I have a cabinet full of children's books. Most of them are books from my own childhood.
Some were my own childhood books or those of family members that made their way into my collection.
Some are books I had to hunt down over the years because I had borrowed them from the city or the school library, but wanted them for myself. Obviously the internet helped immensely with that, even for the few whose titles I didn't remember correctly.
Just a few I got at fleamarkets although I had not read them before, they just seemed to fit the collection.
I had my first own library card at the age of about six if I remember that right. Well, it was in fact not a card back then, it was like a booklet in which the details were noted and then stamped with the due date. Fines were 10 Pfennig per day at the time. That was a lot of money, just the thought of being overdue made me feel bad.
My booklet had the number 5542, isn't it funny how you still remember details like that forever?
Something else I will never forget is the sound of the stamp, one of those big old roller date stamps. I wanted to use one so badly myself.
Every time I walk by the building that used to be the city library - just an ordinary house of flats now since the library moved to the "Adelberger Kornhaus" in 1981 - I have flashbacks of how it felt to open the entrance door, the circulation desk, and the rooms dedicated to different topics, which books stood where and how they looked on the shelf. I even dreamed about it every, now and then.
It really was a happy place for me, and although the new library was so much more beautiful, modern, with open levels instead of individual rooms, and definitely much more practical for the staff (something I only learned to appreciate when I became a librarian myself), I never got the same feeling from it and visited it less and less.
Sometimes I grab one of my children's books for a quick read, a quick escape from reality, a quick memory.
For the coming week's film post I looked for my copy of 1,001 Nights. It was actually not my personal copy, it belonged to the family like our old edition of Grimms'. It had beautiful illustrations one of which I wanted to use for the post because I had always loved it so much. It was a picture of four colorful fish along the side of the text, I remember it so vividly.
However, the book is not in my collection. I remember it was missing at last part of its cover, so maybe it was finally thrown away, and you can imagine how hard it would be to find that exact edition under the many there are.
Looking for it, I got lost in memories as it can happen when you are going through your books, and this time specifically in memories of other illustrations from my favorite books.
There was the "old Parre", the wise cavewoman from "Rulaman", Detective Teffan Tiegelmann (his German name) who couldn't pronounce the s right, a picture that shows that kids can be rather bloodthirsty - the T. Rex bringing down the Triceratops - Michael from "Mary Poppins" on the Cat Star (not colored in by me, this was an Internet find), Half-and-Half (I guess that was his name in English) the Shetland pony foal (not a horse girl, but these drawings are too cute for words), Kästner's Little Man and Little Miss, Sir Oblong Fitz Oblong painting Easter eggs with his friends, The Witch Family, and Andersen's Thumbelina.
And these are just a few examples I pulled out. I could easily have kept going, with authors from Germany, the UK, the USA, Denmark and elsewhere.
If you are anything like me, you may remember the illustrations from your childhood and stubbornly refuse new editions with new, maybe more modern ones because these characters are so familiar to you that it's not possible for them to get new faces just like that (here I have for example a video about a very modern edition of Alice in Wonderland in mind which didn't work for me at all, and from the comments I wasn't the only one).
On the other hand, though, I know of course - and it also makes sense to me - that illustrations for classics evolve and that they can add an interpretation of their own to fairy tales, novels or short stories.
It might be interesting to have a collection of children's books in which there are several editions of the same books to see what different illustrators made of them.
It would even be interesting to see if one artist would change his or her own illustrations for the same book over the years.
My little collection, however, is not for research, it represents a part of my personal childhood, and looking at these images never fails to bring back moments of it which make me smile - yes, even the poor Triceratops.
Do you have favorite book illustrations?
If you are interested in the history of illustration in children's books, here are a few sources. I have to admit that so far I have only browsed through them myself.
- Cynthia Burlingham: Picturing Childhood: The Evolution of the Illustrated Children's Book (1997)
- Corryn Kosik: Children's Book Illustrators in the Golden Age of Illustration, posted June 26, 2018 on Illustration History
- Kelsi Colman: History, Methods, and Psychology of Illustrations in Children's Literature (2023). Honors Theses 863, Scholarly Commons @ Ouachita
I didn’t have a library card or booklet. I only used the school library but I can picture it in my mind in great detail. If it were still the same today, I’d know exactly where to go for my favorite books. I don’t remember many illustrations from childhood, except maybe Dr. Seuss which I also read to my children. I was reading books I really shouldn’t have been by the time I was in fourth grade. My upbringing didn’t really leave room for childhood escapades.
