A few weeks ago, I was on a panel of MG fantasy writers at
Books of Wonder in NYC, and one of the attendees asked:
How do you manage to
write in a voice that engages a child’s interest when all of you (he inserted a
half-apologetic smile and shrug here) are well past being children yourselves?
The panel members answered the question individually, but
basically we all had the same answer, in slightly different words:
In our heads, we are
still children.
To be completely honest, I think that answer should have
been obvious. I was, after all, sitting next to a grown man wearing a cardboard
Pharaoh’s headdress.
To be a writer of children’s books, you need to be a child
inside. You need to write like a child would write (except with the skill of an
adult), and you need to read what your child-self wants to read. I’m not saying
that I never read adult books, but the vast majority of what I read is chosen
to entertain my child-self, not my adult-self.
In fact, an elderly librarian recently confronted me on my
reading selections. I had just checked-in a stack of MG fantasy and adventure
books and was checking-out more of the same. She looked up at me, squinting in
puzzlement, and asked: “This is what
you read?”
Behind her, a librarian who knew me cringed in
embarrassment. For my part, I was rather shocked by her question. I said, “This
is what I write, and this is what I read.”
At first, I thought that was going to suffice, but then she asked,
“Why? So you can find ideas?”
I bit back my first thought: Right. I have to steal ideas from other books. Instead of being
sarcastic, I gave her a better, truthful answer. “No. This is what I like to read.” I wasn't picking out these books as research or to learn the market or assess the competition. I wanted to read them.
She clucked her tongue and promptly suggested other titles I
should try – all of them adult memoirs or literary fiction. The kind of books
that makes my child-self want to say, “Yuck. Sounds booooooring.” But I didn’t.
Because I respected her reading choices in a way that she wasn’t respecting
mine.
For all I know, maybe this librarian comments on everybody’s
choices. “Thrillers? Is that what you
read? Basket weaving? Is that what
you read?” But I doubt it. She disapproved of an adult woman coming into the
library and checking out nothing but children’s books and she thought she could
improve me by suggesting something of supposed greater value.
That’s exactly the kind of person who cannot write
children’s books and who will never capture a voice that engages child
readers. The best children’s literature is written by adults who think they are
still children, not by adults who want to "help" children grow up.
I am proud of my reading choices. But I do regret that I
didn’t snag one of those Pharaoh headdresses from Michael Northrop to wear the
next time I visit the library.
I can't help wondering if I get away with the books I check out - mix of YA and MG - because I have my ten year old with me. Of course, the librarians don't know I'm the one devouring all the books and sharing the MG stories with my kid.
ReplyDeleteI like the point you make about how you capture the children's voice to engage kid readers. My child-self agrees :-)
My CP Krystalyn Drown says one of her local libraries WON'T ALLOW adults into the children's room unless they are accompanied by a child. How messed up is that?
DeleteGreat post, Diane! My reading is heavily skewed toward YA and MG, but I do read a fair amount of adult fiction and nonfiction as well. I love this line: "You need to write like a child would write (except with the skill of an adult)", and I bet Michael would give you one of those headdresses!! :-)
ReplyDeleteThanks, Paul! Yeah, I think he would have let me have one. I forgot to ask.
DeleteI love this!
ReplyDeleteFortunately, I have never been grilled by a librarian in this way. I doubt I would have been as diplomatic as you were. (But then again, I would probably have taken the easy path and claimed I was checking them out for my children.)
Yes! A child at heart, always!!!
I should point out that MOST of the librarians at this branch are lovely. And even this one was friendly. She just wanted to "help" me.
DeleteAs my father-in-law is fond of saying: "Help strikes again."
DeleteGreat post, Dianne! I love your simultaneous graciousness and feistiness toward your librarian. I too read a lot of MG and YA and I began writing MG because of Anne Lamott's recommendation: "Write what you would love to come upon." Great advice.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Joanna! I write what I wanted to read as a child, but it turns out I still want to read the same things now!
DeleteWhat a fun post. And this is so true, Dianne. I know a few people who need to read this. :)
ReplyDeleteI've worked in both a bookstore and a library and I hope I never tried to steer people away from the choices they'd already made. Egad! Of course, I've always read MG and YA too, so more likely I would have gotten excited by their choices and said, "Oh, this is great! You'll love it!"
And I think I've always been 12 inside.
LOL, Joanne. After our conversation tonight in the parking lot of the Kennett Square library, I know exactly who you refer to. Still shaking my head over that!
DeleteDianne, this line says it all: You need to write like a child would write (except with the skill of an adult), and you need to read what your child-self wants to read. And fortunately I have a 12-year old son who I share books with and can get his scoop on why a book is good or not.
ReplyDeleteMy favorite books are the ones I still re-read from childhood so it's no wonder I like to write for tweens and teens. I read somewhere that adults who write for MG/YA still have unresolved issues from their own childhood. Ha! Not sure if true but it's fun to relive being a kid in our writing - and for me, then the magic never ends. I keep creating it.
When I was a kid we didn't have MG/YA categories and I was reading Sidney Sheldon, Stephen King, Danielle Steele, V.C. Andrews. Now, we have those categories (look how Harry Potter changed much of this) and it seems folks of all ages are reading them but you do get the occasional doubter there like you got!
Unresolved issues? For pity's sake ...
ReplyDelete