Dr. Seuss
by
Tammy DiBartolo
In
May of 1954, Life Magazine published an article that addressed the
problems children were having learning to read. The report said that
students were having trouble because their books were boring and the
strategies for teaching reading were not effective.
This article inspired author and cartoonist Theodore
Seuss Geisel to write a new kind of school book. To do this, Dr. Seuss chose
225 words from a list of words that
first graders were supposed to learn. This was more difficult than
Dr. Seuss had anticipated. He looked at the list again and decided that if
he could find two words that rhymed, he would write a book about those
words.
He chose cat and hat, and the rest is history. In 1957
The Cat in the Hat was published and the rest is history. In 1960,
Bennett Cerf bet Dr. Seuss fifty dollars that he could not write an entire
book using only fifty words. Te result was Green Eggs and Ham,
another favorite of children.
Theodore Geisel was born on March 2, 1904, in
Springfield, Massachusetts. To his friends and family he was simply known as
Ted. He graduated from Dartmouth College in 1925 and went on to Oxford
University to obtain a doctorate in literature. Instead of completing his
courses at Oxford, Ted married his sweetheart, Helen Palmer and they
returned to the States.
Dr. Seuss continued to write books and many of them
dealt with subjects that were controversial. The Butter Battle Book
was written to speak out against the nuclear arms race. Publishers felt that
the book was too scary for children and did not have a happy ending. In the
end the book was published just as Dr. Seuss had written it, on his
eightieth birthday.
Dr. Seuss said he was not sure if this was an adult
book for children or a children’s book for adults. Critics could not agree
either. Some felt the subject was too bleak and difficult for children.
Others felt that it gave children the opportunity to think about their
future. Despite the controversy, The Butter Battle Book became a
best-seller all over the world.
Another Dr. Seuss book, The Lorax, offers young
readers insight into greed and pollution. The whole book was written in
forty-five minutes!
In his later years, Dr, Seuss wrote You’re Only Old
Once: a Book for Obsolete Children. He wrote the book when he was in his
eighties and was spending a lot of time in hospital waiting room where he
was both scared and bored.
Each May, high school and college graduates around the
world receive copies of another Dr. Seuss favorite, Oh, the Places You’ll
Go! This book gives inspiration to anyone who is about to set out on a
new phase of their life. The book gives hope with lines like:
You have brains in your head.
You have feet in your shoes.
You can steer yourself in any direction you choose.
You’re on your own and you know what you know.
And YOU are the guy who’ll decide where to go.
Theodore Seuss Geisel died in his sleep in his writing studio on
September 21, 1991. He was eighty-seven years old. For more information on
Dr. Seuss and birthday celebrations for The Cat in the Hat, visit
www.seussville.com or
www.nea.org.
Tammy DiBartolo is the Youth Services Manager for
Rapides Parish Library.