[heading style=”1″]Poetry Month 2012: EPISODE 8[/heading]
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Now, did you know that April is also National Kite Month? Neither did I, but it looks like today’s guest might have had an inkling or a lucky guess. Either way, she goes to great lengths to take us on a journey most kites can only dream about, so let’s give…
a sky-high hello to…
A poet and professor, Julie has published four books of poetry for children: Imaginary Menagerie: A Book of Curious Creatures, Yellow Elephant: A Bright Bestiary (which received a Boston Globe-Horn Book Honor Award), On the Stairs, and Have You Ever Done That? What struck me right away about Julie’s books was how beautiful each one is, like little art collections in themselves, the rich poems paired with equally rich illustrations you can get lost in. Here’s just a tiny example from Imaginary Menagerie:
When not creating these gorgeous tomes, Julie also writes poetry for adults. Not only has she been published in numerous journals and magazines, but she’s also won a Pushcart Prize and has been included twice in the annual Best American Poetry series. What a treat to have her stop by NWR!
…and now, direct from sunny Seattle, here’s Julie and her soaring verse…
“No Strings Attached”
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No Strings Attached
If I were a wild kite with no strings to hold me,
I ‘d let the wind take me – I’d let the crows scold me,
I’d float through the sky with the sun on my shoulders.
The clouds would all bite at my ears. I’d be bolder
than bold – I would dance, I’d be brave, I’d go soaring—
a life in the sky could never be boring.
I’d fly over houses then over the tops
of skyscraping buildings but I wouldn’t stop
there – I’d sail over sailboats and islands and oceans.
I’d drive the world loco with my locomotion.
Diving and squawking, the seagulls would show me
the migrating whales as they spouted below me.
Over Kansas and Kashmir, the hot sands of Cairo,
Mt. Fuji, Mt. Everest – higher and higher— oh,
wheat fields would wave to me, deserts would sigh,
icebergs would stare as I rose in the sky.
The sun would be one friend, the bright moon another,
and what would the stars be but sisters and brothers?
I’d know all the secrets the sky’s never told me
if I were a wild kite with no strings to hold me.
[heading style=”1″]Guest Poet Interview ~ Julie Larios[/heading]
What’s Up with Julie
Julie: who are you, where are you, and how long have you been a rhyming fool?
Rhyming fool? Me? (A small voice in my head is saying, “Yes, you!”) I’ve written poetry for almost as long as I can remember. In 8th grade I won a national poetry contest that Scholastic magazine sponsored. The poem was not brilliant but it had a certain charm and the judges liked it, as did my mother, who kept it framed above her desk for many years (Warning: Do not always trust your mother to be the most objective reader of your poetry.) Fifty years later, I still love writing and I still love poetry. And I still love my mom, who still loves me. Though I spent many years in the Bay Area, I now live in Seattle with my husband and a very cranky cockatiel. My kids are 1) all grown up, 2) married (or about to be), and 3) wonderful people. And I teach creative writing to people who want to write for kids.
It’s clear from your video that you were born to be wild, just like the kite in your poem. So was it your own wild streak and untamed wanderlust that inspired this poem?
I like to imagine what being wild is like – no strings, think of that! – but the fact is I like my life tame and cozy. In the winter, just give me a good book, a hot cup of cocoa, a warm blanket, and a fire blazing in the woodstove; in summer, just change those last three items on the list to lemonade, a hammock in the shade, and kids running through the sprinkler (having a good book to read stays on the list no matter what the season is). That said, I do like to travel, whether the trip is long (Rome, Barcelona, London, Paris, New York City, Guadalajara…) or short (drifting around my own neighborhood on a nice day). My blog is called The Drift Record because I like being a flaneur, someone who drifts around observing people, trees, shadows, birds, house colors, weird signs, cracks in the sidewalk, other fascinating things. If I wander in the dark, I look at the way moonlight changes all those things. But wild? Maybe I’ve got people fooled. I’m far from wild – in fact, if I were an animal, I might be someone’s pet basset hound.
Besides your four books of children’s poetry, you’ve also published poetry for adults, for which you’ve won a Pushcart Prize and other honors. Which came first for you, and do you have a preference? For your children’s books, how long did it take you to soar to publication?
