Hot Men of Children's Literature: Part 32 In a Series
Sometimes a person can come up with a HMOCL entirely on their own, and
sometimes it takes the nominee's publisher to give me a nudge in the
right direction. Today's hottie isn't unfamiliar with being
objectified. After all, he was already mentioned in Paper Magazine's
Beautiful People 2006. Right now I think he's in Prague, so he may not
know about this for some time. You see, I met this particular HMOCL in
the midst of the Narnia movie madness when my library branch at the
time (the Jefferson Market should-really-have-been-in-Kiki-Strike
branch) hosted costumes and props from the film. He does not, sadly,
remember me, which is unsurprising given the circumstances. It was a
busy time for him and I was wearing my patent pending library shelf
camouflage, thus blending in with my surroundings.
I assure you that this fellow is a huge children's literature advocate
and (perhaps more importantly) a lover of libraries as well.
So here, without further ado, is the delightful, the charming, the
rather young...
PERRY MOORE
ATTENTION FUTURE HOT MEN OF CHILDREN'S LITERATURE: You would do very
well to have a picture of yourself like this somewhere in your
possession so as to pass it along to me. It makes my job just that
much easier.
Here is what Paper Magazine wrote of him back in April. I'm a little
sad that it took me this long to hear about it.
The 34-year-old executive producer is responsible -- along with
director Andrew Adamson and producer Mark Johnson -- for The
Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe. The
movie did so well at the box office that Disney green-lit Prince
Caspian, the second film in the series based on the C.S. Lewis
books. That film should land in theaters in 2007, the same year
that Moore's first novel hits bookstores -- Hero (Hyperion). "It's
your regular, ordinary coming-of-age story about the world's first
gay superhero," Moore says. Like Narnia, it's also the first in a
series. Moore has had previous publishing success: His The Official
Illustrated Movie Companion to the first Narnia film is a New York
Times bestseller. What else? "I'm dying to work with [producer]
Brian Grazer," he says. That's understandable: Hero sounds ripe for
adaptation.
The unbelievably affable New York transplant came to Manhattan by
way of Virginia Beach, Virginia (and the White House, where he
interned during the good old Clinton administration). No matter how
busy he is, he never fails to glow with Southern charm. And busy he
is. Besides the Narnia films and his superhero cycle, Moore's
working on Lake City (a film he co-wrote and will co-direct with
PAPER's Hunter Hill, starring Sissy Spacek) and a documentary about
Where the Wild Things Are author Maurice Sendak (co-directed by
Moore, Hill and Spike Jonze).
If he can survive being called "unbelievably affable" he can survive
1 comment:
I love Narnia's book! Its amazing!!I
http://didgetone.blogspot.com/
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