Talk to DP Forum

Andrea Bush

Post #1808 – 20050208

February 8, 2005

Please! Please! Please! Can someone who has leverage and clout convince the publishers, any publishers, to reprint The Wuggie Norple Story???!!!

My 20 year old son alerted me to the fact that it is out of print and battered old copies are selling through the used book sites for close to $200. Our old copy, which was misplaced for a long time, has the cover ripped off and is in deplorable shape. I read this book to my kids 15 years ago and they remember it as the best book EVER, especially after we got a kitten that grew in a similar way to Wuggie Norple.

It’s insane that this is out of print!!! Can’t someone do something???!!!

a loyal fan thanks you

Andrea Bush

Daniel replies:

I'd say that no one can do anything, except that once in a while I am able to get something reprinted. Publishing houses are business enterprises, and you know what those are like.



Julia

Post #1807 – 20050109

January 9, 2005

(This one is actually a message for Jill Pinkwater, so I hope I’m sending it to the right place…)

Dear Jill Pinkwater,

My friends and I recently started a pop fiction review website and books by both Pinkwaters are featured. I, however, have a special place in my heart and on my bookshelf for your gloriously bizarre book “Buffalo Brenda”. Alas, I have been forced to resort to paying enormous sums of money online for battered library copies of this book to give to various young readers of my acquaintance. Are there any plans for “Buffalo Brenda” to be reprinted? Thank you for your time!

Daniel replies:

Dear Julia,

This, indeed, is the right place. Thank you for the kind words about Buffalo Brenda. There has been periodic talk about the book being re-published but right now there is not a peep from publishers. I may go the self-publishing route with it and some of my other out of print novels but right now I'm busy illustrating a couple of new bear books by Daniel and trying to make two deadlines. I've actually thought of using the ""the cat threw up hairballs on my homework"" excuse -- perfectly plausible around our house.

I'm sorry you've had to fork over so much money for battered books. Brenda made it to paperback at one time (Aladdin Books). I wonder if they still have copies lying around.

Best wishes and I'll check out your review site as soon as I clean up the cat mess.

Jill Pinkwater



Ernst Boldt

Post #1806 – 20050106

January 6, 2005

I hope you are right about the future of the world, but I worry sometimes. If you’re still writing, we don’t see much of it north of the US border. And I’m still haunted by the words of the Mad Mallard, in the abhorr’d Quackronomicon:

Phn’glui mglw’nafh Unka-Scrooge Duckburg w’gah-nal fh’tahn.

(“In his money bin at Duckburg, dead Uncle Scrooge waits dreaming.”

Regards from us and the dog, who appears to be a Bernese Mountain Dog constructed on a half scale, although we have no idea of where she really comes from.

Daniel replies:

In all likelihood, the dog comes from New Jersey, or possibly Connecticut. What sort of accent does she speak with?



The Miller Family

Post #1805 – 20050104

January 4, 2005

Just a bit of fan mail; I’m guessing that no one can get enough of it.

There is much love in our house for your books. The world is an imperfect place as long as Wempires remains out of print. There is magic in hearing my four year old reply “dat’s us” if I say “wempires.”

My personal faves are Author’s Day, The Big Orange Splot, and Wempires. And we loved listening to the Looking for Bobowicz CDs we got as holiday gifts last month.

Thanks again.

The Miller Family.

Daniel replies:

Thanks! And, some titles are starting to come back! There will be a Blue Moose Trilogy next year from Random House, The Education of Robert Nifkin is just about out from Houghton Mifflin, and there are some more contemplated. Wempires may be back--especially if I get a few more letters and emails like yours.



Ellie Anglin

Post #1804 – 20041229

December 29, 2004

Dearest Mr. Pinkwater,

I am a twenty-two year old fledgeling writer, and you have greatly entertained and inspired me throughout my entire carreer as a literate being. I have recently written a short story from the point of view of Osgood Sigerson, The World’s Greatest Detective, who is naturally one of my most beloved characters. I have stolen his character and some of his traits from you but the content is my own. I was thinking of submitting it to be published in my local free paper, Xen Magazine, but I’m not sure if this is legal or not. With Mr. Sigerson so closely watching over me, the last thing I was to do is align myself with the criminal element. Would you grant me permission to use your character, or should I change my story in order to avoid a life-time sentence in the big house? Thank-you very much.

You humble servant,

Ellie Anglin.

Daniel replies:

I stole Sigerson myself. It is an alias Sherlock Holmes used. And until just before publication, Sir Arthur Conan-Doyle called his characters Sherrinford Holmes and Dr. Ormond Sacker. So feel free to take whatever you like. You may not be the first person to steal it.



