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Lois
Lowry
Interviewed by Linda
M. Castellitto
Lois
Lowry's stories have been entrancing readers for more than two decades. From
the moving A
Summer to Die to the endearing and comical Anastasia
Krupnik to her most recent work, Gathering
Blue, her books have garnered much praise and a devoted following. Two
of her works have won Newbery Medals: Number
the Stars -- which brings the reader back to the Holocaust, as seen
through the eyes of young Annemarie -- and The
Giver, a complex, intriguing work that has inspired controversy and,
in some cases, censorship.
Lowry's most recent
novel, Book Sense 76 pick*Gathering
Blue, depicts a future society in which the government attempts to harness
and use the talents of those like young Kira -- an exceptional embroiderer and
weaver with a magical eye for color. BookSense.com's Linda Castellitto talked
to Lois Lowry (via email, nicely in keeping with Gathering Blue's futuristic
bent) about artists and authority, her sources of inspiration, what she reads…and
what books she's working on next.
BookSense.com:
You've been writing books for more than 20 years (my goodness!). What keeps
you going?
Lois
Lowry: My first book -- A Summer to Die -- was published in 1977.
The time since then has gone by like the blink of an eye: WHOOSH. It feels like
yesterday that I wrote the sentence, "It was Molly who drew the line," which
began that first book.
Your question
"What keeps you going?" would only have relevance for me if I felt burdened
and plodding. Instead, I feel pulled along by ideas whirling in my head...I'm
always scrambling to keep up with them. Racers call it "drafting," I think,
when they are pulled along by the suction created in the wake of the person
ahead. As a writer, I feel pulled forward that way. The momentum of ideas keeps
me going.
What are your
sources of inspiration?
Dreams and daydreams,
fantasies, memories, and imagination. Those are always there. Then they combine
with what I'm reading, what I've read in the past -- and what I see and observe
and overhear every day. Even sitting here in my home office...I look through
the window over my desk onto a park. All day long I watch (though I can't hear)
the interactions taking place: people meeting, playing with their dogs, having
arguments or discussions about who-knows-what. I notice what they're wearing
and how they stand and walk and smile. In more public places, I listen to snippets
of conversation. Nothing interests me more than a sullen teenager in an airport
with frustrated parents! Or seeing several adolescents together, and observing
how their posture, demeanor, and vernacular, change -- depending on whether
they're with their peers or with adults.
What,
if anything, in your own life spurs you to create a story to share with others?
I think most serious
writers use memories of turning points in their own past as a stimulus to explore
fictionally the issues that such moments raise. Because I write for young people,
I turn again and again to times in my own younger life when emotions ran strong,
when I made decisions -- good and bad. Then, through fictional characters (and
most often they have the same introspective qualities that I did) I re-explore
those emotions and decisions. By the time I'm finished with the fictionalizing,
thought, there is little resemblance to actual events or times. Yet as writers
all we have, really, is the memory of our own past, combined with observation.
Do you have
a routine of sorts that you follow each time you write a book?
It would be wonderful
to be able to describe some ritualistic approach to writing fiction. I'd like
to tell you, "I take a shower using lilac-scented soap. Then I put on a blue
denim dress, listen to a CD of Nina Simone singing "Baltimore," and eat 14 potato
chips and half a Red Delicious apple. As if by magic, a story begins.…"
But the truth
is so much more mundane. I sit at my desk every day. I do the New York Times
crossword puzzle. I watch the park through my window. My CD player plays music,
usually classical (at this moment, it's a violin concerto). I sip coffee. I
type words into my computer. I retype them, rearrange them, and delete them,
and retype them again and again. The phone rings. The dog woofs to go out. I
get up and refill my coffee cup. Then I look at the words I've written and I
rearrange them again. Eventually, somehow, a story is put together. There isn't
anything magical. It's a lot of hard work, a lot of fun, and a lot of waiting
for the words.
In
Gathering Blue, young artists are exploited by the Council of Guardians
-- authority figures attempt to harness and direct the children's creativity,
and use it to benefit themselves and their own future. You are a photographer
as well as a writer -- what do you think about those issues in our society?
(For example, the flap in New York City over the "Sensation" exhibit at the
Brooklyn Museum of Art.)
Picture the small
child who comes home from nursery school with a finger painting wild with smeared
colors. Someone -- well-meaning, certainly -- suggests to that child, at some
point, that if he made the blue here, it would be sky, and then the red would
be house, and he could make some windows and a chimney...and eventually the
child will no longer be free to smear colors across the page because he will
feel it is "right" and "better" to define houses and skies and trees.
I suppose our
acts of creativity have to be directed in order to serve our needs as a society.
I suppose "talented" people have to work in advertising agencies and recording
studios and they have to follow the rules and do what the boss says. But the
world has never been changed by those people. Literature and art and music have
changed people's thinking when they have taken new directions, and sometimes
that has required great courage, and often those artists -- like Van Gogh, for
example, or Ezra Pound -- have died unhappy, frustrated, poor, insane. Today's
artists face such problems from authority. From the government. Even children's
authors like myself face censorship and challenges everywhere. And, sadly, sometimes
the rewards are greatest for those who wear the harness happily and who learn
to dance prettily with chains on their ankles.
