G-R-I-N-C-H: Dr. Seuss' Literary Moxie
Kirt Jacobs
Creator, Host & Producer @ MoxieTalk |Multimedia Origin Stories/Interviews
One of my favorite Christmas stories doesn't mention Jesus or even Santa Claus, but it manages to capture the Christmas spirit quite nicely.
How the Grinch Stole Christmas! has become a holiday classic since it debuted as a children's story book in 1957. Since then, the tale of the curmudgeon who descends from Mt. Crumpit intent on dashing the holiday dreams of the Whos -- only to end up embracing the spirit of the season -- has been retold as a cartoon, a musical and a feature film starring Jim Carrey. A new feature length animated version of the film was released this year, featuring Benedict Cumberbatch in the title role.
There's something remarkable about the tender way the Grinch is won over by the joyous sound of the Whos singing together, even in the midst of loss and disappointment. The moment where the Grinch's heart "grows three sizes" is moving without being maudlin.
Perhaps it's the fact that the moral of the story is neatly tied up in an elaborate package of absurdity that makes it such a pleasure to unwrap. Seuss' inventive rhymes and familiar and yet exotic characters inhabit a world so much like ours, and yet delightfully off kilter.
Theodor Seuss Geisel, the man who came to be known by his pen name Dr. Seuss, had the moxie to create his own words and his own worlds, all aimed at changing our own words and our own world. Here's how:
Moxie explores, risks and sometimes fails.
Geisel didn't start out writing children's books. He started out in the Ivy Leagues, earning a Ph.D. in English Literature from Dartmouth before heading to England to study at Oxford. It was there that he met his first wife, Helen, who convinced him take up writing professionally full time.
Geisel then launched into a successful career as a writer, editorial cartoonist, and ad man for some of the biggest brands of the day. He was successful enough to sustain himself and his wife through the Great Depression.
He believed in the importance of travel for inspiration, and it was a rhythm of a ship's engines that inspired his first book, And To Think That I Saw It On Mulberry Street.
You'd think a successful writer and illustrator with an Ivy League education would have no trouble shopping his book around and getting it published. You'd be wrong. Geisel's first book was rejected 27 times before a chance encounter with an old college friend who just so happened to be a children's book editor for a publishing house gave the book the opportunity it deserved. Geisel was off and running, publishing three more books before pausing to serve in World War II.
What if Geisel had stayed in school and become an English teacher as he intended? What if he had kept his head down and focused on his day job? What if he hadn't unplugged on taken time to travel and see the world? What if he'd given up after that first rejection, or the tenth, or the twenty-sixth? We wouldn't have seen the 60 books that followed.
Geisel had the moxie to let his life unfold with just the right amount of risk-taking and adventure.
Moxie serves when duty calls.
World War II broke out at a really inconvenient time. Geisel's career was going strong. He was successful as a writer and illustrator, and had several book titles under his belt, too. But when war broke out, he put his civilian career on pause and used his talents to further the war effort.
He penned editorial cartoons in support of U.S. involvement in the war, and he joined the Army and became part of the first unit dedicated to producing films. He turned out award winning posters and movies aimed at bolstering American spirits and communicating key messages. Two of the pieces he worked on went on to win Academy Awards.
Like so many of his generation, Geisel answered when his country called, and he brought all his talent to bear in support of the cause. Moxie puts its own interests aside for the greater purpose.
Moxie has a message.
Geisel penned hundreds of editorial cartoons over the course of his career. He was proudly liberal, and supported the New Deal and FDR.
His opinions certainly didn't disappear when he picked up his pen to write books whose primary audience was children. How the Grinch Stole Christmas! pushes back against consumerism and materialism; Yertle the Turtle takes on authoritarianism; and The Lorax champions environmentalism.
Geisel didn't talk down to children, and in fact he seemed to relish the challenge of writing for an audience with a low tolerance for blatant moralizing. He was confident enough in his views to believe they were worth passing on to the next generation, and the moxie to make no apologies for it.
So where is your moxie, have you got it hid? When you look back at your life, what will you say that you did?
Dear friend, take a chance, let your moxie take hold. Be strong today, be brave and be bold.
You've got it inside you, I see it right there. You're ready to launch, anytime, anywhere.
Just remember this man, a young guy named Ted. He failed two dozen times before his story got read.
He brought us a Cat and a Grinch and the Sneeches. He took us to places only imagination reaches.
Where will you take us? What adventures await? Let's buckle up! Let's go! It's never too late!
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5 年GREAT post!? Merry Christmas!!