A children's picture book needs to
strike a balance between the written text and the illustrations. The text
should be able to be divided up evenly, with an equal amount of text on each
page. Each page - or each double page spread - has a sentence or two, or a
paragraph. Each of these sentences or paragraphs must lend themselves to an
illustration, and so the written text should provide a variety of scenes,
characters, or actions. You could think of this as writing "captions"
for the (not-yet-drawn) pictures.
However, these
"captions" must flow, as they should in any other well-written story,
The problem with many picture book
manuscripts submitted to publishers is that writers do not give sufficient
thought to the role of illustrator as co-creator of the finished book.
Publishing Manager of Penguin Books,
Laura Harris, has said that one of the main reasons picture book texts get
rejected is that “the writer doesn’t give the illustrator enough to work with.”
A writer needs to read her text with the eye of an illustrator, looking at each
and every paragraph to consider what pictorial images might complement them. If
she cannot imagine illustrations for each paragraph, then she can be said to
have failed the illustrator, and so she must re-write.
In her book Making Picture Books (Scholastic
Australia 2003), Libby Gleeson writes: “In the best picture books, the
illustrations are absolutely necessary. They carry parts of the story or the
narrative and in some cases the language is dropped, and pictures alone are all
that is needed. The process is like a film where words and pictures work
together but sometimes silence is a powerful way to tell part of a story.
A picture book is not the same as an
illustrated short story: in the latter words alone could tell the story and the
illustrations simply break up the words or decorate the text. Illustrations in
a successful picture book not only complement written text; they can, as
Gleeson says, take the place of text, interpreting and extending the meaning of
what the writer is trying to say in a way that might never have occurred to the
writer (or to her editor). Colour – or lines or shapes - in artwork, for
example, might convey personalities of the book’s characters, be symbolic of a
mood (doom or humour) that the writer wishes to capture, produce an illusion
(say of movement and surprise) or convey greater level of meaning.
To provide an illustrative brief or to
instead allow the illustrator total freedom to make his interpretation is a
problem which often besets a picture book writer. Many editors do not like
writers to provide illustrative briefs. Illustrators like Shaun Tan say,
“Manuscripts that pre-suppose or suggest what the visuals might be in advance,
or even the breakdown of text per page, are quite uninviting to me.” In most
cases where a writer has provided an illustrative brief, illustrators have
totally disregarded them and gone on with their own interpretation of the
written text. In any case, what is sure is that it is the written text alone which
an editor judges as acceptable or not. If a creator submits a poor text
accompanied by brilliant illustrations, then no matter how impressive the
illustrations, the editor will have no hesitation in rejecting the submission.
And what of a picture book text?
Illustrator Ann James says, “To write a picture book the writer knows less is
more, but that each word is potent and a cue for interpretation by the artist.”
She knows that the successful picture book writer needs to provide a strong,
rich and streamlined text. Author Alan Baillie adds to this: “A picture book
can only be about five hundred words, which means that every word has to pull
its weight. The tension, the atmosphere, the characters, the humour.”
In general, the picture book writer
needs to remember that the text is short and some of the story is contained in
the illustrations. She needs to keep the language simple and direct. Not to
overuse adjectives and adverbs. Not to clutter up sentences. To use simple –
(as opposed to complex) verbs that are also appropriate. And, too, the writer
needs to forget about descriptive language – for description is the
illustrator’s domain.
Finally, here is what some Australian
illustrators say about picture book texts:
Kerry Argent: “I like a text to move . .
. minimal enough so that I can create extra layers and stories, visually.”
Shaun Tan: “I accept manuscripts ...
that give much room for me to play and to tell my own stories visually, (that
have) a certain ambiguity . . . that resist being fully explained.”
Ron Brooks: “To make a book, the words
have to turn my heart around, make me go hollow in the belly, weak at the
knees.”
© Dianne Bates
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