
Cannon likens the book to "a mirror, so that anyone who looks into it will see their own story their own way." She never suspected her book would become a runaway bestseller.Īfter the success of Stellaluna, Janell left her job at the library in order to devote more time to writing and illustrating books. The artist and writer also wanted to touch readers with a story about a friendship shared by two different kinds of creatures, a bat and three baby birds. Janell points out in the book that fruit bats benefit our environment as they pollinate plants while foraging for nectar and distribute, through their droppings, seeds from fruit eaten whole. I hope to show them in a positive light so that they might be given more respect," she says. "Fruit bats don't drink blood and won't get caught in your hair. Janell Cannon created Stellaluna (1994) in hopes that she would transform young people's fear of bats into informed affection. She decided it was time to make her own story about these wonderful creatures. While conducting research for a program about bats, Janell found only two books on the subject, both out of print.

Her love of bats, spiders, Komodo dragons, and snakes inspired her work at a public library, where she developed award-winning summer reading programs about these unusual animals. Self-taught artist and writer Janell Cannon has always admired animals, especially creatures that have been misunderstood or neglected.
