Thursday, July 31, 2025
NewsWave
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • World
  • USA
  • Business
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
  • Technology
Login
  • Home
  • World
  • USA
  • Business
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
  • Technology
Login
No Result
View All Result
Login
NewsWave
No Result
View All Result
Home World USA

Once Upon a Time, the World of Picture Books Came to Life

1 April 2024
in USA
0
Once Upon a Time, the World of Picture Books Came to Life
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter
How does this make you feel?


On a crisp Saturday morning that screamed for adventure, a former tin can factory in North Kansas City, Mo. thrummed with the sound of young people climbing, sliding, spinning, jumping, exploring and reading.

Yes, reading.

If you think this is a silent activity, you haven’t spent time in a first grade classroom. And if you think all indoor destinations for young people are sticky, smelly, depressing hellholes, check your assumptions at the unmarked front door.

Welcome to the Rabbit Hole, a brand-new, decade-in-the-making museum of children’s literature founded by the only people with the stamina for such a feat: former bookstore owners. Pete Cowdin and Deb Pettid are long-married artists who share the bullish determination of the Little Red Hen. They’ve transformed the hulking old building into a series of settings lifted straight from the pages of beloved picture books.

Before we get into what the Rabbit Hole is, here’s what it isn’t: a place with touch screens, a ball pit, inscrutable plaques, velvet ropes, a cloying soundtrack or adults in costumes. It doesn’t smell like graham crackers, apple juice or worse (yet). At $16 per person over two years old, it also isn’t cheap.

During opening weekend on March 16, the museum was a hive of freckles and gap toothed grins, with visitors ranging in age from newborn to well seasoned. Cries of β€œLook up here!,” β€œThere’s a path we need to take!” and β€œThere’s Good Dog Carl!” created a pleasant pandemonium. For every child galloping into the 30,000 square foot space, there was an adult hellbent on documenting the moment.

Did you ever have to make a shoe box diorama about your a favorite book? If so, you might remember classmates who constructed move-in ready mini kingdoms kitted out with gingham curtains, clothespin people and actual pieces of spaghetti.

Cowdin, Pettid and their team are those students, all grown up.

The main floor of the Rabbit Hole consists of 40 book-themed dioramas blown up to life-size and arranged, Ikea showroom-style, in a space the size of two hockey rinks. The one inspired by John Steptoe’s β€œUptown” features a pressed tin ceiling, a faux stained-glass window and a jukebox. In the great green room from β€œGoodnight Moon,” you can pick up an old-fashioned phone and hear the illustrator’s son reading the story.

One fictional world blends into the next, allowing characters to rub shoulders in real life just as they do on a shelf. Visitors slid down the pole in β€œThe Fire Cat,” slithered into the gullet of the boa constrictor in β€œWhere the Sidewalk Ends” and lounged in a faux bubble bath in β€œHarry the Dirty Dog.” There are plenty of familiar faces β€” Madeline, Strega Nona, Babar β€” but just as many areas dedicated to worthy titles that don’t feature household names, including β€œCrow Boy,” β€œSam and the Tigers,” β€œGladiola Garden” and β€œThe Zabajaba Jungle.”

Emma Miller, a first-grade teacher, said, β€œSo many of these are books I use in my classroom. It’s immersive and beautiful. I’m overwhelmed.”

As her toddler bolted toward β€œFrog and Toad,” Taylar Brown said, β€œWe love opportunities to explore different sensory things for Mason. He has autism so this is a perfect place for him to find little hiding holes.”

A gaggle of boys reclined on a bean bag in β€œCaps for Sale,” passing around a copy of the book. Identical twins sounded out β€œBread and Jam for Frances” on the pink rug in the badger’s house. A 3-year-old visiting for the second time listened to her grandfather reading β€œThe Tawny Scrawny Lion.”

Tomy Tran, a father of three from Oklahoma, said, β€œI’ve been to some of these indoor places and it’s more like a jungle gym. Here, my kids will go into the area, pick up the book and actually start reading it as if they’re in the story.”

All the titles scattered around the museum are available for purchase at the Lucky Rabbit, a bookstore arranged around a cozy amphitheater. Pettid and Cowdin estimate that they’ve sold one book per visitor, with around 650 guests per day following the pink bunny tracks from the parking lot.

