That was one aspect about it. The other thing is, which is one of the interesting things about illustration, and why it's interesting going from one author to another, and one book to another, is that… is the sort of tuning in on what this is like, and I mean the… the crocodile is a kind of… is a kind of embodiment of evil energy, as it were. It's like Richard III, or someone like that, you know kind of thing. I mean you, it's terrible, but you like to watch it. And it seemed to me that it was because there were frightening things in it, it wanted to be in a sense artificial, or heraldic, so that… and he describes how he’s… you know, he's got hundreds of teeth, which rattle together and so on and so on. And it seemed to me it was like the crocodile in Punch and Judy, in a way. You know, that had… it comes out and goes like this, sort of thing. And, so it’s actually a sort of caricature of a crocodile, and crocodiles actually… I mean I know that crocodile's don't actually look like that. But, so it's got teeth, which are sort of like a saw kind of set of teeth, which are there really for catching children. And they're a trap, as it were, you know, so that the… as I drew it, the crocodile sort of developed into what it is, and also the the children are are real, but it's a kind of artificial pantomime situation of a rather frightening kind. Well, I mean pantomime can be rather more frightening, and so they tend to be slightly strong, heraldic colours, as it were. Very green, or you know, some bright flowers and so on which gives the kind of mood of the book, and to do that you… well you’ve got to design the whole book before you start to do it. You've got to do the rough drawings of the whole book, so that you know how the text fits in, and then it's done with a pen and ink, and that pen is a rather harder pen than the… than one that I might use, say, for doing those Michael Rosen books, or another book by Dahl, perhaps, you know… so it's quite a sort of hard movement, you know… it relates to all those teeth as you drawn them. And they're quite bright, flat colours in places, and… and as I say, you have to draw the whole thing so you can fit the text in.
That again, is a nice thing about a picture book, is that you, and nice for me, is that you arrange… you in a sense design it, because you arrange where everything goes in the book, and you tell the story in that sequence. And in fact there was a thing that I was doing wrong at the beginning, which is absolutely basic, which Tom Maschler was able to point out. Because he’s very good at looking at books, and seeing what works… is that I was getting the… you've got to get the suspense on one opening, and the resolution when you turn the page, so that you reach a point at which, what is going to happen? Whereas actually I was sort of giving the problem on the left-hand page, and the answer on the right. And you mustn't do that. You… you've got to have the problem on the left hand page, so that you turn the page, which is what keeps you turning the pages, because you want to see. And that goes through all picture books, or nearly all picture books. Not quite all, but it’s a sort of fundamental thing. So that was that. I was a bit frightened of it to begin with, but… with… there was rather a lot of biting people went into it, but I think… I sort of tuned into it, and then… that was it as far as I knew.