Is There Official The Giver Fanart From The Author?

2026-03-30 04:06:09 81
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3 Answers

Yara
Yara
2026-04-02 07:52:52
Short answer: no, but the absence feels intentional. Lowry’s interviews emphasize reader imagination—she once said she deliberately avoids describing Jonas’s community in excessive detail. The lack of official art from her preserves that ambiguity. When I met her at a signing, she doodled a tiny apple in my copy, but laughed it off as 'not real art.' The book’s iconic cover (the old man’s face) was designed by Cliff Nielsen, and even the graphic novel adaptation used a different illustrator. That apple doodle, though? It’s my treasure.
Angela
Angela
2026-04-02 08:36:23
Lois Lowry's 'The Giver' has such a unique visual vibe—it's all about that muted, controlled world with bursts of color in memories. I've scoured interviews and her website, and while Lowry shares insights into her writing process, I haven't stumbled upon any fanart she's created herself. The book’s cover art and promotional materials usually come from publishers or licensed artists. That said, her occasional blog posts feel like they’re dripping with imagery, like when she describes Jonas’s first glimpse of red. It makes me wonder if she doodles privately but keeps it separate from her public work.

Fandom-wise, there’s a ton of incredible fanart out there—Etsy shops, DeviantArt, even TikTok artists reimagining the Ceremony of Twelve. Lowry seems to appreciate interpretations; she’s retweeted fan creations before. But an official piece from her? Not that I’ve found. The closest might be sketches in early drafts, but those are locked away in archives. Part of me loves the mystery—it leaves room for readers to paint their own version of that sled ride.
Veronica
Veronica
2026-04-02 17:11:01
I geek out over author-created extras, so I went deep into this! Lowry’s style is more textual than visual—she crafts worlds through spare, powerful prose rather than illustrations. Her Pinterest (yes, she’s on there!) has boards for her books, but they’re mood boards with photos, not her own drawings. The 2014 movie adaptation’s concept art might’ve involved her input, but that’s secondhand. Interestingly, her Newbery acceptance speech for 'The Giver' mentions how her father’s blindness influenced the story’s focus on sensory details beyond sight. Maybe that’s why she leaves visuals to others?

The fandom fills the gap brilliantly, though. My favorite fanart reinterprets the ‘seeing beyond’ moments with abstract watercolors. Lowry’s engagement with fans at conventions suggests she’d probably cheer on those creations rather than compete with them.
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