Picture of author.

R. O. Blechman

Author of The Life of Saint Nicholas

15+ Works 238 Members 5 Reviews

About the Author

Ro. O. Blechman's illustrations have appeared on 19 covers of The New Yorker and have been exhibited in New York, Paris, Berlin, and Munich. He lives in New York City. (Bowker Author Biography)
Image credit: Photo of RO Blechman by J.J. Sedelmaier 2018

Works by R. O. Blechman

Associated Works

The New Joys of Yiddish: Completely Updated (2001) — Illustrator, some editions — 364 copies, 8 reviews
The Art of Mickey Mouse: Artists Interpret The World's Favorite Mouse (Disney Miniature Series) (1991) — Illustrator, some editions — 96 copies, 3 reviews
Linus (1970) n.10 — Author — 1 copy

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Gender
male

Members

Reviews

6 reviews
My favorite movie of all time is Amadeus, which sets this fictionalized biography of Mozart for a giant fail in comparison. Amadeo plays out Mozart's life in parallel to an unknown half-brother named Maladeo. The author tells us up front the story is his attempt to make a statement about fame, art, talent and culture, but frankly I didn't see much point to what actually landed on the page and was left with an overwhelming feeling of meh.

The art is a cartoony minimalist style with extremely show more shaky line work that actually worked fairly well. The same squiggly quality was applied to the lettering and that was less successful. show less
It's not something I would have picked for myself, but I read it because it was a gift and I'm glad I did. It is a letter correspondence between a professional cartoon artist and a perspective illustrator. The Pro gives answers and advice to the "young illustrator". It's great because the advice is universally helpful and could help a lawyer or teacher as much as an illustrator. I really liked it.
Franklin the fly lives a perilous life in New York City. He might get swatted or stepped on or... worse. I ordered this book thinking my 5 year old daughter might enjoy it, but after previewing it myself and having my wife look at it, we both agreed it isn't appropriate for any of our children. I was surprised when Franklin's uncle loses his family to a strip of flypaper (with a bunch of sad and surprised-looking flies stuck to it), but that was nothing compared to the picture of a show more blood-spattered butcher holding a bloody knife, explaining that Franklin's glad he isn't a delicious animal like a pig or a goose or chicken. The "story" meanders on to Franklin explaining how he likes to draw shapes when he flies (even though the other flies think he's nuts) and then heading out to the countryside where he saves a butterfly from a man with a net, thereby making a friend.

Maybe it's a New York-style sense of humor, but I can't imagine anyone thinking this story is appropriate for young children, even if you're hoping to instill a vegetarian ethic in them. And I doubt older children would enjoy such a simple story either. The artwork is okay - nothing fancy - but there's no real storyline here. It's aimless with a few pages I'm sure parents would rather not have to explain. I'm afraid Mr. Blechman doesn't spend much time with children.
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Wonderful illustrations. I like the miniature sketched quality of the book.

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Statistics

Works
15
Also by
4
Members
238
Popularity
#95,269
Rating
3.9
Reviews
5
ISBNs
20
Languages
1

Charts & Graphs