The Fantastic Flying Books of Mr. Morris Lessmore (2012)
by William Joyce. Illustrated by William Joyce & Joe Bluhm
[This is one of the best
fiction-fantasy, short-book I ever read so far! Full of wonderful graphics and
how I wish you also may read this book with all of its inspiring pictures. This
is a story about a man and his books, and how his life and readings influenced
others to read books too. As the author writes that this book is dedicated to
one of the librarian that influenced Joyce’s reading and love for books]
Morris Lessmore loved words.
He loved stories.
He loved books.
His life was a book of his own writing, one orderly
page after another. He would open it every morning and write of his joys and
sorrows, of all that he knew and everything that he hoped for.
But every story has its upsets.
One day the sky darkened.
The winds blew and blew…
…till everything Morris knew was scattered –
even the words of his book.
He didn’t know what to do or which way to go.
So he began to wonder.
And wonder.
Then a happy bit of happenstance came his way. Rather
than looking down, as had become his habit, Morris Lessmore looked up. Drifting
through the sky above him, Morris saw a lovely lady. She was being pulled along
by a festive squadron of flying books.
Morris wondered if his book could fly.
But it couldn’t.
It would only fall to the ground with a depressing
thud.
The flying lady knew Morris simply needed a good
story,
so she sent him her favourite. The book was an amiable
fellow,
and urged Morris to follow him.
The book led him to an extraordinary building
where many books apparently “nested.”
Morris slowly walked inside and discovered
the most mysterious and inviting room he had ever
seen.
It was filled with the fluttering of countless pages,
and Morris could hear the faint chatter of a thousand
different stories,
as if each book was whispering an invitation to
adventure.
Then his new friend flew up to him and landed on his
arm.
It held itself open, as if hoping to be read.
The room rustled to life.
And so Morris’s life among the books began.
Morris tried to keep the books in some sort of order,
but they always mixed themselves up.
The tragedies needed cheering up and would visit the
comedies.
The encyclopedias, weary of facts, would relax with
the comic books and fictions.
All in all it was an agreeable jumble.
Morris found great satisfaction in caring for the
books,
gently fixing those with fragile bindings
and unfolding the dog-eared pages of others.
Sometimes Morris would become lost in a book
and scarcely emerge for days.
Morris liked to share the books with others.
Sometimes it was a favourite that everyone loved,
and other times he found a lonely little volume whose
tale was seldom told.
“Everyone’s story matters,” said Morris.
And all the books agreed.
At night, after all the stories that needed telling
had been told
and everyone has settled down to their proper places on the shelves,
the great big dictionary would get in the last word:
zzzzzzzzzzz…
It was then that Morris Lessmore would once again
write in his own book.
He wrote of his joys and sorrows,
Of all that he knew and everything that he hoped for.
The days passed.
So did the months.
And then years.
And years…
…and Morris Lessmore became stooped and crinkly.
But the books never changed.
Their stories stayed the same.
Now his old friends took care of him
the way he had once cared for them,
and they read themselves to him each night.
Then one day he filled the last page in his book.
He looked up and said with a bittersweet sigh,
“I guess its’s time for me to move on.”
The books were sorry, but they understood.
Morris put on his hat and took his cane.
As he went to the door, he turned and smiled,
then waved good-bye.
“I’ll carry you all in here,”
he said, and pointed to his heart.
The books waved their pages, and Morris Lessmore flew
away.
And as he flew, he changed back to the way he’d been
that long ago day when they’d all first met.
The books were quiet for a while.
Then they noticed that Morris Lessmore had left
something behind.
“It’s his book!” said his oldest friend.
Inside was Morris’s story.
All of his joys and sorrows,
All that he know and everything that he hoped for.
Then the books heard a small, expectant sound.
There in the doorway was a little girl.
She looked around with wonder.
Then something fantastic happened.
Morris Lessmore’s book flew up to her and opened its
pages.
The girl began to read.
And so our story ends as it began…
THINK BIG.
START SMALL. GO DEEP.