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Title: The Melancholy Death of Oyster Boy
Description: a little book by Tim Burton


Mena - August 19, 2004 08:11 PM (GMT)
Last week I had the chance to visit a bookstore inside the Centre Pompidou, in Paris. I was looking at the books, and a small one caught my attention: "The Melancholy Death of Oyster Boy: and other stories". The author is Tim Burton, director of movies like Edward Scissorhands and Sleepy Hollow.

It took me twenty minutes to read through it, for it was a very small book.

It is a collection of short, odd rhyming little stories, macabre and hilarious together, and all the characters, Oyster Boy, Stick Guy and so on, are the perfect craft and result of the "humour noir" Burton is so famous for.

I am not sure I liked it, because it gave me the impression of a writing made to amuse its readers, and to mock them at the same time. Of course, it is not a narration that can make you feel involved, and also, not the kind of thing you'd read to share a couple of light laughs. But it is, anyway, an interesting experience.

If you are a fan of Tim Burton as a director, you may be interested in go deeper in this side of his production. This little book matches quite well his attitude towards movies, giving you the impression of an art that was made for the sake and pleasure of the author himself, and not necessarely to be shared... and that maybe, being shared is just an accidental consequence of it.

This is a review I found on Amazon:

QUOTE
This unassuming hardcover in black buckram with a dark lavender title plate is the door into a world of twisted pleasures. Filmmaker Tim Burton (Edward Scissorhands, Beetlejuice, The Nightmare Before Christmas) tells 23 winsomely macabre stories about boys and girls who don't fit in. Their bodies are misshapen, their habits are odd, and their parents are appalled by them. But they do try hard to be human, like poor unwanted Mummy Boy, who's "a bundle of gauze": he goes for a walk in the park with his mummy dog. Some kids are having "a birthday party for a Mexican girl." They think Mummy Boy is a piƱata: "They took a baseball bat and whacked open his head. Mummy Boy fell to the ground; he finally was dead. Inside of his head were no candy or prizes, just a few stray beetles of various sizes." For all its simple humor, The Melancholy Death of Oyster Boy & Other Stories is a peculiarly disturbing book about the violence that children suffer. It is illustrated in pen and ink, watercolor, and crayon. The themes and imagery are at a young-adult to adult level.

From breathtaking stop-action animation to bittersweet modern fairy tales, filmmaker Tim Burton has become known for his unique visual brilliance -- witty and macabre at once. Now he gives birth to a cast of gruesomely sympathetic children -- misunderstood outcasts who struggle to find love and belonging in their cruel, cruel worlds. His lovingly lurid illustrations evoke both the sweetness and the tragedy of these dark yet simple beings -- hopeful, hapless heroes who appeal to the ugly outsider in all of us, and let us laugh at a world we have long left behind (mostly anyway).



So, even if I cannot guarantee this small, freak book is good, I can say it is worthwhile to read it. If you happen to stumble in it, pick it up.




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