Available:*
Library | Call Number | Status |
---|---|---|
Searching... Stillwater Public Library | DAD J FICTION WHI | Searching... Unknown |
Bound With These Titles
On Order
Summary
Author Notes
Born in Mount Vernon, New York, E. B. White was educated at Cornell University and served as a private in World War I. After several years as a journalist, he joined the staff of the New Yorker, then in its infancy. For 11 years he wrote most of the "Talk of the Town" columns, and it was White and James Thurber who can be credited with setting the style and attitude of the magazine. In 1938 he retired to a saltwater farm in Maine, where he wrote essays regularly for Harper's Magazine under the title "One Man's Meat." Like Thoreau, White preferred the woods; he also resembled Thoreau in his impatience and indignation.
White received several prizes: in 1960, the gold medal of the American Academy of Arts and Letters; in 1963, the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the nation's highest civilian award (he was honored along with Thornton Wilder and Edmund Wilson); and in 1978, a special Pulitzer Prize. His verse is original and witty but with serious undertones. His friend James Thurber described him as "a poet who loves to live half-hidden from the eye." Three of his books have become children's classics: Stuart Little (1945), about a mouse born into a human family, Charlotte's Web (1952), about a spider who befriends a lonely pig, and The Trumpet of the Swan (1970). Among his best-known and most widely used books is The Elements of Style (1959), a guide to grammar and rhetoric based on a text written by one of his professors at Cornell, William Strunk, which White revised and expanded. White was married to Katherine Angell, the first fiction editor of the New Yorker.
(Bowker Author Biography)
Reviews (3)
Publisher's Weekly Review
E.B. White's enduring classic celebrates in style with the release of the Charlotte's Web 5oth Anniversary Retrospective Edition. The handsome volume sports a clothbound cover framing original jacket art; inside, Rosemary Wells adds country color to Garth Williams's original b&w illustrations. An afterword by Peter F. Neumeyer illuminates White's life and work, including photographs of the author on his farm in Maine as well as pages from the seminal manuscript. (May) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Horn Book Review
Geared to gift-buyers, this 50th Anniversary Retrospective Edition is an oversize book featuring large print. Bigger is not necessarily better, and Rosemary Wells's colorization of Garth Williams's artwork adds little to the book. Appended is an informative afterword by Peter F. Neumeyer. From HORN BOOK Spring 2003, (c) Copyright 2010. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Guardian Review
I first encountered EB White's Charlotte's Web in circumstances that were less than promising. I was 11 at the time, my imagination nourished by a steady diet of adventure stories featuring such outsized heroes as John Carter, Man of Mars and Doc Savage, Man of Bronze . Consequently, when my teacher handed out a rather girly- looking paperback detailing the friendship between a talking pig and a wise spider, my heart sank. It was a compulsory assignment, however, and so I soldiered on. By the first few pages, I was hooked, drawn into a barnyard world that felt more real than anything I had ever encountered on the page. By the time I reached its heart-rending climax, I was in tears, the first time a book ever elicited that reaction from me. From that day on, the flashy stories of intergalactic travel and battlefield heroics that lined my bookshelves would never feel the same. Three decades later, as I introduce the book to my own children, I am finding that its power remains undiminished. It has proven to be that rarest kind of story, one that can bloom twice in the reader's imagination. On the 50th anniversary of its initial publication, White's classic, still one of the bestselling children's books in publishing history, con tinues to possess a magical freshness that newer, trendier and more psychologically correct books cannot rival. The story is simplicity itself. A young Maine farm girl, Fern, rescues a runt pig from the axe, raising it herself until it is old enough to be shipped off to Zuckerman's nearby farm. There, the pig, named Wilbur, is fattened for bacon, only to be saved once again, this time by a cunning spider named Charlotte, who weaves messages celebrating Wilbur's uniqueness into her webs. Humans are so convinced that the animal is charmed that they award him a special prize at the county fair. But then Charlotte dies, as all spiders must, after she lays her eggs. A heartbroken Wilbur takes charge of hatching her offspring himself, ensuring that Charlotte's legacy is perpetuated. Analysing the appeal of children's books can be as risky a business as explaining jokes, but there are certain things about Charlotte's Web that do reward scrutiny. It is, first of all, one of the most honest books ever written for young people. "It's true, and I have to say what is true," wise Charlotte explains when Wilbur expresses shock and disgust at her admission that she finds the flies she kills delicious. The author works under a similar imperative. Indeed, White, a lifelong gentleman farmer, portrays his barnyard world with a frank ness that appeals even to inveterate suburbanites like me. Talking animals may prove the downfall of many a children's book, but here they are rendered with a forthrightness that precludes cloying sentimentality. Take, for instance, Templeton the rat, who has "no morals, no conscience, no scruples, no consideration, no decency, no milk of rodent kindness . . . no friendliness, no anything" - and yet is still somehow likeable. Nothing is sugar-coated or defanged in White's world. Even death is a fact of life in Zuckerman's barn. White renders this world in prose that mirrors its simplicity and its candour. The author, who died in 1985, was a celebrated essayist for the New Yorker and Harper's magazine. He wrote another children's classic, Stuart Little , recently ruined by Hollywood. Imagine Hemingway if he had never left the United States and you begin to get an idea of how White wrote. "The barn was very large. It was very old. It smelled of hay and it smelled of manure. It smelled of the perspiration of tired horses and the wonderful sweet breath of patient cows. It often had a sort of peaceful smell - as though nothing