May 31: Today in Children’s Book History

🎂 1926 – Born: James Krüss

One of Ger­many’s great­est con­tem­po­rary chil­dren’s lit­er­a­ture writ­ers and poets (1926–1997). With his unpar­al­leled philo­soph­i­cal insights, imag­i­na­tive tal­ent, and mas­ter­ful con­trol of lan­guage rhythm, he became a lead­ing fig­ure in the post-war revival of Ger­man chil­dren’s lit­er­a­ture.

  • High­est Hon­or: 1968 Hans Chris­t­ian Ander­sen Award (HCAA) for Best WriterThe win­ner.
  • An immor­tal mas­ter­piece:
  • The Child Who Sold His Laugh­ter (Timm Thaler oder Das verkaufte Lachen(This is a quote from a nov­el): His world-class mas­ter­piece. It tells the sto­ry of an orphan named Tim who uses his infec­tious laugh­ter to exchange for the abil­i­ty to win every bet with a dev­il­ish­ly wealthy man, thus unfold­ing a pro­found reflec­tion on the soul, hap­pi­ness, and cap­i­tal.
  • Me and My Great-Grand­fa­ther and the Heroes (Mein Urgroß­vater, die Helden und ich(Win­ner of the 1960 Ger­man Youth Lit­er­a­ture Prize (DJLP), a won­der­ful dia­logue nov­el about what true hero­ism is.)
  • The Light­house of Lob­ster Reef (In de vuur­toren op de Kreeften­rots)。

| Birth | James Krüss | James Krüss (Wikipedia) |


🎂 1937 — Born: Shigeo Nishimura

He is a renowned Japan­ese pic­ture book author and illus­tra­tor. He excels at using extreme­ly grand panoram­ic com­po­si­tions and dense, metic­u­lous details to record the every­day life, trans­porta­tion, and spir­it of human soci­ety.

  • Rep­re­sen­ta­tive works:
  • My First Train Ride(Alter­na­tive trans­la­tion: Night Train)やこうれっしゃ(This is a visu­al mas­ter­piece in the his­to­ry of mod­ern word­less pic­ture books. The entire book con­tains no words, yet through the pos­tures of var­i­ous char­ac­ters on a night bus trav­el­ing from Ueno to Tohoku, it vivid­ly depicts the diverse lives of peo­ple in the Showa era and their long­ing for home.)
  • Our Map Trav­el (ぼくらの地図­Trav­el), and the enor­mous his­tor­i­cal scroll “Illus­trat­ed His­to­ry of Japan” (絵で见る日本の歴史)。
  • Artis­tic fea­tures: Shi­geo Nishimu­ra’s works are a stan­dard “search + re-search” trea­sure trove of infor­ma­tion. Every cor­ner of his writ­ing hides a small sto­ry, pos­sess­ing extreme­ly high soci­o­log­i­cal and his­tor­i­cal doc­u­men­tary val­ue.

| Birth | Shi­geo Nishimu­ra | Nishimu­ra Shigeo(Wikipedia) |


🎂 1893 – Born: Elizabeth Coatsworth

She was a renowned Amer­i­can nov­el­ist and poet (1893–1986). She was an ear­ly female cre­ator in Amer­i­can chil­dren’s lit­er­a­ture with a high­ly inter­na­tion­al per­spec­tive and a deep under­stand­ing of clas­si­cal East­ern aes­thet­ics.

  • High­est Hon­or: The 1931 New­bery Medal The win­ner.
  • Rep­re­sen­ta­tive works: The Cat That Went to Heav­en (The Cat Who Went to Heav­en)。
  • Lit­er­ary and his­tor­i­cal back­ground: Cotsworth trav­eled exten­sive­ly to East­ern coun­tries such as Chi­na and Japan. This award-win­ning mas­ter­piece, set against the back­drop of a Japan­ese Bud­dhist monk, tells the sto­ry of a poor painter fac­ing a moral dilem­ma while paint­ing a pic­ture of Bud­dha’s Nir­vana: whether a cat could enter heav­en, and ulti­mate­ly, a mir­a­cle occurred. She per­fect­ly blends Bud­dhist com­pas­sion and ani­mistic phi­los­o­phy with ele­gant poet­ry, cre­at­ing a huge sen­sa­tion in the Amer­i­can chil­dren’s book world.

| Birth | Eliz­a­beth Coatsworth | Eliz­a­beth Coatsworth (Wikipedia) |


⚰️ 2002 – Death: Dagmar Berková

An immor­tal Czech female graph­ic artist and illus­tra­tor (1922–2002). She was one of the most ele­gant cre­ators of fan­tas­ti­cal visu­als dur­ing the gold­en age of Czech pic­ture books.

  • Inter­na­tion­al Hon­ors: With the works Kytič­ka pro štěstí Award­ed Plaque Award, 1975 Bratisla­va Inter­na­tion­al Bien­ni­al of Illus­tra­tions (BIB).
  • Artis­tic Style: Berko­va illus­trat­ed clas­sic works such as “Ander­sen’s Fairy Tales” and “Alice in Louis Caro” for many years. Her style was deeply influ­enced by Sur­re­al­ism, with lines as smooth and del­i­cate as silk, and col­ors with a cold and mys­te­ri­ous qual­i­ty rem­i­nis­cent of old Euro­pean court murals. She was extreme­ly adept at express­ing the pro­found, intro­spec­tive, and slight­ly dream­like psy­cho­log­i­cal states of female char­ac­ters.

| Passed Away | Dag­mar Berková | Dag­mar Berková (Wikipedia) |


🗓️ Other Important Creator Briefings

eventfig­ureDetails/AwardsWikipedia link
bornPhillip HooseA renowned Amer­i­can non­fic­tion author. His pow­er­ful and mov­ing non­fic­tion work, *Claudette Colvin: Two Steps Towards Jus­tice*, focus­es on the true sto­ry of a young pio­neer of the civ­il rights move­ment.Claudette Colvin: Twice Toward Jus­tice) won 2010 New­bery Sil­ver Medal.Phillip Hoose
bornHar­ry Maz­erA renowned Amer­i­can real­ist young adult nov­el­ist (1925–2016). His rep­re­sen­ta­tive work is the “Boys’ War Tril­o­gy” (such as…). A Boy at War“Boy in War” depicts the fate of a boy after the attack on Pearl Har­bor with extreme­ly del­i­cate and restrained strokes.Har­ry Maz­er
bornElaine MooreA pro­lif­ic Amer­i­can chil­dren’s nov­el­ist (1948). Skilled at cap­tur­ing the social con­flicts and awk­ward­ness of grow­ing up among school chil­dren, her rep­re­sen­ta­tive works are school nov­els beloved by read­ers in low­er and mid­dle grades. Get That Girl Out of the Boys’ Lock­er Room! .Elaine Moore