1 00:00:00,513 --> 00:00:03,266 Hello. My name is Jarrett Krosoczka, 2 00:00:03,266 --> 00:00:07,732 and I write and illustrate books for children for a living. 3 00:00:07,732 --> 00:00:11,892 So I use my imagination as my full-time job. 4 00:00:11,892 --> 00:00:15,221 But well before my imagination was my vocation, 5 00:00:15,221 --> 00:00:17,949 my imagination saved my life. 6 00:00:17,949 --> 00:00:20,436 When I was a kid, I loved to draw, 7 00:00:20,436 --> 00:00:23,302 and the most talented artist I knew 8 00:00:23,302 --> 00:00:25,136 was my mother, 9 00:00:25,136 --> 00:00:28,452 but my mother was addicted to heroin. 10 00:00:28,452 --> 00:00:31,897 And when your parent is a drug addict, 11 00:00:31,897 --> 00:00:35,236 it's kind of like Charlie Brown trying to kick the football, 12 00:00:35,236 --> 00:00:37,732 because as much as you want to love on that person, 13 00:00:37,732 --> 00:00:39,970 as much as you want to receive love from that person, 14 00:00:39,970 --> 00:00:43,223 every time you open your heart, you end up on your back. 15 00:00:43,223 --> 00:00:47,443 So throughout my childhood, my mother was incarcerated 16 00:00:47,443 --> 00:00:48,869 and I didn't have my father because 17 00:00:48,869 --> 00:00:52,529 I didn't even learn his first name until I was in the sixth grade. 18 00:00:52,529 --> 00:00:54,849 But I had my grandparents, 19 00:00:54,849 --> 00:00:57,420 my maternal grandparents Joseph and Shirley, 20 00:00:57,420 --> 00:01:00,702 who adopted me just before my third birthday 21 00:01:00,702 --> 00:01:02,164 and took me in as their own, 22 00:01:02,164 --> 00:01:04,092 after they had already raised five children. 23 00:01:04,092 --> 00:01:07,302 So two people who grew up in the Great Depression, 24 00:01:07,302 --> 00:01:12,340 there in the very, very early '80s took on a new kid. 25 00:01:12,340 --> 00:01:14,398 I was the Cousin Oliver of the sitcom 26 00:01:14,398 --> 00:01:16,504 of the Krosoczka family, 27 00:01:16,504 --> 00:01:19,085 the new kid who came out of nowhere. 28 00:01:19,085 --> 00:01:23,228 And I would like to say that life was totally easy with them. 29 00:01:23,228 --> 00:01:26,321 They each smoked two packs a day, each, nonfiltered, 30 00:01:26,321 --> 00:01:28,524 and by the time I was six, 31 00:01:28,524 --> 00:01:30,627 I could order a Southern Comfort Manhattan, 32 00:01:30,627 --> 00:01:32,780 dry with a twist, rocks on the side, 33 00:01:32,780 --> 00:01:36,761 the ice on the side so you could fit more liquor in the drink. 34 00:01:36,761 --> 00:01:40,100 But they loved the hell out of me. They loved me so much. 35 00:01:40,100 --> 00:01:42,460 And they supported my creative efforts, 36 00:01:42,460 --> 00:01:44,949 because my grandfather was a self-made man. 37 00:01:44,949 --> 00:01:46,669 He ran and worked in a factory. 38 00:01:46,669 --> 00:01:49,132 My grandmother was a homemaker. 39 00:01:49,132 --> 00:01:51,710 But here was this kid who loved Transformers 40 00:01:51,710 --> 00:01:55,851 and Snoopy and the Ninja Turtles, 41 00:01:55,851 --> 00:02:00,652 and the characters that I read about, I fell in love with, 42 00:02:00,652 --> 00:02:03,727 and they became my friends. 43 00:02:03,727 --> 00:02:06,029 So my best friends in life were the characters 44 00:02:06,029 --> 00:02:08,500 I read about in books. 45 00:02:08,500 --> 00:02:11,587 I went to Gates Lane Elementary School in Worcester, Massachusetts, 46 00:02:11,587 --> 00:02:14,283 and I had wonderful teachers there, 47 00:02:14,283 --> 00:02:17,684 most notably in first grade Mrs. Alisch. 48 00:02:17,684 --> 00:02:21,443 And I just, I can just remember the love that she offered 49 00:02:21,443 --> 00:02:24,190 us as her students. 