Current:Home > InvestMatthew McConaughey says he's 'working on the riddle of life' in new book 'Just Because' -Wealth Empowerment Zone
Matthew McConaughey says he's 'working on the riddle of life' in new book 'Just Because'
Surpassing View
Date:2025-04-09 02:38:43
Doing a little bit of everything comes with the territory of being a self-styled Renaissance man – even writing a children’s book when you’re A-list actor Matthew McConaughey.
So why did the star of “Interstellar,” “The Wolf of Wall Street” and “Magic Mike,” the bestselling author of 2020 memoir “Greenlights” and the man who counts Socrates and Ralph Waldo Emerson among his favorite writers decide to write a picture book for children too young to have seen most of his movies?
It started, he says, with a dream.
“This book came to me in a dream. It was like a folk-song ditty. I woke up at 2:30 and just went and wrote it down. I thought it was a Bob Dylan ditty, which it kind of is,” says McConaughey, 53. His debut children’s book, “Just Because,” (Viking Books for Young Readers, 32 pp.,) is out Sept. 12.
“That’s how I think and dream, in song and rhythm.”
Check out: USA TODAY's weekly Best-selling Booklist
The result is a collection of rhyming couplets organized around the words “Just because,” each page and its accompanying illustrations, drawn by Renée Kurilla, their own self-contained life lesson. McConaughey’s brand of folksy wisdom lends itself to the sing-song poetry of children’s verse.
“Just because I let go, doesn’t mean that I stopped climbing,” McConaughey writes, the words floating above a young skateboarder swooping up a ramp. “Just because I mean it, doesn’t mean that I’m not lying,” he writes above the image of a sad-looking girl trying to paint a picture of a smiling sun.
“It’s about the poetry of life, instead of having the pressure on us that feels like we’re told every day that we need to be absolute about every single thing,” McConaughey says of his book, which illustrates the contradictions and complexities that exist in each of us. “That’s not really life. Life’s much more poetic, odd, ironic. Once you admit all these contradictions, life becomes much more of a poem.”
Some of McConaughey’s couplets bend philosophical, with lessons that will hit the parents reading aloud to their children harder than the children themselves: “Just because I forgive you, doesn’t mean that I still trust./ There’s what you do, there’s what I do, and yours is not my must.”
'It's quite freeing':Matthew McConaughey lays soul bare in unconventional 'Greenlights'
“You don’t have to do what I do, and I don’t have to do what you do. What’s true for you? Great. May not be true for me. And that’s OK,” he says. “It’s a place of amnesty, of proper leniency that I hope kids and adults can have for others without the judgment of, ‘Well if you don’t believe what I believe, then we’re against each other.’”
While the book is written at a child’s comprehension level, he hopes “Just Because” will spark deeper conversations between parents and children. “I could talk for hours about any of these couplets in my own life, in adult life, in our nation, in America.”
In America, it’s a culturally and politically contentious time for books, especially those written for children and young adults. In 2022, the American Library Association recorded more book-banning attempts than ever before in the 20 years since it began keeping data. Political and parents’ groups have especially targeted books by people of color or with LGBTQ+ themes in an effort to get them removed from classrooms and school libraries.
Such groups are unlikely to target McConaughey’s anodyne book. But the actor, who’s gotten more politically engaged in recent years, speaking out on issues such as gun control and the Second Amendment, doesn’t entirely yet know where he stands on the issue.
Book bans are on the rise.What are the most banned books and why?
“Well, I think we have to admit there’s a difference between access and promotion,” McConaughey says. “We’re at a time when we’re debating what should be taught. Who is the history written by? What is the truth of the matter?” He adds: “I’m not one for saying any book should be burned, banned, done with. But there’s a difference between access and what’s in a curriculum, and that’s something to discuss.”
Finding common ground and compromise without betraying one’s self is a lesson McConaughey continues to learn as he parents his growing children – Levi, 15; Vida, 13; and Livingston, 10 – whom he shares with wife Camila Alves. They are at ages where they’re making decisions for themselves, sometimes decisions McConaughey himself wouldn’t make.
“Before having children, I thought it was 70% environment, 30% DNA. And boy, as soon as you have them, it’s like, ‘Oh, you are who you are already.’ I can shepherd you, I can put in front of you what turns you on and will feed you and make you more healthy and help you become more you,” he says. “But you are who you are.”
And McConaughey continues to be who he is, which is a bit of everything. Looking ahead at his myriad career possibilities – whether it’s more movies and books, philanthropy or even politics – what excites McConaughey right now?
“I think I’m most useful when I’m having fun doing what I’m doing. I’ve gotten to an age now where I know that if I let myself have fun doing something, I don’t become reckless, I don’t become irresponsible, I don’t become a tyrant,” McConaughey says. “I’m working on the riddle of life, and that riddle excites the heck out of me.”
Purchases you make through our links may earn us and our publishing partners a commission.
- "Just Because" at Amazon for $18
- "Just Because" at Bookshop.org for $18
veryGood! (1286)
Related
- FBI: California woman brought sword, whip and other weapons into Capitol during Jan. 6 riot
- Country Music Hall of Fame: Toby Keith, James Burton, John Anderson are the 2024 inductees
- California Lottery reveals name of man representing a group of winners of second-largest US jackpot
- Stock market today: Asian shares are mixed after Bank of Japan ups key rate for 1st time in 17 years
- IOC's decision to separate speed climbing from other disciplines paying off
- Stolen ‘Wizard of Oz’ ruby slippers will go on an international tour and then be auctioned
- Lawsuit accuses NYC Mayor Eric Adams of sexually assaulting a woman in a vacant lot in 1993
- Oregon man found guilty of murder in 1980 cold case of college student after DNA link
- How to watch new prequel series 'Dexter: Original Sin': Premiere date, cast, streaming
- Afghan refugee convicted of murder in a case that shocked Albuquerque’s Muslim community
Ranking
- Spooky or not? Some Choa Chu Kang residents say community garden resembles cemetery
- Man seeks clemency to avoid what could be Georgia’s first execution in more than 4 years
- Sister Wives Star Garrison Brown’s Sister Details His Mental Health Struggles
- Bettors counting on upsets as they put money on long shots this March Madness
- The Best Stocking Stuffers Under $25
- Illinois voters to decide competitive US House primaries around the state
- Men’s March Madness bracket recap: Full NCAA bracket, schedule, more
- Car crashes into a West Portal bus stop in San Francisco leaving 3 dead, infant injured
Recommendation
Police remove gator from pool in North Carolina town: Watch video of 'arrest'
Dodgers DH Shohei Ohtani to begin throwing program soon, could play field this season
Has there ever been perfect March Madness bracket? NCAA tournament odds not in your favor
Bruce Willis and Demi Moore's Daughter Tallulah Willis Shares Her Autism Diagnosis
Audit: California risked millions in homelessness funds due to poor anti-fraud protections
Missing NC mother, 2 young children found murdered in Charlotte, suspect arrested: Police
Interest rate cuts loom. Here's my favorite investment if the Fed follows through.
Icelandic volcano erupts yet again, nearby town evacuated