FOREWORD BY JEAN
SHEPHERD:
Since Shel Silverstein is a close
friend of mine, I would very much like to be able to recommend
him to everyone without reservation of any kind. This I cannot
do. For one thing, he is not for children, of whatever age.
You'll have to determine your own status here. I cannot
recommend him to the professional laugher or to anyone who
expects to quote him at cocktail parties. Nor is he for the one
who laughs with the Right Thinkers (us) against the Boobs and
the Slobs (them, of course). He will mystify a large percentage
of those who fall into the Freud-Ego-Repression (with added,
vague political-fission-fallout overtones) group with has come
to expect a warm sense of in-group superiority over poor
stumbling mankind with their laughs. In short, if you get your
kicks from moralizing over other people's inanities and
shortcomings, Shel is not your man. He includes us in all his
work and never excludes himself. His humor is that of the Final
Absurdity. I suspect Albert Camus would have enjoyed him
immensely.
In appearance, he is
Neanderthalic: stocky, bearded, vaguely stooped, and
unbelievably sloppy. Yet there is also a distinct air of
imperious Edwardian dignity about him. He has a New Testament
face that is strong and hawk-like and that gives the impression
that he is about to build an ark. Which is probably true. He
plays the banjo, trombone, and bugle, and shouts the blues
(Elektra Records) in the hoarse, rasping voice of a ball-park
hot-dog vendor, which he actually was for four years at Comiskey
Park, the home of the Chicago White Sox. It could be that he
developed his sense of absurdity during this period of close
contact with the Sox Silverstein is one of those rare people
whose cave can be properly called, without embarrassment, his
"digs". I have known only one other establishment with a fanged
tiger-skin rug, a foot-operated, hand-carved pipe organ, 18,000
volumes of forgotten lore, two monstrous overstuffed easy chairs
found discarded on the sidewalks of New York, a fielder's mitt
(Duck Medwick Model), a balsa-wood hat rack carved in the shape
of Teddy Roosevelt wearing veldt dress, an antique
water-operated portable typewriter, and over three hundred rare
unwashed dishes dating back to the Late Bronze Age.
He lives in Greenwich Village
surrounded by things that go bump in the night. Shel is the only
continuously funny man I have ever known. Ideas for humor flow
from him in such a rich, prolific stream that he frightens most
of the rest of us who work in the field. He is also one of the
very few people I have ever known who really don't worry about
popular success. There are Official Experts who fell that, as a
line pen-and-ink artist, he is one of the finest America has yet
produced. I concur. He draws like an inspired fiend. However,
he is cursed by a restlessness that has driven him all over the
world for years at a time. This restlessness comes from a great
love of life and an insatiable thirst for the living of it. It
has also kept him from turning out the great body of work that
is in him. I feel that if, for one year, Silverstein could
somehow be locked in a room with two broken legs, a supply of
paper and ink, his banjo, and a radio to hear the ball games,
Ring Lardner, Don Marquis, George Herriman and company would
welcome another worthy into the Club. I am proud he is my
friend.
-- J.S.