The Prince George Citizen

Wonky Donkey taking off thanks to laughing grandma

- Hillel ITALIE

NEW YORK — The United States’s hottest book isn’t a hit because of Oprah Winfrey or Donald Trump. It’s all because of a laughing Scottish grandmothe­r.

Thanks to a viral video of Janice Clark reading Craig Smith’s The Wonky Donkey to her baby grandson, and her breathless amusement over lines such as “He was a honky-tonky winky wonky donkey,” the 2009 picture book about a three-legged, one-eyed donkey has sold more than 100,000 copies in the U.S. this fall, much of that in the past week. According to NPD BookScan, which tracks around 85 per cent of the print market, Wonky Donkey topped all releases with more than 90,000 copies sold last week, beating out Bob Woodward’s Fear and Rachel Hollis’ Girl, Wash Your Face, among others.

“You can’t ask for a better endorsemen­t of your creation than when the person reading your book is having a better time than the child being read to. Janice’s infectious laughter was an absolute delight!” wrote Smith, a New Zealand-based musician and author, in a recent email. “Remember, this viral sensation came about because a grandmothe­r read a BOOK to her grandson, albeit a very special grandmothe­r.”

The Wonky Donkey, featuring illustrati­ons by Katz Cowley, had already sold hundreds of thousands of copies in New Zealand and Australia. But until recently it had a much smaller audience in the United States. According to Scholastic, the book had sold about 75,000 copies and was out of print before the video caught on last month.

“Before this fall, if you had said Wonky Donkey in my store, no one would have known what you were talking about,” said Linda Devlin, owner of Linda’s Story Time in Monroe, Conn. “Now, it just sells and sells. People see it and say, ‘Oh, I have to get that for my grandchild­ren.”’

Scholastic announced Friday that it had ordered another 600,000 copies. Meanwhile, Clark is coming to New York in November for an event at Barnes & Noble.

On his website, craigsmith.co.nz, Smith identifies himself as a creator of “cruisy, easy listening, children’s and sometimes humorous acoustic music.” He has released numerous books and records, including picture stories such as The Drizzly Bear and The Scariest Thing in the Garden.

Wonky Donkey started out as a children’s song, written by Smith more than a decade ago.

“I was sitting at a table at Te Anau Rugby Club rooms in the South Island of New Zealand one night with my mates and family and we were exchanging jokes,” he wrote recently. “A friend of mine told the joke, ‘What do you call a donkey with three legs?’ And the answer was, ‘A wonky donkey!’ Everyone sniggered and groaned.”

“I went home and got my rhyming dictionary out,” he said, “and the cumulative play on words and Wonky tale began. Being an entertaine­r and songster, I thought it would make a hilarious song.”

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