I'm very excited to present our first Guest Interview here on our blog! In honor of National Library Week & National Poetry Month, we are talking with author, educator, and
CT resident,
Pegi Deitz Shea!
You may know her from such great books as:
But we are here to talk POETRY today!
Q: You've written historical fiction, YA, biography, picture book (wow!) Do you write poetry?
A: I began my “career” writing
verse for my family and friends way back when I was 8 (1968). I won my first
contest in 5th grade—a whopping prize of $2. At my Rutgers
Commencement (1982), I won the Evelyn Hamilton Award for Creative
Writing—another whopping prize of $35. (I soon learned that writing journalism,
PR, advertising and books paid better than poetry.) I continued writing and
publishing poetry for adults, but it took a back seat once my children’s books
took off.
However, my first and third
children’s books are poetry. Bungalow Fungalow (Clarion, 1991) is a
narrative of poems about a boy’s week with his grandparents at my beloved
Jersey Shore. New Moon (Boyds Mills Press, 1997) is a narrative poem,
and won the Patterson Prize for poetry in children’s literature. My board book,
I See Me, (HarperCollins, 2000) was rhyming verse. So poetry has always
been dear to me. In fact, I’m applying for a grant to go to a multi-day poetry
workshop to re-ignite my poetry writing for all ages.
Q: I read on your website that you and your family are big into sports. Have you ever been able to connect your love of sports with poetry, and how?
A: You know what? I haven’t! Thanks
for giving me an idea for a new book of poetry! In the ‘90’s when I was just
learning to write novels, I wrote a series of girls sports novels called Teammates.
Editors liked the books, but didn’t see a market for them. I should dust them
off and revise them, because there sure is one now.
Q: I have
two children in elementary school, and they do a fair amount of poetry writing,
or at least, learning different forms such as haiku, etc. But I think a lot of
people lose interest in poetry once they leave school. (I
still like to read children's poetry though!) Why do you think that is?
A: Until the Internet and self-publishing
recently rejuvenated poetry distribution, poetry was hard to find outside of
academia. The small presses have small runs (1000 copies), the major bookstores
only stock the “biggies” such as Frost, Angelou, etc. and most poetry events
take place in large cities where there is usually a university or two. But
creative writing MFA programs have taken off, and I’m glad to see a lot more
poetry being written as well as distributed in new ways.
Q: One of
the few poems I can recite in full is "Nothing Gold Can Stay" by
Robert Frost, solely because I was a tween when the Outsiders movie came out.
What is one of your favorite poems and why?
"Charge of the Light Brigade" by Lord Alfred Tennyson
A: When I was a tween, it was
“Charge of the Light Brigade!” Which might hint at my pacifist, human rights
bent. A much easier question to answer is who are my favorite poets? I was
lucky to spend an evening at UCONN (along with other Irish studies folks) talking
with Seamus Heaney, who’s delightful on top of being incredibly brilliant. I
studied with Alicia Suskin Ostriker and she remains one of my faves. I wrote my
honors thesis on H.D. (Hilda Doolittle). I also love the Romantic Period poets:
Wordsworth, Coleridge, etc.
Q: I
recently read something on NPR online about the relevance of poetry today, and
if it still mattered to today's youth. How do you think poetry can enhance the
lives of today's youth? And do you know of any particular online sites or authors that are good for budding poets to check out?
A: We are so lucky to have many
fabulous poets for children: Marilyn Nelson, Joyce Sidman (both of whom are
friends), Karen Hesse, Jane Yolen. In addition to those below. I’d also like to
share the humorous rhyming verse of my fellow writers’ group colleagues, Joan
Horton and Janet Lawler. Their books are a hoot!
Q: Will
you be carrying around a poem for Poem-in-Your-Pocket Day, and how do you
choose?
A: This
month, I’m actually carrying umpteen poems in my pockets because I led a poetry
writing workshop at Crystal Lake in Ellington. The 4th graders had
just completed a unit on slavery, so I researched and selected six poems about
it (Langston Hughes, Maya Angelou, Eloise Greenfield were some) to inspire them.
The students blew me and the teachers away with how their poems fused their
factual knowledge with their raw emotion of stepping into a slave’s shoes. For
the 3rd graders, I found silly ones for them, some Silverstein,
Valerie Worth, Prelutsky, Joan Horton.
A HUGE thank you to Pegi Deitz Shea for talking with kids@rml!!!