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Capturing the world’s imaginatio­n

Legendary cartoonist art spiegelman to receive honorary National book award in the us.

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THIS fall, Art Spiegelman will receive an honorary National Book Award for Distinguis­hed Contributi­on to American Letters. He feels honoured, and a little worried.

The unexpected pleasure of being cited by the National Book Foundation comes months after the jarring saga of his Pulitzer Prizewinni­ng Maus being withdrawn by a Tennessee school board, which found Spiegelman’s graphic novel about the Holocaust inappropri­ate for the district’s curriculum. Sales for Maus and other Spiegelman books surged, but the attention distracted him from other priorities.

“My work schedule just got totally smashed to smithereen­s,” he said during a recent telephone interview. “I was happy to crawl back into my hideout.”

Now, the 74-year-old Spiegelman anticipate­s being back out in the world, an admittedly enviable burden that will require him to set aside time and consider his decades-long legacy, one profound and wide-ranging.

His influence extends from Maus, winner of a special citation from Pulitzer judges in 1992, to his 1970s work in undergroun­d comics to his famed New Yorker covers, notably the darkened silhouette­s of the Twin Towers that ran two weeks after the terrorist attacks of Sept 11, 2001.

“Art Spiegelman has captured the world’s imaginatio­n through the comics medium,” David Steinberge­r, chair of the National Book Foundation’s board of directors, said in a statement released last Friday.

“His masterful graphic novels tackle and illuminate topics from the Holocaust to the aftermath of 9/11, alongside the personal intimacy of the people, events, and comics that shaped him as an artist. Spiegelman’s groundbrea­king work has shown us the limitless possibilit­ies for comics as a literary arts form.”

Born in Stockholm, Spiegelman was a toddler when his family emigrated to the US, in the early 1950s.

He is descended from Polish Jews

and lost dozens of relatives – including his brother Rysio – during the Holocaust, a tragic history which he drew upon for Maus. His career as a cartoonist dates back to his teens, when he was contributi­ng art to

Smudge and other fanzines and was producing his own publicatio­n,

Blase.

Spiegelman’s career is, in part, a story of taking an art form associated with kids and reshaping it for adults, what he calls “investigat­ing the language and nature of comics.”

He is the first cartoonist to win the DCAL medal from the National Book Foundation, which previously has awarded Toni Morrison, Philip Roth and Robert Caro among others.

“It’s very different from what was happening back in the 1970s, where being a cartoonist essentiall­y meant – unless you were Charles Schulz – that you weren’t in the big leagues of success. It was more like being a tattoo artist,” says Spiegelman.

“But the world is changing. There has been a cultural shift that has made it less pejorative to make comics. You had a moment in the 1950s when comics bannings were happening across America. Comic books were seen as dangerous, and you had this struggle over what kids should be allowed to see. There was a ratings system (the Comics Code) and a lot of it was nonsense. But the genie is long out of the bottle.”

Neil Gaiman will introduce Spiegelman at the Nov 16 ceremony, presented by the Book Foundation.

The American Library Associatio­n’s executive director, Tracie D. Hall, will receive an award for Outstandin­g Service to the American Literary Community, and winners will be announced in five competitiv­e categories, from fiction to young people’s literature.

In a recent telephone interview, Gaiman said Spiegelman had made an enduring impact on him.

He remembered seeing some of Spiegelman’s Maus images some 40 years ago and relating them to his own experience­s as a relative of Jewish Holocaust survivors.

“It left prints on my soul,” he says of Spiegelman’s work.

They became friends years later, even though Gaiman, who recalls turning down the chance to meet David Bowie and Elvis Costello among others, had an unofficial rule not to meet his heroes. But he said that his admiration and affection for Spiegelman have only deepened, and he was not surprised that Spiegelman had worried that winning the DCAL might disrupt his work schedule.

“That is Art,” he said. “Art, with a capital ‘A,’ is always thinking about art, with a small ‘a.’ He makes things that matter, and I think he knows he makes things that matter, and I think we are ridiculous­ly lucky to have him.”

 ?? — ap ?? spiegelman will be the first cartoonist to win the distinguis­hed Contributi­ons to american Letters medal from the National book
Foundation, which previously has awarded Toni morrison, philip roth and robert Caro.
— ap spiegelman will be the first cartoonist to win the distinguis­hed Contributi­ons to american Letters medal from the National book Foundation, which previously has awarded Toni morrison, philip roth and robert Caro.
 ?? — Handout ?? Maus won a pulitzer prize in 1992, and recalls the story of spiegelman’s father, who survived imprisonme­nt at auschwitz.
— Handout Maus won a pulitzer prize in 1992, and recalls the story of spiegelman’s father, who survived imprisonme­nt at auschwitz.

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