Let’s see – which came first? They’re so woven together in my life that it’s hard to remember. I was writing both kinds of poetry simultaneously when my sister, Mary Cornish (who is also a writer and an illustrator) sent a manuscript of mine to her editor, who accepted it. My first book for children, On the Stairs, was illustrated by my sister, and that was an extra treat for me because she and I are very close. About the same time, I went back to college and began to publish poetry for adults. I can’t say I have a preference for writing one kind of poem over the other – for adults or for kids. I feel very, very lucky to have those three strands braiding together – teaching, writing for children, writing for adults; each makes the other stronger. Winning the Pushcart Prize and getting poems chosen for The Best American Poetry series made me happy in a quiet way. Getting a Boston Globe-Horn Book Honor Award for Yellow Elephant made me giddy with joy and I told everyone I knew. Two treats, just different flavors.
What is your favorite part about being a children’s writer, other than the crazy escapades you no doubt engage in daily?
As much as I love kids and love writing for them, I don’t do a lot of school visits or other things like that. Performing for a crowd runs counter to how quiet my life as a poet is. But having my books in the library makes me happy – I think public libraries are one of the best things about this country. And it makes me happy to think of a child going to the library, browsing, finding one of my books, taking it home, reading it, and enjoying it. I love to think that when that child goes to bed at night, he or she will fall asleep thinking about something I wrote, wondering about it, puzzling it out, being comforted by it. That’s the best part of writing for children – imagining that. That’s heaven.
You are a professor in the Writing for Children MFA program at the Vermont College of Fine Arts. What are some of the writerly things you see your grad students struggle with when it comes to writing children’s poetry?
There are a variety of things students stumble over when they’re starting out writing poetry for children. Here are four problems I see over and over again:
1. Tired topics, clichés. So much about good poetry depends on a surprising and unique take on the world. That’s why so many poets are a little weird (and I include myself) – poets’ brains work differently. At least, that’s been my experience. Poetry sees the world fresh. “Make it new” is good advice.
2. Sentimentality. Over-idealizing childhood leads to writing that is “precious” and cloying. I’m always telling my students, “Strange it up.”
3. Abstractions. Get rid of them. God is in the details, and so is poetry.
4. Inattention to sound. Many students misunderstand free verse and think it means they can forget musicality. Not so. Poetry is made up of sounds, images, and ideas – if any one of those is left out, poetry suffers. If you want to write poetry, especially for children, you should consider learning how to scan a poem for its metrical patterns. Do the work, learn the basics, honor the language.
Do you have formal training in writing poetry, or are you just a natural?
I have a Master in Fine Arts with a concentration in Poetry from the University of Washington, where I studied with some excellent poets – Richard Kenney, Heather McHugh, Linda Bierds – all three of whom have been awarded “Genius Grants” from the MacArthur Foundation. So my work with them was also about intellectual curiosity, not only creative writing. I’m not sure anyone is just a natural in poetry, though formal training probably changes poetry for adults more than it changes poetry for children.
What’s your best advice for kids who want to write poetry?
Read, read, read poetry. And did I mention read poetry? I’m a big believer in learning to write by reading widely and well, and by reading the way a writer does, looking at the craftsmanship behind the poem. It’s not about learning how to “copy” other poets (though imitation is not a bad first step when you’re beginning). It’s just that by reading a lot you begin to notice certain rhythms that appeal to you, certain turns of expression and types of language and patterns of sounds and images. And as you read, read, read, you can begin to write, write, write, until little by little you find your own voice.
What’s your best advice for poets who want to get their poetry published (other than “don’t bother”)?
Do your very best work, screw up your courage, and send it out. And if it comes back, send it out again, to someone else. Remember that editors are quirky – trust the fact that eventually you’ll send the right poem to the right editor who will read it on the right day. The planets will align, and you’ll get a poem published. Then two, then three…
Can you recommend a particular book of children’s poetry, or a particular poet, that you think children should read? Why that book or poet?
I’d love to see kids reading more Mother Goose rhymes, learning jump rope rhymes on the playground, reading nonsense like the poems written by Lewis Carroll and Edward Lear, hilarious poems written by A.A. Milne, haunting poems written by Robert Louis Stevenson (you can see I’m fond of the classics). Most of those poems allow for silliness and word play. Some of them are about the world of the imagination. All of them are by poets who loved language. Valerie Worth – All the Small Poems – oh, that’s a wonderful book, full of small gems. Older children can easily read the work of Mary Oliver, Billy Collins, Kay Ryan, Seamus Heaney, Walt Whitman – kids shouldn’t settle for mediocre work. They should be reading fine poets – great poets, even complicated poets – from an early age. The music of that kind of poetry will wash over them, and the meaning will come later.
Can we come visit you and peruse your wares? (We’ll bring the kites AND the scissors to set those babies free!)
