168:, using socks for jumpers, and a near-death collision with a marmalade jar. When the boy’s parents however find a discarded beer bottle that the boy managed to take from the families garage for the man, he is suspected of consuming alcohol, and has restrictions placed upon him, such as his allowance being stopped. This leads to a heated quarrel between the two, upon which the Man becomes malignant and threatens to burn the house down. The next morning, the boy attempts to apologise to the man and suggest they put what was said behind them. Instead he finds the Man has gone, and left behind are the clothes the boy had made for him, as well as a note from the Man. He thanks the boy for all he had done for him and that he was a true friend. The boy is left disheartened over his departure.
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In the 1990s, the BBC would adapt it as a two part story for their
Jackanory series. Rather than feature the traditional art frames and live segments with the narrator. The entire story used the original art work of the graphic novel instead. With the word bubbles removed, and a full voice cast
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203:, or "the Emil". The award annually (1982 to 1999) recognised one British "work of imagination for children, in which text and illustration are integrated so that each enhances and balances the other."
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and published by Julia MacRae Books in 1992. It tells the humorous story of a boy, John, who is visited by the titular Man, a minuscule human (
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Dutch and Danish-language editions were published in 1993 and the first U.S. edition in 1995. Later there was an
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Unlike the boy and
Snowman in Briggs' famous wordless picture book
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20:. For the 1964 novel by Irving Wallace, see
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