So,
I’d
like to take a side road of sorts in continuing our TeachingAuthors discussion on writers’
reader considerations.
Yes,
indeedy, I agree with my fellow bloggers: writing with passion trumps every
consideration when we are writing to tell ourselves
the story.
That
kind of telling is the stuff of our first
draft, our first pass, at who and what
grabbed our hearts.
Our
second draft, though?
That’s
the draft in which we make choices to grow a story and tell that story the best
way possible to our intended reader.
IMHO,
the “best way possible” considers where that reader is chronologically,
emotionally and cognitively so he or she can easily travel the story, can
emotionally connect with the characters, can live inside the story and take its
truths into his or her heart.
When
I read a student’s or writer’s manuscript for the very first time, when I read
my own first drafts readying to finally revise, I read on behalf of the intended young reader.
Both
the story and the format must be age-appropriate, of course.
But
do I know who claims the story and what it’s about? Am I grounded in the story’s
time and place? What kind of story am I expecting?
Left
unanswered, those questions will likely force the intended reader to leave the
story.
Language
must also be considered – word choice, sentence structure, metaphorical language,
as JoAnn noted when she wrote about assessing reading levels in her Friday post.
And
richness of language need not be sacrificed – ever (!) - for clarity.
JoAnn’s
post brought a smile as I remembered my experience this past September attempting
to write original poems for the newest addition to THE POETRY FRIDAY ANTHOLOGY
series (Pomelo Books), THE POETRY FRIDAY ANTHOLOGY FOR CELEBRATIONS, scheduled
for an official April 1, 2015 pub date.
The book features 150 poems in Spanish and English versions for preK and
up, covering a wide variety of celebrations: Poem in Your Pocket Day to
National Pet Week to Juneteenth to International Talk-Like-a-Pirate Day to
World Bread Day to Winter Solstice.
Invited
writers could choose a day that spoke to them and try their hand at creating a
poem.
Hmmm…National Hat Month?
I
loved that idea and began fingering my way through my Roget’s Thesaurus, having
a high ol’ time.
Here’s
the poem I first submitted, in celebration of National Hat Month:
Mixed-up Mad Hatterisms to Celebrate Hat Month
Bees in your beanie.
A feather in your fez.
Pass the fedora.
Bearskin in hand.
Tom scored a tam
trick!
Talking through your
cap.
Tip o’ my turban.
Pass the sombrero.
Helmets off!
At the drop of a
wimple.
Home is where you hang
your beret.
(Copyright 2014 Esther Hershenhorn)
The
anthology editor Janet Wong returned the poem, kindly reminding me of the
designated preK-and-older audience.
Hmmm…National Write a Letter
of Appreciation Week?
That’s the
ticket! I thought.
I
brainstormed all sorts of letter-writing possibilities and settled on our
TeachingAuthors Thank-u’s.
Here’s
the second poem I sent off to Janet:
A Haiku Thank You
Dear
(fill-in-the-blank),
You knew how to make
me smile.
Thank-u very much.
(Copyright 2014 Esther
Hershenhorn)
Janet remained kind while again reminding me of the
designated preK-and-older audience.
“How about St. Patrick’s Day?” Janet wrote
me. “There’s St. Patrick and everyone
dressed in green and folks even dye their rivers green!”
I think I got this now! I thought. And I was off and running.
This time, though, after brainstorming All
Things St. Patrick’s Day, I thought about my pre-K and K readers. I even Googled “St. Patrick’s Day curriculum
for preschoolers” to learn the top 3 take-aways for little ones about this day.
I’m currently unable to share my finally-accepted
poem, “St.
Patrick’s Day.”
Suffice it to say, I again had fun writing about
my suggested green March 17 celebration, but…
I was extremely aware of my audience’s needs.
Happy Writing!
Our young readers deserve our passion, our best
writing – and – IMHO, our consideration of their chronological, emotional and cognitive needs.
4 comments:
Hooray for you and your St. Patrick's Day poem, Esther! I'll have a poem in that anthology, too, and I agree that the age of the audience was tough--and critical--to keep in mind.
Great post, Esther--very practical. And I look forward to reading your St. Patrick's Day poem. Congratulations!
Esther, I so love the Mad Hatterisms! What a grand discussion! Thank you!
I'm tipping my chartreuse hat at you Esther, and will await the long winter for your St. Patty's surprise! Many thanks for your thoughts.
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