“A
child is just a child, no matter what his heritage might be.”
– Ezra Jack Keats
Born in Brooklyn on this date in
1916 Keats crossed social boundaries as the first white American picture-book
author to give minority children a central place in his literature. His characters transcend ethnicity,
illustrating family life and the simple pleasures and sometimes complex
problems that every child encounters.
A mostly self-taught artist, Keats
further studied art on the GI Bill after WWII and started working as an
illustrator and editor on kids’ books in the mid-1950s. His first attempt (in 1960) at writing and
drawing one of his own was My Dog Is Lost,
the story of a Puerto Rican immigrant boy searching for his dog in New York
City. Keats incorporated Spanish words
into the story and featured children from Chinatown, Little Italy, Park Avenue
and Harlem as central characters.
In 1962, he wrote and illustrated his
Caldecott Medal-winning The Snowy Day, featuring a black child out in
new-fallen snow. “None of the
manuscripts I'd been illustrating featured any black kids — except for token
blacks in the background,” he said. “My
book would have him there simply because he should have been there all
along." The Snowy Day has never been out of print
and is considered one of the most important American books of the 20th
Century.
"I wanted The Snowy Day to be a chunk of life, the sensory experience in word
and picture of what it feels like to hear your own body making sounds in the
snow,” he said. “Crunch...crunch...And the joy of being alive."
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