Students are to post ONE reaction (minimum 350 words) to the
assigned listening/reading/viewing linked below. Students are encouraged
(but not required) to additionally respond to other student reactions."The Autumnal Genius of John Bellairs" by Grady Hendrix:
"There’s a particular kind of nostalgia that smells like burning autumn
leaves on an overcast day. It sounds like a static-filled radio station
playing Brylcreem advertisements in the other room. It feels like a
scratchy wool blanket. It looks like a wood-paneled library stuffed with
leather-bound books. This is the flavor of occult nostalgia conjured up
by author John Bellairs and his illustrator, Edward Gorey, in their
middle grade gothic New Zebedee books featuring low-key poker-playing
wizards, portents of the apocalypse, gloomy weather, and some of the
most complicated names this side of the list of ingredients on a packet
of Twinkies."
Click heading to read essay."Is there still room for scares in John Bellairs?" by Erik Adams:
"The imagery and atmosphere of Bellairs’ work inspired a previous
generation of readers to become a new generation of writers: The
John Bellairs Fandæmonium website
collects testimonies from such fans-turned-authors; The Decemberists’
Colin Meloy recently dropped Bellairs’ name in an NPR interview about
Under Wildwood,
his second YA effort with wife/personal Edward Gorey Carson Ellis. It
all goes to show that the art that most often sticks with us, the work
that most terrorizes and tantalizes, is that which leaves room for the
unknown and the unsaid, that which invites us back by leaving room to
interpret what’s hovering just out of view."
Click heading to read the essay.ANDTHE GASHLYCRUMB TINIES by Edward Gorey: "Part
Tim Burton long before there was Burton, part Edgar Allan Poe long
after Poe, the book exudes Gorey’s signature adult picture book mastery,
not merely adorned by the gorgeously dark crosshatched illustrations
but narratively driven by them."
Click heading to read/view The Gashlycrumb Tinies.
THE HAPLESS CHILD by Edward Gorey:
Click title to download PDF of The Hapless Child.
Why the Link Between Bellairs & Gorey is Unbreakable by Matt Domino: "Bellairs were browsing a bookstore and came across
The Fatal Lozenge,
an illustrated alphabet book by Edward Gorey. Bellairs was particularly
fond of Z, which was illustrated with a Zouave [a class of French Army
infantry members in the 19th and 20th centuries] hoisting an impaled
baby on a bayonet with an accompanying verse."
Click heading to read essay.ANDCharles Addams by
Christian Willaims (The Washington Post): In a sunny day in 1953,
patent attorney F.T. Griswold holds a funny-looking electrical gizmo out
the window of his office, aiming it down at the streets below. At his
side stands the inventor of the device, hat in hand and waiting
hopefully. "Death ray, fiddlesticks!" comes the verdict. "Why, it
doesn't even slow them up."That is, of course, a New Yorker cartoon
perpetrated by Charles Addams. Like his inventor's ray gun, Addams has
never successfully harmed anybody. But it is safe to say that, over the
past 50 years, his weird cartoons have certainly slowed them up."
Click heading to reading article. The Father of the Addams Family (NPR):
They said that Charles Addams slept in a coffin and drank martinis with
eyeballs in them. They said he kept a guillotine at his house and
received chopped-off fingers in the mail from fans. It was once reported
that he had been given a monogrammed straitjacket as a birthday gift --
a garment that might have come in handy if the other stories were true,
such as the one Patricia McLaughlin told about Addams moving around the
living room at a party, "methodically and imponderably depositing"
dollops of tooth powder in various corners. "A charm to ward off
cavity-causing vampires?" she wondered. People said that Addams had
married Morticia, the pale dagger in the spidery black dress from
The Addams Family,
that familiar band of subversives that included Gomez, Lurch, Pugsley,
Wednesday, Uncle Fester, Grandma, Thing, and Cousin Itt.
Click heading to read essay, excerpt, and/or listen to interview.Is Someone Going to Bake Me a Pie? The
eeriness of Mother Goose. Charles Addams' Illustrations remind us how
the classic tales could seem in the minds of the kids to whom we read
them.
Click heading to view book.