The Disneyland “pictorial souvenir” book has a
long history, dating all the way back to even before Disneyland opened
its turnstiles in 1955 (the first guide, printed before the park opened,
featured artwork rather than photographs). Similar pictorial souvenir
books were also issued for Walt Disney World since it opened in 1971.
They are softcover, starting at 20 pages in 1955 and growing to 128 pages
in their latest incarnations (a recent version can be had directly from
Disney for only $5 on the Disney Deals section of eBay). Some popular
attractions, such as Small World and Pirates of the Caribbean, had their
own pictorial souvenirs in the late 1960s. (Alastair Dallas’s comprehensive
illustrated list of every Disneyland pictorial souvenir book can be found
here
and it’s a great resource.)
Sometime in the 1970s, the smaller pictorial souvenirs were joined by
a much larger occasional hardcover. The earliest I have seen is Disneyland,
The First Quarter Century, published in 1979. A sister book was published
in 1982: Walt Disney World, The First Decade. At 122 and 128 pages
respectively, these books are much larger than the less expensive pictorial
souvenirs published in those same years, printed on better paper, and
give better overall views of the parks. Walt Disney’s presence is significant—he
is often pictured on various attractions and seen escorting celebrities
around Disneyland. There is more of a historical side to the text in these
books, with photos of behind-the-scenes work on attractions such as Big
Thunder Mountain Railroad and The Country Bear Jamboree.
As time has passed, fewer photos of Walt appear in the books, there is
less historical information, the photos of celebrities have vanished,
and the books now consist almost entirely of enormous photos juxtaposed
with tiny ones, lots of white space, and minimal text.
The latest in this series is Around the World with Disney by Kevin
Markey. Published earlier this year to coincide with Disneyland’s 50th
Anniversary, the book is the first in this line of souvenir pictorials
to deal with all the Disney theme parks around the world except Hong Kong
Disneyland (though if they had waited just another six months it could
have been included as well). Despite the Around the World…
theme, the focus is mostly on Walt Disney World as a peek at the index
reveals: 86 pages have photos of Walt Disney World attractions; 25 pages
have photos of Disneyland attractions; 17 have photos of Disney’s California
Adventure attractions; 18 have photos of “Disneyland Resort Paris”
attractions (that includes both Disneyland Paris and Walt Disney Studios
Paris); 12 have photos of Tokyo Disneyland attractions; 9 have photos
of Tokyo DisneySea attractions. Considering the beauty of the parks in
Paris and Tokyo, it’s shameful they’re under represented at the expense
of the American parks. What’s the point of the book if not to show readers
images from parks around the world they haven’t seen ad nauseum?
No parks photograph better than Disneyland Paris and Tokyo DisneySea,
but instead we are treated to Stitch’s Great Escape, TriceraTop Spin,
Primeval Whirl, at the expense of things like DisneySea’s Mysterious Island,
which is perhaps the most immersive area in any Disney park in the world.
©Disney Editions.
Interestingly, the author also includes photos of attractions that I
have not seen operating for many years: Les Pirouettes du Vieus Moulin
at Disneyland Paris (this is a tiny ferris wheel where kids sit in wooden
buckets modeled after The Old Windmill), and the Jolly Trolley
at Disneyland. What’s the point?
Well, here’s the point: Around the World with Disney is for the
casual Disney fan. It’s essentially a picture book that tourists will
buy as a memento of their trip and it must be judged for what it is.
The book is divided into 14 chapters that group attractions rather oddly;
Chapter 2, for example, is titled “Round & Round We Go,” and
the author uses this circular logic to display pictures of any attraction
that—well, you’ve probably guessed already—any attraction
that spins: three pages devoted to Walt Disney World’s Carrousel, two
pages devoted to a blurry photo of Disneyland’s Carrousel, one page devoted
to Disneyland Paris’s Carrousel (which can barely be seen because the
photo is so dark at the bottom), one page devoted to the magnificent two-story
Carrousel in Tokyo DisneySea (two small photos on a mostly empty white
page), one page devoted to King Triton’s Carousel in California Adventure,
one page devoted to the Teacups in Walt Disney World (rather than the
original in Disneyland), a page devoted to two photos of the Orange Stinger
in California Adventure, and finally the last page devoted to the Sun
Wheel—the magnificent “Wonder Wheel” at California Adventure.
Where’s the Carousel of Progress?
To give you an idea of how the book lays out, here are notes on some
of the chapters.
• “Castles of Dreams” focuses on the castles in the different
parks.
