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elleng

(131,253 posts)
Tue Apr 19, 2022, 11:17 PM Apr 2022

US Postal Service honors Jewish poet Shel Silverstein with 'The Giving Tree' stamps.

The United States Postal Service released a new series of Forever stamps Friday in honor of Shel Silverstein, the Jewish author and illustrator who died in 1999.

The stamps commemorate what is perhaps Silverstein’s most famous book, “The Giving Tree,” which tells the story of the relationship between a boy and a tree. The stamps feature an image of the boy from the story catching an apple with Silverstein’s name written below.

“The issuance honors the extraordinarily versatile Shel Silverstein (1930-1999), one of the 20th century’s most imaginative authors and illustrators. His picture book The Giving Tree and his quirky poetry collections are beloved by children everywhere,” the description on the postal service’s website reads.

Silverstein was born in 1930 to a middle-class Jewish family in Chicago. He started drawing and writing from a young age and drew his first cartoons for adult readers when he was a GI in Japan and Korea. In addition to his career as a children’s book author, Silverstein was a prolific songwriter and playwright. (He also inspired the name of the youngest child of a Jewish family that recently appeared on Ava Duvernay’s home-swapping TV show.)

The U.S. Postal Service’s special edition stamps commemorating notable Americans have included many Jews, including the physicist Richard Feynman in 2005, cartoonist and inventor Rube Goldberg in 1995 and, in 1991, comedian Fanny Brice, the inspiration for the musical “Funny Girl.” The series in which Brice appeared was drawn by the Jewish illustrator Al Hirschfeld.

https://www.jta.org/2022/04/11/culture/us-postal-service-honors-jewish-poet-shel-silverstein-with-the-giving-tree-stamps?

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US Postal Service honors Jewish poet Shel Silverstein with 'The Giving Tree' stamps. (Original Post) elleng Apr 2022 OP
Shel wrote some great songs, including "A Boy Named Sue" Clash City Rocker Apr 2022 #1
His adult work was funny as well AZSkiffyGeek Apr 2022 #2
Very cool! I wish my parents cold see this, we had his books in our house growing up! Rhiannon12866 Apr 2022 #3
His poems are fun. But cbabe Apr 2022 #4

Clash City Rocker

(3,402 posts)
1. Shel wrote some great songs, including "A Boy Named Sue"
Tue Apr 19, 2022, 11:28 PM
Apr 2022

My favorite of his children’s stories was “Sarah Silvia Cynthia Stout (Would Not Take the Garbage Out),” mostly because Shel recorded his own version reciting it, and Dr. Demento used to play it all the time.

AZSkiffyGeek

(11,126 posts)
2. His adult work was funny as well
Wed Apr 20, 2022, 12:57 AM
Apr 2022

The Smoke-Off
The Freaker’s Ball
Polly in a Porno
It always felt kinda edgy when I got to high school and discovered all this other stuff from him that my parents wouldn’t ever let me read!

cbabe

(3,552 posts)
4. His poems are fun. But
Wed Apr 20, 2022, 12:21 PM
Apr 2022

The Giving Tree gives me the creeps.

Loser guy, mired in self pity, takes and takes until nothing is left. Tree in traditional mommy role is destroyed down to a stump. And he never even says thank you.

I have no idea why this book is so celebrated.

Creepy.

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