Lifestyle
Maurice Sendak delights children with new book, 12 years after his death
An image of Mino from Maurice Sendak’s posthumous book Ten Little Rabbits.
Maurice Sendak/HarperCollins Publishers
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Maurice Sendak/HarperCollins Publishers
An image of Mino from Maurice Sendak’s posthumous book Ten Little Rabbits.
Maurice Sendak/HarperCollins Publishers
In Ten Little Rabbits, a new posthumous picture book by Maurice Sendak, Mino the Magician waves his wand and, poof, a rabbit appears. Another wave and out springs a second and then a third. By the forth rabbit, Mino yawns. By the sixth, he’s annoyed. Ninth, he’s exasperated, as the rabbits crawl all over him. So back they go, one rabbit at a time, giving readers the chance to count up and back again by the time Mino is done.
But it’s the unruly rabbits and Mino’s many facial expressions that kept this reader turning the page. Once again, Sendak’s knack for capturing just about every kind of emotion is on full display, 12 years after his death, in this book being brought to the public for the first time.
Look no further than 5-year-old Maurice Sendak (circa 1933) to see the model for Max, Pierre, Johnny and now Mino the Magician in Ten Little Rabbits.
The Maurice Sendak Foundation
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The Maurice Sendak Foundation
Sendak fans will immediately recognize Mino. While their names and adventures might be different, the boys in Chicken Soup With Rice, Where The Wild Things Are, One Was Johnny — Mino, Max, Pierre, Johnny — and other Sendak stories look very similar.
“Well, he’s Maurice,” says Lynn Caponera, executive director of The Maurice Sendak Foundation. “He” also didn’t look like most of the other boys in children’s books in the 1950s, says curator Jonathan Weinberg.
“Maurice really had created a kind of child that isn’t…the prettiest little boy. He has a kind of…an ethnic look, Jewish, almost European look to it. And Maurice was the child of Jewish-Polish Americans,” Weinberg says.
“The characters of my earlier books are really only sort of cockamamie self-portraits,” Sendak told Terry Gross, host of WHYY’s Fresh Air in 2003. “Unfortunately, I look like Max and the Wild Things, as children tell you in their brazen way. ‘Oh, Mommy, he looks like the Moishe, the big, wild thing.’ And you just want to crack them.”
A whistling night owl
Sendak had no heirs when he died in 2012, but Caponera and Weinberg were like family to him. They first met Sendak when they were kids, 11 and 10 years old respectively. Weinberg says Sendak and his partner Eugene Glynn, a psychiatrist, were like “surrogate parents.” Glynn “was my mother’s best friend,” he says.
Ten Little Rabbits is a new, count-along picture book by Maurice Sendak, published 12 years after he died.
HarperCollins Publishers
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HarperCollins Publishers
Ten Little Rabbits is a new, count-along picture book by Maurice Sendak, published 12 years after he died.
HarperCollins Publishers
Lynn Caponera’s family lived down the street from Sendak and Glynn’s Ridgefield, Conn. home. Her brother took care of the property, which was built in 1790, and Sendak once called Caponera’s mother “a saint.”
When Caponera was 18, she moved into an apartment on the property and helped take care of the house and the dogs. She quickly learned that Sendak was a night owl. Her apartment was right underneath his studio.
“So I would hear him like all night whistling and playing music,” she recalls, “And you could hear when things were going right. He would be whistling like crazy. So like actually whistling while he worked.” She adds it was “a really wonderful way to come up in the morning and see what he did.”
Weinberg adds that Sendak, “could whistle entire operas from beginning to end” — a claim that is difficult to fact-check. But some of his fantasy sketches actually note on the back what song he was whistling when he was working on them.
Artist Maurice Sendak signs prints July 26, 1990 in New York.
Susan Ragan/AP
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Susan Ragan/AP
Artist Maurice Sendak signs prints July 26, 1990 in New York.
Susan Ragan/AP
Like some of his characters, Sendak had a mischievous streak. His very first job was designing window displays for FAO Schwarz. On a recent visit to Sendak’s home, Caponera points out a little toy crow from the store whose likeness shows up in Hector Protector.
