The author of Where the Wild Things Are, Maurice Sendak, is 86 years old. He lives with his dog in Connecticut and is admittedly lonely after his partner of 50 years, psychoanalyst Eugene Glynn, died in May 2007. Sendak has a new children’s book out called Bumble-Ardy, about a pig who throws a wild ninth birthday party for himself. Like Sendak’s earlier works, it has dark moments and some parents could consider it too scary for a children’s book. To promote the book he’s done an unintentionally hilarious interview with UK paper The Guardian. He basically bitches about everything, and he admits he’s an old sourpuss. It’s fun to read, although I did end up wanting to give him a hug that he’d probably yell at me for. Here’s a small sample, and there’s much more at the source that’s well worth reading.
At 83, Sendak is still enraged by almost everything that crosses his landscape. In the first 10 minutes of our meeting, he gets through:
Ebooks: “I hate them. It’s like making believe there’s another kind of sex. There isn’t another kind of sex. There isn’t another kind of book! A book is a book is a book.”
New York: “You get pushed and harassed and people grope you. It’s too tumultuous, it’s too crazy!”
The American right: “These Republican schnooks would be comical if they weren’t not funny.”
Rupert Murdoch: “His name should be what everything is called now.” But he publishes you! “Yes! Harpers. He owns Harpers and I guess the rest of the world, too. He represents how bad things have become. But I don’t know a better house. They’re all in trouble. They’re all terrible.”
Sendak shakes his head beneath the low-beamed ceiling, in this room full of art and old rugs. “I can’t believe I’ve turned into a typical old man. I can’t believe it.” He smiles and his face transforms. “I was young just minutes ago…”
“I’m totally crazy, I know that. I don’t say that to be a smartass, but I know that that’s the very essence of what makes my work good. And I know my work is good. Not everybody likes it, that’s fine. I don’t do it for everybody. Or anybody. I do it because I can’t not do it.” You can’t be that crazy, I say: you managed to stay in one relationship for half a century. “Yes! And he was – well. He was a man who loved music and reading. He never smoked and he died of lung cancer, utterly ridiculous. I had that friendship for a long, long time….”
Of Salman Rushdie, who once gave him a terrible review in the New York Times, he says: “That flaccid f*ckhead. He was detestable. I called up the Ayatollah, nobody knows that.” Roald Dahl: “The cruelty in his books is off-putting. Scary guy. I know he’s very popular but what’s nice about this guy? He’s dead, that’s what’s nice about him.” Stephen King: “Bullshit.” Gwyneth Paltrow: “I can’t stand her.”
He looks fleetingly sheepish. “Look, life is pretty dreadful most of the time. Even in the country that’s so pretty with the flowers and leaves and sunshine. And I was abandoned when he died! I’m alone. I feel like an old bubba. And I’m not kind all of the time, I’m not nice all the time.”
Sendak is in search of what he calls a “yummy death”. William Blake set the standard, jumping up from his death bed at the last minute to start singing. “A happy death,” says Sendak. “It can be done.” He lifts his eyebrows to two peaks. “If you’re William Blake and totally crazy.”
[From The Guardian]
I actually wish they’d either probed more to get explanations from Sendak as to why he hates various things, or printed more of the interview. He probably doesn’t need any justification for disliking things and people, he just does and some of it may stem from the fact that he’s alone now. I hope when I get old(er) that I’m able to bitch and moan with the best of them, but still see the good side of life. To me there is a real joy in bitching about things, though. Maybe that’s the takeaway from this interview. The dude loves to complain. Just like Goop.
Photo credit: WENN.com
Yeah, him and me both.
Goop, Goop
You have a face like poop!
Who doesn’t hate her?
I won’t rationalize anything here, I just want to say that these excerpts are hilarious.
Roald Dahl: “The cruelty in his books is off-putting. Scary guy. I know he’s very popular but what’s nice about this guy? He’s dead, that’s what’s nice about him.”
LOL! Sorry, I can’t help it. LOL!
