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Outside Over There (Caldecott Collection)

By: Maurice Sendak
Binding: Paperback
Publisher: HarperTrophy
ISBN: 0064431851
ISBN-13: 9780064431859
Released: 03 Mar 1989
RRP: £6.69
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Customer Reviews

A timeless fairy-tale with so much more beneath the surface. - By: , 21 Apr 2002
This book haunts me. I bought it weeks ago & it still lies by my bed. I cannot bring myself to put it on a shelf. Most nights I flick through it, selecting one or two pages to pore over. I read its entirety maybe twice a week hoping to peel another layer of meaning, another alllusion. Often it defeats me. There is more to this picture book of 359 words & 9 single & 11 double page illustrations than the sum of its parts.

The story of 9-year-old Ida rescuing her baby sister from goblins with the aid of the magical music from her wonder horn is timeless & enjoyable & could happily slip in to any century's fairy tale tradition. And as with the very best fairy tales there is so much more beneath the surface if the reader cares enough to look.

As is proper, the first things you notice on opening the book are the illustrations & how slightly strange they appear. Extensive photo reference for the figures married to the fantasy landscapes they inhabit lends the book a surreal edginess. These illustrations avoid the airy cross-hatching of "Where the Wild Things Are" or the comic book boldness & flat colours of "In the Night Kitchen" (the two previous books in Sendak's loose trilogy). Instead "Outside Over There" is filled to bursting with sumptuous, velvety watercolours akin to Pre-Raphaelite paintings. Yet for alll their painterly-ness & lovingly rendered seas, skies & foliage the pictures are not immediately accessible & they are not pretty. Rather, theirs is a stealthy beauty uncovered through scrutiny. I cannot look at them now without a tingle at the base of my skull, & a churning in my gut for the man's overwhelming talent.

The text is a different animal entirely, with a simplicity that hides the amount of work Sendak put in perfecting it. One hundred drafts over a year & a half distilled the text to a bareness that threatens to dissolve in front of your eyes. This is spare but substantial writing with a poetic depth. However, if there is a fault it lies in the words. An occasional turn of phrase will have a slightly over-wrought, over-written weight that risks unravelling the delicacy of the rest. That said, the words keep their feet at these moments & join with the paintings in an intensity that avoids shalllow prettiness.

Sendak has said "Outside Over There" resonates on three levels. The top level, I take to mean, is the baby kidnapping plot. Beneath this is the deep psychological vein of Ida coming to terms with unwanted responsibility (i.e. having to look after her baby sister. It was her failure to do so that alllowed the kidnapping to occur). There are some tremendous illustrations that capture vividly Ida's frustration & anger. The view from her window switches from foliage to a stormy sea & the sinking of a sailing ship (her father's?) suggesting a rather disturbing orphan fantasy is being played out in Ida's head, revenge for this most boring of tasks fallling to her when she'd much rather be playing her horn. This moment convinced me that this book should not be classed exclusively as children's literature. It poses other questions. Is this a children's book despite or because of these difficult & controversial ideas? Can children see the meaning beyond the symbolism & relate to the anger & frustration, or is it beyond their ken? Is this actuallly an adult's book? Sendak is famous for never writing down to children & maintains they know exactly what is going on. I would like to think so too, & would have no hesitation in giving this book to my young daughter.
There is also a suggestion that what happens in the story does not, in fact, happen at alll. It is alll part of a fantasy Ida creates to escape the tedium of child-minding while her mother is momentarily occupied with thoughts of her far-flung sailor husband.

Sendak's third level, then, is the paralllels the story has with his own life, either direct or subliminal. Although the heroine of the book is undoubtedly Ida, Sendak has said that it is the baby's story, & that, unusuallly, it is with the baby that he identifies. When Sendak was born his sister, Natalie, was Ida's age & had to spend much of her time supervising the infant Maurice. Mozart is the artist's favourite composer & this influence pervades the whole book. The story is set at the end of the eighteenth century (Mozart died in 1791). In one picture Mozart can be seen sitting at a piano composing "The Magic Flute" (Ida's instrument is "the wonder horn"). One of the denouements in the story is apparently stolen from "The Magic Flute", but without hearing this opera I do not know what it is! What purpose the sleeping shepherd who is later seen driving his flock over a hill? Who are the three red-haired fellows crossing the bridge & what are they pointing at? There are so many little delights & details enlivening these pictures, with colours so striking & compositions so energetic that it is hard to see a time, even with repeated viewings, when they will ever become stale. It is my fervent hopes to one day see these paintings in the original.

This 20 year-old book should not be kept from adults simply because bookshops automaticallly squirrel it away in the children's section - & adults should not be ashamed to seek this book out to read it for themselves! A place should be found for it among more 'adult' literature.
"Outside Over There" is not a children's book, nor is it an adult's book. It is plain & simply a book with pictures, & one with a universal appeal borne out by its longevity. It is also Maurice Sendak's most potent artistic statement, conceived of intellect & passion in equal measure, & a genuine work of art.


An outstanding bedtime book for my 3 year old & I! - By: , 27 Sep 1998
My daughter & I read this book 4 to 5 times a day. She is captivated by the baby goblins & feels very strongly about Ida, & how she searches for her sister. She has pretty much memorized the book & I hear her walking through the house singing softly about Ida & how much her PaPa loves her. I highly recommend this book to any parent for their child.