Skip to Main Content

Suite for Human Nature

Illustrated by Eric Puybaret

About The Book

From the legendary songwriter Diane Lampert, based on a musical piece she wrote with Pulitzer Prize and nine-time Grammy–winning jazz musician Wynton Marsalis, comes an exquisitely illustrated folktale about how we humans got some of our…naughtier traits, and what overcomes them all.

Mother Nature is a very busy woman. Her job is to tend to the Earth and all the creatures that dwell there—she must wake up the bulbs and warm the land in spring, she must freeze the ponds and create snow in winter. But more than anything, Mother Nature wanted children of her own. So with twigs and things she made five: Fear, Envy, Hate, Greed, and Fickle. She asks the most helpless of creatures—the poor, wingless humans—to watch over them as she works. But then her children’s wild personalities begin to seep into human nature in a way that Mother Nature never intended.

A lilting, lyrical ode to all of our human shortcomings and the one trait—love—that can overcome them all.

About The Author

Photograph by Fred Stuart

Diane Lampert (1924­–2013) was a renowned songwriter who contributed to lyrics for artists from The Beatles to Brenda Lee and over twenty movie title tracks such as The Snow Queen, I’ll Take Sweden, Billie, and Silent Running, as well as songs for The Wild and the Innocent, and Trees Lounge, and for Bob Hope, Gary Grant, and Buster Keaton, among others. Suite for Human Nature first debuted at a concert at Jazz at Lincoln Center, with the world-famous Boys Choir of Harlem.

About The Illustrator

Eric Puybaret has illustrated many children’s books, including Suite for Human Nature; the bestselling Puff, the Magic Dragon; The Night Before Christmas; Over the Rainbow, as well as many others in his native country, France. Eric’s critically acclaimed work was praised by The New York Times as “elegantly rendered” and Publishers Weekly calls it “graceful [and] whimsical.”

Product Details

Raves and Reviews

Lampertwrote the libretto for Wynton Marsalis’s 2004 Suite for Human Nature, anallegory about how love tames aggressive emotions. In this adaptation,Puybaret’s (Alice in Wonderland) gauzy and gracefulpaintings on linen create an ethereal ambience; a fairylike Mother Nature withumber skin and a flowing aqua gown with petal accents sustains the weather,flora, and fauna. Mother Nature tends the Earth and cares especially forhumans, but she also yearns for children of her own. One by one, she craftslittle troublemakers named Fear, Hate, Envy, Greed, and Fickle. The genderdynamics are questionable, since all are boys except flirty Fickle. WhileMother Nature governs the seasons, “waking up bulbs” in spring and “ripen[ing]the fields” in summer, she leaves humans in charge of her children and returns toan ever-more-volatile populace. At last, after consulting with the four winds,the anxious Mother Nature creates girl twins who model patient Love.Reminiscent of the story of Pandora’s box and other creation tales, this gentlytold allegory avoids its violent implications and favors optimisticresolutions. All ages.

– Publishers Weekly, February 8, 2016

The talents of songwriter Lampert and illustrator Puybaret combine in this attractive adaptation of a folktale originally penned as a jazz composition. It is a layered and sophisticated allegory about the creation of Love—Mother Nature’s twin children, who undo the damage of her other progeny: Fear, Envy, Hate, Greed, and Fickle. Despite having to care for every living thing in the world, Mother Nature creates children of her own. When the demands of changing seasons call her away, she leaves her troublesome brood with her most beloved creatures: humans. She returns to find that these hapless beings have absorbed the distinct characteristics of each of her children into their own nature. As the humans grow a tizzy with complicated feelings, Love arrives, bringing balance to the world. The length and rather elevated meaning of the story may not hold the attention of young picture-book readers, but early grade-schoolers should appreciate the tale. Readers of any age, however, will be drawn to the whimsical beauty of Puybaret’s acrylic-on-linen illustrations. — Amina Chaudhri

– Booklist, March 15, 2016

A gentle parable ofhow Mother Nature introduced human foibles and strengths to the world. Based ona 2004 musical composition by renowned lyricist Lampert and jazz legend WyntonMarsalis, this glimpse into humankind is both fragile and deep. Puybaret's acrylicillustrations on linen set a dreamlike mood. Mother Nature, draped in gossamerblossoms and reaching root tendrils, watches over all that grows and walks theEarth. She must also change the seasons—turning "noses red and cheeksrosy" during winter and being sure to shake "the sand fromdreams" and "honey-up the bees" when the time is right. But forall her responsibilities, Mother Nature is lonely. She longs for children ofher own. So she makes her first child, Fear (a name that is pleasant because itrhymes with "dear"). But when she looks to humankind to care for Fearwhile she is busy spinning the seasons, she sees cowardice has spread. Torestore balance, she creates other children: Envy, Hate, Greed, and Fickle;each one no better than the last. Luckily, through wise council with the winds,she finally creates two tiny twins, both named Love. Though the prose hasexquisite touches, some delicate moments seem buried in excess. However,Puybaret's metaphorical illustrations are a good match, depicting amulticultural cast of humans aping the actions of Mother Nature's ill-conceivedchildren amid stylized backdrops. It is an earned triumph when Love prevails.(Picture book. 5-10)

– Kirkus Reviews, 3/15/16

Based on a musical composition by renowned songwriter Diane Charlotte Lampert and Grammy-winner Wynton Marsolis, this stunning book attempts to explain why humans behave as they do. As the story goes, there once lived Mother Nature who cared for all living things. She felt sorry for Humans and gave them all they needed in exchange for helping her manage the earth. Mother Nature longed for her own child and so she created a child whom she named Fear. Leaving to create winter, the Humans were left to watch over Fear. Upon her return, she found that Humans now feared one another. She decided to try again and this time created Envy, followed by Hate, Greed, and Fickle. Realizing that she could not handle her mischievous children and the world at the same time, the North Wind suggested that Mother Nature make a child wild and free like herself. So, Mother Nature created twins named Love, who taught their siblings to play together, to give rather than take, to laugh as they sought out the positive, and most of all, to love. A celebration of humanity with all of its shortcomings and its ability to love, this beautifully orchestrated tale, illustrated in magnificent paintings, demonstrates the healing power of love and how it transforms human nature.

– School Library Connection, 08/01/16

Resources and Downloads

High Resolution Images