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Sharon Creech
August 14th, 2002
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TRANSCRIPT
Journeys are important in Sharon Creech's stories. In "Walk
Two Moons," Sal and her grandparents travel across the
United States in search of her mother. In "The Wanderer,"
Sophie sails across the Atlantic Ocean on a voyage in which
she learns about her family.
Get ready to ask Sharon about these adventures, about how
and why she writes, and about her new book, "Ruby Holler."
Sharon Creech: Hello, everyone. I'm very
glad to be here today.
Glitter Bug: Did you want to write books when you
were growing up?
Sharon Creech: I wanted to write, but what I wanted
to write was newspaper articles. I thought I would be a reporter,
but then I discovered a reporter was supposed to tell the
truth. I found that I liked to change the facts. And so it
wasn't until much later that I discovered I could change the
facts in fiction.
Kipling: What's your favorite book that you read
as a child?
Sharon Creech: It's very hard for me to remember
what books I read as a child. The only one I remember was
called "Kimbertoes," and it was about a family of
wooden people who lived in the forest. At the end of the book
they build a raft, leave their home and go down the river.
That story has stayed with me my whole life, because I always
wondered what happened to them when they set off down the
river.
Doodle: Are you going to write more books about Sal
and her friends?
Sharon Creech: So many people ask me that question!
And it makes me really start to want to write more about Sal
and her friends. I think that maybe, someday, there will be
a book that ties together a lot of the characters from a lot
of the books, like Sal, Zinny, Phoebe, and Dinnie. But I just
don't know yet when that book will written.
Sleepy Head: Do you have a favorite character?
Sharon Creech: It's very hard to choose a favorite
character. It would be like asking a mother to choose her
favorite child. Usually, I feel a particular fondness for
the most recent character, and that would be for the two main
characters in "Ruby Holler," Dallas and Florida.
They make me laugh so much, but they're also very vulnerable,
and I feel as if I almost have to take special care of them.
Ruby: Do you make up your characters based on real
people?
Sharon Creech: Yes, and no. When a character first
appears to me, I don't realize that it resembles a real person
in any way. It's only later, after a book has been published,
that sometimes I can see similarities between the character
and someone I know. For example, Salamanca reminds me very
much of my daughter and me combined. In "The Wanderer,"
Sophie also reminds me a lot of me and my daughter combined.
Salamanca is both brave, like my daughter, and afraid in the
sense that she's afraid to face the truth. I think that fear
comes from me in that sometimes I like to turn away from unpleasant
things. There's also a funny side to Sal that both my daughter
and I share, in that when something is getting very serious
or frightening, we will both use humor to lighten the situation.
Lila: Do your characters 'speak to you' after you
have finished writing your books?
Sharon Creech: My characters speak to me all the
time--primarily, during the writing of the book. I always
feel as if I am just listening to their voices. I don't feel
as if I am putting the words on the page; it's them speaking
to me. When the book is finished, I still hear them rumbling
around in my head. It often takes a long, long time for them
to quiet and let new characters emerge. It's a weird sensation
in that the characters become as real to you as real people.
So just as on a daily basis you might be thinking over something
your mother said or your friend said, so I will be thinking
over something that Dallas, Phoebe, or Salamanca said. They're
living there in my brain somewhere!
Lily: Dear Sharon, I read "Absolutely Normal
Chaos." Where did you get the idea for that?
Sharon Creech: That was my first book about children,
and I was writing it when I was living in England. I was missing
my family, and so I began to think about what it was like
to grow up in my family. The whole book emerged just from
that--thinking about my family, and writing about a family
whose lives were just like my own, "Absolutely Normal
Chaos."
Pat: Were you interested in Greek myths when you
were 13?
Sharon Creech: Yes, I was very interested in myths
of all kinds when I was 13. I was interested in Indian legends,
Greek myths, and all of that. There's something in these myths
that speaks to a lot of people, not just me. But I am always
very intrigued by, for instance, a story of why there are
trees, or why the sky became high--that sort of thing.