50 00:02:24,190 --> 00:02:27,089 When I was in the third grade, 51 00:02:27,089 --> 00:02:28,832 a monumental event happened. 52 00:02:28,832 --> 00:02:31,176 An author visited our school, Jack Gantos. 53 00:02:31,176 --> 00:02:34,616 A published author of books came to talk to us 54 00:02:34,616 --> 00:02:37,114 about what he did for a living. 55 00:02:37,114 --> 00:02:40,488 And afterwards, we all went back to our classrooms 56 00:02:40,488 --> 00:02:43,062 and we drew our own renditions of his main character, 57 00:02:43,062 --> 00:02:44,511 Rotten Ralph. 58 00:02:44,511 --> 00:02:47,368 And suddenly the author appeared in our doorway, 59 00:02:47,368 --> 00:02:50,320 and I remember him sort of sauntering down the aisles, 60 00:02:50,320 --> 00:02:53,940 going from kid to kid looking at the desks, not saying a word. 61 00:02:53,940 --> 00:02:57,137 But he stopped next to my desk, 62 00:02:57,137 --> 00:02:59,637 and he tapped on my desk, and he said, 63 00:02:59,637 --> 00:03:01,991 "Nice cat." (Laughter) 64 00:03:01,991 --> 00:03:04,730 And he wandered away. 65 00:03:04,730 --> 00:03:10,066 Two words that made a colossal difference in my life. 66 00:03:10,066 --> 00:03:12,905 When I was in the third grade, I wrote a book for the first time, 67 00:03:12,905 --> 00:03:16,587 "The Owl Who Thought He Was The Best Flyer." (Laughter) 68 00:03:16,587 --> 00:03:18,872 We had to write our own Greek myth, 69 00:03:18,872 --> 00:03:21,715 our own creation story, so I wrote a story about an owl 70 00:03:21,715 --> 00:03:25,658 who challenged Hermes to a flying race, 71 00:03:25,658 --> 00:03:27,769 and the owl cheated, 72 00:03:27,769 --> 00:03:31,491 and Hermes, being a Greek god, grew angry and bitter, 73 00:03:31,491 --> 00:03:33,360 and turned the owl into a moon, 74 00:03:33,360 --> 00:03:35,299 so the owl had to live the rest of his life as a moon 75 00:03:35,299 --> 00:03:38,342 while he watched his family and friends play at night. 76 00:03:38,342 --> 00:03:41,754 Yeah. (Laughter) 77 00:03:41,754 --> 00:03:43,906 My book had a title page. 78 00:03:43,906 --> 00:03:48,208 I was clearly worried about my intellectual property when I was eight. 79 00:03:48,208 --> 00:03:51,339 (Laughter) 80 00:03:51,339 --> 00:03:54,586 And it was a story that was told with words and pictures, 81 00:03:54,586 --> 00:03:56,774 exactly what I do now for a living, 82 00:03:56,774 --> 00:04:00,461 and I sometimes let the words have the stage on their own, 83 00:04:00,461 --> 00:04:03,531 and sometimes I allowed the pictures to work on their own 84 00:04:03,531 --> 00:04:05,766 to tell the story. 85 00:04:05,766 --> 00:04:09,112 My favorite page is the "About the author" page. 86 00:04:09,112 --> 00:04:11,351 (Laughter) 87 00:04:11,351 --> 00:04:14,194 So I learned to write about myself in third person 88 00:04:14,194 --> 00:04:17,314 at a young age. 89 00:04:17,314 --> 00:04:20,838 So I love that last sentence: "He liked making this book." 90 00:04:20,838 --> 00:04:24,769 And I liked making that book because I loved using my imagination, 91 00:04:24,769 --> 00:04:25,954 and that's what writing is. 92 00:04:25,954 --> 00:04:28,469 Writing is using your imagination on paper, 93 00:04:28,469 --> 00:04:31,440 and I do get so scared because I travel to so many schools now 94 00:04:31,440 --> 00:04:34,497 and that seems like such a foreign concept to kids, 95 00:04:34,497 --> 00:04:38,311 that writing would be using your imagination on paper, 96 00:04:38,311 --> 00:04:42,390 if they're allowed to even write now within the school hours. 97 00:04:42,390 --> 00:04:44,578 So I loved writing so much that I'd come home from school, 98 00:04:44,578 --> 00:04:47,073 and I would take out pieces of paper, 99 00:04:47,073 --> 00:04:48,994 and I would staple them together, 100 00:04:48,994 --> 00:04:51,834 and I would fill those blank pages with words and pictures 101 00:04:51,834 --> 00:04:55,510 just because I loved using my imagination. 