Once upon a time, Cowdin and Pettid owned the Reading Reptile, a Kansas City institution known not just for its children’s books but also for its literary installations. When Dav Pilkey came to town, Pettid and Cowdin welcomed him by making a three-and-a-half foot papier-mΓ’chΓ© Captain Underpants. Young customers pitched in to build Tooth-Gnasher Superflash or the bread airplane from β€œMickey in the Night Kitchen.”

One of the store’s devotees was Meg McMath, who continued to visit through college, long after she’d outgrown its offerings (and its chairs). Now 36, McMath traveled from Austin, Texas with her husband and six-month-old son to see the Rabbit Hole. β€œI’ve cried a few times,” she said.

The Reading Reptile weathered Barnes & Noble superstores and Amazon. Then came β€œthe Harry Potter effect,” Pettid said, β€œwhere all of a sudden adults wanted kids to go from picture books to thick chapter books. They skipped from here to there; there was so much they were missing.”

As parents fell under the sway of reading lists for β€œgifted” kids, story time became yet another proving ground.

β€œIt totally deformed the reading experience,” Cowdin said. Not to mention the scourge of every bookstore: surreptitious photo-snappers who later shopped online.

In 2016, Cowdin and Pettid closed the Reptile to focus on the Rabbit Hole, an idea they’d been percolating for years. They hoped it would be a way to spread the organic bookworm spirit they’d instilled in their five children while dialing up representation for readers who had trouble finding characters who looked like them. The museum would celebrate classics, forgotten gems and quality newcomers. How hard could it be?

Cowdin and Pettid had no experience in the nonprofit world. They knew nothing about fund-raising or construction. They’re ideas people, glass half full types, idealists but also stubborn visionaries. They didn’t want to hand their β€œdream” β€” a word they say in quotes β€” to consultants who knew little about children’s books. Along the way, board members resigned. Their kids grew up. Covid descended. A tree fell on their house and they had to live elsewhere for a year. β€œI literally have told Pete I quit 20 times,” Pettid said.

β€œIt has not always been pleasant,” Cowdin said. β€œBut it was just like, OK, we’re going to do this and then we’re going to figure out how to do it. And then we just kept figuring it out.”

Little by little, chugging along like β€œThe Little Engine That Could,” they raised $15 million and assembled a board who embraced their vision and commitment to Kansas City. They made a wish list of books β€” β€œEvery ethnicity. Every gender. Every publisher,” Pettid said β€” and met with rights departments and authors’ estates about acquiring permissions. Most were receptive; some weren’t. (They now have rights to more than 70 titles.)

β€œA lot of people think a children’s bookstore is very cute,” Pettid said. β€œThey have a small mind for children’s culture. That’s why we had to buy this building.”

For $2 million, they bought the factory from Robert Riccardi, an architect whose family operated a beverage distribution business there for two decades. His firm, Multistudio, worked with Cowdin and Pettid to reimagine the space, which sits on an industrial corner bordered by train tracks, highways and skyline views.

Cowdin and Pettid started experimenting with layouts. Eventually they hired 39 staff members, including 21 full-time artists and fabricators who made everything in the museum from some combination of steel, wood, foam, concrete and papier-mΓ’chΓ©.

β€œMy parents are movers and shakers,” Gloria Cowdin said. She’s the middle of the five siblings, named after Frances the badger’s sister β€” and, yes, that’s her voice reading inside the exhibit. β€œThere’s never been something they’ve wanted to achieve that they haven’t made happen, no matter how crazy.”

During a sneak peek in December, it was hard to imagine how this semi-construction zone would coalesce into a museum. The 22,000 square foot fabrication section was abuzz with drills and saws. A whiteboard showed assembly diagrams and punch lists. (Under β€œRandom jobs,” someone had jotted, β€œWrite Christmas songs.”) The entryway and lower level β€” known as the grotto and the burrow β€” were warrens of scaffolding and machinery.

But there were pockets of calm. Kelli Harrod worked on a fresco of trees outside the β€œBlueberries for Sal” kitchen, unfazed by the hubbub. In two years as lead painter, she’d witnessed the Rabbit Hole’s steady growth.