Stephanie Chan

Post #1803 – 20041228

December 28, 2004

Mr. Pinkwater, you are my god.

Long before I knew who you were, I was reading your books. I believe I started in kindergarten with Tooth-Gnasher Superflash, than moving on to Mush, a Dog from Space, Attila the Pun, etc. And all that time when I was a wee young un, I never knew your name. I rediscovered you three years ago with Alan Mendelsohn, Robert Nifkin, Yobgorgle, Kukumlima, and the Snarkout Boys, Borgel, and the Slaves of Spiegel.

Speaking of the Slaves of Spiegel… I compete in speech competitions (aka forensics, but not CSI forensics… this is speaking forensics) and for my piece to deliver, I selected the first chapter of Slaves of Spiegel. There have been many debates among my friends and the judges on the pronounciation of “Spiegel.” Please help.

I tried to drop hints to my brother to get me The Muffin Fiend from Amazon, but it didn’t work. (watch the Muffin Films at www.muffinfilms.com and Making Fiends at www.making-fiends.com)

–The BrassPotato

Daniel replies:

Some say ""speegel,"" and some say ""shpeegel,"" and some say ""brasspotato,"" and some say ""brasspotahto,"" but I say the Muffin Films at www.muffinfilms.com are wonderful works of art, and everyone should click on the link and look at the films. Brava to whoever that is who made them, and thanks to you, whoever you are, for directing us to them. I'm going to go back and watch them all again now.



Ben Florsheim

Post #1802 – 20041224

December 24, 2004

Dear Mr. Pinkwater,

When I was in fifth grade, I wrote a story called The Wrath of the Demented Washcloth, much to the delight of my classmates- everyone loved this story, and I went on to make it a trilogy of Demented Washclote books. I am now in seventh grade, and I am planning to heavily revise the old story to make it the best it can be and possibly send the manuscript to a publisher. However, there is a problem. I wrote the story in fifth grade shortly after reading The Worms of Kukumlima. I loved the book so much, I stole an idea from it. In my story, the Demented Washcloth is the CEO of the World Famous Little Plastic Thingy Company. Thingy, not thing. Now that is an important part of the story. So I need you to give me permission to let me use this in the story. I would be very grateful if you gave me legal rights to this, as I REALLY want to get it published. Thank you very much for your time.

Ben Florsheim

Salt Lake City, UT

Age 13

Daniel replies:

Ben, good authors borrow, great authors steal. You have my permission, on condition that you send me the stories to read when they're finished. Always good to hear from a fellow great author.



Kevin Cadogan

Post #1801 – 20041218

December 18, 2004

Dear Daniel Pinkwater,

I`am the guy who asked you to come to my play in about 1998 but you were writing a moose book. I really like your book Looking For Bobwitz. I think the people in Hoboken should make a statue of Henreata.Your my favorite author.Please write back.

Sincerly,your biggest fan, Kevin Cadogan

Daniel replies:

How big a fan are you? To date my biggest fan is 6'8"" and 379 pounds. There is a sequel coming to Looking for Bobowicz, it is The Artsy Smartsy Club, and I think it is much better.



Stefan Jones

Post #1800 – 20041215

December 15, 2004

Dear Captain Pinkwater:

I recently purchased a stack* of Pinkwater books (Bobowicz, Mush, more Mush) for my nieces. Before they went into Christmas wrap, I of course read them.

I’m sorry to read in the Forum that there won’t be any more Mush books. Perhaps you and Jill could write a cookbook for kids, purporting to be recipes written by Mush**, with fictional interludes.

Best,

Stefan

* Three pancakes is a stack, so I figure three books is a stack.

** Based on my dog’s behavior, I’m not sure if I’d trust recipes created by an actual canine. Kira (home.comcast.net/~stefan_jones/kira_sitting_lo.jpg) has a taste for cat poop, feathers, and fluff plucked from toys she’s killed. One would hope that civilized, intelligent canines would eschew such offal, but there’s always the chance that they’d work it into their food culture, turning out dishes like caviar-fed Persian cat poop encased in a puff-pastry shell topped with really old cheese.

Daniel replies:

I choose to ignore this whole topic.



Kris H.

Post #1799 – 20041212

December 12, 2004

Dear Mr. Pinkwater,

Thank you for so promptly answering my question about Shiko Munakata! I knew that was the name I was looking for.

