Kathy Kacer is the author of three new children's books. One, Masters of Silence, is a middle grade novel focusing on Marcel Marceau during World War II. The second, Broken Strings, written with Eric Walters, is also a middle grade novel. The third, The Brave Princess and Me, is a picture book. Kacer has written many other books for young readers. She lives in Toronto.
Q: How did you learn about Marcel Marceau's role in the
French Resistance in World War II, and how did you come up with the idea for
Masters of Silence?
A: I'm not sure where I first learned about the work Marcel
Marceau did with the Resistance. I probably read about it when I was
researching another book. I knew I wanted to write about him, but put that idea
aside.
And then I began working on another series of books. I knew
a story about Marceau would be a perfect addition to that series. The series is
called the heroes quartet - four books, each one focusing on an individual who
rescued Jews during the Second World War.
Masters of Silence is the second book in that series. I
loved writing about Marceau and loved weaving his story around two fictional
characters - a brother and sister who are in hiding in southern France and are
smuggled to Switzerland by Marceau.
Q: How did you and Eric Walters end up writing Broken
Strings together, and what was your writing process like?
A: Eric actually approached me to collaborate on a book that
would have a Holocaust theme. I jumped at the opportunity to work with him.
We sat down to plot out the story and then Eric started off
the writing by doing the first three chapters. He sent them to me, I rewrote
some of his stuff, added three chapters, and sent it back to him. He then
overwrote me, added some more, and so on and so on - back and forth. It was
kind of like a "finish that story" exercise.
We each had to accept what the other had written and add to
it, always keeping the story moving forward, and always being true to our
original plot ideas. Every now and then, we met to reevaluate the plot. All in
all, it was a pretty seamless process. Eric is a generous writing partner and
it was wonderful to work with him.
Q: How did you learn about Princess Alice's role in World
War II, and at what point did you decide to write a picture book about her?
A: The story of Princess Alice was a gift to me from Margie
Wolfe, my publisher at Second Story Press. Before Margie told me about her, I
had never actually known of Princess Alice and what she did to hide a Jewish
family in her residence in Greece.
As soon as I began to research her history, I decided that a
picture book would be the perfect way to tell her story. It's a very gentle
story, and this format is geared to a younger audience, one that may just be
beginning the process of learning about the Holocaust.
Q: What is your research process when you begin a new
project?
A: Reading, reading, reading!! That's where it always
begins. I need to learn as much as I can about the person I'm writing about, or
the event that I want to explore in a book.
While I'm reading, I'm jotting down notes about how that
information could fit with a story I want to tell. Sometimes I'll write whole
scenes from a piece of research that I've just uncovered.
Eventually, I move from the research to the plot of the
story I want to tell. But I often go back to researching and reading some more,
even when I'm in the middle of the writing. Often, I'm lucky to be able to
interview the person I am writing about. I've written about many Holocaust
survivors and have probably interviewed over a hundred survivors for the
stories I've told.
Q: What are you working on now?
A: I have several books on the go. The third book in the
heroes quartet that I referred to earlier is done and coming out in the spring
2020. It's called Louder Than Words, and it's about a Ukrainian housekeeper who
saved three Jewish children by pretending they were her own when their mother
had been arrested and taken away. Her name was Nina Pukas. What is amazing
about her story is that she was such an "ordinary " person (poor,
uneducated), who did something so remarkable.
I have written a draft of the fourth book in that series,
which is based on the life of Henny Sinding, a Danish girl who saved hundreds
of Jewish people by sailing them from Copenhagen to Sweden. I'm in the middle
of reviewing and editing it.
The other book I'm working on is a story about a man named
Otto Weidt, a German man who owned a brush factory in Berlin during the war. He
saved hundreds of blind and deaf Jews by employing them in his factory. This
book is about a fictional girl and her father who come to work for him. As you
can see, I am not at a loss for stories to tell! And there are so many more I
want to write!
Q: Anything else we should know?
A: In addition to writing, I speak in schools and libraries
across North America and in cities around the world. I love talking about this
history and about my books to young people and to educators. It's a big part of
what I do to keep this history alive.
--Interview with Deborah Kalb. Here's a previous Q&A with Kathy Kacer.
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