102 00:04:55,510 --> 00:04:57,622 And so these characters would become my friends. 103 00:04:57,622 --> 00:05:00,682 There was an egg, a tomato, a head of lettuce and a pumpkin, 104 00:05:00,682 --> 00:05:03,156 and they all lived in this refrigerator city, 105 00:05:03,156 --> 00:05:05,978 and in one of their adventures they went to a haunted house 106 00:05:05,978 --> 00:05:07,381 that was filled with so many dangers 107 00:05:07,381 --> 00:05:12,065 like an evil blender who tried to chop them up, 108 00:05:12,065 --> 00:05:18,007 an evil toaster who tried to kidnap the bread couple, 109 00:05:18,007 --> 00:05:20,362 and an evil microwave who tried to melt their friend 110 00:05:20,362 --> 00:05:23,759 who was a stick of butter. (Laughter) 111 00:05:23,759 --> 00:05:25,962 And I'd make my own comics too, 112 00:05:25,962 --> 00:05:28,099 and this was another way for me to tell stories, 113 00:05:28,099 --> 00:05:31,330 through words and through pictures. 114 00:05:31,330 --> 00:05:33,114 Now when I was in sixth grade, 115 00:05:33,114 --> 00:05:35,970 the public funding all but eliminated the arts budgets 116 00:05:35,970 --> 00:05:38,014 in the Worcester public school system. 117 00:05:38,014 --> 00:05:41,398 I went from having art once a week 118 00:05:41,398 --> 00:05:42,995 to twice a month 119 00:05:42,995 --> 00:05:45,841 to once a month to not at all. 120 00:05:45,841 --> 00:05:47,713 And my grandfather, he was a wise man, 121 00:05:47,713 --> 00:05:49,548 and he saw that as a problem, because he knew 122 00:05:49,548 --> 00:05:53,128 that was, like, the one thing I had. I didn't play sports. 123 00:05:53,128 --> 00:05:55,910 I had art. 124 00:05:55,910 --> 00:05:58,368 So he walked into my room one evening, 125 00:05:58,368 --> 00:05:59,913 and he sat on the edge of my bed, 126 00:05:59,913 --> 00:06:02,152 and he said, "Jarrett, it's up to you, but if you'd like to, 127 00:06:02,152 --> 00:06:04,641 we'd like to send you to the classes at the Worcester Art Museum." 128 00:06:04,641 --> 00:06:06,238 And I was so thrilled. 129 00:06:06,238 --> 00:06:07,908 So from sixth through 12th grade, 130 00:06:07,908 --> 00:06:09,909 once, twice, sometimes three times a week, 131 00:06:09,909 --> 00:06:11,628 I would take classes at the art museum, 132 00:06:11,628 --> 00:06:14,660 and I was surrounded by other kids who loved to draw, 133 00:06:14,660 --> 00:06:18,064 other kids who shared a similar passion. 134 00:06:18,064 --> 00:06:21,023 Now my publishing career began when I designed the cover 135 00:06:21,023 --> 00:06:23,634 for my eighth grade yearbook, 136 00:06:23,634 --> 00:06:26,901 and if you're wondering about the style of dress I put our mascot in, 137 00:06:26,901 --> 00:06:29,509 I was really into Bell Biv DeVoe and MC Hammer 138 00:06:29,509 --> 00:06:33,370 and Vanilla Ice at the time. (Laughter) 139 00:06:33,370 --> 00:06:37,263 And to this day, I still can do karaoke to "Ice, Ice Baby" 140 00:06:37,263 --> 00:06:39,806 without looking at the screen. 141 00:06:39,806 --> 00:06:43,316 Don't tempt me, because I will do it. 142 00:06:43,316 --> 00:06:45,238 So I get shipped off to private school, 143 00:06:45,238 --> 00:06:47,461 K through eight, public schools, but for some reason 144 00:06:47,461 --> 00:06:49,836 my grandfather was upset that somebody 145 00:06:49,836 --> 00:06:52,197 at the local high school had been stabbed and killed, 146 00:06:52,197 --> 00:06:54,893 so he didn't want me to go there. 147 00:06:54,893 --> 00:06:57,704 He wanted me to go to a private school, and he gave me an option. 