Wednesday, 20 May 2020

Fantasy Reads: Things you didn't know about The Hobbit by JRR Tolkien #1


Did you know that celebrated American children's book writer and illustrator Maurice Sendak (1928 - 2012) nearly ended up working on the 30th anniversary deluxe edition of The Hobbit?

Sendak was first approached for the opportunity when his 1963 picture book Where the Wild Things Are had just been published.

Why didn't the imminent creative partnership happen?

The only surviving Maurice Sendak illustration 

The alleged occurrence 

As the story goes, once upon a time Tolkien requested samples from Sendak as a selection process for the esteemed job.

Sendak drew two images, one featured dancing Wood-elves in the moonlight and the other, the only image that survives, featured Bilbo's first encounter with Gandalf outside his home.

Now the plot thickens.

An erroneous editor is said to be the proverbial, fire-breathing dragon of destruction in this story. As the tale goes, the editor wrongly labelled the Wood-elves image as those featuring hobbits. When Tolkien noticed this grave error he assumed that Sendak hadn't read the book and clearly didn't know anything about hobbits.

Tolkien subsequently didn't approve of the drawings, causing Sendak to be furious.

A meeting was later scheduled between Sendak and Tolkien, set around the Where the Wild Things Are UK release, but Sendak is said to have suffered a heart attack, a day before the meeting! It was weeks before Sendak left the hospital.

Sendak never worked with Tolkien or on any of his books again.

The sole illustration is all that remains of a what-might-have-been yarn.


Attributed sources 
While there is no reliable documented evidence to suggest what exactly happened, Wayne G. Hammond & Christina Scull's weblog contains a detailed article on the entire matter.

Wayne's article attributes a piece American children's writer and movie producer Tony DiTerlizzi wrote for the Los Angeles Times about the events (on which the above article is based).

DiTerlizzi claims to have received the information from American novelist Gregory Maguire, who had interviewed Sendak about the so-near-yet-so-far collaboration.


(Article by Snehith Kumbla)

(image copyrights, theatlantic.com,  openculture.com, attemptedbloggery.blogspot.com)

Tuesday, 5 May 2020

Poetry Reads: Train Journey Bits #1 by Snehith Kumbla


Train journeys have given me many moments of joy, poise, scenery, conversations, and priceless window seat scenery views over three decades of an otherwise mundane existence.

For a long time until my adolescence, I wanted to be a train engine driver. Every time I watch the train robbery scene in Sholay, I want to be in that last goods train compartment, quietly relishing the disappearing scenery on a twilight evening, and preferably not warding off dacoits.

I have a dislike for closed air-conditioned compartments, even the warmest summer can't deter me from the constant enhancement the second class window seat provides. Every passing second in motion is but a fleeting vision to the eye. This constant feeling keeps me riveted for hours during every train journey I take.

Presently, train journey bits #1 is my most read poem on hellopoetry.com, garnering 14000+ views till date. The poem is a glue-collage picture book of various scenes I encountered on the return journey from Kerala to Pune in December 2014.

train journey bits #1
by Snehith Kumbla

what forests are those we pass, 
blazing along the railway tracks,
a tree bloom of still cranes, 
stream black of rubbish bane, 

stench of dead city rubble, 
factories of rusted cast metal, 
distant cotton twilight skies, 
sun slide across a bunch of wires,    

passing tunnels echo 
lonely platforms, frantic gecko, 
looming hillside, 
crackle dry wood fire, 

a god barred in lock&key, 
blink glimpse of the sea 
one rush of vision, 
pebble fling at frisson, 

metal-crunch rhythm, 
grind music sublime, 
spark, grunt, grate, 
we arrive, we dissipate...

***


(Article by Snehith Kumbla)


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Poetry Reads: Fragrance and other poems by Snehith Kumbla

The second edition front cover This is convey , with much joy, that I have published a selection of my poems on Amazon Kindle and paperback....