Poetry blog: The Drift Record — This is where I sometimes post poems I’ve written, but more often I post other people’s poetry, or I write about those shadows and moonlight I was talking about earlier. The blog is about curiosity, and about living as a poet in the world, with your head up and eyes open, looking, observing, reflecting.
Writing blog: Books Around the Table is “a potluck of ideas from four children’s book authors and illustrators.” Some friends (Julie Paschkis, Laura Kvasnosky, Margaret Chodos-Irvine) and I alternate posts on this new blog, which focuses on “the writing life.”
Faculty blog: Write at Your Own Risk is the unofficial faculty blog for the Vermont College of Fine Arts. My sweet friends and colleagues – most of them novelists — reflect and ruminate.
Thanks for stopping by, Julie, and for adding “No Strings Attached” to No Water River’s growing video poetry library!
Thank you, Renée. And may I say how much I love that beautiful body of water behind you in your videos. There seems to be plenty of water, so it can’t be the No Water River your blog is named for, can it? Nope! That’s a little inlet of the Mediterranean. I explain No Water River right here!
[heading style=”1″]More Stuff About Julie[/heading]
- View Julie’s publication and awards history
- See the complete list of Julie’s poetry books and those her work appears in at Amazon
- Read and hear Julie’s delightful poem “What Bee Did” at The Cortland Review and “Errata” at The Atlantic
- Read wonderful interviews with Julie elsewhere online, including at Cynsations and at The Miss Rumphius Effect, which features poems from Yellow Elephant and Imaginary Menagerie
[heading style=”1″]Extension Activities: “No Strings Attached”[/heading]
- Using “No Strings Attached” as a model, have students write a “what if poem” about what they would do if they could (fill in the blank: breathe underwater, fly, walk on their hands) of if they were (fill in the blank: a spider, a shovel, the ocean).
- Try some of the fascinating kite lessons online: lessons across the curriculum at the National Kite Month teacher resources page; a manual for kite workshops and activities from American Kitefliers Association; kite meteorology at the National Museum of the U.S. Air Force; dozens of kite lessons and activities at Making Learning Fun; and preschool kite themes at Kinderplans and First School.
- Have kids make and fly their own kites. See instructions at Home Made Simple for a diamond kite; Reed Design for a sled kite made from a plastic bag; and Hifly Kites for simple 5-minute paperfold kites. Don’t forget to read about kite safety first!
- Have some kite sandwiches for lunch, then make some easy kite cookies or fancy kite cookies for dessert.
[heading style=”1″]Coming Up Next![/heading]
LEE WARDLAW
comes in on little cat feet on Friday!
Here’s the whole schedule:
April 2 ~ Kenn Nesbitt
April 6 ~ Amy Ludwig VanDerwater
April 9 ~ Laura Purdie Salas
April 13 ~ Deborah Diesen
April 16 ~ Greg Pincus
April 18 ~ Charles Waters
April 20 ~ Irene Latham
April 23 ~ Julie Larios
April 27 ~ Lee Wardlaw
April 30 ~ J. Patrick Lewis
“No Strings Attached” copyright © Julie Larios. All rights reserved
Delightful! No Strings Attached was beautiful, and it was such a treat to hear it read by Julie Larios. What a special tribute to National Kite Month! I thoroughly enjoyed the interview. I visited some of the links and started my day out right by reading more of Julie’s poetry. GARGOYLE is brilliant. Thanks, Renee, for all the fun you’re adding to National Poetry Month here at No Water River!!!
So glad you enjoyed it, Penny. When I was putting the post together, I got a little lost in finding tidbits of Julie’s poems around the Internet too – I found some wonderful stuff out there!
“Flaneur” – I know I have heard, read and used that word before, but today I fell a little bit more in love with it thanks to Julie’s post!
Thank you for all the wonderful links to explore more of her wonderful poems. We are fans of the beautiful “Yellow Elephant” book in this house.
Now I have Mary Poppins songs running in my head…no kite flying weather here today, but it always does seem like April breezes are more conducive than the gusty March winds.
Looking forward to Friday’s little cat feet!
That’s my new favorite word, Cathy. I have to figure out how to work it into more sentences.
What a treat to celebrate Kite Month with Julie’s poem and interview! I’ve known Julie online for a few years now, but have never met her in person. Hearing her voice for the first time was wonderful.
My fave line: “The clouds would all bite at my ears.” A good example of stranging it up :).
Thanks for featuring this lovely flaneur. Appreciate the kite cookie recipe too.
Didn’t you love that reading? Such a soothing voice!
