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Student
Reading
Caldecott Medal Acceptance Speech for The Polar Express
Chris Van Allsburg, 1986
The first book I remember reading is probably the same book
many people my age recall as their first. It was profusely
illustrated and recounted the adventures of conflicts of its
three protagonists, Dick, Jane, and Spot. Actually, the lives
of this trio were not all that interesting. A young reader's
reward for struggling through those syllables at the bottom
of the page was to discover that Spot got a bath. Not exactly
an exciting revelation. Especially since you'd already
seen Spot getting his bath in the picture at the top of the
page.
The Dick, Jane, and Spot primers have gone to that book shelf
in the sky. I have, in some ways, a tender feeling toward
them, so I think it's for the best. Their modern incarnation
would be too painful to look at. Dick and Jane would have
their names formed into an Afghan hound, and the syllables
at the bottom of the page would reveal that the children were
watching MTV.
In third grade my class paid its first visit to the school
library as prospective book borrowers. It was on this occasion
that we learned about the fascinating Dewey decimal system.
None of us really understood this principle of cataloging
books, but we were inclined to favor it. Any system named
Dewey was all right with us. We looked forward to hearing
about the Huey and Louie decimal systems too.
The book I checked out on my first visit was the biography
of Babe Ruth. I started reading it at school and continued
reading it at home. I read till dinner and opened the book
again after dessert, finally taking it to bed with me. The
story of Babe Ruth was an interesting one, but I don't think
it was as compelling as that constant reading suggests. There
was something else happening. I just simply did not know when
to stop or why. Having grown up with television, I was accustomed
to watching something until it was finished. I assumed that
as long as the book was there I should read it to the end.
The idea of setting the book aside uncompleted just didn't
occur to me.
This somewhat obsessive approach to reading manifested itself
again during the summer after third grade. My neighbor had
a collection of every Walt Disney comic book ever published.
I took my little wagon to his house and hauled every issue
back to my bedroom. For a solid week I did nothing but read
about Pluto, Mickey, Donald, and Daisy. It was spooky. By
the sixth day they'd become quite real to me and were turning
up in my dreams. After I returned the comics, I felt very
lonely, as if a group of lively houseguest had left suddenly.
As years have passed, my taste in literature has changed.
I do, however, still have obsessive reading habits. I pore
over every word on the cereal box at breakfast, often more
than once. You can ask me anything about Shredded Wheat. I
also spend more time in the bathroom than necessary, determined
to keep up with my New Yorker subscription.
It seems strange now, considering my susceptibility to the
power of the printed word, that I'd been reading for more
than twenty years before I thought about writing. I had, by
that time, staked out visual art as my form of self-expression.
But my visual art was and is very narrative. I feel fortunate
that I've become involved with books as another opportunity
for artistic expression.
Over the years that have passed since my first book was published,
a question I've been asked often is, "where do your ideas
come from?" I've given a variety of answers to this question,
such as: "I steal them from the neighborhood kids,"
"I send away for them by mail order," and "They
are beamed to me from outer space."
It's not really my intention to be a rude or smart-alecky.
The fact is, I don't know where my ideas come from. Each story
I've written starts out as a vague idea that seems to be going
nowhere, then suddenly materializes as a completed concept.
It almost seems like a discovery, as if the story was always
there. The few elements I start out with are actually clues.
If I figure out what they mean, I can discover the story that's
waiting.
When I began thinking about what became The Polar Express,
I had a single image in mind: a young boy sees a train standing
still in front of his house one night. The boy and I took
different trips on that train, but we did not, in a figurative
sense, go anywhere. Then I headed north, and I got the feeling
that this time I'd picked the right direction, because the
train kept rolling all the way to the North Pole. At that
point the story seemed literally to present itself. Who lives
at the North Pole? Santa. When would the perfect time for
a visit be? Christmas Eve. What happens on Christmas Eve at
the North Pole? Undoubtedly a ceremony of some kind, a ceremony
requiring a child, delivered by a train that would have to
be named the Polar Express.
These stray elements are, of course, merely events. A good
story uses the description of events to reveal some kind of
moral or psychological premise. I am not aware, as I develop
a story, what the premise is. When I started The Polar
Express, I thought I was writing about a train trip,
but the story was actually about faith and the desire to believe
in something. It's an intriguing process. I know if I'd set
out with the goal of writing about that, I'd still be holding
a pencil over a blank sheet of paper.
