An award-winning author and a Caldecott Medalist take a creative look
at the early life of comedic genius Charlie Chaplin.
Once there was a little slip of a boy who roamed the streets of London,
hungry for life (and maybe a bit of bread). His dad long gone and his
actress mother ailing, five-year-old Charlie found himself onstage one
day taking his mum's place, singing and drawing laughs amid a shower of
coins. There were times in the poorhouse and times spent sitting in the
window at home with Mum, making up funny stories about passersby. And
when Charlie described a wobbly old man he saw in baggy clothes, with
turned-out feet and a crooked cane, his mother found it sad, but Charlie
knew that funny and sad go hand in hand. With a lyrical text and
exquisite collage imagery, Gary Golio and Ed Young interpret Charlie
Chaplin's path from his childhood through his beginnings in silent film
and the creation of his iconic Little Tramp. Keen-eyed readers will
notice a silhouette of the Little Tramp throughout the book that becomes
animated with a flip of the pages. An afterword fills in facts about the
beloved performer who became one of the most famous entertainers of all
time.