• “Leading Ladies” pictures princesses in shows, rides,
statuary, and meet-and-greets.
• “Journeys of Adventure” deals with the various incarnations
of The Jungle Cruise, the Indiana Jones Adventure, The Matterhorn (with
a nice clean shot of the Yeti), and the oft-seen concept art for Expedition
Everest.
©Disney Editions.
• “Riding the Rails” is illustrated with photos of trains,
monorails, rides involving trains (Big Thunder Mountain Railroad, Heimlich’s
Chew-Chew Train, Casey, Jr., and the missing-in-action Jolly Trolley).
Since I assume the photographs which appear in this book were not specifically
shot for it, but are from the Disney archives, many of the shots fail
to show what’s different about the various versions of the rides. There
are shots of Big Thunder Mountain Railroad from all four parks, but only
the photo of the Walt Disney World version looks any different from the
others. What is really needed is an aerial photo of the ride in Disneyland
Paris where it appears on an island in the middle of the river—something
completely unique to that park.
• “Spirit of America” reflects upon the patriotic and
historical attractions, with a focus on Main Street in Walt Disney World,
Liberty Square in Walt Disney World, Hall of the Presidents in Walt Disney
World (though without any of the great photos used in past books of the
Presidential AA figures (though a few head sculpts are shown). A photo
of the marquee for The Walt Disney Story Featuring Great Moments with
Mr. Lincoln is given an enormous page-wide photo, however the photo of
Mr. Lincoln himself is excruciatingly small. A two-page spread devoted
to The American Adventure at Epcot (it’s in Walt Disney World, don’t you
know) finally addresses an attraction properly, with large photos of the
exterior, interior dome, and of the figures of Mark Twain and Ben Franklin.
• “Things that Go Bump in the Night” bumps into the obvious,
The Haunted Mansions and Phantom Manor. The Disneyland original gets a
photo the size of a large postage stamp, but there’s a dandy photo of
the figure in Phantom Manor whose head was originally the prototype for
the Hatbox Ghost. Tower of Terror appears, as does Pirates of the Caribbean
(it would have been nice to see some photos of the things that make the
Disneyland Paris version of Pirates unique, but no such luck).
©Disney Editions.
• “Water, Water, Everywhere” hits Splash Mountain, the
various boats that ply the rivers of all four parks—again, the boat
in Walt Disney World, The Liberty Belle, gets the full-page photo while
the boats in the other parks are given short shrift on the facing page.
The pitiful Kali River Rapids, another ride from Walt Disney World, is
given a full page, as is Grizzly River Run on the facing page. Looking
at both of these rides on facing pages you are drawn to the photos for
Kali River Rapids because it’s a better shot—too bad that the photo
of Grizzly River Run utterly fails to communicate that this is one of
the best and longest white water raft rides in the United States. Then,
at long last, Tokyo DisneySea gets two facing pages of photos of the Venetian
Gondolas in the canals outside the Hotel Miracosta, along with photos
of Mermaid Lagoon and Port Discovery, two other lands in the park. The
chapter concludes with more of Walt Disney World: Typhoon Lagoon and Blizzard
Beach.
• “Built for Speed” hits the Autopia/Tomorrowland Indy
Speedway/Grand Circuit Raceway in three parks. While Walt Disney World
gets two photos, and Disneyland gets one, Tokyo Disneyland rates only
a tiny photo of the attraction’s sign. California Screamin and
Rock ‘N Roller Coaster each get a page, along with Mr. Toad’s Wild Ride
and Roger Rabbit’s Cartoon Spin both from Disneyland. The next two pages
really gave me a chuckle: the idea of including a photo of Tuck and Roll’s
Drive ‘Em Buggies in a chapter called “Built for Speed” is too
ironic to contemplate, particularly since the photo shows the inch-along-bumper
cars completely empty. The photo for Mulholland Madness shows, most prominently,
the head of Dinosaur Jack, a shop in the shape of a pink dino—you
can barely see the subject of the photo in the background!
There are more chapters, but they’re presented pretty much along the
same lines. With the focus so heavily on Walt Disney World, photos I’ve
seen many times before, and text that sounds like it was written for a
series of press releases, Around the World with Disney is really
directed toward those who’ve visited Walt Disney World and are looking
for a superficial souvenir of their visit. It would also really make a
great source book for someone looking for photos for a decoupage project.
Those with a genuine interest in a pictorial souvenir book that shows
you things you’ve never seen before, presented in a new way, can read
my review next week of Disneyland Then, Now, and Forever by Bruce
Gordon and Tim O’Day—now there’s a book worth buying!