Jonah Winter is the author of the new children's picture book Ruth Bader Ginsburg: The Case of R.B.G. vs. Inequality. His many other books include Barack and Lillian's Right to Vote.
Q: Why did you decide to
write a picture book biography of Ruth Bader Ginsburg, and why did you
structure the book as a legal case about inequality?
A: When choosing a subject
for a picture book biography, I gravitate towards people who’ve had an
important impact on the world and/or whose story is particularly compelling and
would be useful for children to know about.
Certainly, these factors went
into my decision to take on RBG. That and the fact she’s one of the people I
admire most in modern American history.
There’s no one else I can
think of whose story even compares – in terms of the courage and determination
and moral gravitas she has displayed from the very beginning of her life. There
is nothing icky about her – no side of her character or history or politics
from which one needs to avert one’s eyes.
Throughout her career, but
especially since she became a Supreme Court Justice and thereby a more
nationally recognized figure, she has been a constant beacon of reason,
justice, and progressivism. She has provided a constant counter-balance to the
awfulness of right-wing politics in America.
Thank God we have her – she
is a national treasure. Keep eating your Wheaties and doing that Canadian Air
Force workout, Justice Ginsburg! We need you!
The legal case structure of the
book…: Whenever possible, I try to find
a structure or approach for each book I write that mirrors the subject matter.
With Gertrude Stein, I
structured my picture book like a piece of Gertrude Stein’s writing – whimsical
and nonsensical, lots of repetition. With Dizzy Gillespie, I structured my book
like a Beat Generation poem, presumably to be read aloud with Gillespie’s music
playing in the background.
With the books on the Negro
Leagues and on Latino Baseball Pioneers that I wrote and illustrated, I
structured the facing pages like two sides of a baseball card, with the front
(image) on the left page and the back (stats/mini-bio) on the right.
With my book on Josephine
Baker, I structured the first half of the book (her sad childhood and early
adulthood) like a blues song, and the second half like a 1920s jazz-age
fast-paced Charleston-esque ukulele number, bursting out at the seams – as a
way of reflecting her progression from the despair of being a black American
subjected to racism and white terrorism and blackface… to becoming a beloved,
celebrated world-famous Jazz Age icon in France.
So, after deciding that I
would devote much of my book on Ginsburg to the injustices as a woman and a Jew
that she was subjected to from the beginning, it just clunked me on the head
like an apple from a tree that I should structure the book like a court case,
with “Exhibits A, B, C,” etc.
It would be a way of plunging
my young readers into the world of courtrooms and the law – and an effective
device for structuring the long list of injustices she has endured… on her way
to becoming a Supreme Court Justice and an emblem of justice.
Q: How did you research the
book, and did you learn anything that especially surprised you?
A: I read books, articles,
interviews, speeches. I hadn’t realized, before I started doing my research,
about just how important a figure she was in the women’s rights movement of the
1970s. She practically WAS the women’s rights movement!
And I certainly hadn’t
realized the degree of bullshit she had to endure and fight to get to where she
is today. Though I’m not Jewish or female, what I found out about her really
inspires me to the degree that she’s now a role model – her toughness,
especially. I wish I had even one fraction of that toughness.
Q: What do you see as RBG’s
greatest achievement?
A: Some public figures are
easier than other to associate with one famous great achievement. For instance,
Thurgood Marshall and Brown v Board of Education. Lyndon Johnson and the Civil
Rights Act and Voting Rights Act of 1965.
But I think Ginsburg is
harder to pin down to just one great achievement. Her achievement is more a
cumulative one, I think. Her presence on the Supreme Court, as a constant
outspoken voice of justice and human decency (I’m trying to avoid using the
word “liberal,” since I believe that word would diminish what she is), is her
greatest cumulative accomplishment.
Also, I think she will be
remembered as one of the great women’s rights leaders of the 20th and 21st
centuries – a figure who moved the cause of women’s rights forward throughout
her long and varied career. If I had to do a Top Five, she would be right up
there with Gloria Steinem and Hillary Clinton.
Q: What do you think Stacy
Innerst’s illustrations added to the book?
A: Stacy Innerst’s
illustrations? They make the book a Caldecott contender! They’re brilliant. I
could not be more pleased.
He has such a delicate touch
– and a style that perfectly suits the subject matter. He conveys the
seriousness and dignity of Ginsburg, while miraculously keeping something
playful and childlike in the style.
Sometimes, with picture book
bios, illustrators don’t quite get the face or character right. They just
don’t. And as someone familiar with the subject, you can see it in an instant. “Huh,”
you say to yourself.
Maybe this doesn’t matter to
some people, but it matters to me as a picture book bio author. If you’re not
conveying something essential about the figure in your illustrations, then
what’s the point of the picture book bio?
Well, this is where Stacy
knocks it out of the park. He serves the subject matter – as opposed to the
subject matter serving him. But he does so without sacrificing any artistry,
style, or his own personality as an artist.
Q: What are you working on
now?
A: “Well, I could tell you,
but then I’d have to….” Because of the competitive nature of the nonfiction
picture book world, I can only speak in the most general terms.
But I will say that, ever
since The Secret Project came out and received such glowing reviews, I have
realized that it is possible to broach really dark moments from history in a
picture book – and that it’s possible to end a picture book on an alarming,
negative, or chilling note.
I know there are many who
disagree with this, who think that, for instance, the making of the atom bomb
is absolutely too dark and mature a topic to introduce in a picture book. I
think these people underestimate children and their ability to absorb so-called
“difficult” topics.
So, I will continue on the
path I’m on, broaching topics that deal with injustice, racism, sexism, bad
things people have done. I’ll leave the feel-good, heart-warming stories to
authors inclined to write that sort of thing.
Q: Anything else we should
know?
A: There are plenty of things
you should know! I’m not sure where to begin….
--Interview with Deborah Kalb. Here's a previous Q&A with Jonah Winter.
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