‘Stone Fox’ author inspires future writers
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Danette Goulet
Children’s author John Reynolds Gardner captivated his young audience at
Paularino Elementary School on Wednesday morning by telling them how they
could become published writers, too.
“He was funny,” said 9-year-old Cristina Gallardo. “He talked to us about
how it could be easier to write stories.”
The students had just finished reading Gardner’s first and best-selling
book, “Stone Fox,” the story of a young boy who, with the help of his dog
Searchlight, overcomes impossible odds to save his grandfather’s farm.
The book has always been a favorite for students, said Pat Insley,
principal at Paularino, and this year was no exception.
Students could barely contain their excitement as they prepared to meet
the author Wednesday.
But students expecting a run-of-the-mill lecture were in for a big
surprise, when Gardner explained what made them enjoy stories and movies
and how they could create them.
“There are three basic ingredients that make a book interesting -- want,
struggle and surprise,” he said. “And a movie is just another way of
telling a story.”
All three are essential, he told them, and the more a character has to
struggle, the better the book is.
Instead of focusing solely on his books, Gardner related his points to a
wide range of stories and movies so that every child had a point of
reference. Examples ranged from William Shakespeare’s classic “Romeo and
Juliet” to the slapstick science-fiction movie “Mars Attacks.”
Gardner even left a list of 10 publishers and told students to keep
writing and submitting their samples if they wanted to have their story
published someday.
“Dr. Seuss sent out his first book 27 times before it was published and
he had to wait until about his third book before he became the
illustrator,” he said.
Gardner shared with students his own personal struggles, to which many of
them could relate.
Students’ ears perked up as they heard that one of their favorite authors
was a terrible speller who didn’t like to read as a child.
Gardner encouraged each child to keep writing and drawing -- no matter
what anyone said. Maybe if teachers praised children’s ideas, instead of
criticizing their spelling and grammar, more children would like to
write, he said.
“We go where the applause is,” he said. “It gets fainter as you get
older, but does it ever go away? No.”
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