bad could happen ever again in the world. It smelled of grain and of harness dressing and of axle grease . . . But mostly it smelled of hay." White's preoccupation with the perfect sentence spills over into the story itself, where Char lotte agonises over the right word to use in her pig-saving project. (After "Some Pig!" and "Terrific" she achieves her masterpiece - "Radiant".) One of the book's more subtle charms is that it serves as a parable of the power of the written word, which prevails over the sword or, more accurately, the axe. As Wilbur realises in the book's final paragraph: "It is not often that someone comes along who is a true friend and a good writer. Charlotte was both." Having laid a durable foundation of realism, White then gets to his deeper mission in Charlotte's Web - evoking the wonders that spring from the everyday world. It is the small things that are pictured as the true miracles on the busy farm. After Charlotte's messages begin to appear in her webs, the bemused Zuckermans go to the local doctor seeking an explanation. "I don't understand it," he admits. "But for that matter I don't understand how a spider learned to spin a web in the first place. When the words appeared, everyone said they were a miracle. But nobody pointed out that the web itself is a miracle." White speaks directly to the unique sensibility of his youthful readers by accentuating the wondrous in everyday life, whether it be the musical chatter of the birds on the farm or, in the book's most astonishing sequence, the sight of Charlotte's young as they are borne away on a gentle breeze, clutching the silk balloons they have woven. Isn't this, after all, how the young mind comprehends the physical world, shot through with a magic that we adults have lost the ability to see? The most remarkable achievement of Charlotte's Web lies in White's ability to show how life comes from death. He confronts mortality with a wide-eyed acceptance. It is the barnyard's basic currency. The topic is often considered the great taboo for children's literature, something too troubling to tackle head on, but White manages to create a death scene that is both harrowing and redemptive. (So nervous were his publishers in 1952 about his candour that they prevailed on him to change the name of the penultimate chapter from "The Death of Charlotte" to "Last Day".) Charlotte's lonely demise at the fairgrounds is infinitely sad, and yet it is also readily understood and even accepted by children. The book's true miracle is not Wilbur's double survival of the axe, but rather Charlotte's regeneration through her 514 offspring. It is a brave children's writer indeed who will have his heroine die, abject and alone, in his penultimate chapter. It is an author of genius who is able to follow that heartbreak with a passage that brings a redeeming smile to his young reader's face. Stephen Amidon's most recent novel is The New City . To order Charlotte's Web for pounds 9.99 with free UK p&p call Guardian book service on 0870 066 7979. Caption: article-charlotte.1 The story is simplicity itself. A young Maine farm girl, Fern, rescues a runt pig from the axe, raising it herself until it is old enough to be shipped off to Zuckerman's nearby farm. There, the pig, named Wilbur, is fattened for bacon, only to be saved once again, this time by a cunning spider named Charlotte, who weaves messages celebrating Wilbur's uniqueness into her webs. Humans are so convinced that the animal is charmed that they award him a special prize at the county fair. But then Charlotte dies, as all spiders must, after she lays her eggs. A heartbroken Wilbur takes charge of hatching her offspring himself, ensuring that Charlotte's legacy is perpetuated. [White] renders this world in prose that mirrors its simplicity and its candour. The author, who died in 1985, was a celebrated essayist for the New Yorker and Harper's magazine. He wrote another children's classic, Stuart Little , recently ruined by Hollywood. Imagine Hemingway if he had never left the United States and you begin to get an idea of how White wrote. "The barn was very large. It was very old. It smelled of hay and it smelled of manure. It smelled of the perspiration of tired horses and the wonderful sweet breath of patient cows. It often had a sort of peaceful smell - as though nothing bad could happen ever again in the world. It smelled of grain and of harness dressing and of axle grease . . . But mostly it smelled of hay." White's preoccupation with the perfect sentence spills over into the story itself, where Char lotte agonises over the right word to use in her pig-saving project. (After "Some Pig!" and "Terrific" she achieves her masterpiece - "Radiant".) One of the book's more subtle charms is that it serves as a parable of the power of the written word, which prevails over the sword or, more accurately, the axe. As Wilbur realises in the book's final paragraph: "It is not often that someone comes along who is a true friend and a good writer. Charlotte was both." - Stephen Amidon.
Excerpts
Excerpts
1953 Newbery Honor Book • 1970 Laura Ingalls Wilder Award This is the story of a kindhearted girl named Fern who saves the life of a very small and very lucky pig named Wilbur. It is also the story of Charlotte A. Cavatica, the beautiful, resourceful gray spider who lives with Wilbur in the barn and who becomes his best friend. Surrounded by his barnyard pals and cheered by Fern's visits, Wilbur enjoys each new day--until the old sheep tells him what farmers do to pigs at Christmas. Suddenly Wilbur is terribly afraid, but faithful Charlotte promises to spin a clever plan to save her humble friend. And with the help of Templeton the rat, she does just that. As moving and eloquent now as when it was first written more than fifty years ago, Charlotte's Web celebrates the sweetness of friendship, even when it is tinged by loss. Born in Mount Vernon, New York, award-winning author E. B. White (1899-1985) penned the children's classics Stuart Little, Charlotte's Web and The Trumpet of the Swan. He also wrote numerous articles, essays and editorials for The New Yorker and Harper's Magazine and authored more than 17 books of poetry and prose. In 1978, White was awarded a special Pulitzer Prize citation for his body of work. E. B. White's Stuart Little and The Trumpet of the Swan are also available on audio from Listening Library. Excerpted from Charlotte's Web by E. B. White All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.