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Author Highlight

Author and Illustrator Tony M. DiTerlizzi: author of the Spiderwick Chronicles 

 

Want to know what inspires Mr. DiTerlizzi to write? Click on his picture to watch video.

DiTerlizzi in 2015.         Lucinda's Secret | Book by Holly Black, Tony DiTerlizzi | Official  Publisher Page | Simon & Schuster

 

Upon graduating, DiTerlizzi moved to New York with his wife Angela and began a freelance illustration career working for TSR's Dungeons & Dragons role-playing game.[7][8] "I was so psyched when I got a chance to work on [the 1993 Monstrous Manual tome]. My entire goal was to 'blow away' the other artists. It helped me in getting the job for the Planescape setting."[3]

DiTerlizzi worked on the 1994 Planescape Campaign Setting and its supplements, redesigning the look of the Outer Planes, "Not only buildings but the people had to have a rusted, organic look. This seemed to come naturally in my art style. When I went to work on Planescape, I looked at anime and Japanese fantasy art like Yoshitaka Amano."[3] According to Shannon Appelcline, the artist's work was the backbone of the setting.[9]

DiTerlizzi continued to work for TSR, as well as White Wolf Publishing's Changeling and Werewolf Storyteller games, and illustrated many cards for Magic.[3]

He also illustrated books such as 1997's Giant Bones by Peter Beagle, and 1998's Dinosaur Summer by Greg Bear.[3] The first project where he both wrote and illustrated a book was the 2000 publication Jimmy Zangwow's Out-of-this-World Moon Pie Adventure,[10] followed in 2001, by Ted, which received the 2002 Zena Sutherland Award.

Mary Howitt's classic poem The Spider and the Fly, which became a New York Times Best Seller, was his next project[11] and for which he was awarded the 2003 Caldecott Honor Medal.[7]

DiTerlizzi and Holly Black created The Spiderwick Chronicles, bought by Simon & Schuster Children's Publishing and Nickelodeon Movies in 2002 and published in 2003.[7] It was subsequently translated into 30 different languages. In 2005, Arthur Spiderwick's Field Guide to the Fantastical World Around You was published, with Paramount Pictures releasing a live-action movie adaptation of the series. DiTerlizzi acting as co-executive producer.

A sequel series, Beyond the Spiderwick Chronicles, began publication in September 2007, and continued through 2009.[12]

In 2010, Simon & Schuster published the first book of a trilogy, The Search for WondLa, written and illustrated by DiTerlizzi. A Hero for WondLa was published in 2012, and The Battle for WondLa followed in 2014.

Dark Horse Books published Realms: The Roleplaying Art of Tony DiTerlizzi in 2015, with words from DiTerlizzi and a collection of artwork and photographs spanning his early career. “Tony's work has a distinct flair, a love for monsters if you will . . . His creatures have the charm of Henson or Rackham but they carry with them hints of their own ecosystem . . . Tony stands alone as a world creator and a weaver of tales, may you treasure these art pieces as much as I do,” quoted Guillermo del Toro.[13]

DiTerlizzi wrote and designed Star Wars: The Adventures of Luke Skywalker, Jedi Knight, published in 2014 by Disney Lucasfilm Press (an imprint of Disney Publishing Worldwide). Accompanying his words were illustrations by Ralph McQuarrie.

Author/illustrator Mo Willems partnered with DiTerlizzi to illustrate the book The Story of Diva and Flea, inspired by Willems' year living abroad in Paris.[14] Disney-Hyperion published the New York Times bestselling book in 2015.