Fortunately, or perhaps I should say necessarily, that premise
is consistent with my own feelings, especially when it comes
to accepting fantastic propositions like Santa Claus. Santa
is our culture's only mythic figure truly believed in by a
large percentage of the population. It's a fact that most
of the true believers are under eight years old, and that's
a pity. The rationality we all embrace as adults makes believing
in the fantastic difficult, if not impossible. Lucky are the
children who know there is a jolly fat man in a red suit who
pilots a flying sleigh. We should envy them. And we should
envy the people who are so certain Martians will land in their
back yard that they keep a loaded Polaroid camera by the back
door. The inclination to believe in the fantastic may strike
some as a failure in logic, or gullibility, but it's really
a gift. A world that might have Bigfoot and the Lock Ness
monster is clearly superior to one that definitely does not.
I don't mean to give the impression that my own sense of what
is possible is not shaped by rational, analytical thought.
As much as I'd like to meet the tooth fairy on an evening
walk, I don't really believe it can happen.
When I was seven or eight, on the night before Easter, my
mother accidentally dropped a basket of candy outside my bedroom
door. I understood what the sound was and what it meant. I
heard my mother, in a loud whisper, trying unsuccessfully
to keep the cats from batting jellybeans across the wooden
floor. It might have been the case that the Easter Bunny had
already been an iffy proposition for me. In any event this
was just the moment the maturing skeptic in me was waiting
for. I gained the truth, but I paid a heavy price for it.
The Easter Bunny died that night.
The application of logical or analytical thought may be the
enemy of belief in the fantastic, but it is not, for me, a
liability in its illustration. When I conceived of the North
Pole in The Polar Express, it was logic that insisted
it be a vast collection of factories. I don't see this as
a whim of mine or even as an act of imagination. How could
it look any other way given the volume of toys produced there
every year?
I do not find that illustrating a story has the same quality
of discovery as writing it. As I consider a story, I see it
quite clearly. Illustrating is simply a matter of drawing
something I've already experienced in my mind's eye. Because
I see the story unfold as if it were on film, the challenge
is deciding precisely which moment should be illustratedand
from which point of view.
There are disadvantages to seeing the images so clearly. The
actual execution can seem redundant. And the finished work
is always disappointing because my imagination exceeds the
limits of my skills.
A fantasy of mine is to be tempted by the devil with a miraculous
machine, a machine that could be hooked up to my brain and
instantly produce finished art from the images in my mind.
I'm sure it's the devil who'd have such a device, because
it would devour the artistic soul, or half of it anyway. Conceiving
of something is only part of the creative process. Giving
life to the conception is the other half. The struggle to
master a medium, whether it's words, notes, paint, or marble,
is the heroic part of making art. Still, if any of you run
into the devil and he's got this machine, give him my name.
I would, at least, like to get a demonstration.
An award does not change the quality of a book. I'm acutely
aware of the deficiencies in all of my work. I sometimes think
I'd like to do over everything I've ever done and get it right.
But I know that a few years later I'd want to do everything
over a third time. This award carries with it a kind of wisdom
for someone like me. It suggests that the success of art is
not dependent on its nearness to perfection, but its power
to communicate. Things may be right without being perfect.
Though this is the second Caldecott Medal I've received, believe
me, it is no less meaningful than the first. Being awarded
the Caldecott in an experience to which one cannot become
jaded. I am certain of this and stand ready to endure any
effort to prove otherwise.
I would like to thank these people at Houghton Mifflin for
their support, encouragement and occasionally, commiseration;
my editor, Walter Lorraine; Peggy Hogan: Sue Sherman; and
Donna Baxter.
I would also like to take this opportunity to thank the people
here tonight who have committed themselves to getting children
and books together. I know that if it weren't for your efforts
my readers would not be only small in size, but in number,
too.
And finally I'd like to thank Mae Benne and the other members
of the Caldecott Committee for this great honor. I accept
it as both praise and encouragement.
Good night!
Source:
http://www.houghtonmifflinbooks.com/vanallsburg/caldecott.html
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