Love, Danger, Homecomings & Heart β Your June Reading Escape Starts Here
A.A. Milne
A. A. Milne (1882-1956) was a playwright and journalist as well as an author and storyteller.
Ernest H. Shepard (1879-1976) was a cartoonist and illustrator.
It seems strange that A. A. Milne would have not have wanted to be associated with one of literatureβs most beloved characters. Having achieved some success as a playwright and novelist, he aspired to be more than only an author of childrenβs books.
However, Milneβs books -- Winnie-the-Pooh, The House at Pooh Corner, and the verse collections When We Were Very Young and Now We Are Six -- are hardly typical of most stories for kids. They remain among the smartest of the genre, and were likely written as much for himself as for his young son, Christopher. Infused with a sly wit, they contain humor that only an adult can appreciate; indeed, some of the poems in When We Were Very Young first appeared in the satiric magazine Punch, where Milne was an editor.
Rendered by illustrator Ernest H. Shepard in quaint, warm watercolors, Pooh and friends Tigger, Kanga, Roo, Owl, Eeyore, and Piglet star in stories about playing games and helping friends in and around their home near β100-Aker Wood.β In one instance of Milneβs ironic humor, a sign outside Owlβs residence reading βPLES RING IF AN RNSER IS REQIRDβ is attributed to Poohβs boy companion Christoper Robin, βwho was the only one in the forest who could spell.β The books are written with sophistication and a certain amount of dry British wit, employing turns of phrase (βcustomary procedure,β βgeneral remarksβ) not usually found in childrenβs stories.
The volumes of verse range over a wider collection of themes, with Pooh appearing in just a few poems. Most of them offer a young personβs perspective on subjects such as imaginary friends, feigning illness, and going to the zoo; and itβs evident how Milneβs work prefigures that of Dr. Seuss (From Going to the Zoo: βThere are biffalo-buffalo-bisons/A great big bear with wings/Thereβs sort of a tiny potamus/A tiny nossarus tooβ). Other poems feature cowardly knights, buffoonish Sirs, and other fantasy figures.
Little of Milneβs work for adults, which included the autobiography Year In, Year Out and his first novel, Lovers in London, can be easily found in print. One adult title, however, is still being published: the pleasing Gosford Park-style Red House Mystery.
Pooh, meanwhile, continues to grow as a powerful franchise, with modern-day titles, animation, and games that are almost as delightful as Milneβs original texts -- but not quite.