December 1, 2021: Volume LXXXIX, No 23

Page 54

AUTHOR SPOTLIGHT

Brian Selznick Slimane Lalami

Brian Selznick won the Caldecott Medal for his 2007 book, The Invention of Hugo Cabret, which was adapted into the Oscar-winning film Hugo, directed by Martin Scorsese. His most recent illustrated book for young readers is Kaleidoscope (Scholastic, Sept. 21), which Kirkus called “his most complex work to date.” Selznick answered some questions by email. What was the inspiration to create Kaleidoscope? Kaleidoscope was my way of grappling with all the things that were happening to the world at the beginning of the pandemic. I found myself thinking about time and grief and friendship and hope, and those feelings channeled themselves into these strange stories that I eventually formed into the book. The stories center around the importance of asking questions, not getting answers, and accepting the unknown.

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Who is the ideal reader for your book, and where would they be reading it? Whenever I make a book, I am conscious of the collaboration that happens between the story and the reader. In my other books, like The Invention of Hugo Cabret, Wonderstruck, and The Marvels, I always hope the reader enjoys figuring out elements of the plot and making their own connections while I provide a narrative that, in the end, answers all the questions raised for the main character in surprising and satisfying ways. With Kaleidoscope I feel like I am collaborating much more closely with the reader than I ever have before. The reader’s imagination is where the stories conclude, where the themes reveal themselves, and where the book is meant to live. My ideal reader is anyone interested in embarking on a journey with me from whatever place they feel safe opening a book. What do you hope readers take away from Kaleidoscope? Kaleidoscope actually began its life about six years ago as a completely different book, one with a much more conventional narrative structure. But after the shutdown began, I reread what I’d been writing and realized it did not feel honest to me to create a story that relied on the reader getting answers. So much was unknown in the world, and everything felt like it had been turned upside down. None of us knew what was going to happen (we still don’t!), so it felt like the only honest thing I could write was a book that celebrated the important questions and explored the terrors and mysteries of the unknown. I hope readers will find some comfort in that. What children’s book most dazzled you this year? I realized recently that all books being published now were, for the most part, created during the pandemic by people who probably were not able to see each other in real life. These books are the products of what it means to work together while being forced physically to stay apart. At the moment, every book that arrives on a store shelf feels to me a little like a mir-

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Articles inside

INTERVIEW: ANN PATCHETT

2hr
pages 178-214

EDITOR’S NOTE

16min
pages 172-177

ROMANCE

13min
pages 166-169

SCIENCE PICTURE BOOKS & FANTASY

8min
pages 164-165

MYSTERY

31min
pages 155-163

INTERVIEW: CRYSTAL M. FLEMING

1hr
pages 98-121

EDITOR’S NOTE

19min
pages 124-131

INTERVIEW: ZACK SMEDLEY

13min
pages 94-97

INTERVIEW: NEEL PATEL

54min
pages 132-154

INTERVIEW: TAHEREH MAFI

12min
pages 90-93

INTERVIEW: DE NICHOLS

1hr
pages 62-81

EDITOR’S NOTE

19min
pages 84-89

INTERVIEW: COREY R. TABOR

15min
pages 12-15

EDITOR’S NOTE

38min
pages 44-53

INTERVIEW: ADRIANNA CUEVAS

12min
pages 58-61

INTERVIEW: TRACY SUBISAK

1hr
pages 20-42

INTERVIEW: BRIAN SELZNICK

13min
pages 54-57

EDITOR’S NOTE

15min
pages 8-11

INTERVIEW: JULIE FLETT

14min
pages 16-19

COVERAGE OF THE 2021 KIRKUS PRIZE CEREMONY

3min
pages 4-5
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