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Las Vegas Strong. Find the helpers. On Tuesday Morning I Found Kathryn Erskine Once Again.

10/4/2017

 
I have had the blank page open on the computer for about an hour. I can’t seem to focus. That has been the case for going on three days now.

The first thing I heard Monday morning as the alarm went off was: “50 dead in Las Vegas Shooting.” I asked my wife, “Did you hear that?”  I grabbed my phone and realized I had a host of text messages, missed calls and my Facebook notification number was unusually high. I was touched by how many people reached out. Thank you.
​
I am a Las Vegas native. Moving back to work at UNLV has been a joy. I have been able to reconnect with some people and hope to do more of that as time goes on. We are closer to family and that has been rewarding.

​This tragedy has been difficult. It will continue to be difficult for many people here in Las Vegas, but in many other communities as families and friends deal with loss and recovery. I can’t begin to count the number of times I tear up as I hear a story about the event. I am proud of the work of all first responders, event staff, hotel staff, people who stood in line to give people, those who offered clothes food, and the people at the event who immediately became neighbors in the truest sense of the word. People who, without question, began to carry one another’s burdens.  
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Mr. Rogers shares with us that his mother taught him to “look for the helpers.” That has been easy to do in Las Vegas. Try to ignore the sensationalized drama of some of the news media and look at the nameless people who have just carried on. I know a retired police officer who spent all day Monday ferrying water and donuts to first responders.  
​
I have listened to my students, who as young teachers or preservice teachers, explain how they have help their students, their friends, and their families. I am proud of them and of all teachers who respond to the emotional needs of people around them. Not only with this event, but with the waves of sadness and despair that accompany many of their students at different times and as a result of different events.
​
One of the helpers I have found even before today is Kathryn Erskine. In all fairness, I have been planning on talking about her work today for several months. She has a new book coming out next week, but we will get to that in a minute. I was going to rave about how much I like her work. I love Mockingbird. I know our class discussion of this work on Oct. 17, 2017 will now be radically different for a group of preservice teachers reading YA literature just two weeks after this tragic shooting.
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​On the day that the National Book Award announces their short list, it is fitting that I like Kathryn, one of the past winners of the National Book Award speak. On Tuesday she posted on Facebook about messages she received from students in Las Vegas on Monday as they wrote to her about reading their class reading Mockingbird. 

"I wanted to talk about something that happened last night."
Thus began a series of emails from children in Las Vegas who are reading my book, Mockingbird (which takes place after a school shooting). They are scared. They are confused. They are hurt. Why do we do this to our children? Here are more:

"No one in my family got hurt that I know of."

"What should we expect from this shooting?"

"With more than 50 killed and 400 injured I am disturbed."

"Me and my classmates are very sad and very scared. I am hoping that your book will comfort me."

And the most gut-wrenching because it shows how these shootings make our kids feel powerless and unimportant:

"Thank you for your time from a middle school student that does not matter that much in this world."
​

So, go ahead, ask me if the lives of my children--and your children--are more important to me than the ability to carry a gun, because the answer is yes, and I wonder why you don't feel the same way. And don't bother responding with the bogus "2nd amendment right" or "my gun will save people" arguments. I am sick of it.
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I agree with Kathryn, I am sick of it. Yet, I will carry on. I have learned that even when students ignore our assignments, disregard our advice, talk behind our backs, text beneath their desks or just sit with a look disinterest they look to teachers to provide meaning in time of chaos. Students see us as anchors of sanity in a world that is often confusing. They look to us to say something soothing and to carry on with hope. They don’t look for us to be helpers. They already think we already are. It doesn’t matter if we also feel grief; we do. It doesn’t matter if we hurt for the loss that might directly touch our lives or lives of others; we do. ​
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Virginia Euwer Wolff, another winner of the National Book Award, in her acceptance speech, just a few weeks after the 9/11 events evoked Faulkner’s Nobel Prize Speech from 1950. After fifty one years his words remained inspirational. Faulkner wrote:

He must teach himself that the basest of all things is to be afraid; and, teaching himself that, forget it forever, leaving no room in his workshop for anything but the old verities and truths of the heart, the old universal truths lacking which any story is ephemeral and doomed - love and honor and pity and pride and compassion and sacrifice. Until he does so, he labors under a curse. He writes not of love but of lust, of defeats in which nobody loses anything of value, of victories without hope and, worst of all, without pity or compassion. His griefs grieve on no universal bones, leaving no scars. He writes not of the heart but of the glands.

In her speech, Wolff calls them Faulkner’s six:

Like most authors, I have wondered since September 11th what I would ever write again, if I would ever write anything, and if so, would it matter? Usually, the answer has been no, for two months, the answer has been no. You understand, don't you? Of course.
​

Today my son, Anthony, and I went to the World Trade Center site and we walked around. What I saw was living proof of Faulkner's six. Faulkner said in 1949 in the Nobel speech that if we are not writing about these six things we are not doing our job. They are love, honor, pity, pride, compassion and sacrifice. I think of them as Faulkner's six. I used to have them on my wall until I memorized them…

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In his fabulous novel The World According to Garp, John Irving defines people who are interested in literature into two groups—readers and writers. I am clearly a reader, but I believe the relationship is intensely symbiotic. For me, reading has always been an intense part of living. Books often help me embrace Faulkner’s six beyond the vicarious experience. I try to more fully embrace love, honor, pity, pride, compassion, and sacrifice with the people close to me and to those I teach, to those I mingle with at church, and to those at work and, increasingly, to the those who cross my path in the course of daily life.

