48
S C A T T E R B R A I N E D
08
One Fish, Two Fish:
Th
e Life and Times of Dr. Seuss
In 1960, publisher Bennett Cerf bet Dr. Seuss $50
that Seuss
couldn’t write a book using only 50 diff erent words. So Seuss
wrote
Green Eggs and Ham,
which became an instant
picture book classic. Cerf ap-
parently never paid up, inci-
dentally.
Green Eggs and Ham
marked the apex of Seuss’s
minimalist-vocabulary pe-
riod, and it was an awfully
impressive feat (we used 50
diff erent words just to tell
you about it).
✖ ✖ ✖
When
Dr. Seuss Goes to War,
a
collection of Geisel’s World
War II–era cartoons created
for
PM
magazine,
was pub-
lished in 1999, the American
public was stunned. How could
the author of peace-loving,
Truff ula Tree–hugging chil-
dren’s books have penned
wartime cartoons that at-
tacked Japanese Americans
and depicted the Japanese as
bucktoothed buff oons? Some
argued that Seuss was only
Seuss: The Basics
Theodor Seuss Geisel wasn’t ac-
tually a doctor (at least not until
his alma mater, Dartmouth,
gave him an honorary PhD), but
his
unique poetic meter and kid-
friendly, leap-off-the-page illus-
trations made him one of the
most successful children’s writers
in history (220 million books
sold). From books intended to
teach vocabulary and reading
skills (like
The Cat in the Hat
) to
allegorical tales of power-
hungry
turtles and environmen-
tal destruction (
Yertle the Turtle
and
The Lorax,
respectively), Dr.
Seuss was a vital innovator in
the world of children’s books for
more than fi fty years. When he
arrived on the kid-lit scene, chil-
dren’s books were boring, life-
less tomes (once you’ve seen
Spot run a couple times, you’re
ready to give up reading for
good). Dr. Seuss created picture
books that we
wanted
to read.
49
refl ecting his times; others
argued that racism is racism
(regardless of whether it’s in a
box or with a fox).
✖ ✖ ✖
Before
he started speaking for
the trees, Dr. Seuss was, well,
a sellout. For fi fteen years he
wrote and designed ads for
the corporate monolith Stan-
dard Oil. In a series of ads
hawking Standard’s pesticide
Flit, Geisel coined the popular
catchphrase, “Quick, Henry,
the Flit!”
which was sort of
the “Mikey likes it!” of its
time.
✖ ✖ ✖
While it would probably be a
slight exaggeration to say
that Dr. Seuss singlehand-
edly ended the Cold War,
Th e
Butter Battle Book
was one of
the most infl uential anti-arms-race books of the ’80s. Tell-
ing the story of the absurd war between the Yooks and the
Zooks (whose sole disagreement is whether one ought to
eat bread butter side up or butter side down), Seuss subtly
challenged the Reagan administration’s
emphasis on de-
fense over social welfare programs. For six months, the
book was on the
New York Times
Best Sellers list—for adults.
Every single one of Seuss’s books sold well to kids, of
course—not that these kids coming up next would ever
deign to read him. . . .
Horton Spies
a Kegger
Dr.
Seuss came from a long
line of German brewmasters,
which perhaps explains how
he came to throw a drunken
bash during his Dartmouth
days. Due to school policy
(and also federal law, since
Prohibition forbade drinking
in those days), Ted’s
excellent
venture got him fi red from his
position at
The Dartmouth
Jack-O-Lantern,
the college’s
humor magazine
.
But the wily
Geisel never let The Man keep
him down:
He kept writing for
the
Jack-O-Lantern,
adopting
the pseudonym “Seuss” (his
middle name) to get by the
censors.
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