The late, great Judith Kerr and her Secret Message by Griselda Heppel
Last
week, in all the uproar surrounding the European elections and the government reeling
from crisis to crisis, something happened that put other news in the shade:
Judith Kerr died. One of the greatest and most loved children’s authors ever,
she was responsible for The Tiger Who Came to Tea, Mog the Forgetful
Cat and When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit – classics which will never go
out of print because, well, who can imagine a world without them?
To
be able to write and illustrate as brilliantly as Kerr did is a rare gift. I
can think of only a handful of other authors who are in her league: Erics Carle
and Hill with The Very Hungry Caterpillar and Where’s Spot
respectively; John Burningham, Jill Murphy and Babette Cole with numerous books
apiece; and of course, the master of animal delineation, characterisation and
humour, Beatrix Potter.
But
for me Judith Kerr stands out because in The Tiger Who Came to Tea, she
created the Picture Book of Picture Books. Tapping into what matters most to young
children – warmth, safety, excitement, surprise and mystery – she makes every
word and every picture count. Taking a child’s every day experience – there’s someone
at the door, who can it be? – she transforms it into a thrilling, magical world
in which the visitor can turn out to be a great big furry tiger who sits down
and makes himself at home, enjoying all the tea and cake Sophie and her mother
can offer. What child can resist that? Mine are in their thirties and even now,
if the doorbell goes unexpectedly, my daughter launches straight into, ‘It can’t
be the grocer’s boy, because this isn’t the day he comes. And it can’t be
Daddy, because he’s got his keys…’
There’s another, special, reason for why the book means
so much to me. Too old for it when first published in 1968, I first spotted The Tiger
Who Came to Tea in a bookshop when browsing for my own children – and felt
I’d come home. Something in those charming, joyous illustrations took me
straight back to my childhood in 1960s Germany, in a way no other English
picture book had ever done.
I’d thought the two countries differed markedly in
their style of book illustration; now in my hands lay delightful proof that I
was wrong, that artistic traditions in the two nationalities could overlap
after all. (Sadly I have no picture books to show you what I mean; but look at
the eyes in this fine line drawing of Gulliver (below) by the wonderful German illustrator,
Horst Lemke, and tell me you can’t see a bit of Kerr’s tiger there.)
Ride with Me Through ABC by Horst Lemke |
From Erich Kastner's retelling of Gulliver's Travels, illustrated by Horst Lemke |
Only
years later did I discover that the solidly British-sounding Judith Kerr was
German by birth, and spent the first 9 years of her life growing up in Germany
before Hitler’s rise to power forced her family into exile. Terrible as her
country under the Nazis was, there’s something both touching and life-affirming
in the way that happy influences of Judith’s early German childhood – books,
pictures, stories, games – helped to mould her artistic style as an adult, even
while her nationality itself changed.
In recent years Judith Kerr pronounced herself
much amused by the clever theory from former children's laureate Michael Rosen and others that the Tiger
is a metaphor for the Gestapo; the Daily Mail recalled that ‘in a 2013
BBC documentary, he pointed out that ‘she was no stranger, to the knock on the door, the monster tearing her world apart.’
Er, Michael Rosen, have you actually read the book? The
tiger is no monster, he is soft, furry and cuddly. These are not adjectives usually
applied to the Gestapo. For this crackpot idea to stick, there’d have to be a
sense of menace about the creature but instead he allows Sophie to stroke and
hug him while munching his way through the biscuit cupboard. As the Daily
Mail article confirms, ‘Judith’s patient answer …was always the same. The
tiger was just a tiger. It was hungry, and it wanted its tea.’
Of course it was. Kerr is much too good an author to weigh down her
enchanting book with such a crass message. Far more interesting is the secret
contained in the pictures themselves, of how Kerr’s artistic style can’t help
but reveal her roots in the happy German childhood she enjoyed before the Nazis’
brutal regime took over.
Find out more about Griselda Heppel here:
and her children's books:
Ante's Inferno
and
The Tragickall History of Henry Fowst
Ante's Inferno
and
The Tragickall History of Henry Fowst
Comments
Thanks, Sandra, glad you enjoyed it!