EDIT: I love both King and Dahl but I also love this interview. There’s nothing like a grumpy old man bitching about everything.
I heard an interview with him on Fresh Air & was struck by what a crab he is! I still like him though. He is an old guy who has been through a lot in his day, he is allowed to be as crabby as he wants
I didn’t like what he said about Stephen King. He is great in what he does and needless to say is more successful than he is. Same with Roald Dahl.
But I definitely agree with what he said about Gwyneth.
He may be old and cranky, but he’s spot-on about Goop!
Aww, he’s adorable!
Any reason you can find to use that picture of Goopie looking like she’s about to hit the floor is fine by me! Naw really, I like this curmudgeon and had a nice giggle while reading this on DListed yesterday & again here today. I love bitchiness & bitching.
Ha!
Sounds like my grandpa when he got old, crotchety and little bit senile.
Love it!!!
He’s the old guy who just backs up without looking or caring who’s behind his car.
“I was young just minutes ago…” awww, I love him for that.
Of Salman Rushdie, who once gave him a terrible review in the New York Times, he says: “That flaccid f*ckhead. He was detestable. I called up the Ayatollah, nobody knows that.”
Lmfao!!!!
I think I fell a little bit in love with him in this interview…
I never really blame anyone for not liking Gwyneth Paltrow, even though I do. But Stephen King….. back off old man! I would still hang out with the geezer though. I love grumpy old people.
I love, love, love Maurice Sendak. Ranks up there with Shel Silverstein in darkly subversive childrens literature. And all the drawings you see in the book are the exact same size and format he really draws them, which is awesome (/illustration geekery).
Regrading Poopy, he speaks the truth. Smart man.
Also, Where the Wild Things Are was my favorite book as a child.
I don’t know, I think Where the Wild Things Are is a classic and far exceeds anything Stephen King has written. It’s pure poetry. Also, my son’s name is Max, therefore the book has special meaning. And I love the little wolf suit.
I’m glad he hates Gwyneth (though it’s unclear why he should be aware of her at all). I also agree about Roald Dahl, but that’s exactly the point – his stories are about the macabre – people getting killed by legs of lamb and such.
Thanks for sharing. Someone who admits they’re a crazy old fart can say basically anything. But is it truth or more BS?
I heard him being interviewed on NPR about his new book, and let me tell you, he was a delight. This crankypants interview only makes me love him more.
He sounds like a cranky old crab, but that’s pretty funny, his gripe list.
Why did they ask him about Goop anyway?
But doesn’t he look fantastic for 86 years old?
I think I’m in love with this guy. So funny and crotchety its amusing and endearing
Thanks for this piece! I love him too, the old curmudgen. Very entertaining.
Well Andy Rooney just retired. This guy could slide right into that job without missing a beat.
“I don’t know, I think Where the Wild Things Are is a classic and far exceeds anything Stephen King has written.”
That is definitely just your opinion. “Where the Wild Things Are” is a great work of art. But Stephen King has over 40 years worth of very well written works.
Maurice Sendak and Stephen King have different styles when it comes to writing, that is all.
Love Dahl’s books, but he was supposedly an a-hole.
Wow, can he please tell us how he really feels?
Great interview, I’d like to hear more, though disagree about Stephen King, that dude is a great writer.
That man is a sexy beast!
Mr. Sendak looks fantastic, and I hope he finds someone to love before his “yummy death”.
Roald Dahl, Maurice Sendak and SHel Silverstein molded me into the warped individual I am today.
This interview made my day. I love him!
Anything this old crank says is irrelevant because he doesn’t like anything or anybody. He wouldn’t like you if he met you, either. He’s either got something wrong with him or he needs to get off his high horse. Only perfect people can be as critical as he is, and there are no perfect people.
Maurice Sendak on Gwenyth Paltrow: “I can’t stand her.” Me on Maurice Sendak: “I love this guy!”
Aw, c’mon Linnie, where’s your sense of humor? Sendak has earned the right to his opinions – I think he’s great.
