Susan Hughes is the author of two new children's picture books: Walking in the City with Jane: A Story of Jane Jacobs and What Happens Next. Her many other books for kids include Maggie McGillicuddy's Eye for Trouble. She lives in Toronto.
Q: Why did you decide to focus on Jane Jacobs in
your new children's picture book?
A: I’d always known a little bit about Jane
Jacobs, probably because I live in Toronto and she was so important to this
city and its development. So when I was playing around with the idea of writing
a picture book biography for kids, she came to mind—but I didn’t know too much
about her.
I did some fairly intense research and the more
I learned, the more certain I was that this amazing person would be a terrific
subject for a picture book.
She’s such a smart, creative woman whose
original ideas about how cities work have had a profound impact on urban planning
around the world; she was an activist who cared passionately about her own
neighborhood and her city and fought to protect their integrity; she believed
everyone was an “expert” about where they lived and their views and opinions
had value; she was dismissed by urban planners with academic credentials
because she didn’t have a college degree but she wasn’t intimidated by them;
she was an excellent writer and problem-solver and a hard worker; she lived and
worked in both the United States and Canada. Amazing, right?
As it happens, many of her attributes and her
areas of interest seemed to align with the curriculum subjects being studied by
kids in Canada and the U.S. from the elementary grades right up through
secondary school—and built on many foundations of what they were already
learning. Plus her life was just so interesting that I knew kids of all ages
would be intrigued!
Q: How did you research her life, and what did
you learn that particularly surprised you?
A: I did lots of online research, of course, as
well as skimming through her ground-breaking text, The Death and Life of Great
American Cities, and books that others had written about her. I also got in
touch with her son Jim.
What surprised me most about Jane was discovering
both how intensely curious she was and what an independent thinker she was
right from her childhood and throughout her whole life.
She always seemed interested in learning about
how things worked, and she didn’t sit around waiting to find out answers from
others. She went in search of answers, even coming up with her own ways for
finding out information.
For example, when she was a child, she had
imaginary friends from the past hanging out with her simply so they would
question her about the things around them, such as traffic lights and train
engines, prompting her to provide answers to why these things were there and
how they worked. She liked the challenge of figuring things out by close
logical thinking and first-hand investigation!
Q: You also have another new picture book out, What
Happens Next, which focuses on bullying. Why did you choose that as your
subject?
A: Well, I didn’t set out to write a story about
bullying! I wrote What Happens Next because I was inspired to explore a style
of writing and, consequently, a particular point of view—an outsider’s point of
view.
I’d read a wonderful novel by Yannick Murphy
titled The Call in which the main character, a country vet, records the events
of his day in a call-book, using headings and jotting down notes both
professional and personal. I marvelled at the extraordinary effect of this
style on my response to the character and the story. Somehow, it moved me
beyond the meaning of the words.
I began to imagine a child narrator who thought
in this way. Might this way of thinking—self-prompts, spare and direct
replies—be reflected in the way a child moved and acted in the world? How might
other children react to a child like this?
I began to write in this particular first-person
narrative style: my story’s narrator sharing thoughts in an extremely
structured way, report-like, a question statement-prompt followed by a
response.
For example,
What I Say When Mom Asks How My Day At School
Was:
Fine.(p 10)
And as soon as I began writing in this style, my
character emerged. The first-person narrator’s way of thinking seemed to
express the narrator way of being, and this seemed to evoke this story about
difference.
The story seemed to be about the effect of the
narrator on others; how others, particularly one girl, feel alienated from the
narrator because of something … perhaps something as subtle or as obvious as
the narrator’s manner, physical actions, posture, word choice, and so on. We
never see this in the story. We just see the consequences.
Q: What do you hope kids take away from the
story?
A: I hope that kids of all ages will enjoy it!
It is a story about two unique characters, of course, and what happens between
them, and I hope children are moved by this.
I also hope it may prompt them to realize that
our feelings and how we act are separate. I’d like them to consider how certain
people or situations make them feel, analyze those feelings (what they are,
what prompted them), and then think about how they want to respond.
I hope What Happens Next will get kids thinking
about perspective and ways of thinking, about understanding, empathy, and
tolerance; about differences and diversity of all kinds, for example, kids new
to a country, a classroom, a language; differences in race, gender, ethnicity,
family structure, wealth, intellectual abilities, physical abilities; about why
there are differences between people, how differences might make us feel and
why, whether our reactions to differences are reasonable, justified, and
compassionate, and how to deal with situations in which we or others are
experiencing bullying, intimidation, or domination or are the ones initiating
this behavior.
I know—that’s a lot, right?
Q: What are you working on now?
A: I’m working on several picture book
manuscripts, all based on real people and events., and I’m doing some
commissioned writing. I’m shopping around an upper middle-grade manuscript and
a YA manuscript.
And I’m continuing to enjoy critiquing
manuscripts from picture books to YA, adult fiction to graphic novels, for
clients, as well as coaching. Interested writers are welcome to get in touch
with me and inquire about my services!
Q: Anything else we should know?
A: I feel so fortunate to work in an industry
where all involved—writers, illustrators, editors, designers, publishers— are
so supportive, collaborative, and lots of fun to work with!
--Interview with Deborah Kalb. Here's a previous Q&A with Susan Hughes.
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