Ratings1
Average rating4
A delightfully crafted picture book biography explores the fascinating world of a solitary artist who spent weeks at a time on his personal paradise, sleeping under his boat, and sketching and painting the natural surroundings and the animals that became his friends.
Featured Series
5 released booksCandlewick Biographies is a 5-book series first released in 2001 with contributions by M.T. Anderson, Kevin Hawkes, and Kathryn Lasky.
Reviews with the most likes.
The first page of the book:
“There once was a man whose love of nature was as wide as the world.
There once was an artist who needed to paint as much as he needed to breathe.
There once was an islander who lived in a cottage at the edge of Mississippi, where the sea meets the earth and sky.
His name was Walter Anderson.
He may be the most famous American artist you've never heard of.”
This book is two books; it's a close-up of Anderson's daily trip to Horn Island, adventuring and painting, and it's a complete biography of Anderson's life. Together, they make for an excellent book.
Anderson has been called the American Van Gogh. He painted extensively and kept voluminous journals. He, like Van Gogh, used brilliant color, and he, like Van Gogh, suffered from mental illness.
The illustrations in this book are beautifully painted and the story of Anderson's life is told with love and respect and admiration.
The author's note is a biography of Anderson's life and an explanation of how she came to write the book. She came to live in Anderson's town and her husband worked as director of the Walter Anderson Museum of Art there.
She includes a bibliography at the back of the book as well.