
Philip Sendak (1894–1970)
Author of In Grandpa's House
Works by Philip Sendak
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Birthdate
- 1894-09-15
- Date of death
- 1970-06
- Gender
- male
- Occupations
- illustrator
- Relationships
- Sendak, Jack (son)
Sendak, Maurice (son) - Nationality
- USA
- Associated Place (for map)
- USA
Members
Reviews
I've come to realize I'm more a fan of Maurice Sendaks artwork than his literary offerings. The illustrations in this book are lovely....very whimsical and visually aid in the total experience of this fantastical story....and I'm apparently a bigger fan of Papa Sendak, than son....I personally enjoyed this one more than the much more popular books by Maurice.
This story gives the impression of sitting in front of your Grandfather on a summer evening and listening to the old tales of his show more culture.....part lore, part fairytale, with holocaust implications peeking through, this wondrous yarn is captivating. show less
This story gives the impression of sitting in front of your Grandfather on a summer evening and listening to the old tales of his show more culture.....part lore, part fairytale, with holocaust implications peeking through, this wondrous yarn is captivating. show less
This book is written by the father of famed children's author Maurice Sendak, at his son's insistence that he get some of his stories down in print. It starts with the true story of how Philip Sendak came to the United States from Poland (in pursuit of a love interest). Then it turns into a fantastical story that he was told by his own father. This story, of a young boy whose grandfather and parents go missing, has a fairy tale ring to it. The boy is aided by a giant bird who offers to fly show more him to his parents; along the way they have many adventures, including meeting giants and little people. In that respect, it reminds me a bit of Gulliver's Travels by Jonathan Swift. Although the timing would then be off (given the generations behind this story), there were also parts of the story, such as the mysterious disappearance of the parents, that almost seemed like an allegory for the Holocaust. This story is illustrated with black-and-white drawings by Maurice Sendak, although their over-exaggerated style did not really appeal to me. show less
This was a big disappointment to me. While I think the illustrations are nice (not great), the story line fell flat.
Reading the background info about the story helped me appreciate this more. Most useful as insight into Maurice Sendak himself.
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Statistics
- Works
- 2
- Members
- 180
- Popularity
- #119,864
- Rating
- 3.4
- Reviews
- 7
- ISBNs
- 10
- Languages
- 2










