Matthew Looney

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Illustration by Gahan Wilson
Illustration by Gahan Wilson
Illustration by Gahan Wilson
Illustration by Gahan Wilson

Matthew Looney is the title character in a series of four science fiction books for children by Jerome Beatty Jr (1918—?). Matthew's sister Maria Looney is the title character in Beatty's three subsequent books. The entire Looney series is illustrated by the renowned cartoonist Gahan Wilson.

[edit] Series overview

The Matthew Looney books chronicle the adventures of a brother and sister, Matthew and Maria Looney, who live in the town of Crater Plato, on the Moon. The inhabitants of the Moon are, for all intents and purposes, people, but they are not human beings. They "breathe" vacuum, instead of air, and they look up in the sky at the Earth and wonder if indeed anyone is living on it.

Like most kids, the Looney kids have parents, friends, and rivals, with the normal array of school-age joys and concerns. Their father works in the powder factory, but Matthew is captivated by the notion of an exciting career in the military like his uncle, Rear Admiral Looney. Maria, his younger sister, prefers playing sports after school and getting in trouble with her best friend and rival, Hester.

During their adventures, the Looney kids face space pirates, a war between the Moon and Mars, the discovery of life on Earth, and the invasion of an Earth circus.

[edit] Influence of the "Space Age"

Jerome Beatty Jr began his series in the early 1960s, at the dawn of the Space Age, when 20th-century children were especially fascinated by the likelihood of space missions and adventures to the Moon in their own lifetimes. The NASA Apollo Program figures into the stories as well. At one point in the series, Matthew witnesses the Earthlings' first feeble attempts to "explore" the Moon.

Beatty uses Matthew Looney’s curiosity about the Earth and his desire to embark on voyages of discovery as a literary device. His readers identify with Matthew Looney because of their own yearning for adventure and fascination with space exploration. Kids in the 1960s, growing up in a time when human beings were first exploring space, would see themselves in the young Moon-boy who was growing up in his own era of early space exploration.

[edit] Publication status

Although the Looney series was fairly popular through the 1980s, commonly enjoyed by grade-school and preadolecent kids, they are currently out of print. The most recent publisher of the series, Avon Camelot, was purchased by HarperCollins in 1999. The Looney series still enjoys a steady readership in the public library system. Used copies for purchase remain in circulation via the internet.

[edit] Series titles

  • Matthew Looney's Voyage to the Earth (1961)
  • Matthew Looney's Invasion of the Earth (1965)
  • Matthew Looney in the Outback (1969)
  • Maria Looney and the Cosmic Circus (1978)
  • Maria Looney and the Remarkable Robot (1978)