β€œI remember painting the β€˜PΓ©rez and Martina’ house before there was insulation,” Harrod said. β€œI was bundled up in hats, gloves and coats, making sure my hands didn’t shake.”

Leigh Rosser was similarly nonplused while describing his biggest challenge as design fabrication lead. Problem: How to get a dragon and a cloud to fly above a grand staircase in β€œMy Father’s Dragon.” Solution: β€œIt’s really simple, conceptually” β€” it didn’t sound simple β€” β€œbut we’re dealing with weight in the thousands of pounds, mounted up high. We make up things that haven’t been done before, or at least that I’m not aware of.”

Attention to detail extends to floor-bound exhibits. The utensil drawer in β€œBlueberries for Sal” holds Pete Cowdin’s mother’s egg whisk alongside a jar containing a baby tooth that belonged to Cowdin and Pettid’s oldest daughter, Sally. The tooth is a wink at β€œOne Morning in Maine,” an earlier Robert McCloskey book involving a wiggly bicuspid β€” or was it a molar? If dental records are available, Cowdin and Pettid have consulted them for accuracy.

β€œWith Pete and Deb, it’s about trying to picture what they’re seeing in their minds,” said Brian Selznick, a longtime friend who helped stock the shelves in the Lucky Rabbit. He’s the author of β€œThe Invention of Hugo Cabret,” among many other books.

Three months ago, the grotto looked like a desert rock formation studded with pink Chiclets. The burrow, home of Fox Rabbit, the museum’s eponymous mascot, was dark except for sparks blasting from a soldering iron. The floor was covered with tiny metal letters reclaimed from a newly-renovated donor wall at a local museum.

Cowdin and Pettid proudly explained their works-in-progress; these were the parts of the museum that blossomed from seed in their imaginations. But to the naked eye, they had the charm of a bulkhead door leading to a scary basement.

When the museum opened to the public, the grotto and the burrow suddenly made sense. The pink Chiclets are books, more than 3000 of them β€” molded in silicone, cast in resin β€” incorporated into the walls, the stairs and the floor. They vary from an inch-and-a-half to three inches thick. As visitors descend into the Rabbit Hole, they can run their fingers over the edges of petrified volumes. They can clamber over rock formations that include layers of books. Or they can curl up and read.

Dennis Butt, another longtime Rabbit Hole employee, molded 92 donated books into the mix, including his own copies of β€œThe Hobbit” and β€œThe Lord of the Rings.” He said, β€œThey’re a little piece of me.”

As for the metal letters, they’re pressed into the walls of a blue-lit tunnel leading up a ramp to the first floor. They spell the first lines of 141 books, including β€œCharlotte’s Web,” β€œDevil in the Drain” and β€œMartha Speaks.” Some were easier to decipher than others, but β€œMashed potatoes are to give everybody enough” jumped out. It called to mind another line from β€œA Hole is to Dig,” Ruth Krauss’s book of first definitions (illustrated by a young Maurice Sendak): β€œThe world is so you have something to stand on.”

At the Rabbit Hole, books are so you have something to stand on. They’re the bedrock and the foundation; they’re the solid ground.

Cowdin and Pettid have plans to expand into three more floors, adding exhibit space, a print shop, a story lab, a resource library and discovery galleries. An Automat-style cafeteria and George and Martha-themed party and craft room will open soon. A rooftop bar is also in the works.

Of course, museum life isn’t all happily ever after. Certain visitors whined, whinged and wept, especially as they approached the exit. One weary adult said, β€œCharlie, we did it all.”

Then, β€œCharlie, it’s time to go.”

And finally, β€œFine, Charlie, we’re leaving you here.” Cue hysteria.

But the moral of this story β€” and the point of the museum, and maybe the point of reading, depending on who you share books with β€” crystallized in a quiet moment in the great green room. A boy in a Chiefs Super Bowl T-shirt pretended to fall asleep beneath a fleecy blanket. Before closing his eyes, he said, β€œGoodnight, Grandma. Love you to the moon.”



Source link

πŸͺ„ Creating a simple explanation...

