David E. Crowley
Published: 2020-05-30
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A young mother, Maude Crowley, moves to a seacoast town, Marblehead, Mass., and strives to write a children's book based on her 6-year-old son David and his playmates. Unlike other kids, her fictional child Azor can speak with animals who tell him important things like the location of lost objects and people. The young woman writes the book in three weeks. With the help of her brother-in-law Joseph Mitchell of the New Yorker, she finds an agent and a publisher, Oxford University Press. "Azor" is published in 1948 followed by four other children's stories. Reviewers love the books which go on to sell 51,000 copies and earn almost $9000 by 1960 ($85,000 in today's money).Her devotion to her son is total. How does she find time to write these books along with three others that aren't published and several short stories? And what is her son's life like knowing that he has a fictional counterpart? David, the real son, can't speak with animals but has a great childhood anyway. All is not perfect for him, though. He has to live in a world where the kids around him are real, and where his mother, despite her extraordinary talent and outsized persona, has all the flaws of a real adult.Fifty-two years after her first book is published, Maude Crowley dies in August 2000, and David inherits a mass of manuscripts, correspondence, and business papers. Now in full detail, you can read how Maude Crowley built her writing career, how she succeeded in the competitive world of children's publishing, and how she maintained her home and family. There are excerpts from the five children's books, notes from Maude that illuminate her forceful presence, and her son's reactions it all-her writing, her relationships, and her struggles with problems real and imagined.