The Agony and the Eggplant is the first book-length study of author,
illustrator, and radio personality, Daniel Pinkwater. Pinkwater began
writing and illustrating children's books in 1970 and has been a
prolific author for three decades. He has written over 70 books
altogether: more than fifty picture books, a dozen books for
middle-grade or intermediate readers, half a dozen books for
adolescents, an adult novel, and several books of nonfiction. Pinkwater
is a humorist, and many of his stories involve science fiction or
fantasy themes. He is often compared with Douglas Adams and Kurt
Vonnegut; his style is often likened to Monty Python and Mad magazine.
Pinkwater's fiction has often been described as "wacky" and "zany;" The
Agony and the Eggplant will go beyond those cliches to place Pinkwater
as a classical satirist, an American humorist, and a master of
children's literature. Sprinkled with quotes and observations from
Pinkwater, Hogan gives us a highly entertaining look at the man
responsible for some of the most unique young adult fiction on the
market.