Daily children’s book recommendations and events from Anita Silvey.

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May
17

The Carrot Seed

by Ruth Krauss
illustrated by Crockett Johnson

In May of 1945—around the time of Victory in Europe Day in World War II—a small book appeared on the list of Harper and Brothers. A quirky, offbeat title, it was not advertised that year and did not seem a likely candidate for celebrity status in the picture book world. But when it comes to children’s books for the very young (those one to three years old), simplicity often wins out over other approaches, and The Carrot Seed exemplifies simplicity.

The creation of writer Ruth Krauss, this small gem stands as a testament to revision. When asked how long it took her to write The Carrot Seed, Krauss always said “her whole life.” She had to pare the story down, again and again, until she got its essence.

In this saga, a young child plants a seed. Everyone else believes it won’t grow (or as they say, “come up”) except the child. “And then one day,/a carrot came up/just as the little boy had known it would.” A statement about childhood belief and faith, the book—sometimes called “the little book with the big idea”—has become one of our most cherished American picture books.

Krauss could be quite acerbic when she wanted to, and even her editor Ursula Nordstrom addressed her in letters as “Dear Ruthless.” Krauss often terrorized her illustrators. On one notable occasion she took some drawings offered her by a frightened, young illustrator and deposited them in a wastebasket. But she pronounced the drawings for The Carrot Seed “perfect.”

Of course, Krauss was married to the illustrator of this book, David Johnson Leisk, aka Crockett Johnson who also created Harold and the Purple Crayon. But it would be hard to image any other rendition of this book or of the child in the drawings. Johnson, who was himself bald, always drew bald characters or, in the case of The Carrot Seed, a child with a single hair. He maintained that bald heads were easier to draw than ones with hair.

Happy birthday to The Carrot Seed. For all these years, children have been absorbing its subtle message about the power of positive thinking.

Here’s a page from The Carrot Seed:

And then, one day,


a carrot came up


just as the little boy


had known it would.

Also recommended:

  • Harold and the Purple Crayon by Crockett Johnson
  • A Hole Is to Dig by Ruth Krauss, illustrated by Maurice Sendak

Additional Information

A few other events for

May 17
  • Happy birthday Eloise Greenfield (Honey, I Love and Other Poems), Nancy Polette (Eight Cinderellas), Gary Paulsen (Hatchet), and Jeanne M. Lee (I Once Was a Monkey).
  • It’s the birth date of the New York Stock Exchange, formed in 1792. Read Six Days in October: The Stock Market Crash of 1929 by Karen Blumenthal.
  • In 1939, the Columbia Lions and Princeton Tigers play in the first televised sporting event in the U.S, a collegiate baseball game. Read Library Lion by Michelle Knudson, illustrated by Kevin Hawkes, and Riding the Tiger by Eve Bunting, illustrations by David Frampton.
  • It’s Pack Rat Day. Read The Return of Pete Pack Rat by Robert Quakenbush.