H. A. Rey (1898–1977)
Author of Curious George
About the Author
Hans Augusto Rey was born on September 16, 1898 in Hamburg, Germany. He escaped to Paris with his wife after the Nazi's invaded. While in Paris, Hans's animal drawings came to the attention of French publisher, who commissioned him to write a children's book. The result, Rafi and the Nine Monkeys, show more is little remembered today, but one of its characters, an adorably impish monkey named Curious George, was such a success that the couple considered writing a book just about him. Their work was interrupted with the outbreak of World War II. As Jews, the Reys decided to flee Paris before the Nazis seized the city. Hans built two bicycles, and they fled Paris just a few hours before it fell. Among the meager possessions they brought with them was the illustrated manuscript of Curious George. The books were published by Houghton Mifflin in 1941. Curious George was an instant success, and the Reys were commissioned to write more adventures of the mischievous monkey and his friend, the Man in the Yellow Hat. They wrote seven stories in all. Their title Happy Halloween made The New York Times Best Seller List in 2013. At first, Margret's name was left off the cover because there was a glut of women already writing children's fiction. In later editions, this was corrected, and Margret now receives full credit for her role in developing the stories. H. A. Rey died in 1977 and in 1989 Margaret Rey established the Curious George Foundation to help creative children and prevent cruelty to animals. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
Disambiguation Notice:
Despite being married, H.A. Rey and Margret Rey are two different people. Please do not combine their separate author pages. Also, do not combine either Margret or H.A. with pages that have both their names.
Series
Works by H. A. Rey
Curious George and Friends: Favorite Stories by Margret and H.A. Rey (8-in-1) (2003) — Author — 189 copies, 1 review
Curious Baby Counting (Curious George Board Book with Beads) (Curious Baby Curious George) (2009) 57 copies
My First Curious George 3-Book Box Set: My First Curious George, Curious George: My First Bike, Curious George: My First Kite (2022) 19 copies
Curious Baby My First Words at the Zoo Gift Set (Curious George Book & T-shirt) (Curious Baby Curious George) (2010) 14 copies
Curious George Rides a Bike, The Little Red Hen, 14 Rats and a Rat Catcher, and more (2006) 12 copies
Curious Baby Everyday Shapes Puzzle Book: A Puzzle Play Book (Curious Baby Curious George) (2012) 12 copies
Yellow hat and help Maneko people (large picture book) (1983) ISBN: 4001109212 [Japanese Import] (1983) 6 copies
Curious George Snowy Day (CGTV): A Winter and Holiday Book for Kids – An Illustrated Tale about Skiing, Sledding, and Rescuing a Pig (2007) 4 copies
Curious Baby My Growing World (Curious George Fold-Out Board Book and Growth Chart) (Curious Baby Curious George) (2011) 3 copies
Curious George Rides a Bike: And Other Storybook Classics [With Earbuds] (Playaway Children) (2009) 2 copies
Stars: a New Way to See Them. Enlarged World-Wide Edition with Wall-Sized Chart of the Heavens on Verso of Dustwrapper (1962) 2 copies
Curious George Adventures in Learning, Grade 1: Story-based learning (Learning with Curious George) (2015) 2 copies
[Curious George Circus ACT (Cgtv Lift-The-Flap 8x8)] [Author: Rey, H A] [August, 2008] (2008) 2 copies
Curious George Flies a Kite 2 copies
Curious George gets a medal 1 copy
Curious George rides a bike 1 copy
Curious George Plush Monkey 1 copy
Peter Pedal i Zoologisk Have 1 copy
Find the Constellations 1 copy
Zozo 1 copy
Curious George Get's a Medal 1 copy
MARGRET REY 1 copy
curious gorge 1 copy
Tommy helps, too 1 copy
Zozo takes a job 1 copy
Curious George Story Kit 1 copy
Curious George Cloth Book 1 copy
Curious George takes a job 1 copy
Curious Georges Dream 1 copy
What does George like? 1 copy
Find the Constellation 1 copy
Peter Pedal og raketten 1 copy
From abc to xyz 1 copy
Costumes 1 copy
The best! 1 copy
Zebrology 1 copy
Curious Geroge Rides a Bike 1 copy
Curious George® Notecards (Curious George Stationery Set, Gift for Curious George Fan) (2015) 1 copy
