Make Way For Ducklings by Robert McCloskey 1941 Analysis

Make Way For Ducklings by Robert McCloskey (1941) is an American classic which serves as an excellent example of unreliable narration as it presents in picture books.

NOTES ON THE ILLUSTRATION IN MAKE WAY FOR DUCKLINGS

LIFELIKE DUCKS

McCloskey’s devotion to mimesis reminds me of the lengths the Hayao Miyazaki studio goes to when animating naturalistic movements.

Many people know Make Way for Ducklings, but they might not know the lengths to which Robert McCloskey went to get the beloved Mallard family to look just right. […]Itching to begin the illustrations, McCloskey went down to the Washington Square Market, bought a crate of ducks and brought them back to his Greenwich Village studio apartment. He washed the ducklings off in the bathtub, put them in a pan and got to work.

Mental Floss

SEPIA

We see sepia drawings quite a bit now, but it was unusual at the time:

Illustrated with sepia drawings rather than the traditional black-and-white pictures found in most children’s books of the day, the book, which received the 1942 Caldecott Medal for its illustrations, has continued to garner praise years after its first publishing. The drawings of Boston represent a duck’s eye view of the city.Each of the individual ducklings is “bored, inquisitive, sleepy, or they are scratching, talking over their backs one to another, running to catch up with the line”. Children identify with the ducklings because they behave as children do. The comforting message shows parents as caretakers, protectors, and teachers. According to fellow Caldecott winner Paul O. Zelinsky, “I realized that if the action in the drawings were to move from left to right, the ducks could not have been shown passing the Corner Book Shop, which is a wonderful detail in the story … He clearly knew these streets very well.”

“‘Robert McCloskey’s unusual and stunning pictures have long been a delight for their fun as well as their spirit of place.’— The Horn Book

Wikipedia

PAGE BREAKS AND PACING

[A] critic has positively commented on McCloskey’s use of page breaks as a pacing technique. McCloskey’s use of one-sentence pages forces the reader to quickly turn the page, enhancing the sense of motion, especially during the home search and when Mrs. Mallard teaches the ducklings their basic skills. McCloskey also employs this page break method to heighten surprise. When searching for a home, Mr. and Mrs. Mallard seem to have found a home on page eleven.

Wikipedia
Make Way For Ducklings inner image

STORY STRUCTURE OF MAKE WAY FOR DUCKLINGS

Shortcoming/Need

In this picture book, McCloskey’s first, it did not go unnoticed by certain critics who understood story structure very well, that this part of the story is left out altogether.

One critic says the “loosely plotted” story gives no true explanation for why Mr. Mallard leaves the island in the Charles River or why the Mallards did not simply stay on the lagoon island in the first place and avoid the bicyclists on the shore. However, McCloskey has stated himself that he thinks of himself as an artist who writes children’s books and not vice versa. One critic also find the characterisation lacking, that is, the Mallards represent “rather stereotypically concerned parents”, often showing the same facial expressions and rarely showing expressiveness.

Wikipedia

The moral of the story is that you can break the rules of story structure, but if you do, people will say it is ‘loosely plotted’ and if you don’t give your characters a ‘need’, your characterisation will be described as ‘lacking’ and you’ll end up explaining that you’re really more of an illustrator than a writer anyhow… The other part of this story is that you can still win a Caldecott medal for your subpar storytelling efforts.

Desire

This is where McCloskey decides to begin his story: ‘Mr and Mrs Mallard were looking for a place to live.’

Opponent

The deadly Boston traffic.

Plan

‘Come along children, follow me,’ says Mrs Mallard, swimming across the pond to the highway. This is where the anthropomorphised mother duck becomes more ducklike — in real life we sometimes see mother ducks leading their ducklings into perilous, built-up areas for what seems like no reason. And no reason is given here, hence the accusation of ‘weak characterisation’. The mother duck wants to cross the road, and so she does.

Big Struggle

Whereas the bulk of the first part of the story is illustrated from a bird’s eye view, now we see the enormous 1940s vehicles from the ducks’ perspective on the ground, and they look terrifying. The big struggle is represented with the ‘HONK! HONK!’ coming out of the cars. These drivers have no time for ducklings, and it’s only a matter of time before some driver comes along happy to mow them down flat.

Anagnorisis

‘The ducklings liked the new island so much that they decided to live there.’

New Situation

‘All day long they follow the swan boats and eat peanuts. And when night falls they swim to their little island and go to sleep.’

NARRATION AND IRONY IN MAKE WAY FOR DUCKLINGS

In picturebooks there is always an ironic gap between the pictures and the words; if there were no gap at all the picturebook is no longer a picturebook but simply an ‘illustrated story’.

James Wood describes the narration that accompanies this ironic gap as ‘free indirect style’:

Some of the purest examples of irony are found in children’s literature, which often needs to allow a child— or the child’s proxy, an animal — to see the world through limited eyes, while alerting the older reader to this limitation. In Robert McCloskey’s Make Way for Ducklings, Mr. and Mrs. Mallard are trying out the Boston Public Garden for their new home, when a swan boat (a boat made to look like a swan but actually powered by a pedal-pushing human pilot) passes them. Mr. Mallard has never seen anything like this before. McCloskey falls naturally into free indirect style: “Just as they were getting ready to start on their way, a strange enormous bird came by. It was pushing a boat full of people, and there was a man sitting on its back. ‘Good morning,’ quacked Mr. Mallard, being polite. The big bird was too proud to answer.” Instead of telling us that Mr. Mallard could make no sense of the swan boat, McCloskey places us in Mr. Mallard’s confusion; yet the confusion is obvious enough that a broad ironic gap opens between Mr. Mallard and the reader (or author). We are not confused in the same way as Mr. Mallard; but we are also being made to inhabit Mr. Mallard’s confusion.

