Anecdotes arranged, verselike, in three acts honor the enigmatic Edward Gorey (1925-2000): iconic artist, writer, voracious collector, and lover of cats.
Act One examines Edward’s precocious childhood: He drew at 18 months, taught himself to read at 3 and a half, and devoured Dracula just before turning 6. Whether creating his own books or walking through downtown Chicago barefoot, toenails painted green, Edward expressed his originality early. Act Two examines Gorey’s decades in New York City, where he illustrated others’ books and wrote his own indelibly unique tales. He attended the New York City Ballet’s productions religiously. His books, embodying his “deliciously sinister sense of humor,” gained a growing following. His sets and costume design for the Broadway production of Dracula yielded fame and a Tony. Gorey eschewed celebrity, however, using his earnings from the show to buy a house on Cape Cod. Act Three explores his time there, writing, drawing, tending his six cats, taking part in community theater productions, and prodigiously collecting books and objects ranging from teddy bears to skeletons. Burgess relishes Gorey’s contentment and celebrates his singular artistic achievements. “He lived his life precisely as he wished,” and his books’ strange denizens live on, “just as Edward imagined.” In playful, expressionistic tableaux, Majewski depicts cityscapes, book-stuffed interiors, vibrant stages, selected Gorey characters, and the seaside ease of his final years.
An admiring, and admirable, tribute to an iconoclastic artist.
(author’s note, further reading, quotation citations, chronology, photograph, reproductions of Gorey’s work) (Picture-book biography. 5-9)