Lily: Did any of your life experiences influence
the characters and events in your books?
Sharon Creech: Yes. I think many of my life experiences
have influenced my characters and the events in my books.
However, it's very hard to say just what those influences
are, especially when I'm writing a book. I think when we write,
we naturally draw on everything we've seen and heard, and
those things will fuel any story. I can give you a more specific
example though. "The Wanderer" was very consciously
based on a trip that my daughter took when she graduated from
college. She sailed across the ocean on a 45-ft. sailboat
with six boys. Along the way they encountered a storm, and
they nearly did not survive. So that's one book in which I
was very aware, even while writing the book, that something
that had happened to my daughter was fueling the story. In
"Love That Dog," I don't know how that story came
to be, in that it just seemed to come out of nowhere and write
itself. But now, after it's been published, I can see that
I couldn't have written that book if I had not been a student,
a teacher, and a parent.
Rita: Do you write at home, or do you write in an
office?
Sharon Creech: Both! I have an office on the third
floor of our house, and I spend almost all day, every day,
up there when I'm not traveling. When I began writing, I was
living in England, and I wrote in a little tiny room that
was more like a closet. I wrote on a tiny table on an electric
typewriter, and every night I had to put it all away, so I'm
very glad now that I have a whole room where I can spread
out my papers and my books. You can see a picture of this
room on my web site, www.sharoncreech.com.
Sandals: When did you start writing?
Sharon Creech: I've always written, but I didn't
start writing professionally until about 1986. I wrote stories
and poetry for my own children, (some of that poetry was published,
so I guess that's professional writing) but I didn't think
of myself as a poet. I also wrote long letters to my family
and my friends back in the States. I think that was good practice,
because I was always describing people I had met, or places
I had been. That's a wonderful way to practice your writing
skills.
Tennie: Is writing books what you thought it would
be like, or would you like to have a different job now?
Sharon Creech: Writing books is much, much, much
more exciting than I ever thought it would be. I think the
more you write, the more exciting it becomes, because with
each new book you learn something new, and yet you're able
to build on what you've learned. I love writing books, and
I wouldn't want to do any other job. I feel very fortunate
to be able to do this for a living.
Linz: Do you write on a computer?
Sharon Creech: Yes. I write directly on the computer.
I type very fast, and I'm better able to keep up with my brain
if I type, rather than if I write longhand. I print out each
chapter, so that I can see how the words look on the page.
I edit and revise on the hard copy, and then I transfer those
changes to the computer. I wrote my first two novels on an
electric typewriter, and I had to retype each page over, and
over, and OVER, each time I made changes. It sounds like such
a primitive process now!
Thirteen Twenty-Two: When did you know you wanted
to be a writer?
Sharon Creech: When I was young, I knew that it was
one of the things I wanted to do, but I think it wasn't until
I was in college and took a writing course that I began to
think seriously that this was something I could do. And it
wasn't until I taught literature for many years that I felt
as though I knew what I was doing, and I had something to
say.
Tiendas: Do you visit schools? How do we go about
arranging a visit?
Sharon Creech: I used to visit quite a lot of schools,
but it's become increasingly difficult for me to continue
to do that. If you travel a lot, there's not a lot of time
left to write books. I felt I had to make a choice, so I do
a lot less traveling now. Anyone who is interested in having
me come to their school can contact Catherine Balkin at HarperCollins
Publishers. However, I should say that they would probably
let you know that I'm not taking any new bookings for the
coming year. I wish I could do more, but I can't. Sorry!
Mefox: In your book, "Pleasing the Ghost,"
was this an autobiographical work of fiction?
Sharon Creech: I don't think I can say it was autobiographical;
however, it was loosely based on something that happened to
my father, in that my father had a stroke like the uncle in
the book. My father's name was Arvel, and the character's
name was Arvie. My father, like Arvie, wasn't able to speak
correctly, and sometimes this was a source of amusement, because
he would come out with funny things. And sometimes it was
a source of sadness, because he couldn't say what he wanted
to say.