I believe that Kathryn Erksine’s novels embrace Faulkner’s six as well. Writing novels that embrace these qualities is work. Sure, as readers we often marvel at the grace and beauty of a book. Sometime a passage, a paragraph, or a sentence forces us to stop and let the words wash over us again. This happened to me as I read Kathryn’s The Incredible Magic of Being. Julian’s direct experience with the world helped me see the world as a place of magic; as a place where people might be able to create the magic they need. I need a little bit more of that right now. ​
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For the rest of this post Kathryn explains how she, and other authors, works to make “it” look easy. 

We Make It Look Easy… by Kathryn Erskine

We Make It Look Easy…
 
…at least, we try.  As authors, we don’t want you to know how many thousands of hours it took to write and rewrite a book or how many walks we had to take to clear our heads or how much of the research isn’t in the actual story but serves to inform us (about 95%).
 
We simply want you to be sucked into the story, enjoying a smooth ride from start to finish.  There should be no bumps – no thinking to yourself, “there’s no Cracker Barrel off that interstate in Michigan,” “no 14 year old talks like that,” “Empire didn’t premiere until 2015;” in short, we have to get the facts right.  If you find even one error, we’ve lost our credibility.  You’ll be looking for more potential errors, which takes your attention away from the story.  We want you happily lost in our world.
We also have to get the emotion right.  That takes some research, too, as well as soul searching.  How would a boy with albinism be treated in mid-14th century England?  And how would he feel about himself?  What if his father was supportive, protective, even indulgent but his aunt had nothing but disdain for him?  Who is this boy and what is he made of?  Often, there’s a little of us in our characters.  Every character, actually.  We need to go back to that place where we felt those emotions and relive them, even if they’re painful – especially if they’re painful.  We need to figure our characters out and know their world view and what motivates them.  We can observe people, interview them, read about them.  We also need to walk around in their shoes.  If it’s a nine year old boy, there are books like Your Nine Year Old to give us an idea of developmental stages, but also books like Living with Intensity because maybe my nine year old is not quite like others.  If we’re writing about an actual person, we want to know as much about that person as possible.  If he’s an historical figure from 200 years ago and we have limited information, we need to understand the times.
For an upcoming novel, I had actual documentation of the young boy at Monticello who played with and was tutored by Jefferson’s grandchildren.  What I didn’t have was how he felt when Jefferson died … and he realized not only that he was enslaved but also that he would be sold away from his home and family.  We have his own words, mostly conciliatory and complimentary of Jefferson, but we need to put that in context because he would’ve been keenly aware that white society would be more than a little annoyed if he railed against a founding father.  His one statement, “I resolved to get free or die,” shows us the grit and determination he had which enabled him to survive his horrifying experience.
 
I thought a lot about this boy, walking the rooms and grounds of Monticello, imagining being in his shoes.  When I think about him, when I think about his mother … what would it have been like if my own son had been ripped away from me when he was eleven and I had to watch him from afar, not be able to hear his ideas, see him grow, feel his hug?  I can only imagine – and that’s the point, I can only imagine.  We don’t know what it was like to be an 11 year old boy who felt he had a rather normal, ordinary life like the rest of us and suddenly experiences the true horror of being enslaved, or what it was like for his mother and father, other family members, or anyone else involved.  Fortunately, most of us have never experienced slavery.  My job as an author is to try to experience the emotion myself and then put it into words so others can feel it, and in turn feel connected to the characters and, ideally, transfer that understanding to the historical and present day human experience and wonder how we could’ve gotten that way and how we can change.
Literature helps us feel and transcend an event to understand it more fully than reading facts or hearing a lecture.  A story asks us to go on a journey, sometimes an uncomfortable one, and bear witness to things we can’t ignore because if we do they will continue, in different forms perhaps, but they will continue unless we question them, grab them, shake them, speak out, take action, and refuse to accept a human condition that, ironically, kills humans.  We are all a part of it whether we caused it or not.  We are all responsible for it.  To ignore that is to ignore the human condition and our fellow humans.

