Picture of author.

Blair Lent (1930–2009)

Author of Why the Sun and the Moon Live In the Sky

8+ Works 1,376 Members 66 Reviews

About the Author

Author and illustrator Blair Lent was born on January 20, 1929 in Boston, Massachusetts. He received a degree in art from the Boston Museum School in 1953. He travelled to Switzerland and Italy on a study grant and then worked for the Container Corporation of America designing tin-can labels and show more for the Bresnick Advertising Company designing bank loan advertisements. He wrote and illustrated Pistachio, which was published in 1964. He also wrote and illustrated John Tabor's Ride (1966); Baba Yaga (1966) using the name Ernest Small; Bayberry Bluff (1987); Molasses Flood (1992); and Ruby and Fred (2000). He specialized in illustrating international folk tales retold by other writers including The Wave (1964); Tikki Tikki Tembo (1968); Why the Sun and the Moon Live in the Sky (1968); Little Match Girl (1968); and The Funny Little Woman, which won the Caldecott Medal in 1973. He died of pneumonia on January 27, 2009 at the age of 80. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

Also includes: Ernest Small (2)

Disambiguation Notice:

Wrote and illustrated under the name Ernest Small: those works are now aliased here.

Works by Blair Lent

Why the Sun and the Moon Live In the Sky (1968) — Illustrator — 1,223 copies, 64 reviews
Baba Yaga (1966) 63 copies, 1 review
Molasses Flood (1992) 31 copies, 1 review
Bayberry Bluff (1987) 30 copies
Ruby and Fred (2000) 9 copies
John Tabor's ride (1966) 9 copies
Pistachio (1964) 6 copies

Associated Works

Tikki Tikki Tembo (1968) — Illustrator — 5,874 copies, 153 reviews
The Funny Little Woman (1972) — Illustrator — 1,526 copies, 55 reviews
The Wave (1964) — Illustrator — 392 copies, 4 reviews
The Beastly Feast (1998) — Illustrator — 254 copies, 1 review
Favorite Fairy Tales Told in India (1973) — Illustrator, some editions — 68 copies
The Telephone (1996) — Illustrator, some editions — 43 copies, 4 reviews
Cricket Magazine, Vol. 1, No. 2, October 1973 (1973) — Illustrator — 6 copies
Cricket Magazine, Vol. 5, No. 10, June 1978 — Illustrator — 3 copies
May Horses (1969) — Illustrator — 3 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Other names
Small, Ernest
Birthdate
1930-02-20
Date of death
2009-01-27
Gender
male
Education
School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
Occupations
artist
Nationality
USA
Places of residence
Boston, Massachusetts, USA
Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA
Disambiguation notice
Wrote and illustrated under the name Ernest Small: those works are now aliased here.
Associated Place (for map)
Massachusetts, USA

Members

Reviews

67 reviews
The reason for the sun and moon living in the sky is set out in this picture book retelling of a traditional pourquoi story from Nigeria. Despite being good friends, Sun is unable to host his friend Water, because he does not possess a structure large enough to do so. Deciding to rectify this, Sun and his wife Moon build a large house, and invite their friend over, insisting that more and more of his people enter their house. As the house fills with water, Sun and Moon must climb higher and show more higher, eventually ending up on the roof, and then in the sky...

Published in 1968, Why the Sun and the Moon Live in the Sky pairs a story from Elphinstone Dayrell's 1910 collection, Folk Stories from Southern Nigeria, West Africa, with artwork from American children's book illustrator Blair Lent. A British civil servant who was the District Commissioner of southern Nigeria in the early 20th century, Dayrell apparently gathered traditional tales in the region, and had two collections published in his lifetime. The story presented here was taken from the Efik-Ibibio people. The text in this picture book presentation is almost exactly that of the 1910 collection, and is brief and to the point. Although I also enjoy more textually complex tales, I appreciated the brevity and matter-of-factness of this story, as I suspect it reflects the way in which it was originally related to Dayrell. True folktales, particularly those taken from oral tradition, are not always as polished as literary fairy-tales, and may reflect the storytelling traditions and methods from which they spring.

While enjoyable, this title would not have been such a stand-out for me, without the artwork from Lent, who was awarded a Caldecott Honor for the book, in 1969. Lent would go on to win a Caldecott Medal in 1973, for Arlene Mosel's The Funny Little Woman. In any case, I thought the artwork here was striking, and appreciated the way in which the figures of the Sun, Moon and Water were anthropomorphized, depicted as humans wearing traditional masks. I also appreciated the brief note at the end, indicating that the visual motifs used were inspired by various African traditions, rather than reflecting a specific Nigerian or Efik-Ibibio aesthetic. While the latter would have been interesting, I appreciate the transparency of the artist, in noting that his work was not taken from that tradition specifically.

All in all, this was an engaging read, and is a book I would recommend to young folklore enthusiasts. For my part, I hope to track down and reader Elphinstone Dayrell's larger collection of tales.
show less
I was fortunate to have stumbled upon this delightful African folktale when I was browsing the folk story section at the library.

Here is a wonderful little story about why the sun and the moon live in the sky and not on Earth with the water. Sun and his wife Moon invited Water and his tribe to come visit them in their home. Water and his tribe came and were welcomed, and then they kept coming and coming and coming until the home of Sun and Moon filled up entirely with water and they were show more displaced up, up, up into the sky.

The drawings are richly detailed and colorful. It's a wonderful tale.

My only complaint is that the story ended too soon. I would have liked some kind of resolution between Sun, Moon and Water. The end of the story kind of leaves the reader hanging. That said, it's a fun, bedtime read.
show less
In Why the Sun and the Moon Live in the Sky, "Water" visits "Sun" (and "Sun's" wife "Moon") but there is no room for "Water" to come into "Sun's" house. "Sun" builds progressively bigger and bigger houses to try and allow "Water" to visit but eventually so much "Water" comes in that it forces "Sun" and "Moon" onto the roof of the house and up into the sky. I like this book for its humor and because of its unique and interesting aztec-like illustrations, for which the book won a Caldecott show more honor. I would want to use this book in my teaching to discuss legends, and more specifically themes surrounding pourquoi stories, with Grades 1-4. show less
This book explains how the sun and moon bought a house and went to the sky to make room for everyone else. Although it wasn't my favorite book, I liked how clever the explanations were. I would include it in my future classroom, because it a pourqui book and would add variety to the library. Lastly, I would read it to grades K-1st in a week about tall-tales and folklore.

Lists

Awards

You May Also Like

Associated Authors

Statistics

Works
8
Also by
9
Members
1,376
Popularity
#18,684
Rating
4.0
Reviews
66
ISBNs
18
Languages
1

Charts & Graphs