Culture | Where the wild thing is

How “The Gruffalo” went global

The children’s book, first published 25 years ago, rewrote the rules for success

An illustration from The Gruffalo book.
What rhymes with millions?Photograph: Courtesy of Macmillan Children's Books

When Julia Donaldson set out to write a children’s book featuring a mouse—who would take a stroll through “the deep dark wood”, fending off a series of predators with wit and cunning—she intended him to meet a tiger for tea. Ms Donaldson, a British author who wrote songs for children’s television, had been inspired by a Chinese fable about a girl who escapes death by convincing a tiger that she is the queen of the forest. But there was a problem: Ms Donaldson wanted the book to be in rhyming couplets, and not a lot rhymes with tiger. She decided it would be more pragmatic for the beast’s name to end with the sound “oh”. And so, with the help of Axel Scheffler, a German illustrator, one of the most lucrative monsters in children’s publishing was born.

This article appeared in the Culture section of the print edition under the headline “Where the wild thing is”

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