
"My mother made illustrations and dust covers for books all day long and well into the night. Every book she contributed to she got free when it was published, our bookcases grew all over the walls and I read without restriction, anything and anywhere, with pocket flashlights under the bedcovers and on the dumpsters down in the yard if I was told to get some fresh air. If any book was really unsuitable for a child my mother only had to say, "that one you should read, it is very instructive, to ensure that I didn't...The happiest childhood is, I think, the one which offers both security and excitement...In my books...if there are any greys they are not the colour of gloom but rather those half tones necessary for the unspoken, the hidden. In a book for children I think there should always be something left unexplained and without any illustration. There should be a path at which the writer respectfully stops to let the child continue alone."
Tove Jansson, winner of the 1966 Hans Christian Andersen Medal,in Third Book of Junior Authors, 1972