He was irreverent, absurdist and ahead of his time. Here’s the best of the best by the groovy pied piper who made poetry fun. Credit...Alice Ochs/Michael Ochs Archives, via Getty Images Supported by ...
We grew up reading the delightful writings of Shel Silverstein in works like “Where the Sidewalk Ends” and we still cry at the end of “The Giving Tree,” so we’re overjoyed to learn that a new book of ...
A floppy-eared protagonist who would be called Bunny Rabbit in the straight-talking world morphed into Runny Babbit in the inimitable imagination of Shel Silverstein, and first appeared in Runny ...
The late author-illustrator Shel Silverstein (1930–1999) knew exactly how he wanted his children’s books to look, right down to the color and weight of the paper and the size of the type. In that same ...
The second posthumous volume of poems from Shel Silverstein will be released by HaperCollins next year. According to Entertainment Weekly, the untitled collection will feature 120 to 130 new works ...
Many of us fondly remember Shel Silverstein as the voice of our childhoods. We were lulled by the amiable content of collections like Where the Sidewalk Ends, A Light in the Attic and The Giving Tree.
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