Dr. Suess

There are many popular children’s books authors out there.   Unfortunately, not all are as recognized as Theodore Geisel, more commonly referred to as “dr. Suess.”   To find out what makes an author as successful as Suess, one must first find out about the author’s history, the author’s experiences, and the author himself.
Theodore Suess Geisel was born on March 2,1904, in Springfield, Massachusetts.   This date became the marking date of the birth of a great American author.   Geisel grew up with his father managing a city zoo.   Going to school at Dartmouth College, A.B., 1925 and having graduate study at Lincoln College, Oxford, 1925-26, and the University of Paris, 1926, Theodore planned to take up a career in teaching.   But upon his return form Europe in 1927, he became instead a humorist and cartoonist of Judge, Vanity Fair, Liberty, and other national magazines of the day.   This was surprising considering that he had no formal art training.  
Seuss had no children of his own, and was once quoted for saying, “You have ‘em, I’ll amuse ‘em”(TCLC 106).   After his wife Palmer died, he remarried Audrey Stone and had two daughters,   Lea and Lark which widely spread his imagination.   Geisels books have great interest that draws children to read them, even on their own.
Along with the great, animal-based characters, the Seuss also used a wide array of words, referred to as “a facile sort of knock-about word play”(TCLC 106).   These sometimes non-existent words he refers to as “logical insanity”(106).   Geisel’s famous stories were popular in their time and somehow have found a way to continue to capture the hearts of young, as well as older readers.   Through the 1950s, Geisel wrote a couple of children’s books a year, capped in 1957 by the publication of How the Grinch Stole Christmas and The Cat in the Hat.   According to most looked-up-to resources, Suess’s most popular book, The Cat in the Hat, consists of a cat equipped with a top hat on a rampage in a youngsters...