Evan Turk is the author and illustrator of the new children's picture book You Are Home: An Ode to the National Parks. His other books include Heartbeat and The Storyteller. He lives in the Hudson River Valley.
Q: You note that your father has worked for the Park Service
for more than 40 years. What role have the National Parks played for you
personally throughout your life, and why did you decide to write and illustrate
this book?
A: The National Parks were a big part of my childhood. Being
from Colorado, and visiting a lot of the parks in the west as a kid, making
this book really felt like a homecoming for me.
I think that because I was introduced to the parks, and to
nature, at such a young age, they were always a big part of the way I saw the
country and my place within it. I decided to create this book in the hopes that
it would inspire that feeling in more kids and more families.
The National Parks seem eternal, but they are constantly
under threat from pollution, people, and politics, and I wanted this book to
inspire families to see the magic in these places, and make them a priority.
Q: You did some of your work on this book on location in
various parks. Do you have some favorites?
A: I visited 20 different parks for this book, and did many
of the illustrations in the book on-location in the parks. With each new place
I visited, I felt like THAT was my new favorite park.
It’s so hard to choose a favorite, but I think that Glacier
National Park is one of the most incredible places I’ve ever seen! The
mountains are jaw-dropping in scale, the rocks are maroon and teal, the lakes
are bright turquoise, the forests are lush and green, and there is an abundance
of different wildlife. In one short trip I saw grizzly bears, mountain goats,
moose, bald eagles, and many deer.
Runners up would be Grand Canyon, Big Bend,
Sequoia….Arches…Zion…okay, all of them!
Q: How did you come up with the idea of focusing on the
theme of home in this book?
A: My husband and I had recently moved up to the Hudson
Valley, outside of New York City, and I came up with the idea for this book
after I had spent a year drawing our new surroundings in pastel. I had drawn
the river, the plants, the animals, the seasons, and sort of created a portrait
of our new home.
As the year came to a close, I began thinking about the idea
of what was next, and more broadly about this idea of “home” in nature. One day
while walking by the river, thinking about my own connection with the National
Parks in my childhood, I began writing the poem that would become “You Are Home.”
Q: What do you hope kids take away from the book?
A: I hope that all kids, even if they haven’t been to a
National Park yet, feel at home in nature. And I hope that kids who do
visit a National Park will come away with a greater appreciation and sense of
wonder and responsibility for the parks.
I think that a lot of times today, especially with social
media, there is a tendency to reduce the beautiful places we visit to a
photo-op. But maybe this book will inspire families to slow down, think more
deeply, and really appreciate the incredible wonders we are lucky enough to
experience in a National Park. Maybe even draw a little bit!
Q: What are you working on now?
A: Right now I am just finishing up a book called A Thousand
Glass Flowers, which is about Marietta Barovier, one of the first female glass
workers and entrepreneurs in Venice during the Renaissance. It imagines the
circumstances leading to her creation of the glass rosetta bead,
which would travel the world and become one of the most valuable currencies of
the early Renaissance.
Venice is one of my favorite places in the world, and
getting to bring its art, architecture, and beauty to life through a fascinating
figure like Marietta was a dream come true!
--Interview with Deborah Kalb. Here's a previous Q&A with Evan Turk.
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