Derek
Anderson's career in children's books began one fortuitous afternoon.
"Just as I was graduating from college," he recalls, "my mother, a
third-grade teacher, returned from a book conference where she'd met
all kinds of authors and illustrators. She took armfuls of children's
books back with her, which immediately caught my eye." They were books
the likes of which he'd never seen before, like The True Story
of the 3 Little Pigs. "I was blown away by them," he says. "The pictures were
works of art."
On the cusp
of graduating from Iowa State University, where he majored in drawing
and painting, he was looking for an outlet, and once he saw his mother's
treasure trove of children's books, he knew he wanted this to be his
future.
Anderson's
path eventually led him to Simon & Schuster, and the debut of his first
picture book, Little Quack written by Lauren Thompson, which appeared
on the New York Times bestseller list this spring. Of course the road
to being published wasn't as straight and narrow as he would have liked.
"I had been sending my work out to New York for years," he says, "and
S&S had been at the top of my list." He had sent a story to Kevin Lewis,
executive editor at S&S Books for Young Readers, and associate editor
Alyssa Eisner, about four years ago and they showed a lot of interest
in it. It went through a round of rewrites but was eventually rejected.
After
that, Anderson scheduled appointments with 15 publishing houses, and
in May of 2001 made a trip out to New York City from his home in Minneapolis.
"It was intimidating to go to the East Coast and sit in front of people
who are used to working with the best," says Anderson. At S&S, he saw
Lewis and Eisner and showed them all the drawings in his portfolio.
"When they saw my true self, all my different styles, they said to
me, 'You've been holding out on us!'"
Thompson's
manuscript for Little Quack had already been acquired, and S&S was
looking for an illustrator for it. Once the duo saw Anderson's full
range of work, they knew he was right for the job.
Eisner
(who edited the book) gave Anderson a fair amount of freedom, according
to the artist. "She reined me in when I needed it, but allowed me to
break free with brushstrokes," he recalls. "I wanted to give the book
an impressionistic feeling and she let me do those things."
Working
out a way to give five little ducklings personalities proved to be
a bit of a challenge. Anderson painted Mama Duck and Little Quack first,
and Eisner loved them, but she reminded him that there were five ducklings
and they couldn't all be the same. Anderson says, "We toyed around
with a few different ideas like adding clothes or glasses or hats,
but thought that wouldn't work because the book was grounded in reality."
Then he did a second painting where he played around with their height
and weight and different feather styles (i.e., hairstyles) - that worked
for everyone.
While
books have always been Anderson's first choice, his past experience
includes a variety of stints in various creative fields. Shortly after
graduating from college, he moved to Minneapolis and worked as a sculptor,
with contracts with Disney and Warner Brothers to make figurines. Then
he moved into product design, and after that he illustrated greeting
cards and designed storyboards for animation. "It was during this time,
on evenings
and weekends that I would write and paint and send my stuff off to
New York," says Anderson.
He
is currently working on three more books with S&S - two more Little
Quack books, as well as one that he is writing and illustrating
himself - and no longer has time for
freelancing. With all the attention his first book has been getting,
it's no wonder.
-Joy
Bean
(Copyright 2003
Reed Business Information, Inc.)