A really cool Even Aliens Need Snacks display at Frank Knight Elementary in Seneca Falls. Just one of a school full of great projects by some very talented artists/readers.
Author Archives: Matthew M
Return to Richfield Springs
Had the pleasure to return to Richfield Springs on Friday for another visit (last one in 2009) and it was every bit as fantastic as I remembered. I arrived to find the presentation room filled end to end with hundreds fantastic book-related projects that the kids worked on during the weeks leading up to the visit.
Here are just a few samples, where the kids imagined new Benjamin Franklinstein-style titles: Henry Corn Meets George Carwashington and Jackie Robotson Attacks Duke Scarington. I would totally read both of those.
Allen Creek Elementary
Snacks at Scott M. Ellis Elementary
Franklinstein Portraits at Craig Elementary
Spotted these amazing Benjamin Franklinstein portraits at a recent visit to Craig Elementary in Niskayuna, Ny. Great work!
Breakfast Cupcake Party at Cayuga Heights Elementary
What’s better than arriving at a school for a visit and finding a breakfast cupcake party? Absolutely nothing, that’s what. Let me repeat: breakfast + cupcakes + party. It doesn’t get better than that.
How could the rest of the day measure up, you ask? Well, it did. It was a great day all around with a bunch of amazing readers. Thanks, Cayuga Heights!
Episcopal Lower School
Bean Thirteen in Korean
One of the best parts of being an author is when a foreign edition of one of my books arrives. I feel like it’s a glimpse into an alternate universe where things are almost – but not quite – the same. When the book is set in a supercool Korean typeface, the effect is magnified all the more.
(Plus, I just love the thought that children in Korea – who I will never meet – will be reading this book I wrote one long winter far away in upstate New York.)
Newsweek: The Truth About Cousin Ernie’s Head
(From “The Best Kid’s Stuff,” December 1996)
In a very welcome twist on those relentlessly beaming families so dear to picture book authors at holiday time, Matthew McElligott offers “The Truth About Cousin Ernie’s Head” (Simon & Schuster, $15). Here’s a crowd gathered for Thanksgiving whose squabbling over family history never lets up. McElligott’s narrator gets a taste of harmony and then decides he likes his combative family just the way it is.
Booklist: The Truth About Cousin Ernie’s Head
A nice change from all the sweetly nostalgic holiday stories about extended families, this funny picture book is for any child who has to suffer noisy, overbearing adult relatives with their ritualized memories and grudges. As usual, all of Ernie’s family gather at his grandmother’s for Thanksgiving. And, as usual, they are all soon loudly arguing about what really happened when . . . . Then Ernie finds an old family movie in the attic that documents the way things did happen. The loudmouths are silenced. But Ernie is sad to see them crushed, and he soon works out a way to get the crazy, noisy conversations going again. The garishly colored, New Age-style illustrations express the boy’s view of these eccentric characters shouting around the dinner table. The fun is in the details, in the wild exaggeration, and in the sense of a calm child surrounded by adult farce.
School Library Journal: Uncle Frank’s Pit
Eccentric Uncle Frank comes to visit and literally makes himself at home. He begins to dig a pit in his relatives’ middle-class urban back yard, searching first for dinosaur bones, then for oil, and eventually for treasure. Oblivious to his family’s disbelief (excluding the boy who narrates the story), and later intense media coverage, he ends up unearthing a huge ancient statue. Uncle Frank has the manic good cheer of an updated Monsieur Racine (Tom Ungerer’s The Beast of Monsieur Racine, Farrar, 1971) but is revealed in contemporary, vivid, and thoroughly wacky full-color art. Surprises enliven the book an Uncle Frank moves furniture and amenities into the pit and has a hot tub installed. Emphatic characters are notable for their angular hairstyles, and the spot art is irresistible apropos. Original and endearing, the text and illustrations support one another seamlessly. Best of all, the offbeat protagonist proves himself right against all logical odds. Children will regret his departure and hope he’ll be back soon.
Kirkus: Uncle Frank’s Pit
McElligott (The Truth About Cousin Ernie’s Head, 1996) finds inspiration in Uncle Frank, an amiable old codger who is full of cockamamie ideas and immune to suggestions that he’s worn out his welcome. Uncle Frank answers an invitation to drop in on his relatives: ” ‘I can only stay a few hours,’ said Uncle Frank. A month later, he was still with us.” A scientist/inventor with a shock of white hair to make Einstein proud, and one card shy of a deck, Uncle Frank believes that dinosaur bones are buried in the backyard and starts to dig and dig and dig. As the young narrator’s father becomes increasingly vexed, Uncle Frank changes his mind and keeps digging, first for oil and then for buried treasure. His hole in the ground begins to resemble a full-service apartment, and he orders a hot tub to make it homier yet. At the climactic moment when the narrator’s father has had enough and Uncle Frank is about to be evicted, treasure is struck: an Easter Island-like statue that resembles Uncle Frank (who hastens off to his next adventure). This is a good-time, goofy story, without deep meanings or hidden agendas. The illustrations, chock full of color and shadow, have the fuzzy quality of low-tech computer artwork. (Picture book. 5-8)
Booklist: The Spooky Book
In this wonderfully creative story, a boy named Andrew and a girl named Zo Zo each sit alone in their separate houses reading a scary book. Meanwhile, as they read, the children actually experience the frightening scenarios depicted in their eerie books. The well-crafted plot is beautifully complemented by McElligott’s dramatic watercolor illustrations, which make wonderful use of shadows and warped perspectives to create ominous scenes. Sufficiently scary for older kids, yet mild enough for younger children to enjoy.
Publisher’s Weekly: The Spooky Book
In this Hitchcockian thriller-within-a-thriller, “Andrew shook as he opened the cover of a spooky book.” The sepia pages show a girl opening the same tome. Odd coincidences continue. If lightning startles the girl, a flash startles Andrew. Stranger still, they both scan the mirror image of this very volume. McElligott (The Truth About Cousin Ernie’s Head) strategically uses color to signal scene changes, and his perspectives are agreeably vertiginous. Patschke (Don’t Look at It! Don’t Touch It!) unforgivably rhymes “spooky” with “droopy” and “a bat flying kooky” but otherwise his meta-book stimulates the mind.
Boston Globe: The Spooky Book
Steve Patschke and Matt McElligott, author and illustrator of The Spooky Book, have come up with an enigmatic story-within-a-story that tweaks the imagination. When two children in different locations begin reading “The Spooky Book,” each child hears thunder rumble and sees flashes of lightning. Shapes of goblins appear. As they proceed through the book, the children take different courses of action and move toward an unexpected and ultimately satisfying conclusion.
You must be logged in to post a comment.