Carl Sandburg
Carl Sandburg was a prolific poet and the recipient of three Pulitzer Prizes. He was born in Galesburg, Illinois January 8, 1878 to Swedish immigrants. The family’s name was originally Johnson, however, his father, August, changed their surname after meeting several men with the same name while working on the railroads. Sandburg supported his family from a young age, working as a bricklayer, dishwasher, among other odd jobs. He was inspired to attend Lombard College, located in his native Galesburg, when he met a student during the Spanish-American war. The young soldier took the student’s advice, and attended the university. Although his poetry attracted attention and resulted in his first publication credit, he didn’t receive a diploma. He relocated to Milwaukee, working as a reporter and ad writer, then when he and his new wife moved to Chicago, he worked as a journalist for the Chicago Daily News. Indeed, Chicago could be considered his muse, as it was the focus of a great deal of his poetry. He soon branched beyond poetry to include biographies, novels, children’s books and more in his writing repertoire. Published in 1922, Rootabaga Stories was his collection of children’s folk tales, stories written for his own children. The silly and whimsical stories are interrelated, sharing characters and locations. Scholars report that Rootabaga Stories was written out a desire to create American fairy tales and folk tales, and thus are set in a fictionalized Midwest setting. The main narrator of the stories is Potato Face Blind Man, who lives in Village of Liver-and-Onions. As Sandburg was a hobo at age 17, traveling the railroad, some of those themes appear in the stories for children. A sequel, Rootabaga Pigeons, was released in 1923. The author died July 22, 1967, and his ashes were buried under Remembrance Rock in Galesburg.
Fairy tales by Carl Sandburg
- How the Animals Lost Their Tails and Got Them Back Traveling From Philadelphia to Medicine Hat
- How They Bring Back the Village of Cream Puffs When the Wind Blows It Away
- How Rag Bag Mammy Kept Her Secret While the Wind Blew Away the Village of Hat Pins
- How Six Pigeons Came Back to Hatrack the Horse After Many Accidents and Six Telegrams
- How the Three Wild Babylonian Baboons Went Away in the Rain Eating Bread and Butter
- How Six Umbrellas Took Off Their Straw Hats to Show Respect to the One Big Umbrella
- How Bozo the Button Buster Busted All His Buttons When a Mouse Came
- How Googler and Gaggler, the Two Christmas Babies, Came Home with Monkey Wrenches
- How Johnny the Wham Sleeps in Money All the Time and Joe the Wimp Shines and Sees Things
- How Deep Red Roses Goes Back and Forth Between the Clock and the Looking Glass
- How Pink Peony Sent Spuds, the Ball player, Up to Pick Four Moons
- How Dippy the Wisp and Slip Me Liz Came in the Moonshine Where the Potato Face Blind Man Sat with His Accordion
- How Hot Balloons and His Pigeon Daughters Crossed Over into the Rootabaga Country
- How Two Sweetheart Dippies Sat in the Moonlight on a Lumber Yard Fence and Heard About the Sooners and the Boomers
- The Haystack Cricket and How Things Are Different Up in the Moon Towns
- Why the Big Ball Game Between Hot Grounders and the Grand Standers Was a Hot Game
- The Huckabuck Family and How They Raised Pop Corn in Nebraska and Quit and Came Back
- How a Skyscraper and a Railroad Train Got Picked Up and Carried Away from Pig's Eye Valley Far in the Pickax Mountains
- How Henry Hagglyhoagly Played the Guitar with His Mittens On
- How They Broke Away to Go to the Rootabaga Country
- How the Five Rusty Rats Helped Find a New Village
- The Potato Face Blind Man Who Lost the Diamond Rabbit on His Gold Accordion
- How the Potato Face Blind Man Enjoyed Himself on a Fine Spring Morning
- How Gimme the Ax Found Out About the Zigzag Railroad and Who Made It Zigzag
- How the Hat Ashes Shovel Helped Snoo Foo
- How Bimbo the Snip’s Thumb Stuck to His Nose When the Wind Changed
- Kiss Me
- Sand Flat Shadows
- The Skyscraper to the Moon and How the Green Rat with the Rheumatism Ran a Thousand Miles Twice
- The Story of Jason Squiff and Why He Had a Popcorn Hat, Popcorn Mittens and Popcorn Shoes
- The Story of Blixie Bimber and the Power of the Gold Buckskin Whincher
- Slipfoot and How He Nearly Always Never Gets What He Goes After
- Shush Shush, the Big Buff Banty Hen Who Laid an Egg in the Postmaster's Hat
- The Toboggan-to-the-Moon Dream of the Potato Face Blind Man
- The Two Skyscrapers Who Decided to Have a Child
- Three Boys With Jugs of Molasses and Secret Ambitions