Catherine NYC: What is your favorite book for children?
Sharon Creech: Too hard to choose! I can, however,
tell you some of my recent favorites. "True Believer,"
by Virginia Euwer Wolff. "Skellig," by David Almond.
"Loser," by Jerry Spinelli. "Witness,"
by Karen Hesse. "Catherine, Called Birdy," by Karen
Cushman. "The Watsons Go to Birmingham, 1963" by
Christopher Paul Curtis. I have a lot more favorites; they're
just too many to list here.
DC Librarian: When is your next book for teens, and
when do you expect it to be published?
Sharon Creech: My next book for the normal age group
I write for, which includes teens, will be published in Fall
2003, and is titled "Granny Torelli Makes Soup."
It's about an Italian grandmother, her granddaughter, and
the boy next door. All of the action takes place in a kitchen,
which may not sound too exciting, but I think it works!
Pat: Were you outgoing as a child?
Sharon Creech: That's an interesting question, because
my siblings describe me as being very outgoing, perhaps even
loud, and my friends describe me as being rather shy and quiet.
So I suppose I was both. Maybe I was louder at home because
I had to compete with all my siblings. I had three younger
brothers and an older sister.
Tiendas: "The Wanderer" is great! Loved
learning radio code! Did you already know it, or was it part
of your research?
Sharon Creech: Thank you. Learning the radio code
was part of my research, and it was one of the most fun parts
of my research. Another fun by-product of including it in
my book was that often readers would write to me in radio
code.
Anne: In the book, "Walk Two Moons," I
noticed that you used a lot of quotes to describe or say something
without actually coming out and saying it. My question is
where do you get your quotes?
Sharon Creech: I'm not sure exactly what you mean
about the quotes. Perhaps you're referring to the folk sayings,
such as "Don't judge a man until you've walked two moons
in his moccasins." There are five of those. Some I already
knew, and the rest I found in a book of proverbs.
Catherine NYC: Do you have any pets?
Sharon Creech: I don't have any pets because we travel
so much, but we used to have a shaggy yellow dog, and that
dog is the basis for the dog in "Love That Dog."
There's a photo of our dog on my web site, www.sharoncreech.com.
Anne: Why do you write literature for teens?
Sharon Creech: I don't think of myself as writing
literature for teens or for children, I think of myself as
writing about young people. My first two novels were about
adults, and published as adult books in England, where I was
living at the time. But my next novel had a 13-year-old narrator,
and it was my agent who suggested that this was a children's
book. I so enjoyed writing about this younger age group that
I have continued to write stories about them. I think, also,
that if a story is good, both children and adults will read
it.
Tee: Which book was the hardest to finish?
Sharon Creech: I think "Walk Two Moons"
was the hardest book to complete, because I kept starting
over. It took me three years and probably 50 drafts to write
that book. But I learned a lot in writing that book, also.
I think because I learned so much, no book has been harder
since.
Lily: How do you get the ideas for your books? Do
you have a special writing place, or do you just think of
something because of a sudden inspiration?
Sharon Creech: Ideas come from all over the place.
Usually, a book is started by just an image of a person and
the voice of that person that comes from nowhere. But once
I hear this person talk, and can see the person in my mind,
I write very rapidly, and feel as if I'm just listening to
the person. And if I listen carefully enough, they will tell
me the story.
Catherine NYC: What kind of music do you like to
listen to?
Sharon Creech: I'm all over the map! I like some
classical, some country, and some rock--from Pavarotti, to
The Mavericks, to Rod Stewart. However, I don't listen to
music all that much, because most of the time I'm writing,
and I can't write when I'm listening to music. My brain wants
to stop and listen to the music.
Tee: Which book was your favorite to write?
