THE LAST FIFTH GRADE OF EMERSON ELEMENTARY

THE LAST FIFTH GRADE OF EMERSON ELEMENTARY
April 12, 2016

Friday, June 11, 2010

5 Questions for Ellen Hopkins, Part 2

Nevada may not have a state poet laureate, but they do have best-selling verse novelist Ellen Hopkins. Ellen is spending Poetry Friday with us today!

Let's continue the 5 questions.

3) Ellen, there are a handful of poems in your YA book Burned which describe Nevada's landscape ("Halfway," "Aunt Jeanette Lived"). Pattyn, the main character, falls in love with rural Nevada. How has living there affected your poetry?

Immensely! After 20 years here, Nevada is such a huge part of me.

The landscape is incredibly beautiful, (it's a unique palette -- evergreen and gold and a kind of lavender, from the vegetation) and the view outside my windows inspires me greatly.

I spent time teaching in eastern Nevada, where much of Burned is set. [I] have driven those highways and back roads, which seem endless and often empty. There is wildlife specific to our area (and a lot of it is currently chewing up my garden). I encourage the wildlife, something my husband doesn't understand. I write poetry about it, too. It's life. Poetry should live.

4) Nevada doesn't have a state poet laureate, but I'm guessing there's a thriving poetry scene. Who are some regional poets we should be reading? What do you admire about their work?

Northern Nevada especially has a thriving arts community, including some amazing poets. The late Bill Cowee was a mentor of mine.  He has one book, Bones Set Against the Drift. And two other Nevada poets are exceptional -- Shaun Griffin and Gary Short. Shaun writes a lot about life and death. Gary is just a real celebration of living.

I've been a member of Ash Canyon Poets here in Carson City for a decade. It's a great group... everything from raw beginners to award-winning poets. I used to be more active (time is always an issue now).

5) Gary Snyder has a beautiful poem called, "How Poetry Comes to Me." How does poetry come to you?

Poetry comes to me in the way dawn reveals its face over muted eastern hills. It shines, silver light, scattered across the winter-fed valley. It hums along with the brass song of saxophones. It rises in a mist of rain-splattered sage. It says goodnight, paw prints in the sand.

Thanks for spending Poetry Friday with us, Ellen. And thanks for being a voice for those teens who really need someone to tell their stories.

Poetry Friday: 5 Questions for Ellen Hopkins

Nevada, the 36th state, is the next stop on our 50 State Tour of poets laureate. But they've left the Nevada P.L. post open since 2007.

However... I will put aside my cranky Poetry Wall of Shame comments for today, because superlitstar Ellen Hopkins is visiting!

Ellen Hopkins is a bestselling YA novelist and Nevada resident. Her novels-in-verse (Fallout, Tricks, Identical, Glass, Impulse, Burned, Crank) tackle tough subjects that are real for many teens: abusive parents, addictions, the complications of love and the consequences of sex.


1) Ellen, I was discussing your novels-in-verse with another author who said poetry is a good fit both for the difficult subject matter you tackle, and for your teen readers. Why do you think that's so?

Poetry offers a number of things that appeal to teen readers. Imagery. Language. Poetic devices. These affect them on a subconscious level.

But also, the white space on the page is comforting, especially with the heavier subject matter I choose to write about. They can read a poem. Breathe. Read another poem. Breathe. And they can stop anywhere, unlike prose where you often feel you have to read an entire chapter before you can stop.

That's an interesting point. It gives readers control over how they experience the story.

Because of their infatuation with TV, video games, texting, etc., teen brains think in short bursts, rather than in long rambling sentences. Poetry makes every word count, and comes in short bursts.

2) That might also explain why novels-in-verse are such big sellers in the teen market. They're not nearly as popular with adults. Do you have any insights as to why?

Unfortunately, I think historically it is in high school that people become afraid of poetry. Just the word frightens most adults, and I think it's because a lot of poetry is unapproachable. You have to work hard to understand its meaning. Which is fine if you're studying poetry and want to know what the poet means.

But if you're an average reader, reading for pleasure, working too hard to understand meaning will make you quit reading. Verse novels have opened teen eyes. And the fact is, many of the teens who started with me not quite six years ago are now adults. And they've shared my books with parents, teachers, counselors, etc., who have discovered they enjoy the verse novel format.

I think the adult marketplace is opening and I have, in fact, been invited by my publisher to write an adult novel-in-verse.

