JACK PRELUTSKY
Jack Prelutsky was born on
September 8th 1940 in Brooklyn, New York. His father, Charles Prelutsky, was an
electrician, and his mother Dorothea, a homemaker.
He attended local public
schools in the Bronx but hated it. He also claims to have hated poetry when he
was younger. He says that in elementary
school he “had a teacher who, in retrospect, did not like poetry herself. The
syllabus told her she had to recite a poem once a week. She would pick a boring
poem from a boring book and read it in a boring voice, looking bored while she
was doing it."
Because of his musical
talents, he went to The High School of Music and Art and was happy there. He
graduated in 1958 and attended Hunter College to study philosophy and
psychology. He failed English three times before dropping out.
Prelutsky loved to draw
imaginary animals, and a friend encouraged him to send them to a publisher in
New York. He wrote the poems to go with the drawings at the last minute. He was
astonished that they wanted his work; not the drawings that took him six months
to complete, but the poems which took two hours. They appeared in his first
book, A Gopher in the Garden and Other Animal Poems, in 1967.
He has now written over 50 collections.
Prelutsky married his wife
Carolynn in 1979. They met when he was on a book tour in Albuquerque, she was a
children's librarian and showed him around town. He says it was love at first
sight. They currently live in Seattle where he has a studio with
a writing desk, computer, lots of books, and his collection of miniature frogs.
Five fun facts about Jack Prelutsky:
1. Before becoming a writer he was a busboy, a potter and a door-to- door salesman.
2. In the late 1960s, while singing in coffee houses he became a friend of Bob Dylan.
3. He asked his wife to marry him on the first day they met.
4. He collects miniature frogs.
5. He was the first Children's Poet Laureate.
Email: sharontegenza@gmail.com
2 comments:
Great to be reminded of Jack Prelutsky. His poetry does have a joyous spark about it.
I've loved his work for many years. Such a spark of playfulness about it.
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