Photo de l'auteur

Frederick Winsor (1) (1900–1958)

Auteur de The Space Child's Mother Goose

Pour les autres auteurs qui s'appellent Frederick Winsor, voyez la page de désambigüisation.

1 oeuvres 250 utilisateurs 10 critiques

Œuvres de Frederick Winsor

The Space Child's Mother Goose (1958) 250 exemplaires

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Date de naissance
1900-10-15
Date de décès
1958
Sexe
male
Nationalité
United States of America
Lieu de naissance
Massachusetts, USA
Études
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Professions
architect
Courte biographie
Frederick Winsor, Jr. was born in Massachusetts in 1900. He earned a degree in architecture from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and spent his working life in architecture and related areas. His friends were scientists, teachers, lawyers, artists and writers. For most of his adult life he wrote light verse. He produced poems for family occasions, to amuse his friends and to entertain his children. He also wrote lyrics for amateur musical shows, many of which were produced by the St. Botolph Club of Boston. A voracious reader, he devoured detective fiction faster than the bookstores could keep him supplied and he was delighted by the emergence of science fiction to which he turned with enthusiasm. He retired in 1951 and wrote The Space Child's Mother Goose over the next few years, inspired perhaps by the development of space research and the birth of his first grandchild. He was working on a second book of verse when he died unexpectedly in 1958.

Membres

Critiques

If you love nursery rhymes and science, this volume will make your chuckle a few times. While most rhymes appear in English, several languages make appearances in one poem each. My LibraryThing 2020 Secret Santa chose a book I'm certain to revisit a few times.
 
Signalé
thornton37814 | 9 autres critiques | Jan 14, 2021 |
Years ago, I came across the "Probable Possible, My Black Hen" rhyme and have been on the lookout for this book ever since. I'm happy to report the rest of the book is just as delightful. The reworked nursery rhymes have a wonderful cool-jazz kind of feel to them:

Resistor, transistor, condensers in pairs,
Battery, platter, record me some airs;
Squeaker and squawker and woofer times pi,
And Baby shall have his own private Hi-Fi.
 
Signalé
melonbrawl | 9 autres critiques | Feb 25, 2015 |
One day in the 1950s a retired architect started combining a lifetime of light verse with modern science fiction. The resulting rhymes and ditties were not only silly, they were also entirely based on philosophy and science, this being mainly Einsteinian and quantum physics and mathematics. The author himself, alas, did not make it through the year in which this book was published but the book remained a cult classic into the 21st century. The illustrator carried the torch for the next 50 years ensuring that the book would not be forgotten. She was, in fact, responsible for much of the love and craft that had gone into it so it is less an intellectual exercise and more a complete work of art.

Mother Goose is the sort of book that I love to give as a gift because my friends are just the sort of people who can appreciate the absurdity and get the references. This book is whimsy elevated to absolute genius.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
thkey | 9 autres critiques | Jan 9, 2011 |
I don't even understand a small fraction of the physics behind this delightful book, but love the idea of spacers reading it to their children in harness just before tranking for the jump.
 
Signalé
BrickBook | 9 autres critiques | Aug 8, 2010 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
1
Membres
250
Popularité
#91,401
Évaluation
½ 4.4
Critiques
10
ISBN
3

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