Sendak got it during a contest among the workers “to see what you could steal from the store,” Caponera laughs, “Maurice was very proud that he said he got a train set out once and…so besides being a great illustrator, apparently was a good thief.”
Sendak’s studio is as he left it
Weinberg says Sendak “was constantly learning and teaching himself” different styles and “emulating” other artists.
Throughout Sendak’s home there is all kinds of art everywhere: 19th century oil paintings and photographs, Winslow Homer engravings from Harper’s Weekly, mechanical toys Sendak made with his brother, a vast collection of Mickey Mouse memorabilia and much more.
Maurice Sendak’s home studio, left, remains as it was during the time he was working there, down to the sweater on the chair and the slippers on the floor. He kept an image of Lewis Carroll’s Alice, right, by his desk for inspiration.
Meghan Collins Sullivan/NPR
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Meghan Collins Sullivan/NPR
His studio is almost exactly as it was when Sendak was alive, says Caponera. Slippers on the floor, sweater draped over the chair, art supplies on his desk. “Cheap…cake paints” like the kind you’d “use in kindergarten,” she notes.
Among the many photographs by Sendak’s desk is one of Alice Liddell, the girl who inspired the main character in Lewis Carroll’s Alice’s Adventures Under Ground. She doesn’t look too happy; Sendak loved it.
“Maurice used to say that he really identified with that photo because, you know, being an illustrator is a very lonely job,” Caponera says. “You’re usually hours and hours doing tedious work at a drawing table by yourself. So he liked to think that Alice was sort of looking over him and that she looked so dejected because she’s so tired.”
Overseeing Sendak’s legacy can be “daunting,” Caponera says. She says she’s confident he would have approved of the new edition of Ten Little Rabbits.
He initially thought the count-along picture book would be part of Nutshell Library, his 1962 collection of pocket-size books Alligators All Around, Chicken Soup with Rice, One Was Johnny, and Pierre. But “he decided to go in a different direction because the other books in Nutshell Library are much more elaborate,” Weinberg says.
Eventually, in 1970, Sendak turned Ten Little Rabbits into a 3.5 x 2.5-inch pamphlet for a fundraiser for Philadelphia’s Rosenbach Museum.
Ten Little Rabbits was originally created in the style of the books that are part of the Nutshell Library. In 1970, Sendak turned it into a 3.5 x 2.5-inch booklet for a fundraiser for Philadelphia’s Rosenbach Museum.
Meghan Collins Sullivan/NPR
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Meghan Collins Sullivan/NPR
Ten Little Rabbits was originally created in the style of the books that are part of the Nutshell Library. In 1970, Sendak turned it into a 3.5 x 2.5-inch booklet for a fundraiser for Philadelphia’s Rosenbach Museum.
Meghan Collins Sullivan/NPR
This is the third posthumous book of Sendak’s to be published, after My Brother’s Book (2013) and Presto and Zesto in Limboland (2018). And in addition to the new book, Caponera and Weinberg have organized a major retrospective of Sendak’s work that will head to the Skirball Cultural Center in Los Angeles in the spring and then to the Denver Art Museum in the fall.
Caponera says Sendak’s instructions for how to guide his legacy were pretty much “You’ll know what to do.”
It’s evident he trusted her. Nine months before he died, at age 83, Sendak did a sweeping, poignant interview with Terry Gross. He reflected on his career, losing extended family in the Holocaust, depression, getting older and, as he put it “trying to understand what it means to be an artist.”
Gross asked him if he had someone helping him. Sendak told her about Lynn Caponera. “She is a youngish lady who puts up with my oldness; that is, I’m fighting and struggling against,” he says. “She puts up with my bad behavior and she loves me and I love her.”
Meghan Collins Sullivan edited this story for radio and the web. Isabella Gomez Sarmiento produced the audio.
Lifestyle
Former Vice President Mike Pence believes Washington is more ‘swampy’ under Trump
Since leaving office, former Vice President Mike Pence founded the policy and advocacy organization Advancing American Freedom.
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Drew Angerer/Getty Images

Since leaving office, former Vice President Mike Pence founded the policy and advocacy organization Advancing American Freedom.