James Wood, How Fiction Works

Free indirect style describes a type of third person narration that slips in and out of a character’s consciousness. It’s like, half narrator writing, half character’s thoughts.

This free indirect style allows for unreliable narration, which is common in picture books (though far less common in middle grade books)

UNRELIABLE NARRATION IN MAKE WAY FOR DUCKLINGS

1. The narrator that purposefully leads you astray

2. The narrator whose view of the world is so strident that by sheer force of will they are attempting to lead you astray

3. The narrator who does not attempt to lead you astray but does by dint of their youth and inexperience: Room, Catcher In The Rye

Fuse8 blog

Other notable examples of unreliable narration in picture books:

A lot of Dr Seuss books
A lot of switched-up fairy tales
  • The Wolf’s Story: What Really Happened to Little Red Riding Hood by Toby Forward, an example of a picture book in which the pictures tell a different story.
  • The True Story Of The Three Little Pigs
  • Seriously, Cinderella Is SO Annoying!: The Story of Cinderella as Told by the Wicked Stepmother by Trisha Speed Shaken — from the perspective of the stepmother and stepsisters who accuse her of being an insipid little twit

Many picture books in which the child reader knows more than the naive animal or child main character

  • My Cat, the Silliest Cat in the World by Giles Bachelet — the words tell a story about a cat but the pictures show that the ‘cat’ is actually an elephant.
  • Dear Mrs. LaRue: Letters From Obedience School by Mark Teague — has two stories — the black and white imaginings of a dog narrator which match his melodramatic letters home, compared to coloured illustrations depicting ‘the truth’. (There’s a whole series of them.)
  • Poor Puppy
  • Emma Kate by Patricia Polacco
  • Green Wilma by Tedd Arnold
  • Olivia, especially the one about the circus
  • When I Went To The Library

SETTING OF MAKE WAY FOR DUCKLINGS

This is a book with a very specific, real-life setting: Boston’s Public Garden. These days there’s a statue there in honour of this best-seller.

What was going on in the world at this time, particularly in Boston?

Well, everywhere war was about to break out. That was the main worry. That didn’t stand in the way of much building going on in Boston at the time: museums, universities, landmarks. The city itself had a population of 770,816 in 1940.

If you look for images of 1940s Boston you’ll see that it looked exactly as it did in Make Way For Ducklings. People really drove those cars, people really wore hats everywhere they went. (Though I’m guessing it wasn’t always quite as busy as the street depicted below, in which people line up for some sort of department store sale:

1940s Boston as in Make Way For Ducklings

Even the lamppost is the same:

Make Way For Ducklings policeman

PRE-FEMINISM

Make Way for Ducklings was published in the 1940s. Many books of the time portray a male dominated society, a trend which Make Way for Ducklings does not follow. In context, the story takes place during wartime as fathers were being drafted and sent to Europe, requiring more social support for single parent families. McCloskey presented Mrs. Mallard as an “independent and nonsubmissive female character.”

When Mr. Mallard leaves on questionable purpose, Mrs. Mallard is charged with raising their ducklings alone. McCloskey portrays Mrs. Mallard as a capable woman who does not need the support of a male character. This strong portrayal has led one critic to label the book as “pre-feminist”.

Wikipedia

OTHER WORK BY ROBERT MCCLOSKEY

Robert McCloskey is exceptional in being a recognized author [as well as an illustrator]. (He wrote Homer Price and Centerburg Tales.) The broad humor and short but strong story-lines of his Make Way for Ducklings (1941) and Blueberries for Sal (1948) have kept these two cheerful books popular through the decades. The text of Time of Wonder (1957), a description in words and pictures of a vacation in Maine, is possibly a shade overwritten, but this is a lovely picture book, full of light and air and water, and with a sense of wonder that justifies the title. At the time of writing, unfortunately, McClosky has published nothing for 30 years.

Written for Children by John Rowe Townsend

Of course, McCloskey has since died (2003, age 88) so I don’t think we will be getting any more picture books out of him after all. It is interesting that some picture book creators do all of their work while relatively young, retiring at the age any other workers have done in the past few generations at around age 60; others work their entire lives, perhaps entering the very young picture book market again when grandchildren come into their lives.

COMPARE AND CONTRAST

James Wood compares Make Way For Ducklings to What Maisie Knew by Henry James (also a movie).

what_maisie_knew_ver2

What happens when a novelist wants to inhabit a character’s confusion, refuses to make clear what a state of nonconfusion would look like? We can walk in a straight line from McCloskey to Henry James. There is a technical connection…between Make Way For Ducklings and James’s novel What Maisie Knew. Free indirect style helps us to inhabit juvenile confusion, this time a young girl’s rather than a duck’s.

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CONTEMPORARY FICTION SET IN AUSTRALIA AND NEW ZEALAND (2023)

On paper, things look fine. Sam Dennon recently inherited significant wealth from his uncle. As a respected architect, Sam spends his days thinking about the family needs and rich lives of his clients. But privately? Even his enduring love of amateur astronomy is on the wane. Sam has built a sustainable-architecture display home for himself but hasn’t yet moved into it, preferring to sleep in his cocoon of a campervan. Although they never announced it publicly, Sam’s wife and business partner ended their marriage years ago due to lack of intimacy, leaving Sam with the sense he is irreparably broken.

Now his beloved uncle has died. An intensifying fear manifests as health anxiety, with night terrors from a half-remembered early childhood event. To assuage the loneliness, Sam embarks on a Personal Happiness Project:

1. Get a pet dog

2. Find a friend. Just one. Not too intense.

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