The greatest liar on earth by Mark Greenwood
Ill. by Frane Lessac. Walker Books, 2012. ISBN 9781 921529 85 6.
(Ages: 8+) Recommended. Humour. Fable.
This extraordinary story is expounded on the pages by Greenwood and
Lessac in a brilliant retelling of the life of Louis de Rougemont and
is wonderfully illustrated with fantastical drawings of his adventures
and presentations on the stage.
Greenwood came across this tale of a media celebrity who made his name
in London, telling the most amazing tales of the adventures of his life
to packed theatres in mid Victorian times. He became a celebrity,
people flocked to his performances, a wax likeness was made and
displayed at Madame Tussauds, he met Queen Victoria but was questioned
by members of the Royal Geographical Society. When some journalists
investigated his life they found him to be Henri Grin, a man who had
been butler to the Governor of Western Australia in 1875, and who may
have heard many stories from the southern lands, but many were said to
be untrue. Despite then calling himself the 'greatest liar on earth',
he was jeered and heckled off the stage. So he fell from the celebrity
status he once held, fading back to the darkness of where he came from,
dying a pauper and buried in London.
Lessac's wonderful illustrations show the man and his stories in bold,
colourful gouache, and represent him participating in the adventures he
talked about: seeing a giant squid, being wrecked on a coral reef,
being marooned on an island with the bones of other shipwrecked
sailors, riding a giant turtle, wrestling a crocodile, almost eaten by
cannibals and finding gold.
The story underlines the momentary status of celebrity, their names on
everyone's lips for a while, then fading as more truth is brought to
light.The book also reflects the willingness of people to believe the
stories they are told, adoring the person about whom the stories are
said, but then dismissing them out of hand. The fickleness of the crowd
is shown clearly in the last few pages where the sparse audiences jeer
the man who recently was adulated.
Fran Knight