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September 7th, 2010
From: Killeen Anderson

Dear Mr. Pinkwater,

May I ask you to recommend a book for a four yr. old boy who is currently fond of pirates, police & firefighters?

Thank you in advance,

Killeen Anderson

Daniel replies:

You would do better to ask a librarian or bookseller.



September 6th, 2010
From: Janet

Regarding recordings of Yggyssey and other books, well, we do buy the books, but they're kind of hard to read when you are riding your bike or building things with Lego . . . we will just hope that audio recordings do make it on to your list at some point!

Janet

Daniel replies:

All I can suggest at this time is that you make recordings for your personal use of certain books of mine from the Pinkwater Podcast archives on this very website, and listen to them while biking and legoing. In time, the books you particularly want to hear may be added to this archive--meanwhile there are the others, which you may enjoy.



September 3rd, 2010
From: Janet

After listening to the Neddiad recording at least four times in one week, my son is anxiously awaiting your recording of The Yggyssey. Is one planned in the predictable future?

Daniel replies:

Sorry, no plans at present for recordings of The Yggyssey or Adventures of a Cat-Whiskered Girl. This could possibly change. Try reading the books?



September 1st, 2010
From: Judy Bowser

Dear Mr. Pinkwater,

I am reading Fat Men From Space to my Sixth grade class. It is one of our beginning riruals to introduce students to the joy of reading. We love your book and look forward to reading many more. Thank you for being such a good and imaginative writer.

Warmest regards,

Judy Bowser

Sixth grade teacher

Daniel replies:

Thank you for being such an inventive and tasteful teacher. Did you know there is a sequel (of a sort) to Fat Men from Space? Slaves of Spiegel, (which is the third of the Magic Moscow trilogy, The Magic Moscow, and Attila the Pun being the first two), has the Spiegellian space pirates make a return. All are of similar length and mindlessness.



August 30th, 2010
From: Steve Hurd

About 30 years ago I read The Snarkout Boys and everything changed. I never knew a book could be so powerful. Then I got Lizard Music and any others I could get. Then I just started reading everything by everyone. Daniel Pinkwater led me to Ray Bradbury and Kurt Vonnegut and they remain my holy trinity who shape and inspire me. I'm now 41 and halfway through reading The Neddiad and it is like I'm a kid again. I have a 10 year old niece that so far has said she doesn't like reading. I hope my Christmas gift this year of a big box of Pinkwater will change that. Thank you Mr. Pinkwater for everything.

Daniel replies:

And this is more or less the reason I wake up smiling every morning.



August 23rd, 2010
From: Virginia Jones

I fell in love with this story teller when he shared the tale of Sneaky Nose. And now I see an adorable pup in the family portrait. I'm so looking forward to purchasing Yetta for my friend's 60th birthday. He was raised in Brooklyn, a nice Jewish boy, and his wife is from the lower(?) east side, a nice Puerto Rican girl. Please don't spill the beans if you know Bobby and Sandy.

Daniel replies:

Schtoom's the word!



August 16th, 2010
From: Karen Shore

I will, I promise, never have Yetta for Shabbat dinner.

My cousin Anne is married to David Pinkwasser. He was a rabbi and believe it or not is now an airline steward for Southwest Airlines. Maybe there is a book there some where.

My cousin think you and her husband may be related.

Any thoughts?

Daniel replies:

I hope, for his sake, that Rabbi/steward Pinkwasser is not related to me. If he is, it would mean he is related to the Pinkwaters I am related to.



August 15th, 2010
From: Emily

Thank you so much for Yetta The Beautiful Chicken- I grew up hearing stories, embellished with Yiddish words and phrases, told by my grandmother , and so loved having that brought to life, with colorful words and pictures, in a marvelous book.

Daniel replies:

I could not have done it without Jill to illustrate, Webmaster Ed to help with Yiddish, and nice readers to read enjoy it.



August 14th, 2010
From: Robert Hurwitz

Just heard "Beautiful Yetta" on NPR, and I wanted to let you know that as a kid growing up in Brooklyn (Avenue I at Albany Avenue), I regularly took a southerly 10-minute walk with my father, arriving at, guess what...a CHICKEN FARM...right in the middle of Flatbush! It was crowded in by high-rise apartments, but it was an honest-to-goodness chicken farm. (By the time I turned 12 it had been replaced by yet another high-rise, so that's, I guess, why Yetta didn't find it.)

Daniel replies:

You never know. She might find it in a subsequent book.



August 14th, 2010
From: Dave

Mr. Pinkwater -

Do you recall a place of business in Hoboken called "Nelson's Marine Bar"? I ask because upon a recent re-read of Edward Abbey's "Desert Solitaire", I noticed that he wrote the introduction to the book in that place in 1967.

Just curious about this intersection in space and time of two literary behemoths.

