that person,” Terry explains. “What might they have been feeling when they did
this or experienced this? And is there anything like that in my life, not because I
want to talk with them about my life, but because I want to be able to understand
it in a way that might make sense to me.”
When Terry interviewed renowned author Maurice Sendak, her empathetic
questioning produced a remarkable moment.
Sendak, the beloved children’s author of
Where the Wild Things Are and
other books, was a famously complex character. He could translate dark reality
into a playful children’s adventure. An avowed atheist, he was introspective and
deeply creative. He came out as gay late in life. In September 2011, as the New
England fall was setting in, Sendak spoke with Terry by phone. He was eighty-
three and in failing health. His partner was gone, and loneliness was his
companion. But Sendak had just published
Bumble-Ardy, a book about a pig
who, on his ninth birthday, throws himself his first birthday party. The story is a
fable about growing up and staying young, about celebration and convention,
about love and forgiveness. Terry had interviewed Sendak many times before.
They’d known one another for years. He trusted her. You can hear the affection
in her voice.
She congratulates him on the book and asks simply:
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