Vincent van Gogh is now known as an acclaimed, incomparable
Post-Impressionist painter. But when he lived in Arles, France, in the
1880s, he was mocked for being different. Back then, van Gogh was an
eccentric man with wild red hair who used clashing hues to paint
unusual-looking people and strange starry skies. Children and adults
alike called him names and laughed at him. Nobody bought his art. But he
kept painting.
Inspired by these events, The Artist and Me is the fictional
confession of one of van Gogh's bullies -- a young boy who adopted the
popular attitude of adults around him. It's not until the boy faces his
victim alone that he realizes there is more than one way to see the
world.
Artwork in the book uses vibrant color and texture to bring the
laneways, cafés, and wheat fields of southern France to life while
playing on scenes from van Gogh's own work. The lyrical text carries the
emotional weight of the subject and will leave readers with the
understanding that everyone's point of view is valuable.