Ok, he hates many things…. still, he is adorable!
My new favorite curmudgeon.
Sendak has said some really cool things over the years. When The Little Mermaid came out from Disney he said that they had taken a beautiful story about love and sacrifice and turned it into a cartoon about getting married and wearing cupcakes on your boobs. Paraphrased but funny and accurrate.
He is just stating what most of us think of Goopy, even if he can get a bit whinny about a lot of other thing but he makes great points.
@MacScore – I completely agree that he has a right to his opinion. But, I am sticking to my opinion that is an old and bitter crank. I find him unpleasant and his negativity borders on obsession.
Awww…I want to adopt him! He is my new favorite. Irreverent, self-deprecating, with some wild insight. I want to grow old like him. Except not lonely. Poor bubbba.
He speaks the TRUTH!
Oh, I hope he’s popped the organic, delusional, self-congratulatory, oversized dubble-bubble Goopy floats around in.
When you have a literary legend saying that he can’t even stand Gwyneth.. this made my lunch hour!
Roald Dahl: “The cruelty in his books is off-putting. Scary guy. I know he’s very popular but what’s nice about this guy? He’s dead, that’s what’s nice about him.”
LOL, he just made my day 😀
Hehe I love grumpy old men, they’re like kids: they speak the utter truth with a capital T. Preach it, grandpa!
The filter that comes off with older age is simply brilliant.
I bet if a teenager said things like that, they’d be labeled an emo brat, and if a younger adult had said them (with the same tone and intent), they’d be called a douchebag. But since he’s past a certain age, it’s “adorable”. Gah.
@Erandyn:
I see what you are saying, but I think the difference here is perspective and experience.
When a teenager says these things it is said in a tone of complete false knowledge based on an unsubstantiated view of the world and with little to no perspective
When a younger adult says such things again, there is perhaps more knowledge and slightly more perspective but this comes with a huge helping of judgement.
I think once we get to a certain age we lose all pretenses and just call it like we see it with no underlying sub context.
@Erandyn – well that’s a privilege you get when you reach old age, you’ve likely earned it and as your youth, looks and possibly mind has gone down the drain, you get to complain and throw the odd insult.
Thank goodness there’s still the occasional ecentric still around, the world would be a boring place without crazy old men like him.
Oh my gosh, I want him to be my neighbor and I’ll bring him cookies and he’ll yell at me to get off his front porch. He’s cracking me up.
Sounds like a miserable, unintelligent, rambling old man. He needs to change up his meds.
This is pretty much just asking my old immigrant grandfather what he dislikes about the states. I gave them “Pride and Prejudice” on DVD, and he was complaining that Keira Knightley was “just another American tramp trying to ruin the classics.” Despite hours of trying to convince him that Keira Knightley was a classy, Award-winning British actress, he refused to budge.
Old men are hilarious. Reminds me of how Andy Rooney’s last line in his final telecast was, “If you see me at a restaurant, leave me alone.”
Love Roald Dahl – especially “The Twits”.
He reminds me of my grandpa. LOL
Ahhh, the elderly. You gotta love them.
Nothing demonstrates the benefits of aging more than being able to freely, openly, and guilt free express your opinions.
@ layla & Ell
Sure, I agree that people attain a broader perspective on life and get less pretentious with age, and that’s all well and good, but I still think there’s a lot of “assumption of wisdom” bias going on even when there’s no evidence one way or the other. Being old doesn’t automatically make you right about everything (even though, as children, we get taught that it does).
Honestly, I think he’s just the typical type of old person that hates everything cos he has lost his ability to adapt to a changing world. He suffers from “In myyyy daaaaay…” Syndrome. I don’t think that being a miserable old person is something to admire or aspire to.
Wow, I think I’m his new biggest fan. I saw Rushdie speak once, total douche! And gwyneth, well…that pretty much sums it up.
