On September 28, 1983, the discovery of a previously unknown tale by
Wilhelm Grimm was reported on the front page of The New York Times.
"After more than 150 years," the Times noted, "Hansel and Gretel,
Snow-White, Rumpelstiltskin, and Cinderella will be joined by another
Grimm fairy-tale character." The story of dear Mili was preserved in a
letter Wilhelm Grimm wrote to a little girl in 1816, a letter that
remained in her family's possession for over a century and a half. It
tells of a mother who sends her daughter into the forest to save her
from a terrible war. The child comes upon the hut of an old man, who
gives her shelter, and she repays his kindness by serving him faithfully
for what she thinks are three days. Actually, thirty years have passed,
but Mili has remained safe, and with the old man's blessing there is
still time for a tender reunion with her mother. As for the pictures
that interpret Dear Mili--hailed by School Library Journal as
"gorgeous"--they were a milestone in Maurice Sendak's career, the work
of a master at the height of his powers.