On Valentine's Day, Love and Authorship Melt Together - February Theme by Tamera Wissinger
When I ask students how long they think it took for Gone Fishing
to become a book, their guesses usually begin at a month, then two months, six
months, a year. And after several guesses, each upping the timeframe a bit
more, when I reveal the answer: six years (four years on my own, then two more
years with the help of my editor) – their eyes grow big – for some of them
that’s a lifetime. The topic we don’t get into is: how long it took to prepare
myself to be ready to write books before I began writing Gone Fishing. The
answer to that question is a lifetime
– my lifetime.
Grandma Will reading a big book to my sister & me (notice my grabby hand.) |
I started to become a writer when I was a baby – it’s true. I
was lucky enough to have parents who read to me, to have grandmas and grandpas
and uncles and aunts who gave books as gifts, to have an older sister who would
read to me then with me, and a younger brother who listened to me read to him. As
a very young child I fell in love – with rhythm, rhyme, stories. Eventually,
with the help of thoughtful librarians and patient teachers, I began reading
and writing stories and poetry on my own.
On this Valentine’s Day, love and authorship are melting
together – I get credit for writing down words in a way that could form a book
that others might enjoy reading – I give credit to those who cared enough about
me to put engaging books in my hands, ensured that I knew how to enjoy reading them,
and taught me how to write. My road to publication began long before Gone
Fishing and involved great acts of affection, patience, kindness, faith – from
many people who loved me and wanted me to be happy.
This Valentine’s Day I’m feeling fortunate and grateful. I hope
you all have a happy day.
~~~~~
Tamera Wissinger writes stories and poetry for children. She is a graduate of Hamline University's MFA program in Writing for Children and Young Adults. Her
first book, Gone Fishing, arrived from Houghton Mifflin Harcourt in 2013 after
six years in development, and her first picture book, THIS OLD BAND, arrived
last June from Sky Pony Press. You can connect with Tamera online at www.tamerawillwissinger.com, on
Twitter: @TameraWissinger, or on Facebook.
As an author, I feel the same way. As a reader too, because without all those people encouraging writers throughout their lives, there'd be much less to read!
ReplyDeleteI love your little verse novel.
Thank you, Rebecca! You're right - without those helping along the way we would have much less to read.
DeleteI'm in the midst of editing a book I've had for ten years...
ReplyDelete