148 00:06:57,704 --> 00:06:59,440 You can go to Holy Name, which is coed, 149 00:06:59,440 --> 00:07:01,813 or St. John's, which is all boys. 150 00:07:01,813 --> 00:07:04,013 Very wise man, because he knew I would, 151 00:07:04,013 --> 00:07:06,749 I felt like I was making the decision on my own, 152 00:07:06,749 --> 00:07:08,545 and he knew I wouldn't choose St. John's, 153 00:07:08,545 --> 00:07:10,243 so I went to Holy Name High School, 154 00:07:10,243 --> 00:07:13,011 which was a tough transition because, like I said, 155 00:07:13,011 --> 00:07:14,571 I didn't play sports, 156 00:07:14,571 --> 00:07:17,052 and it was very focused on sports, 157 00:07:17,052 --> 00:07:21,216 but I took solace in Mr. Shilale's art room. 158 00:07:21,216 --> 00:07:23,714 And I just flourished here. 159 00:07:23,714 --> 00:07:26,873 I just couldn't wait to get to that classroom every day. 160 00:07:26,873 --> 00:07:29,160 So how did I make friends? 161 00:07:29,160 --> 00:07:33,393 I drew funny pictures of my teachers -- (Laughter) -- 162 00:07:33,393 --> 00:07:36,150 and I passed them around. 163 00:07:36,150 --> 00:07:39,948 Well, in English class, in ninth grade, 164 00:07:39,948 --> 00:07:41,924 my friend John, who was sitting next to me, 165 00:07:41,924 --> 00:07:44,639 laughed a little bit too hard. 166 00:07:44,639 --> 00:07:46,920 Mr. Greenwood was not pleased. 167 00:07:46,920 --> 00:07:50,827 (Laughter) 168 00:07:50,827 --> 00:07:54,212 He instantly saw that I was the cause of the commotion, 169 00:07:54,212 --> 00:07:58,227 and for the first time in my life, I was sent to the hall, 170 00:07:58,227 --> 00:08:00,409 and I thought, "Oh no, I'm doomed. 171 00:08:00,409 --> 00:08:03,614 My grandfather's just going to kill me." 172 00:08:03,614 --> 00:08:05,175 And he came out to the hallway and he said, 173 00:08:05,175 --> 00:08:06,293 "Let me see the paper." 174 00:08:06,293 --> 00:08:11,357 And I thought, "Oh no. He thinks it's a note." 175 00:08:11,357 --> 00:08:14,193 And so I took this picture, and I handed it to him. 176 00:08:14,193 --> 00:08:17,406 And we sat in silence for that brief moment, 177 00:08:17,406 --> 00:08:19,554 and he said to me, 178 00:08:19,554 --> 00:08:22,917 "You're really talented." (Laughter) 179 00:08:22,917 --> 00:08:25,606 "You're really good. You know, the school newspaper 180 00:08:25,606 --> 00:08:27,989 needs a new cartoonist, and you should be the cartoonist. 181 00:08:27,989 --> 00:08:31,615 Just stop drawing in my class." 182 00:08:31,615 --> 00:08:33,949 So my parents never found out about it. 183 00:08:33,949 --> 00:08:37,175 I didn't get in trouble. I was introduced to Mrs. Casey, 184 00:08:37,175 --> 00:08:38,839 who ran the school newspaper, 185 00:08:38,839 --> 00:08:43,411 and I was for three and a half years 186 00:08:43,411 --> 00:08:45,787 the cartoonist for my school paper, 187 00:08:45,787 --> 00:08:47,959 handling such heavy issues as, 188 00:08:47,959 --> 00:08:51,067 seniors are mean, 189 00:08:51,067 --> 00:08:53,663 freshmen are nerds, 190 00:08:53,663 --> 00:08:59,468 the prom bill is so expensive. I can't believe how much it costs to go to the prom. 191 00:08:59,468 --> 00:09:03,052 And I took the headmaster to task 192 00:09:03,052 --> 00:09:06,915 and then I also wrote an ongoing story about a boy named Wesley 193 00:09:06,915 --> 00:09:10,161 who was unlucky in love, and I just swore up and down 194 00:09:10,161 --> 00:09:12,277 that this wasn't about me, 195 00:09:12,277 --> 00:09:16,079 but all these years later it was totally me. 196 00:09:16,079 --> 00:09:18,207 But it was so cool because I could write these stories, 197 00:09:18,207 --> 00:09:19,385 I could come up with these ideas, 198 00:09:19,385 --> 00:09:21,688 and they'd be published in the school paper, 199 00:09:21,688 --> 00:09:24,298 and people who I didn't know could read them. 200 00:09:24,298 --> 00:09:27,353 And I loved that thought, of being able to share my ideas 201 00:09:27,353 --> 00:09:29,683 through the printed page. 202 00:09:29,698 --> 00:09:32,879 On my 14th birthday, my grandfather and my grandmother 203 00:09:32,879 --> 00:09:35,124 gave me the best birthday present ever: 204 00:09:35,124 --> 00:09:40,043 a drafting table that I have worked on ever since. 