You wrote so
clearly and descriptively of the children's various talents: intricate embroidery,
creating color, singing, carving. How did you research the processes Annabella
and Kira used to create their dyes?
When I began writing
the book, the first draft, Kira was a weaver, with magic patterns appearing
in the hand-woven cloth. But when I did research on looms, I realized that even
the most simple handloom would have to be fairly complex in order for her to
create her weavings. And so, eventually, I gave her a needle carved from bone
or wood, with which she could stitch into cloth...and then in my mind I began
to see the patterns that could emerge, especially through color.
Of
course, the world in The Giver had no color at all, and I am a person
who LOVES color, so it was a treat to begin to think in those terms. I got several
books on natural dyes. I wish I could say that I experimented with it myself,
but I didn't; it would have been too time-consuming to grow the plants, too
complicated and messy to create the real dyes. After I finished writing the
book, I gave the books about dyes to Erica Layton, the young girl who posed
for the cover on the jacket. She thought she might like to give dyeing a try.
What made you
select these skills for each of the characters in Gathering Blue?
I chose things that I can't do myself -- especially singing. I would so love
to have a soaring, lyrical voice. Being able to write, and to take photographs,
makes me aware of the enormous, surging feeling of satisfaction one experiences
with the act of creativity. And I also know the feeling of frustration that
comes with using your gift to suit someone else's needs. (I've done my share
of wedding photographs!) But it was fun to use my knowledge of that feeling
in combination with an exploration of skills that I don't have. Just five nights
ago I went to a concert and heard the soprano Renee Fleming sing. It made me
think of little Jo, in the book, possessing a voice that soars and hovers and
floats. What an amazing gift.
It's
been 23 years since A Summer to Die was published. How has your writerly
life changed (or not) since then? What have you learned along the way?
I no longer have
the anonymity and isolation that I did then. That's a loss. But it's an irony,
that any success as a writer brings with it the peripheral obligations that
take away the things that most helped your writing. I've lost the loneliness
and uncertainty and there's no way that I'll ever get those back. I still have
the excitement, though, at the words falling into place. And what I've learned
really has come through the loss of those things. At the same time that I grumble,
mostly to myself, about having to answer all the mail, and to go off and make
speeches and do promotion and interviews (Sorry about that! This one's pretty
painless, though, because I'm doing it at home, at my desk).
I have learned
about the reciprocal nature of writing: that at the other side of the wall that
isolates me, there is that magical somebody known as the reader. And that I
have a relationship with -- and an obligation to -- the reader, because I affect
that person's life and thinking, and that is no small responsibility.
What books
have been influential in your life?
The books that
have most influenced me as a writer are those that combine a profound knowledge
of childhood with a masterful gift for language. In that category I would place
James Agee's A
Death in the Family, William Maxwell's So
Long, See You Tomorrow, Harper Lee's To
Kill a Mockingbird, and Margaret Atwood's Cat's
Eye.
What books
are on your to-read list?
Oh, dear. That's
a guilt-producing question because I always have a stack sitting and waiting,
and there is never enough time. Right now Barbara Kingsolver's Prodigal
Summer and Jane Hamilton's Disobedience
are in the stack. Both of those are authors whom I admire. I need a long plane
ride and a deserted beach with no bugs.
Have you had
any interesting moments with your readers that you'd like to share?
The moments I remember
most, and most sweetly, are the very small ones. Last week I spoke, in a library
basement room in Pittsburgh, to a fourth grade that had been brought in. It
was nothing special. A few words from me about writing, and about my books.
Questions and answers. But then, when it was time for them to leave, one by
one, completely spontaneously, boys and girls alike...the children came to me
and hugged me. I remember each one: the smell of their hair, the texture of
their jackets, and mostly the exuberant and genuine warmth of those hugs.
What's next
for you? Can you give our website visitors (and bibliophiles!) a hint as to
what you are, or will be, working on?
I don't much like
talking about things I'm working on. I need to keep them firmly in my head and
not let any bits and pieces escape into the atmosphere, because they tend to
vaporize if I do. But I will say that I'm working (slowly. much too slowly)
on trying to combine some real photographs and documents with a fictional narrative
to create a novel. It's HARD.
And also, you
should know that I'm planning a third book to go with The Giver and Gathering
Blue so that they will create a trilogy.
Is there anything
I haven't asked that you'd like to let your readers know about?
My dog's name.
Bandit.
Lois Lowry's
reading list:
   

*
A November/December 2000 Book Sense 76 Pick
"So much more than Lowry's female response to The Giver, this enchanting
heroine makes her way through a dystopian society which harbors petty class
squabbles, corrupt officials, and shocking secrets of its own."
- Mary Brice, The Tattered Cover, Denver, CO
Further Reading
Jane
Yolen
Brian Selznick
Connie Willis
Aliza Sherman
Chris Crutcher
Joan Aiken
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