion, and the new economy. None of which a kid with any good sense would have any interest in.

As I began my project, I happened to go to a panel discussion of childrens authors at the New York Public Library, because some of my kids favorite authors were participating. A question was posed to the panel: Do you write for yourself, or for children?

One after another, these accomplished authors repeated Sendaks sentiment: they write totally for themselves, and then, lo and behold, it is children who enjoy the product. It struck me as kind of odd, because one of them had even written an ABC book. Is that really the book she would have written, regardless of intended audience?

When the question came to Jules Feiffer, a legendary cartoonist/playwright for adults who became a childrens book author later in life, he gave the very simple answer that blew my mind and became my North Star in writing my books.

He answered: Both. I write for the kid in me.

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Maybe its the very reason I wanted to write kidlit, but I happen to have a kid in me, and I dont have to dig very deep to find him.

I ended up writing exactly the books I would have liked when I was a kid: funny adventure stories about a gang of kids in fantastic situations, full of plot twists and surprises. Secret tunnels, ghostly visions, aliens and robots.

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And they are exactly the books that the kid currently in me likes.

In addition, I realize now that when I write Tom the Dancing Bug, Im not really writing for some abstract, whole me. Im writing for the adult in me that part of me that is interested in sketch comedy, absurdist humor and political and social satire.

But, speaking of plot twists, heres the M. Night Shyamalan-type kicker at the end of the story: It turns out that even as I wrote my very grownup comic strip for 25 years, Ive been also writing for the kid in me the whole time!

When I want to write about income inequality, I use funny animal Carl Barks-like comic book characters.

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When I use strange, absurdist humor, its often contrasting something dark or ridiculous against a childrens medium, such as daily comic strips.1E1F4-zee-XsXPOQFF5Agscod8eMm5xCSf7I0ffYziG3vm9k

When I want to write about religion, I use a brightly colored, caped superhero.

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When I want to write about the new economy and its effect on employment, I use a Richard Scarry picture book format.

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One of my main (maybe only!) techniques as a satirist is to juxtapose the innocence of childrens culture with a darker point about adult world.

The difference is that in my kids books, I dont subvert kid-culture, I create it. I play in it.

Writing these books was one of the most joyful experiences of my career. Like my three kid characters, Ive been on a brand new adventure, looking at the world in a different way and taking risks.

I feel like a kid again.

Ruben Bollings Tom the Dancing Bug premieres on Boing Boing every week.


Original Link: http://feeds.boingboing.net/~r/boingboing/iBag/~3/iFQyjTaq638/what-jules-feiffer-taught-me-a.html

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