205 00:09:40,043 --> 00:09:41,299 Here I am, 20 years later, 206 00:09:41,299 --> 00:09:45,843 and I still work on this table every day. 207 00:09:45,843 --> 00:09:48,253 On the evening of my 14th birthday, 208 00:09:48,253 --> 00:09:52,418 I was given this table, and we had Chinese food. 209 00:09:52,418 --> 00:09:56,038 And this was my fortune: 210 00:09:56,038 --> 00:09:58,315 "You will be successful in your work." 211 00:09:58,315 --> 00:10:01,143 I taped it to the top left hand of my table, 212 00:10:01,143 --> 00:10:03,102 and as you can see, it's still there. 213 00:10:03,102 --> 00:10:07,003 Now I never really asked my grandparents for anything. 214 00:10:07,003 --> 00:10:09,347 Well, two things: Rusty, who was a great hamster 215 00:10:09,347 --> 00:10:13,483 and lived a great long life when I was in fourth grade. 216 00:10:13,483 --> 00:10:16,302 (Laughter) 217 00:10:16,302 --> 00:10:19,499 And a video camera. 218 00:10:19,499 --> 00:10:21,739 I just wanted a video camera. 219 00:10:21,739 --> 00:10:24,220 And after begging and pleading for Christmas, 220 00:10:24,220 --> 00:10:26,651 I got a second-hand video camera, 221 00:10:26,651 --> 00:10:30,483 and I instantly started making my own animations 222 00:10:30,483 --> 00:10:32,683 on my own, 223 00:10:32,683 --> 00:10:35,363 and all throughout high school I made my own animations. 224 00:10:35,363 --> 00:10:38,460 I convinced my 10th grade English teacher to allow me 225 00:10:38,460 --> 00:10:40,787 to do my book report on Stephen King's "Misery" 226 00:10:40,787 --> 00:10:45,551 as an animated short. (Laughter) 227 00:10:45,551 --> 00:10:48,407 And I kept making comics. 228 00:10:48,407 --> 00:10:52,351 I kept making comics, and at the Worcester Art Museum, 229 00:10:52,351 --> 00:10:56,584 I was given the greatest piece of advice by any educator I was ever given. 230 00:10:56,584 --> 00:10:59,473 Mark Lynch, he's an amazing teacher 231 00:10:59,473 --> 00:11:01,688 and he's still a dear friend of mine, 232 00:11:01,688 --> 00:11:04,095 and I was 14 or 15, 233 00:11:04,095 --> 00:11:07,116 and I walked into his comic book class halfway through the course, 234 00:11:07,116 --> 00:11:08,930 and I was so excited, I was beaming. 235 00:11:08,930 --> 00:11:12,231 I had this book that was how to draw comics in the Marvel way, 236 00:11:12,231 --> 00:11:14,536 and it taught me how to draw superheroes, 237 00:11:14,536 --> 00:11:16,864 how to draw a woman, how to draw muscles 238 00:11:16,864 --> 00:11:18,790 just the way they were supposed to be 239 00:11:18,790 --> 00:11:21,615 if I were to ever draw for X-Men or Spiderman. 240 00:11:21,615 --> 00:11:24,507 And all the color just drained from his face, 241 00:11:24,507 --> 00:11:26,246 and he looked at me, and he said, 242 00:11:26,246 --> 00:11:29,016 "Forget everything you learned." 243 00:11:29,016 --> 00:11:32,840 And I didn't understand. He said, "You have a great style. 244 00:11:32,840 --> 00:11:37,002 Celebrate your own style. Don't draw the way you're being told to draw. 245 00:11:37,002 --> 00:11:39,160 Draw the way you're drawing and keep at it, 246 00:11:39,160 --> 00:11:41,609 because you're really good." 247 00:11:41,609 --> 00:11:45,183 Now when I was a teenager, I was angsty as any teenager was, 248 00:11:45,183 --> 00:11:48,696 but after 17 years of having a mother 249 00:11:48,696 --> 00:11:50,858 who was in and out of my life like a yo-yo 250 00:11:50,858 --> 00:11:54,759 and a father who was faceless, I was angry. 