Zoro Rides a Bike 1 copy
Georges à la plage 1 copy
Curios George Flies a Kite 1 copy
Rey, H.A. 1 copy
Associated Works
The 20th-Century Children's Book Treasury: Picture Books and Stories to Read Aloud (1998) — Contributor — 1,833 copies, 14 reviews
What Does George Like? (Curious George Curious About Phonics) (2008) — Creator — 27 copies, 1 review
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Legal name
- Rey, Hans Augusto
- Other names
- Reyersbach, Hans Augusto
- Birthdate
- 1898-09-16
- Date of death
- 1977-08-26
- Gender
- male
- Education
- Wilhelm Gymnasium, Hamburg
University of Munich
University of Hamburg - Occupations
- children's book illustrator
lithographer
poster designer
amateur astronomer
children's book author - Relationships
- Rey, Margret (wife)
- Short biography
- H.A. Rey was born Hans Augusto Reyersbach in Hamburg, Germany, as was his future wife Margarete Elisabeth Waldstein, known as Margret. Both of them had German Jewish fathers. The couple first met in Hamburg as teenagers. They met again in 1935 in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, where Hans was working as a salesman and Margret had gone to escape the Nazis regime in Germany. They married that year and moved to Paris. There Hans's animal drawings came to the attention of a publisher, who commissioned him to write a children's book that contained a monkey character called Curious George. In June 1940, the couple fled the German invasion of France on bicycles made by Hans, with only the clothes on their backs and the manuscript of a new book about Curious George. They reached Bayonne, France where they managed to obtain visas for Spain; from there, they went on to the USA, settling in New York City. They sold Curious George to Houghton Mifflin, which published it in 1941. It was an instant success, and the Reys were commissioned to write more books about the mischievous monkey and his friend, the Man in the Yellow Hat. They wrote seven stories in all, with Hans mainly doing the illustrations and Margret working mostly on the text, though they cooperating fully in every stage of development. The Curious George books have sold more than 25 million copies around the world and the original story has never been out of print. The Reys moved to Cambridge, Massachusetts in 1963 and lived there until Hans's death in 1977. A children's bookstore named Curious George & Friends (formerly Curious George Goes to Wordsworth) was founded in Cambridge Square the 1990s by friends.
- Nationality
- Germany (birth)
USA - Birthplace
- Hamburg, German Empire
- Places of residence
- Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Montmartre, Paris, France
New York, New York, USA
Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA
Waterville Valley, New Hampshire, USA - Place of death
- Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA
- Burial location
- cremated
- Map Location
- USA
- Disambiguation notice
- Despite being married, H.A. Rey and Margret Rey are two different people. Please do not combine their separate author pages. Also, do not combine either Margret or H.A. with pages that have both their names.
Members
Reviews
I realize that this will make me sound crazy, because on its surface this is a classic picture book about an adorable dachshund. But the whole story is about how Pretzel falls in love with a lady dog who dislikes him and then he proceeds to give her presents, beg for her affection, and stalk her. There is literally a page that says something about how he had been following and watching her all the time. CREEPY. So he rescues her and she decides he's not so bad and they get married. UGH. Awful.
I feel torn in my review for this book. As a child, I read several of these books, and enjoyed them because as so many children were, I was blissfully unaware of poaching/kidnapping - which is basically what the man in the yellow hat does to George.
There is nothing mentioned of the danger of owning a chimpanzee (was the thing with Travis the chimp really over a decade ago now? Daaaaamn) but then this book was published in the 1940s, which was... really a different time in more ways than show more one.
