Paz, Octavio My Life With The Wave ISBN 13: 9780606301084

My Life With The Wave - Softcover

9780606301084: My Life With The Wave
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A child befriends a wave at the seashore and brings her home.

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About the Author:
In her Own Words...

"Igrew up in a valley four miles from Jollyville, Texas (outside of Austin), where I attended first grade in a threeroom school. Friends and playmates, other than my brother and sister, were rare. Since we didn't have television, I entertained myself. Any movie, comic book, or old Nalional Geographic" fed my imagination with stories.

"Books were time-travel machines carrying me around the world and into other lives. I took what I read, then changed it, adding different characters to make the stories my own. I played these out with homemade paper dolls. At the end of the day, my characters were swept into a box and hidden away so that no one would find them and laugh at me.

"The only hint that I might one day write came while I lay sick, whining over my inability to do the things I dreamed of. My mother suggested I could write. Then I could do whatever I wanted without ever leaving my bed. That was not what I had in mind. I wanted to have the kind of wild adventures that another sickly child, Robert Louis Stevenson, wrote about.

"Among my favorite books were Bambi, The Jungle Book, and The Wind in the Willows--all with friendly animals. Living in the country, I heard foxes and raccoons kill our chickens. Even gathering eggs could be frightening. Chicken snakes, swollen with swallowed eggs, often lay coiled in dark nests. I decided to tame the wild world and bring it inside to live. I tried rabbits, snakes, hawks, and a fox, but discovered that wild things do best in the wild, just as waves are best left in the ocean.

"When other children ran outside to play, I hung around listening to the grown-ups. One day, my grandfather offered to tell me about when he and his brother went to the Klondike, or the time they drove cattle from Texas to the Dakotas. I was thrilled. Until my grandmother said, "That child doesn't want to hear your old tales." Later, when traveling, I found myself searching for his lost stories.

"What I wanted to do with my life changed depending upon the day, the month, and year. I planned to run a museum, raise angora goats, be a composer, play the violin, dig for lost civilizations, work in a zoo, sail around the world, save the planet from humanity, explore the Amazon basin, collect unknown orchid species, be a photographer, and drive from Alaska to the tip of South America.

"It wasn't until after I had graduated from college that I began to write. Then, needing to earn a living, I became an accountant. That didn't last. Encouraged by my husband, Carl, I escaped and returned to writing.

"As a child, I liked pretending I was grown. But now that I'm grown, I like nothing better than pretending I'm a child again."

Review:
Based on the story by Octavio Paz. In retelling this story for a child audience, Catherine Cowan retains the metaphoric language of the Paz original. She replaces the adult protagonist with a child who falls in love with a wave and brings it home. Mark Buehner's acrylic and oil paintings capture the powerful sensuality and surrealism of the original. Early on, the art mirrors an innocent relationship by using stable perspectives and centered compositions. Yet, the sun-drenched colors of the beach, water, and sky bleed off the page, hinting that even the most willing wave cannot be constrained. . . The wave's return "in frozen form" to the sea stands as a far more loving gesture than the ironic one Paz provides in his story for adults (in which the man sells the wave-turned-ice to a restaurant to chill bottles of wine). Cowan's ending carries a different irony: in the tame waters of his bathtub, the boy gazes out the window at an anthropomorphized cloud and wonders if he could befriend it. -- Horn Book, September/October 1997

Most Children take home lightning bugs, caterpillars or stray kittens for pets, but one boy chooses an ocean wave.

Based on a story by Nobel Prize winner Octavio Paz, My Life With the Wave translates into an offbeat and charming picture book adapted by Catherine Cowan and illustrated by Mark Buehner, whose talent for the surreal emerged with Harvey Potter's Balloon Farm.

My Life With the Wave is a far-out adventure that manages an undercurrent about human relation-ships with nature.

The boy and the wave, unable to part company after a sunny vacation, stand on the beach, where the boy pleads the unspoken question with his father: "Can I take her home?"

The flabbergasted father --- white sunscreen on his nose and purple fish on his swimming trunks -- leans back, overwhelmed, as the boy and the wave beg with body language. The wave looks like a watery stalk of celery, its foamy crest hugging the father's houlders -- while the boy, in turn, hugs the wave.

Home they go, where the wave floods rooms with sunshine and water, frightening the cat and amusing the boy.

"If I caught and hugged her," the boy says, "She would rise up tall like a liquid tree, then burst into a shower and bathe me in her foam."

Cowan's adaptation is poetic and often open-ended, leaving room for Buehner's provocative pictures, which extend the story.

In one scene, the wave rolls and bucks like a pony, a cowboy hat perched on her crest. Elsewhere, she turns dark and ferocious, spilling forth sharks, sea monsters and dozens of glowing yellow eyes.

Each depictation contains tiny, hidden images of sea horses, whales and common household animals such as cats and mice.

As the visit extends, the wave changes from playful to sly, spiteful and, finally, dangerous. Even the boy grows angry and frightened by his uncontrollable pet.

When winter arrives, the wave freezes into a beautiful ice sculpture and the family, in resignation and relief, returns it to the beach.

The imaginative My Life With the Wave offers as its theme a subtle reminder of the difficulty of taming or even coexisting with nature. Beyond that, it has a story --- an element too often missing in children's picture books. -- The Columbus Dispatch, July 17, 1997

The new world champion . . . may be the absolutely stunning picture book My Life with the Wave. The story comes from Nobel Laureate Octavio Paz, and it has been translated from the Spanish and adapted by Catherine Cowan. Illustrator Mark Buehner, working in oil and acrylic, brings it to perfect life.

On his first trip to the beach, a boy falls in love with the waves -- and one slips out of the sea and begs to come home as the boy's pet. He smuggles her onto the train home, hiding her cupful by cupful in the water cooler. At home, the wave curls out and makes herself comfortable, flooding the old, dark rooms "with light and air, driving away the shadows with her blue and green reflections." She plays gently with the boy, attracts the s un in to dance, and -- best of all -- "rocked me to sleep in her waters and sang sweet sea songs into the shell of my ear."

But, oh, "her moods were as changeable as the tide," faster than you can say Sebastian Junger, the wave becomes a perfect horror. The steps toward banishing the wave are as carefully and beautifully described as her arrival. The rising and falling action is as measured as the wave itself.

And at the end of the book, becalmed in his bathtub, the boy is dream ing of his next pet, another aspect of Mother Nature and one just as likely to "weather-strip" his house.

Using all my imagination, I can't think who wouldn't fall in love with this one. -- San Jose Mercury News, Sept. 14, 1997

"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.

  • PublisherDemco Media
  • Publication date2004
  • ISBN 10 0606301089
  • ISBN 13 9780606301084
  • BindingPaperback
  • IllustratorBuehner Mark
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