​Obviously, then, we need to give you more than facts and emotion.  We need to write a story that engages you, keeps you reading, and maybe guessing, maybe even angsting. And if it’s going to teach you something, you shouldn’t even realize you’re learning about Quakers (Quaking) or autism (Mockingbird) or international adoption (The Absolute Value of Mike) or Civil Rights (Seeing Red) or Medieval England (The Badger Knight) or anxiety, not to mention a fair amount of science (The Incredible Magic of Being).  Ideally, a story will make you think, but that should be painless, too; in fact, we want you spurred to anger or commitment, seeing the similarities to real life, freely researching more on the topic and sharing it with others.  That’s when we know our hard work is done, that we’ve made the difficult look easy.
But we are truth-tellers, too, not just in the guise of a story but in person.  At school visits I tell students, “I started this novel in 1999 – before you were born – and it was published in 2013.  That’s how long it took to get it right.”  I talk about revision and how it’s now my friend.  Sure, I resisted it, rationalized my mistakes, but then I realized that “re-vision” means seeing it again, as if for the first time, giving me a chance to turn it into something I’m proud to put my name on.  As a former trademark attorney, I know that a brand name is important.  I want people to see mine and think “quality” and “worth reading.”
How long does it take to write a book?
Someone invariably asks. I answer honestly, sometimes to gasps.

Where do you get your ideas?
Anywhere, everywhere—in the shower, on a walk, driving past someone who walks hunched over – what’s his story? Is he hurt? Is it physical or emotion? Is it temporary or permanent? Where’s he going? How is he feeling? What makes this day different for him than any other?

Why do people die in your books? 
Because people die in real life.  Because we have to learn how to keep living even after death, or after any kind of loss.

Did this really happen to you? 
Not this, exactly.  Probably something like it, though, even if it was the death of a relationship, or feeling trapped, or feeling ignored, or feeling scared, or any of the myriad emotions that the people – characters – in my books experience.

How much money do you make?
About a dollar on hardbacks, maybe ten cents (or less) on paperbacks.

That’s all?  Then why do you write?
While some may write for the thrill of it or the challenge or to quell demons, I think many of us who write for young people want to give hope, encouragement, and a refuge.  I certainly took solace and looked for answers in books, still do, and I want to share that companionship with others.
 
We don’t always get it right.  I certainly don’t.  I cringe at every passage that I should’ve written better.  In fact, except for short sections I’ll read aloud if asked, I can’t read my books once they’re published – my muscles would lock up from excessive cringing.  But we do try.  We try to make story look easy.  We have to write because we really don’t have a choice.  It’s more a question of who we are, not what we do.  It’s how we reach out to other human beings, hoping to entertain, yes, but also join forces, spread passion, and connect with those around us, and those who are still to come because really, we’re all connected.  Story is what connects us all in this crazy, wonderful, frightening, funny, miraculous human drama.
Virginia Euwer Wolff link
10/5/2017 08:49:28 am

Dear Steve,

Your essay, in concert with Kathryn Erskine’s, reminds all of us to stand tall. One of the reasons is that we never know when we’ll be needed. Mr. Rogers, as usual, was so sweetly wise when he passed along his mother’s advice: “Look for the helpers.” And in my decades of teaching, I gradually learned this truth, but I’ve never managed to say it as well as you do here:

Students see us as anchors of sanity in a world that is often confusing. They look to us to say something soothing and to carry on with hope. They don’t look for us to be helpers. They already think we already are.

As you and Kathryn Erskine share perspective, wisdom, and compassion with your classes, and as your students each go out and find their worlds merging with those of complete strangers, may they, and all of us, learn human unity in kindliness and moral outrage.

Knowing we are candles for the students, and remembering that we must stay lit,

Virginia


Comments are closed.

    Dr. Steve Bickmore
    ​Creator and Curator

    Dr. Bickmore is a Professor of English Education at UNLV. He is a scholar of Young Adult Literature and past editor of The ALAN Review and a past president of ALAN. He is a available for speaking engagements at schools, conferences, book festivals, and parent organizations. More information can be found on the Contact page and the About page.
    Dr. Gretchen Rumohr
    Co-Curator
    Gretchen Rumohr is a professor of English and writing program administrator at Aquinas College, where she teaches writing and language arts methods.   She is also a Co-Director of the UNLV Summit on the Research and Teaching of Young Adult Literature. She lives with her four girls and a five-pound Yorkshire Terrier in west Michigan.

    Bickmore's
    ​Co-Edited Books

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    Meet
    Evangile Dufitumukiza!
    Evangile is a native of Kigali, Rwanda. He is a college student that Steve meet while working in Rwanda as a missionary. In fact, Evangile was one of the first people who translated his English into Kinyarwanda. 

    Steve recruited him to help promote Dr. Bickmore's YA Wednesday on Facebook, Twitter, and other social media while Steve is doing his mission work. 

    He helps Dr. Bickmore promote his academic books and sometimes send out emails in his behalf. 

    You will notice that while he speaks fluent English, it often does look like an "American" version of English. That is because it isn't. His English is heavily influence by British English and different versions of Eastern and Central African English that is prominent in his home country of Rwanda.

    Welcome Evangile into the YA Wednesday community as he learns about Young Adult Literature and all of the wild slang of American English vs the slang and language of the English he has mastered in his beautiful country of Rwanda.  

    While in Rwanda, Steve has learned that it is a poor English speaker who can only master one dialect and/or set of idioms in this complicated language.

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