That's exciting news! I look forward to hearing more about it.

I'll post the rest of my interview with Ellen at noon (Eastern Time) today. For now, here is Ellen Hopkins' haunting and romantic portrait poem, "Leading Man."

She says, "Now when I find the time to write stand alone poems, I often write lyric poetry, mostly to do something different and to remember what that is."



Leading Man

by Ellen Hopkins

He's been with women clear around the world.
Can you believe it? He's just a ... poet.
The last word spit, as if defining something
no woman of sound mind would dare get close to.

I turn to look at the poet. Attractive, yes,
but not exactly your leading man type.
Slender. Average height. Light
brown hair, thinning slightly.

I think I'll never find him in my library
of classics. He is no Gable, commanding
Tara's sweeping staircase, no Redford,
raindrops falling on his head, no
Beatty, splendor burning in the grass.

All mine to adore with three clicks of the remote.

Women, clear around the world...
I open the poet's book, come face to face
with some of them: the redhead, whose hair
still nests in the brush on his nightstand,

the girl whose father tended tiger lilies
beneath her bedroom window,
the woman whose dress slips off
like a flutter of birds.

His words float from the paper, thistledown.
Weightless, but not without importance,
spores, lifting into the breeze
to carry their codes of life across time.
My eyes capture them, and I understand.

Oh, to be cherished, again and again,
painted like a watercolor in an easy flow
of syntax, externalized in a soft wash of verse.
This poet is, indeed, a leading man.

And he's mine to adore, with every turn of the page.


Posted with permission of the author.

Kelly Polark is hosting Poetry Friday today. Check out Kelly's blog for more Poetry Friday posts.

Thursday, June 10, 2010

News You Can Use

It's been a big week at Author Amok. Let's do some announcements, events and a Poetry Friday sneak peek that you won't want to miss.

Announcements
1) Have you read Laura Miller's review of The Hunger Games in the New Yorker? It's a thoughtful review, not just of Suzanne Collins' series, but of the dystopian genre and why it works for YA readers. Miller's comparison of the Capitol city and the games themselves to the hungers and cruelties of high school is spot on.

One disappointment with the article -- Miller didn't mention The Mysterious Benedict Society by Trenton Lee Stewart. My middle schooler ate up the book and its sequel. It's dystopian, but very funny and scathingly satirical (adults run around worrying about "The Emergency" but no one can say what the emergency is or how long it's been in existence). I think Stewart's balance of humor and disaffection is perfect for middle grade.

2) Speaking of Middle Grade, there's a new blog championing MGs. From the Mixed-Up Files of Middle Grade Authors promises can't-find-it-anywhere-else interviews with MG authors, giveaways, fun book lists, and an insight into real kids' opinions about MG books.

3) Not exactly an announcement, but I'm reading Scott Westerfeld's Leviathan. All it took was the flap copy for me to proclaim this is the perfect book for my world history/modern technology/fantasy novel loving almost-eighth grade son. He took one look at the maps and agreed. Now he's bugging me every night, "Are you done? Can I have it?" No -- get your  paws off my book!


Events
1) The Columbia Festival of the Arts kick off this weekend with Bookfest at Lakefest. Stop by the Maryland Writers Association tent on Saturday and say hello. If you get there around 1 PM, I'll be doing a family poetry craft -- Poetry Pops...concrete poems shaped like whirly pops.

2) Steampunk was the talk of last month's Balticon SF/F convention. If you're free June 18, I'm hosting a "Craft & Crit" -- we'll discuss Leviathan while catching up on our craftworks-in-progress. (I'm finishing up my son's socks.) Leave me a comment if you'd like info.

3) June 22 is a big fundraiser for CityLit Project, publisher of my chapbook. I'll be reading from Mountain, Log, Salt and Stone. A $40 ticket buys you dinner, the reading and you're supporting the arts in Baltimore!

Sneak Peek
Tomorrow is Poetry Friday.

I was dismayed and disappointed that the next state on my 50 state tour does not have a poet laureate. You'd think Nevada would join the poetry party. I thought Las Vegas never met a good time it didn't like.

I have soothed my mood by asking a truly fabulous Nevada poet to visit tomorrow...bestselling YA novelist Ellen  Hopkins. She's going to share a poem.

Are you jumping up and down with excitement? Me too!

See you tomorrow.