Tags: booksLifepictureTimeworld
Previous Post

Top things to do in Riebeek-Kasteel

Next Post

How to avoid a billion climate deaths

Related Posts

Ex-Biden cyber director Jen Easterly says her West Point appointment was “unfortunately” rescinded
USA

Ex-Biden cyber director Jen Easterly says her West Point appointment was “unfortunately” rescinded

by My News Wave
31 July 2025
0

Jen Easterly, former director of the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, had her appointment as a chair at West Point rescinded after pro-Trump activist Laura Loomer criticized her hire on social media. Army Secretary Dan Driscoll cited concerns over integrity and the need for a vetting process, with Easterly expressing disappointment and emphasizing the importance of character in leadership. Want More Context? πŸ”Ž

Read more
NYC gunman had valid Nevada concealed carry permit
USA

NYC gunman had valid Nevada concealed carry permit

by My News Wave
31 July 2025
0

Shane Tamura, who fatally shot four people in a New York City office building, legally obtained a concealed carry permit in Nevada despite a history of mental health issues. The incident has reignited calls for a national assault weapon ban, as current laws allow gun owners to transport firearms across state lines, complicating enforcement against gun violence. Want More Context? πŸ”Ž

Read more
Virginia mall surveillance shows alleged toddler abduction by 26-year-old man
USA

Virginia mall surveillance shows alleged toddler abduction by 26-year-old man

by My News Wave
31 July 2025
0

Police in Virginia released surveillance footage showing 26-year-old Andres Caceres Jaldin allegedly abducting a toddler at the Fair Oaks Shopping Center on July 18. After the girl's parents located Jaldin and retrieved their daughter, he was arrested at a nearby hotel for abduction of a minor and grand larceny, and is currently held without bond. Want More Context? πŸ”Ž

Read more
US to impose sanctions on Palestinian organisations
USA

US to impose sanctions on Palestinian organisations

by My News Wave
31 July 2025
0

The US plans to impose sanctions on the Palestinian Authority (PA) and the Palestine Liberation Organisation (PLO), denying visas to their officials, following a UN conference supporting Palestinian statehood. This move is seen as a response to growing international recognition of Palestine and has drawn criticism from Palestinian leaders, who argue it punishes victims rather than addressing alleged Israeli war crimes. Want More Context? πŸ”Ž

Read more
Justin Timberlake reveals Lyme disease diagnosis
USA

Justin Timberlake reveals Lyme disease diagnosis

by My News Wave
31 July 2025
0

AndrΓ© Rhoden-PaulBBC NewsJustin Timberlake recently revealed his diagnosis of Lyme disease, explaining how it has caused him significant pain and fatigue during his performances. Despite health challenges, he chose to complete his world tour, emphasizing the joy of performing and his desire to be more transparent about his struggles. Want More Context? πŸ”Ž

Read more
Student loan interest for millions resumes on Aug. 1. The average monthly payment could rise 0.
USA

Student loan interest for millions resumes on Aug. 1. The average monthly payment could rise $300.

by My News Wave
31 July 2025
0

Millions of student loan borrowers enrolled in the Biden-era SAVE repayment plan will see interest charges resume on August 1, potentially increasing monthly costs by $300, as the Department of Education emphasizes fiscal responsibility. Borrowers can opt for forbearance to avoid payments but risk growing loan balances, while evaluating repayment plans, including a new Repayment Assistance Plan set for 2026. Want More Context? πŸ”Ž

Read more
NewsWave

News Summarized. Time Saved. Bite-sized news briefs for busy people. No fluff, just facts.

CATEGORIES

  • Africa
  • Asia Pacific
  • Australia
  • Business
  • Canada
  • Entertainment
  • Europe
  • India
  • Middle East
  • New Zealand
  • Sports
  • Technology
  • UK
  • USA
  • World

LATEST NEWS STORIES

  • Seven more die from malnutrition in Gaza, Hamas-run ministry says
  • Liberals shrink fundraising gap with Conservatives to closest since Poilievre became Tory leader
  • Five jockeys on a small plane forced into dramatic landing after engine failure
  • About Us
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Contact Us

Copyright Β© 2025 News Wave
News Wave is not responsible for the content of external sites.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • World
  • USA
  • Business
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
  • Technology

Copyright Β© 2025 News Wave
News Wave is not responsible for the content of external sites.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In