No more questions, but I had to tell you how your books have affected me, beyond the usual enjoyment and mind enrichment that all Pinkwater readers experience. First, they started me out on a life of crime. I remember taking refuge from the blistering sun in the library (it was a particularly uncomfortable day) and stumbling across “The Snarkout Boys and the Avocado of Death”. It was my first expierence with one of your books. After reading a few chapters, I realized three things. 1) I MUST finish this book or I will die. 2) If I didn’t get home immediately my mother would kill me. 3) I owed the library $1.60 in late fees, a princely sum for a financially challenged child. So I did what anybody would, I stole the book. Now, if you reference points 1 and 2 above, you can see it was nothing but self-defense. My very life was in grave danger! All these years later, I don’t know which to feel more guilty about. Stealing the book, or keeping countless other children from enjoying it in the future. I now have a shelf of Pinkwater books, and that library book remains among them. I may even send it to you for an autograph! Provided you promise not to turn me in to the authorities that is.

Second, for once I proved my mother wrong. My mother is a brilliant artist ( www.jandove.com ) who always (damnit) knows more than I do. And she NEVER approved of my reading choices. “Junk” and “Garbage” she would call my precious paperbacks. Books about lethal avocados were not immune from her disapproval. Every time I bought one of your book, she was positive she could see my IQ sinking before her eyes. She never told me drugs would kill brain cells, but she seemed to believe your books could, and were. About a decade later, she asked me if “that Daniel Pinkwater was the one who wrote all those horrible little books I use to read?” (Use to? She assumed because I was now an adult, I read Pinkwater no more?) It turns out she heard your story about the Art teacher shouting “You’re all dead!” on NPR, and thought you were BRILLIANT. I gave her Fishwistle and SHOULD have given her a pack of Depends with it. And Chicago Days / Hoboken nights damn near killed her! Anyway, thank you for being on NPR, not only did you convert her into a fan, you helped me prove I was RIGHT for once! My daughter is reading Lizard Music, I feel that I should encourage her Pinkwater reading by strongly disapproving. It worked for my Mom!

Keep up the good work, Alan Menderson, Borgel, The Snarkout Boys, Robert Nifkin and the rest have made this world a better place. Even if it did turn me into a criminal that made my Mom mad.

Thank You!

Kris H.

Daniel replies:

You have a lot of issues. Of course, I will not autograph a book I know to have been stolen from a library. Calculating accumulated late fees, inflation, and standard expiation rates of the recognized religions, you ought to buy several brand-new books for some library. While you're ordering, get a copy of The Artsy Smartsy Club, to be published in spring of '05, for your mother, and tell her you forgive her for having been such a snob. I forgive her too.



Joan Thompson

Post #1798 – 20041211

December 11, 2004

I’ve just discovered a beautiful and delightful children’s book written by a local Seattle author, Gayle Nordholm. The title is The Rainbow Tiger. I always enjoy your book reviews on npr’s weekend Edition Saturday and thought you may wish to consider this one.

Daniel replies:

Usually the publisher, and sometimes the author, sends the book, and every one is looked at. We only do 12 books a year, ideally, ( usually less, as people go on assignment and vacation, and some months I just am unable to find a suitable book). So the odds of any book getting featured are extremely poor. Plus, quality of the book is only one criterion--some books don't seem right for radio, or the program, or for Scott and me to read. All books not chosen are donated to inner city schools or shelters. And that is how it works.



Kris

Post #1797 – 20041205

December 5, 2004

Hello! I am trying to remember the name of the Japanese lithographer you talked about in one of your books. After skimming through hundreds of pages in frustration, I remembered that you have your own forum, and I can just ask you here! Thank you for your time!

Daniel replies:

You must mean the Japanese woodcut artist, Shiko Munakata. Very famous.



Janson Michael Steffan

Post #1796 – 20041205

December 5, 2004

Dear Daniel Manus Pinkwater, (I love full names)

Oh my most merciful God, thank you so very much for having brought Daniel Pinkwater into this earth and through so many very interesting adventures.

I first read “Alan Mendelson” when I was in 4th grade. It was a charming book, but I thought nothing of it. I continued onto Ray Bradbury and Isaac Asimov, as well as the “Lord of the Rings” and such. Now, 18 years later, I returned to my childhood library and found the book still sitting exactly in the place I had left it (in the sci-fi/fantasy section, out of order, with my old bookmark in the pages). Does that mean that no one has had the privelage of reading it in all that time? What a sin! I raced home to scour the internet for more of your works. I found the 4 and 5 novels, which I immediately ordered and quickly digested. My search continues for more…

Sometimes, I hope that my as-of-yet unborn son has a torturous life and turns out just like you, Mr. Pinkwater. I tell my soon-to-be wife that the boy will not be allowed to read anything but your books. I am slowly amassing a growing collection. It would be easier if 85% of the stuff was still in print. However, I’m pleased as punch to find it used for a very small portion of the original cover price.

To date, I’ve read over 28 of your books and I hope to read the rest. Now that I have a son on the way, I can easily justify buying the ones for ever younger readers.