What a wise poet Julie is! I particularly love the advice “strange it up.” That’s the part that REALLY takes courage. Allowing our own strangeness to inhabit our poems. Write more beautiful books, Julie! And Renee, thanks, as ever. xo
Yup, “strange it up” is just the kind of advice I like and understand. Will have to keep that in mind next time I’m feeling too normal – words to live by! 🙂
Oh my! This is my favorite so far. Thanks so much ladies and I have All the Small Poems on my bookshelf it is a treasure. Lovely to hear you don’t like going off on book tours, I’m petrified of that.
I am definitely going to check out All the Small Poems now – it looks wonderful!
What a beautiful poem for this breezy spring day! 🙂
“I’d know all the secrets the sky’s never told me
if I were a wild kite with no strings to hold me.”
So lovely–I think that could stand alone as a poem! 🙂
I appreciate all of Julie’s writing advice–all great reminders. Thanks Renee and Julie for a fantastic interview.
I love how everyone has his or her favorite line. I like “I’d drive the world loco with my locomotion.”
I’d attach myself to Julie Larios’ kite anytime. What a beautifully
crafted verse.
Lee Bennett Hopkins
http://www.leebennetthopkins.com
That makes two of us, Lee! Thanks for stopping by!
Renee, I had so much fun with this! Sometimes answering questions about what we do – any profession, not just artists and writers – can make us more aware of the joy involved, can’t it? And it’s always nice to reflect a bit on what we believe and what that “bliss” is that we’re supposed to be following!
Thanks for your hard work in putting this whole series together. I’ve enjoyed every single post especially since you’ve added in all the supporting links to our work and to curriculum ideas. Be sure you schedule some down time when this whole project is done (and with the Mediterranean near, you must be able to create some pretty glorious “down time”…?)
Thanks to the people leaving such generous comments, too.
Julie
Julie, YES! What you said about answering questions about what we do — I had the same experience this week, and I tell you it helped me clarify things for myself. Perhaps we should all interview ourselves now and then…
Thank you so much for being a part of the celebration here this month. I’ve been having a ball getting to know all you fabulous poets. I will have a teeny tiny bit of downtime (which I will definitely spend by the sea), but then it’s back to recording more of my own poems, and more guests already lined up. Poetry never sleeps!
I feel like I went on a little trip with that kite. Great images!
Thanks for the tips, too. I think they apply to a lot of writing for kids— not just poetry– especially picture books. “Strange it up” indeed!
I loved those tips – in fact, Julie’s whole interview was like a little master class for me. So helpful all the way around!
Beautiful poem and I thoroughly enjoyed the insightful interview! Thank you Renee and Julie.
So many wise words, even from the kite, that “would know all the secrets the sky’s never told me”. I love the idea of a kite overhead of so many places in the world, & you gave a lovely taste of that, Julie. Thank you. And Renee, again thank you for bringing another marvelous poet to entertain! The video was lovely to hear.
I love the poem! I really like the idea of a totally “free” kite!
PS I like basset hounds 😉
Thanks for another great interview, Renee! I love Julie’s advice to “strange it up”!
I adore this poem – both spirit and language – and too, the magical quality that Julie often tucks into her poetry. HAVE YOU EVER DONE THAT? is one of my favorite books to read and hug. I am positive that I will be quoting her words, “Strange it up” for years to come! Thank you, Julie, and you Renee for a great post. a.
My favorite bit:
I would dance, I’d be brave, I’d go soaring
It was interesting to read about the four problems students stumble over.
It has been fascinating to hear the voices of poets and to read the interviews. It’s almost like I am allowed to enter a mystical place.
Thank you
What a wonderful interview and post! Thank you, Renee and Julie. I’ve been an admirer of Julie’s books for children since long before I became a Poetry Friday “flaneur.” How special to see/hear the reading of another luscious poem. I could drift with her all day.
What a wonderful interview and then to hear her read and that poem….I stopped and savored the line:
“The clouds would all bite at my ears”
I will be thinking of that one all day long.
That’s what I’m talking about! Descriptive words and tight imagery and those final two lines … YES!
What a joyful, soaring poem…I want to be along for the ride! And thank you for the interview – so much in it that makes for great writing advice for my students (and me!).
This is so beautiful! I love Julie’s work and it was a treat to hear her read. A life in the sky, the hot sands of Cairo, what would the stars be but sisters and brothers?, and that ending couplet…oh, my!
I was a child on the swing, seeing my feet in the sky and following them to a world of freedom and joy. Thank you, Julie, for the journey.