![]() “All of Joan’s work still feels fresh,” says Just. Heilbroner’s agent, Just, believes that her lasting popularity can be attributed to the fact that her books sprout from something real and therefore remain just as kid-friendly now as 20, 30, even 50 years ago. And instead of a fair, Sneaker is found in a pet store, where the funny tricks he does just might attract a boy enough to give him a home. In Heilbroner’s book, Plato becomes Sneaker, because “the name Plato doesn’t mean anything to small children,” the author says. ![]() Quentin replied, ‘Certainly! He can make figure eights and handcuffs.’ ” One day, Quentin and Katrina took it to a fair on Martha’s Vineyard and the fair director asked if the snake could do tricks. ![]() “They were just crazy about that snake,” says Heilbroner, “and they would play with it endlessly, twisting and turning it. This time around the spark came from two of her grandchildren, Quentin and Katrina, who regaled their grandmother with an anecdote about their pet snake, Plato. ![]()
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