251 00:11:54,759 --> 00:11:57,481 And when I was 17, I met my father for the first time, 252 00:11:57,481 --> 00:12:01,382 upon which I learned I had a brother and sister I had never known about. 253 00:12:01,382 --> 00:12:03,302 And on the day I met my father for the first time, 254 00:12:03,302 --> 00:12:06,066 I was rejected from the Rhode Island School of Design, 255 00:12:06,066 --> 00:12:09,817 my one and only choice for college. 256 00:12:09,817 --> 00:12:12,209 But it was around this time I went to Camp Sunshine 257 00:12:12,209 --> 00:12:14,709 to volunteer a week and working with the most amazing kids, 258 00:12:14,709 --> 00:12:17,781 kids with leukemia, and this kid Eric changed my life. 259 00:12:17,781 --> 00:12:20,346 Eric didn't live to see his sixth birthday, 260 00:12:20,346 --> 00:12:22,911 and Eric lives with me every day. 261 00:12:22,911 --> 00:12:26,600 So after this experience, my art teacher, Mr. Shilale, 262 00:12:26,600 --> 00:12:27,792 he brought in these picture books, 263 00:12:27,792 --> 00:12:29,642 and I thought, "Picture books for kids!" 264 00:12:29,642 --> 00:12:34,710 and I started writing books for young readers 265 00:12:34,710 --> 00:12:36,439 when I was a senior in high school. 266 00:12:36,439 --> 00:12:39,227 Well, I eventually got to the Rhode Island School of Design. 267 00:12:39,227 --> 00:12:41,331 I transferred to RISD as a sophomore, 268 00:12:41,331 --> 00:12:44,962 and it was there that I took every course that I could on writing, 269 00:12:44,962 --> 00:12:48,995 and it was there that I wrote a story about a giant orange slug 270 00:12:48,995 --> 00:12:50,647 who wanted to be friends with this kid. 271 00:12:50,647 --> 00:12:52,156 The kid had no patience for him. 272 00:12:52,156 --> 00:12:55,395 And I sent this book out to a dozen publishers 273 00:12:55,395 --> 00:12:57,939 and it was rejected every single time, 274 00:12:57,939 --> 00:13:00,692 but I was also involved with the Hole in the Wall Gang Camp, 275 00:13:00,692 --> 00:13:03,677 an amazing camp for kids with all sorts of critical illnesses, 276 00:13:03,677 --> 00:13:06,925 and it's those kids at the camp that read my stories, 277 00:13:06,925 --> 00:13:10,692 and I read to them, and I saw that they responded to my work. 278 00:13:10,692 --> 00:13:14,428 I graduated from RISD. My grandparents were very proud, 279 00:13:14,428 --> 00:13:17,046 and I moved to Boston, and I set up shop. 280 00:13:17,046 --> 00:13:19,221 I set up a studio and I tried to get published. 281 00:13:19,221 --> 00:13:22,262 I would send out my books. I would send out hundreds of postcards 282 00:13:22,262 --> 00:13:24,659 to editors and art directors, 283 00:13:24,659 --> 00:13:26,299 but they would go unanswered. 284 00:13:26,299 --> 00:13:28,154 And my grandfather would call me every week, 285 00:13:28,154 --> 00:13:32,485 and he would say, "Jarrett, how's it going? Do you have a job yet?" 286 00:13:32,485 --> 00:13:34,749 Because he had just invested a significant amount of money 287 00:13:34,749 --> 00:13:36,670 in my college education. 288 00:13:36,670 --> 00:13:40,525 And I said, "Yes, I have a job. I write and illustrate children's books." 289 00:13:40,525 --> 00:13:44,043 And he said, "Well, who pays you for that?" 290 00:13:44,043 --> 00:13:46,009 And I said, "No one, no one, no one just yet. 291 00:13:46,009 --> 00:13:47,169 But I know it's going to happen." 