Drew Angerer/Getty Images
Former Vice President Mike Pence played a key role in bringing President Trump to power in 2016. By putting his name on the Republican ticket, he helped reassure the Republican establishment and evangelical voters who were wary of Trump’s brash brand of populism.
Pence’s departure from Trump’s leadership of the Republican party began when Trump called on Pence to refuse to certify the results of the 2020 election — pressure Pence rejected.
“For four years, we had a close working relationship. It did not end well,” Pence wrote in his memoir So Help Me God, which was released in 2022.
In the years since leaving office, Pence has been advocating for an ideological restructure of the Republican party, and founded the policy and advocacy organization Advancing American Freedom. Pence builds on the theme of reimagining the Republican party in his new book What Conservatives Want, which provides a critique of the second Trump administration and what he terms the “populist right.”
In an interview with Morning Edition, Pence detailed to NPR’s Steve Inskeep his critique of the second Trump administration, shared his perspective on civil rights legislation and challenged Trump’s tariffs and other interventions in the economy.
Listen to the full interview by clicking on the blue play button above; and read highlights from the conversation below.
‘The populist right’ does not represent conservative beliefs
Pence believes that Trump has embraced “the populist right” over traditional conservatives in the Republican party.
The sale of economic American company U.S. Steel to Nippon Steel in Japan exemplifies this shift, Pence said.
In his first term, President Trump opposed the sale. But in his second term, he approved the sale and took a golden share — a class of shares in which a government can own a very small percentage of the company but has outsized voting rights.
Pence said that he was taken aback by Trump’s decision to take a golden share.
Free trade is essential to American conservatism
Pence takes umbrage with his former boss’ tariff-laden economic policy.
Pence said it violates conservatism’s bedrock belief in the power of free trade, and Trump has gone about granting exceptions to tariffs in an unfair way.
Granting waivers to large corporations from certain tariffs is “one of the lesser reported aspects of the tariff regime that’s been imposed by the administration,” Pence added.
Trump and Pence ran in 2020 on a mission to “drain the swamp,” rooting out government corruption and wasteful spending. However, Pence said Trump appears to have shifted from those goals.
“There’s maybe nothing more swampy than the battle over getting tariff waivers for big business,” Pence said.
Women’s rights on the right
There is a debate among the ultraconservative right about the role of women in civic life.
The concept of “household voting,” has become a familiar talking point for ultra-right-wing communities online. Supporters of “household voting” advocate that every American household should get one vote, the vote being that of the husband’s. This concept has been promoted by figures such as Abby Johnson, a prominent anti-abortion activist who spoke at the 2020 Republican National Convention. When asked about whether he supported household voting, Pence said he is not aligned
“It’s one person, one vote in this country. And people have bled and died for that principle throughout the years of our history,” Pence said.
He added that American families don’t need to be propped up by government programs to boost childbirth. “What American families need is an application of the kind of principles that will create higher wages, more opportunities, more jobs,” Pence said.
Should conservatives stand for civil rights?
Pence said he was an admirer of senator and one-time presidential candidate Barry Goldwater.
Notably, Goldwater voted against the Civil Rights Act of 1964.
“Should conservatives stand for civil rights?” asked Inskeep.
Pence responded that civil rights are important to conservatives, but that equality of opportunity is what legislation ought to enshrine, not equality of outcome.
Pence added that he stood by the Supreme Court’s decision to ban partisan gerrymandering on the basis of race, rendering ineffective a key provision of the Voting Rights Act of 1965.
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‘Supergirl’ has a solid hero but could use a better villain : Pop Culture Happy Hour
Milly Alcock in Supergirl.
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Warner Bros. Pictures
Hollywood’s newest Supergirl is kind of a dirtbag — in the good way. Fearless and grumpy, Supergirl (Milly Alcock) sets out on a quest to support a new pal’s revenge journey and to make a point that should be clear by now: Never mess with a lady’s dog. Also featuring David Corenswet and Jason Momoa, is Supergirl a worthy follow up to Superman?
If you want more DC superhero action, check out these episodes:
‘Superman’ takes off and nails the landing
‘The Batman’ puts the emo in emote
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