I love reading what children’s and YA authors have to say about writing. I hope you do, too.
“I think … that whether we are consciously writing about the real lives of our families or not, their lives appear there, in our words and in the gaps between our words. They give us our themes—if not our direct material.”
–Susan Campbell Bartoletti, in PENPals: A Correspondence with Markus Zusak & Susan Campell Bartoletti, Part 1
“As for there being scenes that I may have avoided writing, well…probably the whole book! I sometimes see my job as a kind of writing evasion. There are tax evaders and then there’s me, avoiding my story because I am filled with doubt, and afraid of facing the failure that will arrive that day. I constantly remind myself that all those failures are what bring whatever success comes my way. If I hadn’t failed over and over again, The book Thief would never have evolved.”
–Markus Zusak, in PENPals: A Correspondence with Markus Zusak & Susan Campell Bartoletti, Part 2
Lois Lowry was recently interviewed for the Washington Post (an in-depth interview where she talks about writing in her head as a child, lying, and the way she learned to shape a story, and a sidebar). The sidebar included a lot of background info, some interesting details, and was fine until the last section, where the interviewer asked Lowry: “Has she ever contemplated writing a novel for grown-ups?”
This is a question that children’s and teen writers so often hear, and the implication is that children’s and teen fiction is somehow not equal to adult fiction, somehow not as worthy of the questioner’s time. It’s a question many of us come to grit our teeth about.
So Lowry’s response is beautiful and inspiring: “I’m doing something far more valuable, writing for someone who is wide open — aged somewhere between 10 and 14. I’m preparing kids to enter the difficult world of contemporary times.”
Lois, I love what you said! You said it for so many of us. Thank you. That quote will go down as one of my favorites.
It’s similar to what Madeline L’Engle once said: “You have to write the book that wants to be written. And if the book will be too difficult for grown-ups, then you write it for children.”
Thank you to Just Like a Nut for pointing this out.
I feel pretty sheepish admitting this but it took me a while this month to open The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. I assumed that since I had read it before, the book would not hold the same magic for me. I was wrong. I spent a nice portion of last weekend relaxing in a hammock reading, dreaming of traveling down the Mississippi with Huck and Jim. I’d forgotten much of the soul searching, gut-wrenching questions about “right” and “wrong” that Huck wrestles with. The book certainly reveals more upon each read.
I’ll save my full reactions for our discussion on the 30th but if you haven’t started reading yet start today. Huck is the perfect summertime companion.
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