ReplyDeleteIt is funny how we remember those things so vividly, even the exact spot for certain books.
DeleteI helped out at the school library for the lower classes (5 to 8 or 9), but school libraries in Germany were not that big, so I was very happy about the local one.
Apart from that, I jumped between books officially for my own age and those for older ones because I had several siblings up to ten years older than me who gave me some of the stuff they read.
I don’t have any favorite illustrations. We moved around a lot and my books went by the way side. But I do share your love of libraries. I always have had such a feeling of anticipation, wondering what adventures might be had among all the pages. And yes, I do remember those old fashioned stamps.
ReplyDeleteThere are not that many books in my collection that actually belonged to me and they usually look very, very worn down because we read them so often.
DeleteI really started looking for them when we started going to fleamarkets in 1990, but without much success. We started going online in 1999 and even then it took years to find some of them.
I share your love of libraries. The old library in my hometown was a building of some kind on a rich man’s land. Now, this wasn’t a lot of land, but it was right at the edge of the downtown area. The library had beautifully curved staircases that went upstairs to the adult section or down to the children’s room. There was a curved metal staircase in the back room for the librarian and assistants to use. Unfortunately, the town decided we needed a bigger library (we did) and auctioned off the old one. The historical society tried to buy it, but some unknown person did. I forgot to mention the main house was/is a funeral home. And, you’ve probably guessed…the unknown one bought the library for the funeral home. They promptly tore it down and paved it!
ReplyDeleteI have a collection of anthologies, each a different genre. It’s not the one I grew up with as that got lost along the way. But, it is the same collection. I have a few Christmas Golden Books, too. My collection is nothing like yours, though.
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That sounds beautiful, what a pity it was torn down. So typical, isn't it?
DeleteThe "Kornhaus" our library moved to is in a building from 1514 which was totally run down, though (after two major city fires we don't have that many really old buildings left). It really is much more beautiful than the old one, but I lost my hiding spaces.
I used to love borrowing anthologies, too! One of my dream as a child was to have the collection of international fairy tales. It was a whole shelf full and they had such beautiful spines and covers. I thought about trying to collect them now, but I'm too old for that now.
I had a library card very early on and was allowed the run of my village library; the librarian let me at the "teen" shelf before I was a teen (no such thing as YA then!) and then the adult books as she saw what I was taking out and could advise! I love Edward Ardizzone and Victor Ambrus' illustrations the best.
ReplyDeleteSame for me. They gave me the library card that early because I could read very early, today that wouldn't even be possible anymore. I guess they trusted my mother to keep an eye on me and the books, no idea if she had to sign something extra then, but I would think so.
DeleteI usually went there with one or more of my siblings, we didn't live far from the library, so they knew us all well.
My favourite children's illustrators are Edward Ardizzone, Victor Ambrus and Quentin Blake. I still have a lot of my childhood books, and a few replacements after a cat-related incident in my 20s ...
ReplyDeleteThank you for sharing!
DeleteI didn't know the names and found I'm familiar with Blake's illustrations, but not the other two.
There are not that many illustrators whose names were familiar to us which is really quite unfair as their work can enhance books so much! I should do better.
Cat-related ... uh-oh, that brings several scenarios to mind ...
Oops, how did I comment twice!! Ha! Yes, my first cat as an "adult" (I was a student but living with my boyfriend in his house so reasonably settled) sprayed on the lowest shelf of one of my bookshelves and I had to replace the books eventually!
DeleteNo worries, it has happened to me when I thought one didn't go through. Also they were different enough!
DeleteOh dear, the dreaded spraying. I had a diabetes cat, he sometimes had a hard time to make it to the box in time and depending on where he was and where a book was (for example on the bed) ... 'nuff said.
I remember growing up in France loving going to the library and how it looked different when they renovated it into a modern buildings with a lot of glass. I do not remember illustrations in regular books so much as really enjoying comic books like Asterix and Tintin.
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Yes, very modern libraries have a lot of glass here as well.
DeleteWe loved our comic books, too! Asterix was a staple here in Germany, still is. I'm not sure if Tintin is still as popular, it was never one of my favorites, but there were so many of course!
Garth Williams, hands down no question. He illustrated so many books from my youth, including my beloved Little House series and E.B. White books. I should try to find more that he illustrated! I am sure that I would love them.
ReplyDeleteI only know him from Charlotte's Web, but that is so cute! I will have to look up more.
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