Sharon Creech: Again, that's a little hard to say,
but I think the two most recent ones have been my favorites,
and I'm not sure I'm saying that because they were the most
recent. "Love That Dog" was just such a pleasure
to write. As I said, it just seemed to come from some place
and bubble up. "Ruby Holler" was fun because the
characters, Dallas and Florida, made me laugh so hard I couldn't
wait to join them again every day at my desk, and see what
they were going to do.
Mace and Tex: When did you first get interested in
writing?
Sharon Creech: I was interested in writing when I
was young, became very interested in it when I was in college,
and even more interested when I was a teacher.
Catherine NYC: Where do you keep your Newbery medal?
Sharon Creech: <laughing> I think it's safely
in its little wooden box in my office, on a bookshelf.
Tee: Do you write a book in order, or do you skip
around?
Sharon Creech: I tend to start at the beginning and
write straight through to the end. However, when I revise,
I jump all over the place, and sometimes I will add a chapter
at the beginning, completely change the middle, or jump to
the end and rewrite the ending.
Anne: If you hadn't become a writer, what would you
be doing at this point in your life?
Sharon Creech: I think I would probably still be
teaching, because I really love to teach. It gave me the chance
to read and talk about books, and to hear what my students
thought about stories, and also to hear what they had to say.
If I couldn't be a writer now, that's what I would most likely
be--a teacher. I taught from grades 9 through 12, although,
primarily, I taught 11th and 12th grade. I also taught students
whose native language was not English. Those were some of
my students. And that was quite enlightening. I think that
experience fed into a couple of my books. One was "Pleasing
the Ghost," where you can't always determine what a word
means, and in "Bloomability," where the girl is
suddenly in an environment where people speak another language,
and she has to learn to survive.
Pat: Did you draw the map in Bloomability?
Sharon Creech: No, I did not draw the map. There's
an artist who did that. I provided a very primitive map of
my own, but I have no drawing skills whatsoever. Unfortunately.
Hidden Muse: Was there any one person or event in
your life that influenced you most as you developed into an
author?
Sharon Creech: This is a hard question to answer.
I was influenced in many ways by my mother, who had a playful
love of words and language, by my father's family stories,
by reading the words of other authors, by my students, who
always surprised me with their individual voices, and by my
husband, who encouraged me to take time off in order to write.
Tee: Do you decide what the book cover will look
like?
Sharon Creech: Sometimes I am able to make suggestions.
My editor actively solicits those suggestions, but then she
finds the artist, and it's really up to the artist and the
editor and the art director what the final cover will look
like.
Tiendas: Have you had any offers to make one of your
books into a movie?
Sharon Creech: Yes, there has been some interest
in "Walk Two Moons," "Pleasing the Ghost,"
and "The Wanderer;" however, nothing is firmed up
yet.
Marimac: Did you have a special teacher who encouraged
you to read/write as a child?
Sharon Creech: One of my favorite teachers when I
was young was my sixth grade teacher, Mrs. Zolar. I'm not
sure what it was she did, except that she made me feel that
I was good with words, and that I had a good brain.
Emily: How did your family feel about your becoming
an author? Did you find it difficult to have your books published?
Sharon Creech: My family was, and still is, so excited
about each book. They seem to take such joy in the fact that
I'm a writer, and they take such joy in telling people about
the books. It's a wonderful thing. I did not have much difficulty
having my books published. I was very fortunate. My first
book was for adults, and I merely sent it to an agent in England,
and six months later she found a publisher. Since then, each
book was taken as it was sent to the publisher. So I've been
very fortunate.
Tiendas: Is it easier to write a story in diary/journal
format?
Sharon Creech: I think it is easier to write a story
in a diary or journal format. I'm not quite sure why that
is. Perhaps the writer feels freer to talk in a more natural
voice.
Catherine NYC: Do you like sad stories or happy stories,
because "Love that Dog" made me cry?