HILARIOUS. He may be a bit harsh but the difference between him and a smart mouthed teenager is he’s earned the right to say whatever the hell he wants because of the time he’s put in on the planet.
J’DORE the book Where the Wild Things Are. The movie was an abomination.
And I am so sorry for him, that he is still mourning the loss of partner 4 years later. (And I totally couldn’t stomach Goop with an entire month’s supply of Maalox, whatever comfort food my poor little heart needed, and a Russian Roulette-equipped revolver.)
FYI – The word is “curmudgeon.”
This? Is the most hilarious thing I’ve read in a long, long time. SO funny.
“That flaccid f*ckhead. He was detestable. I called up the Ayatollah, nobody knows that.”
I just have to jump on the love train.
I adore when people get to the point that they say EXACTLY what they want and consequences be damned.
I grew up on Stephen King, but I still give him a pass for dissing him.
Wouldn’t it be fabulous to sit with Mr. Sendak at a dinner party while he commented on life and his surroundings?
@erica, couldn’t have said it better. @all the gwyneth haters, I bet you were drooling when you saw this headline. Had to get your Gwyneth-hating fix.
Roald Dahl has a lot of cruelty in his books because that was his children: filled with beatings at school and a lot of uncertainty, fear of adults and people in authority. He brings his dark reality of childhood and in many ways rectifies it with happy endings and the people who behaved badly get in trouble for it.
I loved his books as a child, and I love his books for adults as an adult.
As for Stephen King, I wish he’d gone into more detail. On the surface and in some of his works, King is “bullshit” but a great many of his novels are multidimensional and deal with subjects that are very applicable to our lives: the pain and fear of growing up, death and dying, why the universe/God is so unfair, etc. He applies horror to bring alive these things which are very scary to us as mortal beings. His non-horror stuff is great too, like Rita Hayworth and the Shawshank Redemption. Of course, then there’s Cujo…
torontogal: Who doesn’t hate her?
====================================
I don’t. Nothing there to love or hate. She’s just meh.
@Bellaluna: I prefer “old fart” to curmudgeon, but either will do. He’s funny and spot-on. He reminds me of my dad in the last year of his life.
He’s half right about Stephen King. King used to be a great horror novelist 25 or 30 years ago. He hasn’t written a really good book since “Pet Sematary”.
@ Cheyenne:
I, too, do not hate Paltrow. Perhaps if I had to deal with her on a daily basis, but so far (and from this very comfortable distance) I think that her antics make her involuntarily funny. She thinks she’s the shit and I just sit back and laugh at her.
He rocks. He just kicked the Dalai Lama off my #1 spot for favorite fantasy dinner guest.
Hilarious.
Don’t be confused, he was born like this. Is the Spike Jonze wank affair over yet, or has the other ‘disaffected WASP kids get followed around with the melancholy knowledge that, as stifling as Les Suburbs are, they’re familiar and where last we recognized ourselves, even if we felt like we were placeholders for the roles assigned us. We built our own world to shield us from theirs, but we’re breaking out of that one, too, and ambivalent though we are, today’s the day we’re going to grow up. Even though this is time when it all begins, maybe soon we’ll look back with some fondness at the place where it all began.
That movie–if I pulled that shit at that age with company around she would’ve thrown me in front of a speeding Mac truck and I would periodically re-animate myself somehow to thank for having the right freaking thing. It just doesn’t work for a kid that old unless he’s about to have an aneurysm. I doubt he watched it since it would be bad for the pissier-than-though thing he’s been doing for lo, these 70 years now, but had he seen it I could only wonder what he thought of that brat pulling that shit and getting rewards heaped on him. Yeah, yeah, ‘I’m glad you’re not dead. Love, Mummy’. Just toss him in a room like Livilla, or get some rabies shots, something.
Must the Gurardian really have to include Gwyneth Paltrow in everything? E-books, Roald Dahl, Salman Rushdie, Stephen King and then Gwyneth. That was random. She’s not a literary figure, oh wait.