One big comment — reading “The Afterlife Diet”, I noticed that it was most likely written for a predominantly adult audience. That was my first venture away from your “teen/young adult” line of literature. I recalled you mentioning that you only put cursing in a book when it was called for by the plot, characters, etc. It was a riot! I laughed myself silly. I read and read, laughing… becoming weary at where this bouncing book was going. By the time I reached the last page, I was almost ready to give up. However, when I read the very last line, I laughed for days. You are a brilliant genuis.

I’ve also read your “Fish Whistle” and “Chicago Days/Hobokan Nights”. I find bits and pieces of characters and situations from your novels strewn about in the stories. It’s hard to fathom that things once only believed to be fiction were actually portions of your life!

Probably my biggest joy in your books is the fact that characters pop up out of nowhere in other books. The Chicken Man (aka, well you know the thousand other names) appears left and right, other than just in “Lizard Music”. It just makes me happy to be reading and discover that you’ve brought a character from a completely unrelated book into the story, even if only for a brief moment and in an assinine way.

Through reading your many novels and essays, I really feel like I know you and have a firm understanding of your personality. I also share your love for canines. Samoyed lover, myself. And surprisingly enough, I’ve NEVER listened to you on NPR.

Your books find a place in me that was forgotten for a long time. My parents kept slapping me into growing up. Situations in life have “gently” convinced me to grow up. But when I read your books, I instantly identify with the main character. Usually, it is some outcast kid with a vivid imagination and, while not utterly unhappy, still has some creative outlet and lives a semi-normal life. That was me in a nutshell, the me I try to hide from. Your books allow me to enjoy and embrace that child. That downtrodden kid who got beat up so very many times all throughout school. The one with so many knives in his back, there isn’t room for another one. That kid who (yes) built models (plastic and plain, but not snap-tite). That boy who spent hours writing stories, painting pictures, and writing songs. I thank you for all that you’ve done for me. This little silly e-mail cannot express it fully.

Do I really have any questions for you? Hmm. I’m starting on “Java Jack” and I’m wondering how that dual authorship came about.

My best wishes for you, sir, in your continued life and writings. My compliments on your long-standing marriage. As an artist of many medias myself, I am extremely inspired by all of your work and respect every ounce of it. Never stop.

Peace,

Janson Michael Steffan

P.S. You may post my information if you’d like. Any friend of Daniel Pinkwater is a friend of mine. However, I will keep locking my doors and screening my calls.

P.P.S. I have an Aunt of 54 years old who is also a writer with a bit of that “Pinkwater” wit and sarcasm. She wrote for Cosmo in the ’80s and has since done work for Fox television, NPR, and various local publications. She is also hovering around the 300-pound zone. Any ideas on how I can hook her up with something? Can I send you some of her writing samples? Her professional resume?

P.P.P.S. I am a composer, performer, engineer, producer, and recording studio owner. If they EVER make a movie about Alan Mendelson, PLEASE allow me the privelage of presenting you with some audio material to use.

Daniel replies:

Finally! Someone who read The Afterlife Diet all the way to the end! You may be the only one. Java Jack isn't so much co-authored as super-edited by me. It's fun to think of people having fun with stuff I wrote. Keep reading. I will keep writing.



David Sitomer

Post #1795 – 20041205

December 5, 2004

SO, how do I get my writing on National Public Radio?

A piece and a project. [5 pages of text]

And now to Daniel Pinkwater.

Hey, and Happy Birthday Dan.

Daniel replies:

All we can tell you about with any authority is how to get your writing posted on this website. As to NPR, I suggest sending it to them. Thanks for the interesting post.



John Melngailis

Post #1794 – 20041204

December 4, 2004

Dear Mr. Pinkwater,

A while ago in an interview on NPR you quoted your father as saying “Sonny if you vanna lose veit, eat black bread….”. My mother who was born in Latvia in 1896 baked sour dough rye (black) bread in the US until she died at age 91. On a trip to Latvia last summer I brought back a suitcase full of rye bread from the Laci (pronounced Lachi) bakery.

Now I am having bread shipped by air from the bakery, located just outside of Riga, every 4 weeks. The bread is so hardy and dense that it is delicious even 10 days after baking, and it survives freezing very well. I would like to arrange to have a loaf shipped to you, because I so liked your interview.

Please send me your address.

Warmest regards,

John

Daniel replies:

How can I refuse a generous offer like that? Thank you. Will I have to go to Latvia with an empty suitcase, once I've tasted it?

Of course, my father admonished not to eat white bread--but also to eat fresh vegetables, chicken and fish. I don't want anyone to go on the all-black-bread diet, and then blame me for what happens.



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