So I will refrain from giving this book 1 star out of fairness, but I also would not recommend this as a children's book nowadays, at least not without a serious talk with the child about poaching, the exotic animal trade, et. al. show less
There is nothing mentioned of the danger of owning a chimpanzee (was the thing with Travis the chimp really over a decade ago now? Daaaaamn) but then this book was published in the 1940s, which was... really a different time in more ways than show more one.
So I will refrain from giving this book 1 star out of fairness, but I also would not recommend this as a children's book nowadays, at least not without a serious talk with the child about poaching, the exotic animal trade, et. al. show less
Curious George is, of course, a mischievous little monkey who gets taken from his home in Africa and brought to live in the big city by the man in the yellow hat. Along the way he gets in many misadventures including falling off a big boat, accidentally calling the fire department and causing them trouble, getting put in jail, getting blown away with a handful of balloons, and finally getting put in the zoo.
This is long for a picture book, but the text is simple and would be a good show more introduction to indpendent reading for newer readers. I think the characterization of George is what has made these books so popular - he's sweet, naive, often misunderstands or takes things too literally, etc. I think kids identify with him. The illustrations are bright, old-fashioned, lovely. I'm pretty sure they were originally done with a limited color palette but have been "colorized" in subsequent reprints?
The story itself is kind of disturbing in retrospect: George is basically kidnapped/poached from Africa by the Man in the Yellow Hat, he's nonsensically "jailed" for calling in a false alarm to the fire department, and finally he ends up in the zoo - you know, trapped in a cage rather than running around free in Africa. This is very different from the Curious George most kids are probably used to seeing via the movies and the PBS show. show less
This is long for a picture book, but the text is simple and would be a good show more introduction to indpendent reading for newer readers. I think the characterization of George is what has made these books so popular - he's sweet, naive, often misunderstands or takes things too literally, etc. I think kids identify with him. The illustrations are bright, old-fashioned, lovely. I'm pretty sure they were originally done with a limited color palette but have been "colorized" in subsequent reprints?
The story itself is kind of disturbing in retrospect: George is basically kidnapped/poached from Africa by the Man in the Yellow Hat, he's nonsensically "jailed" for calling in a false alarm to the fire department, and finally he ends up in the zoo - you know, trapped in a cage rather than running around free in Africa. This is very different from the Curious George most kids are probably used to seeing via the movies and the PBS show. show less
[a:Maria Tatar|15620|Maria Tatar|https://images.gr-assets.com/authors/1302120613p2/15620.jpg], in the preface to [b:Off with Their Heads! Fairy Tales and the Culture of Childhood|123002|Off with Their Heads! Fairy Tales and the Culture of Childhood|Maria Tatar|https://i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/books/1347437099l/123002._SY75_.jpg|118422], asks whether this is an "exemplary" or a "cautionary" tale. Do children admire & scheme to find ways to emulate the adventures show more of the monkey, or do they accept the moral lesson to be good & obedient, and to consider consequences, because said lesson is couched in a funny book with bright pictures?
Well, I say, don't underestimate children. I believe that many can hold both ideas in their minds simultaneously. Not only do many children surely react to it as *both* exemplary and cautionary, but they may also react to it by thinking "oh, I'll be more careful, I'm smarter than a monkey, I can have adventures without getting caught." They may also react to it by thinking "thank goodness my parents will always love me and not send me to a zoo." (Or, they may think "I wish I could go live in a zoo and not have to do chores or go to school...").
(Btw, these thoughts surely apply to many many other books for children about characters who are curious, or naughty, or who have poor impulse control...) show less
Well, I say, don't underestimate children. I believe that many can hold both ideas in their minds simultaneously. Not only do many children surely react to it as *both* exemplary and cautionary, but they may also react to it by thinking "oh, I'll be more careful, I'm smarter than a monkey, I can have adventures without getting caught." They may also react to it by thinking "thank goodness my parents will always love me and not send me to a zoo." (Or, they may think "I wish I could go live in a zoo and not have to do chores or go to school...").
(Btw, these thoughts surely apply to many many other books for children about characters who are curious, or naughty, or who have poor impulse control...) show less
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