I
couldn’t have picked a better week to post my Thumbs Up review of Luke Reynolds’
KEEP CALM AND QUERY ON (Divertir Publishing,
2012), a veritable Rx for Any Writer’s Spirit.
The
book’s subtitle says it all: “Notes on
Writing (and Living) with Hope.
Like
my fellow TeachingAuthors Jeanne Marie, Carmela and Jill who so generously shared
their Writing Lives these past two weeks, Luke Reynolds pulls back the curtain on
his magic-making too, in honestly examining his Writer’s Life, letting us see and
know the goings-on.
Because
that’s what writers do, Reynolds
reminds us in this two-part collection of personal remembrances and essays:
they go on!
Despite
Jobs, Families, Life, Emergencies.
Despite Failures, Rejections, Turndowns, Turn-backs.
Reynolds
has the kind of resume our readers love.
A
former teacher of grades 7 through 12 and writer of children’s fiction, he’s
the editor of the forthcoming book for teens and tweens BREAK THESE RULES (Chicago Press, 2013).He co-edited BURNED IN: FUELING THE FIRE TO TEACH (Teachers College Press, 2011) and DEDICATED TO THE PEOPLE OF DARFUR (Rutgers University Press, 2009).
Teachers College Press also published this year his latest book for teachers, A CALL TO CREATIVITY: WRITING, READING, AND INSPIRING STUDENTS IN AN AGE OF STANDARDIZATION.
In
Part One of KEEP CALM AND QUERY ON, “On
the Path,” Reynolds shares his journey, past and present. Each chapter's title is the stuff of a
cross-stitched sampler.
Be a River, Not a Swamp
Follow Your Delight,
Trace Your Despair, Fight Your Demons
Writing (and Living)
Through
Don’t Think; Begin!
Learn to Love Middles
When
I finally sold my first trade children’s book, I crowned myself (deservedly) “The
Susan Lucci of Children’s Books;” I proudly wear the title.
But
reading Reynold’s story, warts and all, calmed me, emboldened me, encouraged me
– GO ON!Oh, to have had his words mid-way in my writing career.
It always feels so good to know we’re not alone.
In
Part Two, “Finding Footsteps,” heralded writers (Daniel Handler, Jane Smiley,
Ann Hood, Robert Pinsky, John Dufresne, just to name a few), answer Reynolds’
thoughtful questions, thus giving peeks inside their writing lives.
What inspires you to
craft prose, and what deflates you (if anything)?
Can you share a
particularly difficult rejection story and how you overcame the emotion of that
experience?
How do you feel before
you write, while you’re writing, and after you write?
What kinds of writing
support do you need or greatly appreciate as you work?
Honest
bon mots made me sit up and listen.
Oh,
to have read these authors' words mid-way in my writing career.Once again, I was calmed, emboldened, encouraged – GO ON!
I repeat: it always feels so good to know we’re not alone.
The
truth is, no matter when or where or how we work, at some point in the process,
our Writers’ Spirits are bound to lag.
Except
now, thanks to Luke Reynolds, we can keep calm and query on!
Esther
Hershenhorn
P.S.
To
sample Reynold’s graceful writing and earnest Writer’s World vision, check out
Hunger Mountain, the Vermont College of Fine Arts Journal of the Art.And, stay tuned for a TeachingAuthor Book Giveaway somewhere down the road of this Rx for Any Writer’s Spirit, KEEP CALM AND QUERY ON.
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