292 00:13:47,169 --> 00:13:50,662 Now, I used to work the weekends at the Hole in the Wall off-season programming 293 00:13:50,662 --> 00:13:53,845 to make some extra money as I was trying to get my feet off the ground, 294 00:13:53,845 --> 00:13:57,597 and this kid who was just this really hyper kid, 295 00:13:57,597 --> 00:14:00,469 I started calling him "Monkey Boy," 296 00:14:00,469 --> 00:14:04,150 and I went home and wrote a book called "Good Night, Monkey Boy." 297 00:14:04,150 --> 00:14:07,432 And I sent out one last batch of postcards. 298 00:14:07,432 --> 00:14:10,806 And I received an email from an editor at Random House 299 00:14:10,806 --> 00:14:14,557 with a subject line, "Nice work!" Exclamation point. 300 00:14:14,557 --> 00:14:16,345 "Dear Jarrett, I received your postcard. 301 00:14:16,345 --> 00:14:19,108 I liked your art, so I went to your website 302 00:14:19,108 --> 00:14:23,069 and I'm wondering if you ever tried writing any of your own stories, 303 00:14:23,069 --> 00:14:25,735 because I really like your art and it looks like there are some stories that go with them. 304 00:14:25,735 --> 00:14:29,806 Please let me know if you're ever in New York City." 305 00:14:29,806 --> 00:14:33,108 And this was from an editor at Random House Children's Books. 306 00:14:33,108 --> 00:14:35,444 So the next week I "happened" to be in New York. 307 00:14:35,444 --> 00:14:38,388 (Laughter) 308 00:14:38,388 --> 00:14:40,700 And I met with this editor, 309 00:14:40,700 --> 00:14:43,924 and I left New York for a contract for my first book, 310 00:14:43,924 --> 00:14:44,957 "Good Night, Monkey Boy," 311 00:14:44,957 --> 00:14:48,419 which was published on June 12, 2001. 312 00:14:48,419 --> 00:14:54,114 And my local paper celebrated the news. 313 00:14:54,114 --> 00:14:58,379 The local bookstore made a big deal of it. 314 00:14:58,379 --> 00:15:00,268 They sold out of all of their books. 315 00:15:00,268 --> 00:15:04,045 My friend described it as a wake, but happy, 316 00:15:04,045 --> 00:15:06,622 because everyone I ever knew was there in line to see me, 317 00:15:06,622 --> 00:15:09,646 but I wasn't dead. I was just signing books. 318 00:15:09,646 --> 00:15:11,193 My grandparents, they were in the middle of it. 319 00:15:11,193 --> 00:15:13,782 They were so happy. They couldn't have been more proud. 320 00:15:13,782 --> 00:15:17,534 Mrs. Alisch was there. Mr. Shilale was there. Mrs. Casey was there. 321 00:15:17,534 --> 00:15:18,973 Mrs. Alisch cut in front of the line and said, 322 00:15:18,973 --> 00:15:22,230 "I taught him how to read." (Laughter) 323 00:15:22,230 --> 00:15:24,774 And then something happened that changed my life. 324 00:15:24,774 --> 00:15:26,990 I got my first piece of significant fan mail, 325 00:15:26,990 --> 00:15:30,265 where this kid loved Monkey Boy so much 326 00:15:30,265 --> 00:15:33,861 that he wanted to have a Monkey Boy birthday cake. 327 00:15:33,861 --> 00:15:38,248 For a two-year-old, that is like a tattoo. (Laughter) 328 00:15:38,248 --> 00:15:41,309 You know? You only get one birthday per year. 329 00:15:41,309 --> 00:15:44,154 And for him, it's only his second. 330 00:15:44,154 --> 00:15:45,160 And I got this picture, and I thought, 331 00:15:45,160 --> 00:15:47,202 "This picture is going to live within his consciousness 332 00:15:47,202 --> 00:15:50,878 for his entire life. He will forever have this photo 333 00:15:50,878 --> 00:15:53,834 in his family photo albums." 334 00:15:53,834 --> 00:15:56,502 So that photo, since that moment, 335 00:15:56,502 --> 00:15:59,549 is framed in front of me while I've worked on all of my books. 336 00:15:59,549 --> 00:16:02,109 I have 10 picture books out. 337 00:16:02,109 --> 00:16:05,509 "Punk Farm," "Baghead," "Ollie the Purple Elephant." 