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Picture
Books Author of the Month
Jan
Wahl

1 April 1933 --
???
Biography
Jan Wahl was born on April 1, 1933 in Columbus, Ohio to Russell
Rothenberger and Nina Marie (Boyer) Wahl. Wahl's father was a
physician.
Wahl was never one to allow himself
to be bored as he was growing up in Ohio. He played piano on a weekly
radio program, had a traveling puppet show and shadow-play theater,
and performed his own magic act. With a background like this, can
there be any wonder how he ended up with a career in the
entertainment industry?
He made his first attempt at writing
literature when he was in the fourth grade at DeVeaux School in
Toledo, Ohio. Wahl sat at his worn desk trying to work on the story
that he already enjoyed a great deal. The project was an attempt to
take the classic tale of "Jack and the Beanstalk" and improve it. It
was with this venture that Wahl fell in love with
writing.
It was at this time that Wahl began
collecting films, which has become a lifelong interest. His
collection now includes everything from hand-colored films dating
from 1893 to post World War II, both those in black and white movies
and those in Technicolor.
Upon graduating from high school in
1950, Wahl attended Cornell University in Ithaca, New York, where he
received a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1953. Wahl was an author of a
play called Paradiso! Paradiso! while he was a student at
Cornell. The play was produced by the school in 1954.
Wahl enrolled in a creative writing
class while he was at Cornell University. The professor of the course
was very encouraging. He started writing original stories that he
submitted to a number of magazines.
When he graduated from Cornell
University, Wahl learned that he had been awarded the honor of being
a Fulbright fellow in the area of Folklore and Folk Literature. His
new found scholastic status brought him to the University of
Copenhagan in Denmark.
After completing his graduate
studies at the University of Copenhagan, Wahl worked with Danish film
director Carl T. Dreyer during the making of Dreyer's prize-winning
film Ordet. He worked with Dreyer from 1954 to
1955.
In 1957, Wahl returned to Denmark to
take a position with the mystery writer Isak Dinesen, who was ill.
Dinesen dictated her novel Last Tales and Wahl recorded it for
her. Upon finishing his work with Ms. Dinesen, Wahl returned to the
United States. He attended the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor to
complete his Master's Degree in arts in 1958.
Even with all this experience, Wahl
struggled in his early attempts to publish his children's stories.
They were repeatedly rejected by editors until children's editor
Ursula Nordstrom encouraged him. ".... It was 1960 and I was fresh
from school, having received a Master's degree from Michigan. Warily
I ventured rather decrepit, very literary Macmillan Company offices
in New York near the foot of Fifth [Avenue] ... [Ms.
Nordstrom] rattled a bit of [manuscript] in her bloodless
hand and I felt I was floating on a cake of ice far out in the Arctic
Sea. About to sink! Or to be saved! While waiting for her
pronouncement, I recalled the very first instant I felt the itch to
be a writer." [2]
That first manuscript turned out to
be Pleasant Fieldmouse, which was illustrated by Maurice
Sendak. Wahl submitted the book sixteen times over three years. It
was this editor that suggested Maurice Sendak as the illustrator for
the book. In fact, she liked the book so much that she also purchased
a second title by Wahl, called Push Kitty, and suggested that
Garth Williams be the illustrator for that piece.
Throughout Wahl's writing career, he
has continued to concentrate the scope of his work on children. He
addresses themes like family relationships, physical handicaps,
self-reliance, tolerance, and peace.
Besides collecting old films, Wahl
enjoys collecting old toys like those relating to Felix the Cat,
Mickey Mouse, and Betty Boop.
Wahl, who still lives in Toledo,
Ohio, has published more than 100 books, many of which have been
translated into seven foreign languages. He has worked with a many
well-known illustrators such as Maurice Sendak, Garth Williams, Erik
Blegvad, and Mercer Mayer.
Still a prolific children's author,
Wahl likes to share his writings and experiences with teachers and
children through class visits, conferences, and writing
workshops.
Information
for this biography was taken from:
1) Anne Commire (ed.). Contemporary Authors, #2; Gale Research
Company: Detroit, Mich., 1971.
2) Anne Commire (ed.). Contemporary Authors,
#34; Gale Research Company: Detroit, Mich., 1984.
3) "Jan Wahl", Charlesbridge Publishing(http://www.charlesbridge.com/wahl.htm)
4) "The Jan Wahl Collection", Center for
Archival Collection (http://www.bgsu.edu/colleges/library/cac/ms0069.html)
5) Sara Pendergast and Tom Pendergast. St. James Guide to
Children's Writers; St. James Press: Detroit,Mich.,
1999.
Titles by
Jan Wahl
E-AND The Woman With the Eggs (1974) -- In this adaptation
of a poem by Hans Christian Andersen, a greedy woman is so
preoccupied with becoming rich from selling her eggs she forgets she
is carrying them in a basket on her head.
E-Wahl Abe Lincoln's Beard
(1971) -- This book introduces the major events in the life of
Abraham Lincoln up until the time he grew his beard.
E-WAH The Clumpets Go Sailing
(1975) -- The Clumpet family sails to a sick uncle's house to take
him some hot soup.
E-WAH Humphrey's Bear (1987)
-- Just as his father did, Humphrey has wonderful adventures with his
toy bear after they go to bed at night.
E-Wahl "I Remember!" cried
Grandma Pinky (1994) -- Lisa loves to listen to her Grandma Pinky
tell stories about the old days, but she worries when Grandma becomes
forgetful about more recent activities.
E-Wahl Jeremiah Knucklebones
(1974) -- Longing to see the world, Jeremiah, a Scottish terrier,
leaves home on his tricycle only to find that some of his adventures
are not so pleasant.
E-Wahl The Little Blind
Goat(1981) -- A blind goat keenly develops his senses of hearing,
smell, and touch in order to save his sister from a horrible fate and
to save himself from being a slave to his handicap.
E-Wahl Mrs. Owl and Mr. Pig
(1991) -- Lonely and in need of money, Mrs. Owl advertises for a
boarder, but Mr. Pig seems to be more trouble than he is
worth.
E-WAH Pleasant Fieldmouse's
Valentine Trick (1977) -- Pleasant Fieldmouse devises a plan to
bring together his quarrelsome neighbors on Valentine's
Day.
E-WAH Sylvester Bear
Overslept (1979) -- Sylvester Bear desperately wants to escape
his wife's snoring, but soon realizes that it is truly magic to his
ears.
E-WAH Tales of Fuzzy Mouse: Six
Cozy Stories for Bedtime (1988) -- With these six stories,
readers can join Fuzzy Mouse in his adventures.
E-WAH The Teeny, Tiny Witches
(1979) -- This book relates the adventures of a family of teeny, tiny
witches as they search for a home.
E-WAH Who Will Believe Tim
Kitten? (1978) -- Tim Kitten has his great-grandmother's talent
for telling tales, but no one believes his stories.
Websites
"Jan Wahl", Charlesbridge Publishing (http://www.charlesbridge.com/wahl.htm)
-- This site provides a brief biography for Jan
Wahl.
"The Jan Wahl Collection", Center
for Archival Collection (http://www.bgsu.edu/colleges/library/cac/ms0069.html)
-- Besides a brief biography, this site also provides a brief
discussion about Wahl's collective works and lists the titles owned
by the center.
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