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Lunch Money by Brian Selznick
Lunch Money by Brian Selznick












Lunch Money by Brian Selznick

The story left the reader thinking that if you put your mind to something and work as a team it is possible to resolve any conflict. The plot carried the reader into the challenging situations that required problem solving skills. They embraced real world situations that made the story more believable. The characters in this book found a way to learn from each other and support each other through the hurdles to be successful. How Maura and Greg were going to get the approval from the school board to sell the comic books. How Greg was going to make the principal understand that it wasn’t just about making money, there was more value to his comic book. This story truly engaged the reader in the manner that made the reader curious has to how he was going to find a new way to make money, how he was going to work with his longtime rival and neighbor Maura Shaw. I really enjoyed the clever ways he made money at home and at school. It is a great story about creativity, comics, economics and entrepreneurship. I live in Brooklyn, New York, and San Diego, California. I have also written a few other books myself, including The Boy of a Thousand Faces, but The Invention of Hugo Cabret is by far the longest and most involved book I’ve ever worked on. Since then, I have illustrated many books for children, including Frindle by Andrew Clements, The Doll People by Ann Martin and Laura Godwin, Amelia and Eleanor Go for a Ride by Pam Muñoz Ryan and The Dinosaurs of Waterhouse Hawkins by Barbara Kerley, which received a 2001 Caldecott Honor. My first book, The Houdini Box, which I both wrote and illustrated, was published in 1991 while I was still working at the bookstore. While I was at Eeyore’s I also painted the windows for holidays and book events.

Lunch Money by Brian Selznick

I learned all about children’s books from my boss Steve Geck who is now an editor of children’s books at Greenwillow. I studied at The Rhode Island School of Design and after I graduated from college I worked at Eeyore’s Books for Children in New York City. I have a sister who is a teacher, a brother who is a brain surgeon, and five nephews and one niece. My name is Brian Selznick and I’m the author and illustrator of The Invention of Hugo Cabret.














Lunch Money by Brian Selznick