Wanting Monster

The Wanting Monster

  • ISBN: 9781592704422
  • Publication Date: May 27, 2025

Format:

Price: $17.95
Description

From award-winning author Martine Murray (dubbed Australia’s Kate DiCamillo) and artist Anna Luisa Read comes a timeless and timely tale about the monstrousness of envy, and every creature’s—even a monster’s—need for love.

It starts with a whisper in your ear. A prickly feeling that something isn’t quite right. And it builds until a sneaky, possessive thought wriggles into your mind, and an insidious want burrows into your heart.

Before you know it, you’re discontent, convinced that you’re owed more than what you’ve got. This is the work of the Wanting Monster.

One day, the Wanting Monster arrives in a small village, but no one notices him, despite his antics. Feeling snubbed, he starts sowing discontent and envy of one’s neighbor. So infectious is the wanting and greed awakened by the Wanting Monster that even the stars are plucked, one by one, from the sky.

Covetousness and distrust reign. Will the village people ever return to their senses? Will they ever learn that it’s the monster of wanting that’s been poisoning their minds? The Wanting Monster almost triumphs . . . fortunately, he is finally seen for what he is, and this recognition unleashes the purifying force of collective lamentation and a coming together to reroot and rebuild.

Praise

“A picture book written by Martine Murray and beautifully illustrated by Anna Read, The Wanting Monster tells the story of a town... where the titular character sets off a mad race among the townspeople to hoard every natural resource for themselves... The Wanting Monster looks like Maurice Sendak’s Max if he had stayed in the land of the Wild Things and grown into one himself. And as with Max, the key to taming him is showing him a bit of love... From the first page, a palette of pale greens and blues is threatened by dark clouds hovering over the horizon. As the Wanting Monster pours its greed into the ears of the villagers, the darkness pours over the hills and envelops the village, the pages becoming gorgeous studies in blacks and whites and deep blues.”
—The New York Times, Newbery honoree Adam Gidwitz

"Very poetic and deep... The ideas afoot in this book are great."
—A Fuse #8 Production (A School Library Journal blog), Betsy Bird

"This fable teases out the difference between wants and needs and illustrates how excessive desire can lead to heartache. Read’s folkloric art has an ominous quality to it, with skies filled with gray, purple, and black swirls evoking the current climate disaster... An atmospheric musing on the perils of avarice."
—Kirkus Reviews

"An almost unbearably wonderful modern fable about who we would be and what this world would be like if we finally arrived, exhausted and relieved, at the still point of enough. Having always felt that great children’s books are works of philosophy in disguise, speaking great truth in the language of tenderness, I hold this one among my all-time favorites."
—The Marginalian, Maria Popova

“Dreamlike illustrations track this fable about the dangers of envy... Even the stars in the sky fall prey to the Wanting Monster—until a compassionate child reminds the villagers of their responsibility to one another and the world.”
—Foreword Reviews

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