Sharon Creech: And yet I think of "Love That
Dog" as a happy story! I think of most of my stories
as a combination of the happy and the sad. They're the stories
I prefer to read, and that I like to write. I think that comes
out of who I am, in that I take things very seriously, and
yet I have to lighten serious things with humor.
Chad: Do you have children, and do you read to them?
Sharon Creech: I have two grown children. I read
to them a lot when they were young, but they are now in their
30s. I have a son, Rob, who lives in Vermont, and a daughter,
Karin, who lives in Washington D.C. They both love to read,
and they both claim not to have an interest in writing, but
my daughter is a great writer, and I wish she would write
books someday. Maybe she will.
Animach: Have you gone sailing in a sailboat in real
life?
Sharon Creech: Yes. When my daughter took that trip
across the ocean, I took a sailing course so I would be able
to share the experience with her and know some of what she
was undergoing. However, I am a very timid sailor. I have
only sailed on a lake in a very small boat. I have never sailed
on ocean, nor would I want sail on the ocean! I think my daughter
was very courageous in what she did.
Angie: Do you teach your English class the way Mr.
Birkway teaches his?
Sharon Creech: <laughing> I no longer teach,
but when I did teach, I think I was probably a combination
of the exuberant Mr. Birkway, and the very quite Miss Stretchberry
in "Love That Dog." I'd say I was somewhere between
the two.
Lily: Do you come up with something, then let go
of it and really develop it in your mind, and then finish
it? Or do you write little by little?
Sharon Creech: I start with very little, and I race
through to the end. I don't stop and worry about the book,
outline the book, or plan the book, because I know that if
I did, my brain would ruin the story. I find it a much better
way for me to write to just let the story go as it will, wherever
it will.
Megan: I love your books, because they are mostly
about country girls who love the outdoors, which reminds me
of myself. Do you live in the country?
Sharon Creech: I grew up in the suburbs of a big
city--Cleveland--but my cousins lived in the country, in Kentucky.
Every summer we would visit them, and I loved those visits.
They lived in a place very much like Bybanks, and I felt so
free there. I love the outdoors--trees, animals, and anything
to do with nature. And I think that's why many of my books
are set outdoors.
Lily: Do you have any special tips for children who
would like to become a professional writer?
Sharon Creech: The tips I often give are to read
a lot, write a lot, and to have fun with both. I think you
shouldn't worry too much about knowing the whole story before
you begin, or about finishing the whole story before you start.
Just play around and have fun, and you will automatically
learn something from everything you read and write.
Tee: Do you get stuck when you are writing a book?
Sharon Creech: I occasionally find myself 'winding
down'. In other words, I wouldn't say I feel stuck; so much
as the writing doesn't seem to be flowing as smoothly as it
should. When that happens I usually stop and do something
else such as take a walk, put in the laundry, or clean the
bathroom. I find that when I come back to the writing, my
brain has refreshed itself, and I'm able to return to whatever
point I've stopped at.
Lily: Was it difficult for you to get your books
published? How did you feel when you got your first novel
published?
Sharon Creech: It was very exciting to hear that
my first novel was going to be published. It was next to the
birth of my children and the marriage to my husband--one of
the most exciting moments of my life. Oh, and next to winning
the Newbery! Also, seeing the book in my hands was a very
moving moment. I couldn't quite believe that I had written
all those words, and that it was actually a real book. The
first time I saw this book in a bookstore was in London, in
Piccadilly Circus, and I remember wanting to take a photo
of the book on the bookshelf, just to prove that it was my
book!
NYPL: Thanks for a great chat! We are almost out
of time. Do you have any parting words for us?
Sharon Creech: Thanks for the great questions. I
hope that you will enjoy reading as much as I do, and that
you will find authors and books that speak especially to you--books
that will widen your life and the journeys you take in it.
And if you want to write, I hope that you will have fun with
it. Thanks again!
NYPL: Sharon, we love your novels and picture
books. We can't wait for your next book! Thank you so much
for joining us this week.
Copyright 2002. All Rights Reserved
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