About this item
Milo the magician is a mess. Not only does he botch his card tricks and tangle his rope tricks, but he cant even manage the old standby: pulling a rabbit from a hat. Spurred on by his managers fury, Milo heads out of the city to find himself a rabbit. Dangling a carrot over his top hat, our magnificent magician captures... a bear. Here is where his luck turns. As it happens, this particular bear is adept at jumping into hats: "You just pretend your bones are made of rubber," he says. "Its a secret I learned from a rabbit." Returning to the city, (after a brief mix-up on the subway) , the two quickly become a smash sensation. But after popping in and out of 762 hats, the bear is positively pooped. Can Milo carry on without his rubber-boned buddy? Jon Agee illustrates his eccentric story with strange yet wonderful illustrations of blank-eyed, big-nosed, redheaded Milo in too-short trousers, and the cavalier, hat-hopping bear. Perfect comedic timing and a nutty plot ensure that readers of all ages will adore this tale of a misfits triumph. (Ages 3 to 8) --Emilie Coulter
About the Author
Jon Agee
I grew up in Nyack, New York, just up the street from the Hudson River. In our house, there was always an art project going on. My early drawings were very animated: a lot of stuff zipping around, airplanes, racing cars, football players. No surprise my first published drawing was a pack of rats running along a highway (The Rat Race) . I did that for the Op Ed page when I was still in high school. I went to college at The Cooper Union School of Art in New York City. I studied painting, sculpture and filmmaking, but what I loved doing most - in my spare time - was drawing cartoons and comic strips. When I graduated, I hauled my pile of doodles into the offices of a bunch of editors, with the wild notion that somebody might publish them. When that failed, I wrote a story for kids to go with my pictures () . It was two sentences long (which counts, by the way) . Frances Foster, a wonderful editor at Random House, saw something in that book and signed me up. The next book, , was about a dog who teaches economics at a university. When he gets home, he throws off his clothes and acts like a dog, which is fine, until some fellow teachers discover this and he loses his job. Somebody told me that was a story about "being yourself. " I never realized it had a moral. I moved to another publisher with , the story of a grumpy guy who laughs in his sleep. This book was doing very poorly until the comedienne Phyliss Diller read it on PBS's . It stayed in print for over twenty years. My fourth book, , was a hit. One of the first people to see it and give it the thumb's up - literally, hot off the press - was Maurice Sendak. We bumped into each other at the printers. It was a lucky first meeting, and happily not our last.That was all a long time ago. Since then I've written many other picture books, illustrated a few by other authors, and created a series of offbeat wordplay books, beginning with the book of palindromes, I visit schools across the country and sometimes around the globe. I live with my wife, Audrey, in San Francisco.
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