Odd E-Mails
Sometimes when you take a step or two back from a project, you can’t quite believe you are writing serious, professional e-mails to a colleague that go like this:
The page looks empty and the pandemics themselves seems kind of inconsequential in all that space. I mean, the Black Death should be HUGE…. We do need to do something about the circle for COVID…. Right now it’s about the same size as the 1918 Influenza, when it should really be between the Third Bubonic Plague and Ebola, closer to Ebola.
This is what it looks like when you’re finishing up a picture book on pandemics and you need to get the final infographic just right.
Read MoreThe Real Heroes
We put up statues to politicians and generals, but in a just world, people like Edward Jennings would have a statue on every corner. He created a true vaccine for smallpox, and the more I research pandemics, the more I understand how amazing his achievement was. This disease had been with us since ancient times and was capable of wiping out civilizations. Now? It’s gone. (Except for a few samples in laboratories which should be destroyed yesterday, if you ask me.)
Interestingly, he based his work on folk medicine practiced in Asia, where patients were immunized with pus taken from smallpox sores (it worked, though it was risky) and from the folk knowledge of farmers near his home, who insisted that, if they’d had cowpox, they were immune to smallpox (they were). So it was not just an individual epiphany, but an achievement built on observation and experimentation by countless others whose names science and history do not remember.
Read MoreKorean Editions!
Just before Christmas, the Korean editions of my two Let’s Read and Find Out titles arrived on the doorsteps (dropped by Santa’s sleigh, no doubt). Here’s what Where Do Polar Bears Live? and What’s for Lunch? look in their snazzy new Asian editions.
A translated title is always a kind of giddy and bewildering joy. It’s recognizably my book and yet I can’t read a word of it. I can’t even identify my own name. The title of Where Do Polar Bears Live? has transmogrified from a question to an exclamation–why is that? Who knows? It’s kind of fun to feel four years old again and primarily interact with a book through the illustrations.
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