Thursday, February 09, 2006

Have you ever noticed that when you're thinking about something a lot, you see many things related to it all around you? It happens to me all the time. I'll be thinking about going to Florida and I suddenly start spotting lots and lots of Florida license plates on I-95 while I'm driving to work. ... (I bet you have tons of examples from your own life to share. Click on the "comment" link below to help me make a list.)

So, elephants have been on my mind for the past couple of days. The next issue of Writing has a fun image of an elephant on a red bicycle on its cover ... (Why? you ask. Well, you'll just have to wait and see!) ... and I've been reading and re-reading a pretty cool poem about a spotted pink homeless elephant (The poet shall remain nameless until April, when you crack open our magazine). 

Anyway, I was reading The New York Times today and bumped into a story about Babar, my favorite literary and seemingly immortal elephant.

Did you know?

  • This year marks the 75th anniversary of Babar's creation.
  • Babar is French.
  • "Babar might have passed away prematurely when his original author and illustrator, Jean de Brunhoff, Laurent's father, died of tuberculosis in 1937, six years after bringing the popular character to life. For almost a decade, Babar was in literary limbo. But at age 21 Laurent, who studied art at the same Paris school his father had, decided to resuscitate Babar ..." Why? Read the full article to find out.
  • Babar does yoga.
  • Author Laurent de Brunhoff is receiving a Lifetime Achievement Award from Child magazine tonight in NYC.
  • Babar's latest adventure has taken him on a World Tour. Check it out.

Those of you who are smirking at my excitement about Babar: Hey, it's never too late in life to look at a picture book. Next time you are at a bookstore, go to the children's department and pick up a Babar book ... or one of your childhood favorites. Notice how a picture can sometimes convey a 1,000 words ... and how a few words can tell so much of a story. Both are great writing lessons for all ages.

OK, so that was a tangent. Reading about Babar made me start thinking about monkeys, which reminds me of Curious George. Tune in tomorrow to find out what Babar the elephant and Curious George have in common.


# (2)#
Sandhya    Posted by
Sandhya
on 2/9/2006
8:10 PM
2/9/2006 8:42:54 PM UTC
I know exactly what you mean but unfortunately, I can't think of any examples right now. Hey, maybe that will be my example? Maybe over the next week I'll keep bumping into example after example of examples.... trust me, this makes sense in my head.
Bryon
2/10/2006 2:52:51 PM UTC
I don't know if this example fits in...but this happens to me when I fancy something like an electronic gadget with a cool but useless feature. I start seeing myself using it everywhere and for everything. By the time I have to make a decision that feature is the most useful feature in that gadget :)

P.S. What do Babar the elephant and Curious George have in common?? Hmmmm....they are both mammals??
Mona
Please Note: This blog is moderated, therefore your comment won't appear until the moderator accepts it.
Name
E-mail

Comment (HTML not allowed)  

Enter the code shown (prevents robots):



Read and Writing Blog Writing Magazine Read Magazine Books and Authors Get Published Writing Tips 1000 Words Musings and Ramblings Cool Links Fiction Student Writing Nonfiction Student Writing Poetry Student Writing Submit Your Student Writing