Daniel replies:

I remember the name, but I'm unable to remember which bar it was. See, Prohibition was ignored in Hoboken, and as a result River Street was pretty much nothing but bars from one end to the other, patronized by people who came over from New York. There were additional bars on adjacent streets, also on Hudson Street and Hudson Place, and also some on Washington Street, and on street corners scattered throughout the mile-square city. After repeal, Hoboken still held an edge for drunks, as closing time in Manhattan was something like 2:00 AM, and in Hoboken nominally 4:00 AM, so the ferries would be crowded with the still-thirsty. There weren't quite as many bars when I lived there, but still a disproportionate number. If Abbey favored the places that still offered the free lunch, we might have been in the same one at the same time. I liked the place where Charles Dickens, Stephen Foster, and Ernest Hemingway were known to frequent, but not all at once. (Now you've got me remembering: Glass of beer 15 cents, clam broth, pickles, onions, bread, beans, scrag ends of corned beef and pastrami--gratis. For the affluent, a bowl of steamer clams was, I think, 75 cents, buck and a quarter for a pot of them. Throw the shells on the sawdust floor. Yum.)



August 14th, 2010
From: Michael Everding

I always enjoy hearing you read children's stories with Scott Simon on NPR, but only today I discovered your Yiddishkeit, re: Beautiful Yetta.

As I listened today though, I wished you had emphasized a little more the dialect (especially prosodic or musical) aspect of the great dialogue in Beautiful Yetta. Remember The Goldbergs TV show from the 1950's? “So, how's th' femly?" a line my dad said I heard on that show, was a dialect question I used in my early childhood to entertain my half-Jewish family. I know dialect issues can be sensitive, but if carefully done can be great fun as well as educational.

For years I looked forward to teaching the High Point (Hampton-Brown/National Geo.) unit that used Fat Men from Space, to launch intermediate-level high school ESL students to write their own ludicrous fantasy stories, and yet build real academic skills thereby. ESL-teaching led me to occasionally use dialects to improve students’ listening and speech.

My web project, www.digitalcaptions.org, uses dialect features to develop students' speech fluency. I recently retired and have time now to do more with what was mostly a spare-time avocation (though I did patent the associated software for it along the way). You can see how I used John Kennedy's inaugural to teach his dialect to students. It's more academic than you might want, but gives the idea that the music of speech can be expressed in print. Would you like to emphasize that more in any of your work?

Daniel replies:

Did you entertain your half-Jewish family or only the Jewish half? Thanks for the advice--just what I needed.



August 3rd, 2010
From: benjamin sTone

Señor Pinkwater,

I'm looking into getting a Lizard Music tattoo, perhaps a lizard holding a rock instrument/microphone with a cheesy tattoo-scroll under him reading "Reynold." That's not necessarily the final design, just an idea.

The issue: what image should I use? Have you ever done illustrations of the lizards (my brain isn't always the most not dumb remember thing) from the book? Has somebody else? Should I have an artist friend read the book and then draw me a Reynold?

Hmm. Perhaps I shall have a contest.

I need my lizard, sir.

Need.

Oh, and by the way, your books helped inspire me to do the writing and drawing that I do now.

Thanks for that.

Sincerely,

benjamin sTone

Daniel replies:

I am not advising anyone about any tattoo! Here is my thinking--you may love my book Lizard Music, you may love lizards, you may love music, you may think a tattoo like that would be the coolest thing in the world...now. But tastes change. At one time (when I was about 5) I loved extra-well-done hamburgers on wonder bread with mustard. Now I have found better things to love. Your tastes may change and develop too. And even if you love my book, and lizards and music, and even tattoos all your life, will you love the work the tattoo artist does, or is it possible you will see much better drawing that you like more? That stinking tattoo of a lizard who looks like a duck, holding a crummy-looking guitar will be on you for the rest of your natural life, (only the color will fade, and the lines will get fuzzy, and your skin will get wrinkly).



July 20th, 2010
From: Emily Lloyd

Hello, wonderful Mr. DP! I'm a librarian and write a webcomic set in a public library called 'Shelf Check"--today's strip mentions you, so I thought I'd post the link here in case you'd like to see it:

http://shelfcheck.blogspot.com/2010/07/shelf-check-422.html.

Thanks for all you do!

Daniel replies:

I checked Shelf Check. I am pleased you mentioned me, but I think you should have had me appear as a character in the strip. I am easy to draw, using a compass, or the bottom of a cup or glass to get my general shape--then you put a smaller circle for the head, and two even smaller circles for the eyeglasses--and there you have me!



July 6th, 2010
From: Ben Shefftz

Hello, Daniel!

Years ago, when I was a young and odd and impressionable child reading every book of yours that I could find in the Broome County Public Library system, I learned from you that every boy should have a chicken, and that following odd and crooked paths and people is the surest way to a good adventure.