338 00:16:05,509 --> 00:16:07,793 I just finished the ninth book 339 00:16:07,793 --> 00:16:10,286 in the "Lunch Lady" series, which is a graphic novel series 340 00:16:10,286 --> 00:16:12,870 about a lunch lady who fights crime. 341 00:16:12,870 --> 00:16:15,686 I'm expecting the release of a chapter book 342 00:16:15,686 --> 00:16:19,366 called "Platypus Police Squad: The Frog Who Croaked." 343 00:16:19,366 --> 00:16:22,936 And I travel the country visiting countless schools, 344 00:16:22,936 --> 00:16:27,446 letting lots of kids know that they draw great cats. 345 00:16:27,446 --> 00:16:29,974 And I meet Bagheads. 346 00:16:29,974 --> 00:16:34,545 Lunch ladies treat me really well. 347 00:16:34,545 --> 00:16:39,069 And I got to see my name in lights 348 00:16:39,069 --> 00:16:40,919 because kids put my name in lights. 349 00:16:40,919 --> 00:16:43,009 Twice now, the "Lunch Lady" series has won 350 00:16:43,009 --> 00:16:45,990 the Children's Choice Book of the Year in the third or fourth grade category, 351 00:16:45,990 --> 00:16:47,960 and those winners were displayed 352 00:16:47,960 --> 00:16:52,220 on a jumbotron screen in Times Square. 353 00:16:52,220 --> 00:16:54,944 "Punk Farm" and "Lunch Lady" are in development to be movies, 354 00:16:54,944 --> 00:16:57,518 so I am a movie producer 355 00:16:57,518 --> 00:17:00,251 and I really do think, thanks to that video camera 356 00:17:00,251 --> 00:17:02,815 I was given in ninth grade. 357 00:17:02,815 --> 00:17:05,585 I've seen people have "Punk Farm" birthday parties, 358 00:17:05,585 --> 00:17:08,472 people have dressed up as "Punk Farm" for Halloween, 359 00:17:08,472 --> 00:17:10,101 a "Punk Farm" baby room, 360 00:17:10,101 --> 00:17:14,916 which makes me a little nervous for the child's well-being in the long term. 361 00:17:14,916 --> 00:17:17,387 And I get the most amazing fan mail, 362 00:17:17,387 --> 00:17:19,795 and I get the most amazing projects, 363 00:17:19,795 --> 00:17:23,147 and the biggest moment for me came last Halloween. 364 00:17:23,147 --> 00:17:25,301 The doorbell rang and it was a trick-or-treater 365 00:17:25,301 --> 00:17:29,458 dressed as my character. It was so cool. 366 00:17:29,458 --> 00:17:32,572 Now my grandparents are no longer living, 367 00:17:32,572 --> 00:17:35,636 so to honor them, I started a scholarship at the Worcester Art Museum 368 00:17:35,636 --> 00:17:38,911 for kids who are in difficult situations 369 00:17:38,911 --> 00:17:41,619 but whose caretakers can't afford the classes. 370 00:17:41,619 --> 00:17:44,210 And it displayed the work from my first 10 years of publishing, 371 00:17:44,210 --> 00:17:47,306 and you know who was there to celebrate? Mrs. Alisch. 372 00:17:47,306 --> 00:17:48,993 I said, "Mrs. Alisch, how are you?" 373 00:17:48,993 --> 00:17:52,099 And she responded with, "I'm here." (Laughter) 374 00:17:52,099 --> 00:17:58,713 That's true. You are alive, and that's pretty good right now. 375 00:17:58,713 --> 00:18:00,389 So the biggest moment for me, though, 376 00:18:00,389 --> 00:18:02,375 my most important job now is I am a dad myself, 377 00:18:02,375 --> 00:18:04,723 and I have two beautiful daughters, 378 00:18:04,723 --> 00:18:07,514 and my goal is to surround them by inspiration, 379 00:18:07,514 --> 00:18:10,636 by the books that are in every single room of our house 380 00:18:10,636 --> 00:18:13,226 to the murals I painted in their rooms 381 00:18:13,226 --> 00:18:16,865 to the moments for creativity where you find, in quiet times, 382 00:18:16,865 --> 00:18:20,350 by making faces on the patio 383 00:18:20,350 --> 00:18:22,674 to letting her sit in the very desk 384 00:18:22,674 --> 00:18:25,362 that I've sat in for the past 20 years. 385 00:18:25,362 --> 00:18:27,638 Thank you. (Applause)