Harold and The Purple Crayon: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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[[File:haroldmoonresized_9737.jpg|frame|Long before [[Haruhi Suzumiya (Light Novel)|Haruhi Suzumiya]]...]]
[[File:haroldmoonresized_9737.jpg|frame|Long before [[Haruhi Suzumiya]]...]]




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* [[Art Shift]]: Each episode of the HBO series had [[Book Ends]] set in Harold's bedroom, which looked more realistic than the rest of the backgrounds.
* [[Art Shift]]: Each episode of the HBO series had [[Book Ends]] set in Harold's bedroom, which looked more realistic than the rest of the backgrounds.
* [[Bald of Awesome]]
* [[Bald of Awesome]]
* [[Exactly What It Says On the Tin]]
* [[Exactly What It Says on the Tin]]
* [[Heroic Mime]]: Harold.
* [[Heroic Mime]]: Harold.
** In some episodes of the HBO series, Harold would get to deliver one line, but the narrator would still do most of the talking.
** In some episodes of the HBO series, Harold would get to deliver one line, but the narrator would still do most of the talking.

Revision as of 15:38, 9 April 2014

Long before Haruhi Suzumiya...


Harold and the Purple Crayon is an illustrated children’s book first published in 1955 by Crockett Johnson. The story follows Harold as he wanders around drawing his own reality with his purple crayon and trying to get home.

Harold is colored in with a blue jumpsuit and Caucasian skin. Everything else in the story is purple, since it was drawn with the crayon; this lets the reader see that Harold is somehow more real than everything else.

It has received several sequels, and also been adapted into a series of children's animated shorts.

The book is aimed at young children, ages 3 to 7, but it’s a good quick read for adults.


Harold and the Purple Crayon contains examples of: