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What are your
thoughts about reading your poetry in Cobourg at the POW! Festival?
I've found that I've had fantastic audiences in places outside of the
big cities. There is a palpable sense of community and excitement in these
places.
Please tell us about your children's book(s) and also a little about
any other books you've had that "saw print"
Part of the great excitement about writing, for me, is to connect with
a variety of readers. As such, I create many different kinds of works:
picturebooks, Young Adult novels, stories, and poems for kids, as well
as a variety of kinds of fiction, poetry for adults, music compositions
from different traditions (incorporating live musicians, computers, spoken
text, singing, etc.) as well as a a range of visual work.
My children's books include the picturebook The Racing Worm Brothers
which was inspired by watching my two young sons 'adopting' worms as pets.
Another picturebook, The Magic Mustache had its inception as a
bedtime story that I improvised for my son. My Young Adult novel, Seeing
Stars, was developed after watching TV shows about people who were
so obese that they couldn't leave their beds, ads about phone psychics,
and a plane crash involving a child pilot.
At POW!, do you plan to solely read pieces from your published books?
Do you plan to read other work as well?
I will read both published work and work-in-progess. I like to improvise
with my audience, and make up stories on the spot with them. We might
start with an idea that they come up with, or with the beginning of a
story that I'm working on, and then I ask them to suggest what might I
do next. I really enjoy being interactive with my audience. It's more
fun and it demonstrates to kids that they are creative and just need to
feel invited to use their imagination in order to create stories.
How would you describe your writing for Children? How about your
other work ... your poetry and so on?
My children's writing comes from many places: experiences of real life
children including my own, memories of being a child myself, stories from
the news, other stories and myths. My YA-novel in progress, The Unibrow
Underground, was inspired by a joke by my Grade 8 music students.
(I taught music in a middle school for ten years.) All of my writing,
both for kids and adults comes from a delight in language, in the imagination,
in spelunking through the tunnels of the mind.
When did you start writing children's literature and what prompted
it? How about you starting writing in general?
I've always made up stories. Sometimes only to blame my brother for something
that I did. I became immersed in children's literature when my own children
were young. There were so many fantastic books and so many ideas circulating
that I wanted to try my own hand at it. I also valued the deep connection
kids have with books and their own imagination, and powerful creative
relationship children have with authors.
What inspires you to put pen to paper / fingers to keyboard?
Anything. A semi-colon. Sadness. The joy of a dog. Something a little
kid says. Something misheard from a great philosopher. Wondering what
it is like to be someone or somewhere. A bad joke or a great folk story.
Modern life.
Can you describe (a little) your writing process in creating a new
piece?
It is like orienteering. You find yourself in the middle of somewhere
and you have to find out where you are, where you're going to go next,
what is there, and how to proceed. It is an adventure, an exploration,
and a very pleasurable and exciting challenge. Sometimes I'm not out of
the woods for many years. Sometimes I just delight in a clearing.
The POW! Festival is built on the notion that poetry should not
be relegated to an existence as "a niche art form" that the
average person doesn't care about.
How do you respond to that?
The imagination is not a specialized niche. I find that once I interact
with an audience, any notion of poetry being a rarified niche form disappears.
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