The Stranger
The enigmatic origins of the stranger that Farmer Bailey hits with his
truck and brings home to recuperate seem to have a mysterious relation
to the weather. Could he be Jack Frost?
Price: $18.95
Chris Van Allsburg
RISD ’75 [Sculpture]
Chris Van Allsburg first beckoned readers into his enchanted imagination — a place where, “something strange or puzzling,” is sure to happen — with The Garden of Abdul Gasazi (Houghton Mifflin, 1979). The string of books that followed (The Polar Express, The Mysteries of Harris Burdick and The Z Was Zapped, to name a few) sealed his reputation as a perennial favorite with both children and adults. In Zathura (2002), a two-dimensional game board unfolds into a three-dimensional world, enveloping two boys and their house and taking them on a trip through outer space and back in time. Among Van Allsburg’s numerous awards are Caldecott Medals for The Polar Express (1986) and Jumanji (1982), which was made into a feature film and heralded in The New York Times Book Review for its “subtle intelligence beyond the call of illustration.”
Chris Van Allsburg first beckoned readers into his enchanted imagination — a place where, “something strange or puzzling,” is sure to happen — with The Garden of Abdul Gasazi (Houghton Mifflin, 1979). The string of books that followed (The Polar Express, The Mysteries of Harris Burdick and The Z Was Zapped, to name a few) sealed his reputation as a perennial favorite with both children and adults. In Zathura (2002), a two-dimensional game board unfolds into a three-dimensional world, enveloping two boys and their house and taking them on a trip through outer space and back in time. Among Van Allsburg’s numerous awards are Caldecott Medals for The Polar Express (1986) and Jumanji (1982), which was made into a feature film and heralded in The New York Times Book Review for its “subtle intelligence beyond the call of illustration.”





