Paul Rogers Studio

Forever Young is in a bookstore near you.

OCTOBER 11, 2008

Forever Young is in the stores. Illustrating a book for kids that takes one of Bob Dylan’s most loved songs was a challenge.  Ginee Seo and Ann Bobco at Simon and Schuster laid this story on me that parallels the lyrics, and brings to it a narrative  line that fits and isn’t too corny. My idea was to bring elements from Dylan’s life and lyrics from other songs to the book. I set up the illustrations as sort of stage sets, New York City became a character  in the book, and I squeezed in as many references as I could without being obnoxious. This book is for children and their parents, and I also wanted to make a book that Dylan fans would enjoy.

This is the first illustration I did, and it set the tone for the look of the book. We sent this to Dylan for approval, he had seen the book I did with Wynton Marsalis, “Jazz ABZ,” and picked me to be the illustrator for this book. There was really no need for us to get on the phone, and everything we sent over was approved right away. This drawing shows a block of Greenwich Village that includes clubs Dylan played in when he first arrived in New York.

Café Wha? was a pass-the-hat joint, and Dylan says he spent a lot of time in the NY Public Library.

The kid in the story lives next door to Gerde’s Folk City, and that VW bus and ’51 Chevy are still parked on Jones Street where they were on the cover of Freewheelin.’

I found a photo from the sixties of this cat’s sidewalk record stand that he rigged up from a bicycle, so I filled it with records that Bob plays a lot on Theme Time Radio Hour.

Woody Guthrie’s influence on Dylan was immeasurable, the first song Bob wrote was “Song to Woody” and he name-checks  Cisco, Sonny and Leadbelly too. This illustration was an early style exploration that didn’t make it into the book.

The kids room is loaded with references to many things and people Dylan mentions in his memoir Chronicles Vol 1.

The portraits of Cisco Houston, Sonny Terry, and Leadbelly found a place. All good illustrators know not to throw anything away, and to never draw something you can trace, and never trace something you can cut out and paste down.

Milton Glaser’s poster shows up next to Willis Reed. The radio has words coming out of it that read “the country music station plays soft,” a line from Visions of Johanna. I tucked some tiny handwritten lines into a number of the illustrations.

Maggie’s Farm becomes a pawnshop with electric guitars and a polka dot shirt in the window.

This drawing of Dylan was done for the endpapers, but we didn’t use it.

The book jacket is a wrap around drawing that includes a train and a signpost that refers to Guthrie’s This Land Is Your Land. My brilliant wife, Jill von Hartmann,  handled the book design and made everything look good. I asked her if anyone would get that the windmill and the dandelion were in reference to Blowin’ in the Wind and she said “Not one person on earth.”

There's a video on YouTube that the publisher made to hype the book

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hc-a1kP7ITA

Topical: Forever Young