So I would like you to meet Tillie, our most favorite – and crooked – chicken.

Tillie was born with a crooked neck somehow, and we took her home as one small, crooked young chick in our very first flock of four chickens. We brought her back to the feed store the next day and asked if they could fix her. They offered us another chicken from the same brood as an exchange but we didn't like the "fix" they had in mind for little Tillie, so we took both her and her sister home. If there was a chicken chiropractor or even a credentialed mad professor in the phone book we would have given that a try, but instead my very patient and loving wife hand-fed our weak and tired Tillie scrambled eggs, and vitamins, and electrolytes. After a few weeks she was no longer weak and tired, just crooked, but she owed us lots of scrambled eggs. Several months after that, she began paying us back with beautiful and delicious blue-green eggs that she lays to this day. She scratches and pecks and plays, and has chicken adventures, and hops "hup-hup-hup" up and down our chicken ramp like a happy chicken should. It's impossible for us to look at her without smiling no matter what kind of day we're having.

It's hard to say what may or may not have happened had something else not happened, what with butterflies flapping their wings all the time, but it has occurred to me recently, as I've been revisiting and purchasing many of your beloved books, that your writing has influenced me in ways that made it more possible for me to love a little crooked chicken. For that I thank you, and Tillie thanks you too.

If you ever come to California we would be honored to make you an omelette.

p.s. - I recently read The Hoboken Chicken Emergency to my wife and she thought it was just about the greatest thing ever. I plan to read her all of your chicken-themed books. Please keep writing stories about chickens!!

Daniel replies:

Tillie is a lovely chicken! I had an aunt with a similar physique. I hope you're aware of our most recent chicken-themed book, Beautiful Yetta, the Yiddish Chicken. You may wish to read it to Tillie.



July 4th, 2010
From: Ross Alden

Dear Sir. Why are the pockets of my pants sewn shut? Best.

Daniel replies:

To discourage the slovenly habit of standing with your hands in them. A gentleman does not put his hands, or anything, in his trouser pockets. The pockets are there for some unknown reason shrouded in antiquity. You may carry your handkerchief, wallet, and other items in a pocket of your jacket or waistcoat. Or have your servant carry them.



June 30th, 2010
From: Pat Zietlow Miller

I have a blog where kids review books. Today, Dharma, who's 5, reviews BEAUTIFUL YETTA. If you'd like to see her review, it's at: http://www.patzietlowmiller.com

Thanks!

Pat Zietlow Miller

Daniel replies:

Best review ever!



June 27th, 2010
From: Bob Silverstein

Have you ever seen a kid's version of the I L Peretz short story "Bontsha Zwieg" or "Bontsha the Silent"?

Daniel replies:

No, nor the adult version. I am happy to answer literary questions like this.



June 17th, 2010
From: Hally

Dear Mister Pinkwater,

I read "Lizard Music" when I was a little seven year-old Weirdo (26 years ago) and I have adored your work ever since. Not only did you have odd characters and fun situations; you captured the vocabulary of my childhood inner self in a way no other author ever did. Your young characters were strange but not stupid, whimsical but not baseless. Their patterns of speech never seemed unreal or worse- condescending.

"Lizard Music" became my lifelong friend and it showed me that other Weirdos besides myself, my family and Dr Demento were out there and thriving. I will always be indebted to you for filling such a deep void in my life and for providing me with countless days and nights of joy and kinship through your books and radio appearances.

Thank you.

Sincerely,

Hally

Daniel replies:

Well, that is about as handsome a compliment as a book can receive. Except for this one: The magnificent New York Review of Books children's collection, which only reprints books of genuine quality, has selected the very same Lizard Music for publication next year! So you can give copies to others. Meanwhile, maybe you'd like to read The Neddiad and/or Adventures of a Cat-Whiskered Girl and let me know if you think I am still on the same track 40 years later.



June 24th, 2010
From: Jeff Day

Daniel--

A link, forwarded by my daughter, proving that The Big Orange Splot is a true story. My three kids grew up on Orange Splot and Lizard Music. All three turned out better than most. Far better. Each got a personal copy of Orange Splot this past Christmas.

http://www.ajc.com/news/atlanta/owner-likes-orange-house-553469.html

Jeff

Daniel replies:

It is a widely held understanding that readers of mine turn out better than most. Thanks for confirming this.



May 24th, 2010
From: Riley

Hi, its Riley i had a question well when i grow up i want to be an auther and i was wondering if it was fun and if it was easy.So thats about it thank you. - Riley

Daniel replies:

It is fun, and it is easy--for me. If it is fun and easy for you, then you might want to be a writer. There are writers for whom it is not fun and not easy, and they do it anyway--I don't understand why.



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