He hated Roald for years b/c Dahl was Anti-Semitic. I’m surprised he just called him out for being cruel. Roald prides himself for being cruel and scary to children. If Roald’s alive, he would be taking Maurice words as compliments.
Salman Rushdie dig was understandable. Salman tore him to pieces in NYT. What I don’t get was his Stephen King diss.
He’s cute
Cheyenne – Have you tried to plod through Under the Dome? I read the reviews, anxiously awaited the book, bought it in hard-cover, and…well, I can’t. I still haven’t finished it.
@Bellaluna: I felt a huge amount of sympathy/empathy for the man, too. While I very much enjoy his biting wit, he sounds incredibly lonely yet emotionally incapable of remedying it. I hope he finds whatever it is he’s currently lacking, but I hope the sass doesn’t ever stop!
stephanie marie – I can’t imagine losing my husband now, let alone after 50 years. How devastating.
But I absolutely love this quote “I was young just minutes ago.”
When asked about people who didn’t like the movie of “Where the Wild Things Are,” he barked, “They can go to hell.” I loved that.
I remember reading about the time when certain Moral Elements were having conniptions about the fact that Sendak’s book “In the Night Kitchen” showed a naked little boy with an OMG PENIS. How this was deplorable, pornographic, blah blah blah … Librarians were actually drawing on little pairs of shorts, with felt-tip markers, so children wouldn’t see an OMG PENIS.
Sendak’s take on this was (not an actual quote, just the gist here) along the lines of “These people get upset when there’s a penis in a children’s book, that it’s traumatic to children … and then they take their children to museums to absorb real art. Aand what do the children see? Ancient statues with the PENISES BROKEN OFF. Well, that’s traumatic to a little boy, and not seeing an illustration of a penis in a book.”
I LOVE LOVE LOVE Mr Sendak. He can do no wrong. He’s spot-on about so many things, and he always has been. And I cosign on his slam against Stephen King. I was a King fan for many years and agree with previous commenters that yes, he’s been coasting for quite some time. A comment was also made about King being a “great writer” for “forty years” … Sendak has a few decades more than that under his belt. And has earned the right to be a curmudgeon.
I’ll see him there, then.
I guess I’m one of the few who thinks the movie is spot on with the spirit of the book. I have a son who, much like Max, escapes into his world when this one becomes too much to handle. I wonder what Sendak thinks of the film? Even still, this is my very favorite book.
Seems like even he knows he’s a crotchety coot. Not really by choice, and seems almost apologetic. I give him a pass. He’s always been a bit of a misfit, not in line with what society says he should be, do, or even write. Let him be, I say.
I loved the naked boy in The Night Kitchen. Little kids go naked all the time. They feel good that way. I get the feeling Sendak likes kids and remembers childhood. I don’t like Roald Dahl. I get the feeling he secretly hated kids.
LOVE HIM. And who knew so many of us are Fresh Air listeners? In that interview he was very teary, now I see he wears his heart on his sleeve no matter his mood! And I think it is hilarious that he even HAS an opinion about GOOP, I don’t even care what it is.
I LOVE MAURICE SENDAK!!!
This is brilliant.
But shut the hell up about Dahl. I liked that his books were screwed-up. Made me feel all nice and normal. I must have read Matilda at least fifty times.
This is the best interview I’ve read in a long time… refreshing really
I think you’d have to search long and hard for someone who hasn’t said this on knowing, chatting.. even a tiny bit and dealing her ‘know that.. done that better.. really, it’s bad for you shocked expression.. Can you believe the youthful transformation? We should appaude her skills in turning back the clock.. Amazing older lady tight stretched skin.., she’s ano? But we are wrong.. Smug tween girl look she is promoting now is so saaaad and no it doesn’t mask you lost your tits.. hips and waist and over processed the thinning hair.
I look at the banner picture and I want to pinch his cheeks — he’d probably tell me to bugger off and say that my hands were sweaty — and I’d love it!.
I might have a new hero.
I LIKED Matilda. But Willy Wonka was malignant.