Christopher Manson


Christopher Manson is a children's book author and illustrator noted for his use of traditional hand tools to painstakingly make the pine woodcuts that fill his several highly acclaimed works.

Background

Born in Buffalo, New York, Manson graduated in 1975 from the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design in Halifax, Nova Scotia, having specialized in printmaking. He also obtained a Master of Fine Arts from the State University of New York at New Paltz.
He returned to Buffalo, where he took a job at a local arts council in arts management, a position that required fundraising skills. "It wasn't for me," he later recalled. "I figured out that I was tired of helping others make their art."

Career

After illustrating a friend's cookbook, he published the phenomenally popular children's book, ', issued by the major publishing house Henry Holt and Company. The book promised a $10,000 award to whoever solved the book's many visual puzzles, and even though the contest has long since ended, the book remains in print, and was reissued as a computer game in CD-ROM format.
Manson authored and illustrated the following books:
'
The Rails I Tote: Forty-Five Illustrated Spoonerisms to Decipher
The Practical Alchemist: Showing The Way An Ordinary House-Cat May Be Transformed Into True Gold
A Gift For The King: A Persian Tale
Two Travelers
The Crab Prince: An Entertainment For Children
The Marvellous Blue Mouse
Manson provided the illustrations for these books:
The Norman Table: The Traditional Cooking of Normandy
A Farmyard Song
The Tree in the Wood: An Old Nursery Song
Good King Wenceslas
Till Year's Good End
Over the River and through the Wood
Uncle Sam and Old Glory
Black Swan/White Crow
Manson summed up his approach to his authoring and illustrating children's books like so: "What I'm really after is the perfect book. The kind where you just can't imagine the words without the pictures, or the pictures without the words... like Milne. But there aren't that many out there to point to as perfect. I'm constantly working toward it." He added, "Even if I won the 40 million dollar lottery, I'd still do this — I'd have a fancier studio, but I'd still do this."