Hello and Happy Poetry Friday! Be sure to visit Carol at
Carol's Corner for Roundup.
I've had a lovely time this week with my turning-11 adopted little sister ... we've been busy swimming and playing piano and shopping and making funny videos... the one of her teaching Paul to do the floss dance is pretty hysterical! :)
In poetry news, today I am happy to welcome to the blog Michelle Schaub, to talk about her new poetry book Finding
Treasure: A Collection of Collections, illustrations by Carmen Saldaña, coming September 17, 2019 from the good folks at Charlesbridge. I met Michelle at WWU Poetry Camp in 2016, just after my farmers' market collection had been released, and just before hers would be released! So we've known for a while we have things in common. :) Which is why I wasn't surprised to learn her newest poetry book is about something else near and dear to my heart: collections!
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Michelle's farmers' market book, illustration by Amy Huntington - who also illustrated one of my forthcoming 2020 books, NINE: A Book of Nonet Poems.
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my farmers' market book, illustrated by Mique Moriuchi |
About
FINDING TREASURE:
When
her class is assigned to bring in favorite collections for show and
tell, our young narrator panics. She doesn’t have a collection! In
search of inspiration, she turns to family and friends. Mom collects
buttons. Grandpa collects coins. Even the mailman has a collection.
Is there time to start a new collection? Or find an abandoned one in
the attic? Join the treasure hunt in this story told through poems.
And now, here's Michelle, responding to a few simple prompts:
The
difficult:
MS: When
I started brainstorming different types of collections to include in
Finding
Treasure,
some obvious ones popped into my mind: coins, rocks, shells, baseball
cards. I definitely wanted to represent time-honored forms of
collecting, but I also wanted to include surprises. I did some
research and found several unique collections.
Some I decided to
include, like snow globes, but others were just a little too strange
for a children’s book. So, I forced myself to think outside the
box. Would it be possible to collect something intangible? This led
to the poem “My Mail Carrier’s Cache” about a postal worker who
collects smiles. Do scientists collect anything? This led to the poem
“The Gist of Collecting.” (By the way, getting scientific names
like “dipterologist” to fit the poem’s meter presented its own
difficulty.) I was also challenged to have the protagonist come up
with a collection that fit her personality, was different from the
other collections in the book, and came as a bit of a surprise. Read
the final poem “My Treasure Found” to see if I accomplished this!
The
delicious:
MS: As
a poet, I love the challenge of shaping my words and ideas into
specific poetry forms. Finding the right word and rhythm to meet
specific parameters is as satisfying as fitting an elusive piece into
a puzzle.
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see complete vanity plate poem below! |
To that end, I played with many different poetry forms in
Finding
Treasure, from
double dactyl to rondeau. But the form I found most delicious is one
I made up: a vanity plate poem. (Note from Irene: this makes me think of Donna, who collects - ! - interesting vanity plates via her camera.) I knew I wanted to include a poem
about someone who collects license plates because this is something
my grandfather did. One entire wall in his garage was covered with
old plates. While my grandfather’s license plates were just random
combinations of numbers and letters, I wanted the poem I wrote to be
about a collection of vanity plates. Who doesn’t love decoding
those secret messages when cruising down the highway? So, I composed
the poem with each line as a different vanity plate. I hope readers
have as much fun solving the license plate puzzles as I did inventing
them.
The
unexpected:
MS: The
biggest, and most pleasant surprise I had with Finding
Treasure
is seeing how much Carmen Saldaña’s illustrations enriched my
poems.
When I set out to write a new poetry collection, I try to
include a narrative arc so that my poems tell a story as they
progress. I did this with Fresh-Picked
Poetry
by structuring my poems to show a day at the market unfolding, from
farmers’ early morning harvest to venders finally taking down their
tents at dusk. I wanted to do this in Finding
Treasure
also. In the opening poem, I set up the skeleton of a story: a child
needs to bring in a collection for a school assignment, but she
doesn’t collect anything. Without Carmen’s amazing
illustrations, the child’s quest would not have been developed as
clearly. Carmen gave the child a personality. She put her in
relationship with the different characters who share their
collections along the way. She created an entire community of
collectors and brought depth and life to the book.
Anything
else:
MS: To
gear up for the launch of Finding
Treasure,
I’ll be running a social media campaign called “Countdown to
Collection” in which I feature different people’s collections.
If you collect something you’d like me to share on twitter and IG,
please send a picture of it (with our without yourself in the
picture) to shellschaub (at) hotmail.com. Note from Irene: I sent Michelle a picture of one of my newest collections. I hope you will, too.:)
I
hope Finding
Treasure
inspires both collectors and those who have not yet started a
collection to discover their own treasures!
Thank you, Michelle, for sharing with all of us... congratulations on FINDING TREASURE! xo