Showing posts with label leslea newman. Show all posts
Showing posts with label leslea newman. Show all posts

Sunday, July 29, 2012

Finding Water

Writers stumble upon water in unexpected ways.  

Sometimes it takes months (often years) to find our stories, the ones that we need to tell, even when we don’t yet know what it is we need to say. 

For some it’s a long search through the desert, a dry, parched journey until they find the story that’s waiting for them in the cool waters of an oasis just beyond the next sand dune. 

Others find their way to water quickly, although still in mysterious fashion, drawn perhaps by the sound of waves, or the trickle of a creek, or some inner divining rod that draws them closer and closer to the pool of water where they find their story.

And for other writers finding water is a bit like getting caught in a thunderstorm. There’s a flash of lightening, and the story—like the rain that comes with the sudden storm—washes over them, drenching them in emotions and images and words.

Leslea Newman found herself in the midst of such an unexpected storm on a trip to Wyoming in 1998. 

It was a storm that drenched her to the bone and soaked her heart.

She spent the next decade thinking about what happened on that trip before beginning to write October Mourning, the collection of poems that she has  written to honor the memory of Matthew Shepard, the gay student who was murdered only days before Newman was scheduled to give the keynote address to begin Gay Awareness Week at the University of Wyoming.

She knew what had happened to Shepard before her arrival in Laramie, but she couldn’t have known how the emotional impact of what she learned about Shepard’s death during her visit would bleed into her imagination and lead her to a source of inspiration that she hadn’t expected to find when she stepped off the plane at the airport.

“Why was I feeling so emotional?” Newman writes in the afterward. “Why did I care so much about Matthew Shepard? I had never met him or even heard his name until a few days before my arrival.”

What seemed to fill her with the deepest "unspeakable sadness" and "a touch of fear" was knowing that Shepard had planned on attending her lecture.

After her talk, as she shook hands with the students who had come to hear her speak, Newman says she realized how much the students had "needed to see an out, proud lesbian, right before their very eyes.”  Her presence, she felt, sent an important message. If her life was possible, she writes, then their lives as gay or bisexual or transgendered people was possible, too.

At the airport Newman wore a yellow armband in memory of Shepard and had to explain the armband to a woman who shared the same tram with her heading to Terminal C. Newman relates the woman’s response: “Her eyes filled with tears. ‘His poor parents,’ she said. ‘I can’t imagine what they’re going through.’”

Those words—I can’t imagine—repeated themselves in Newman’s mind for hours and days because so many others had used the same words. 

Perhaps it was Newman’s emotional response to Shepard’s death or to the events of her time in Laramie or to the words of so many people that suggested to her that if no one could imagine the horror, then she would try to imagine it.

“As a poet, I know it’s part of my job to use my imagination. It’s part of my job as a human being, too.” 

The poems that found their way to the pages of October Mourning are raw, brutal, and powerful reminders of our humanity, no matter what our sexual orientation or gender. 

In writing these poems, Newman reminds us as writers and as human beings to remain vigilant and alert because a writer never knows when she might stumble upon water or find herself caught in the kind of bone-soaking storm that Newman found herself in when she stepped off the plane in Laramie in 1998.

For more information about Newman and October Mourning, visit:







Sunday, September 04, 2011

One Writer's Process: Leslea Newman

LeslĂ©a Newman admits that she is happier writing than not writing, even when the work isn’t going well.

“I think the reason I still love writing and being a writer is that I’m really in love with language,” writes Newman, , the award-winning author of more than sixty books, including A Letter to Harvey Milk, Nobody's Mother, Hachiko Waits, Write from the Heart, The Boy Who Cried Fabulous, The Best Cat in the World, and Heather Has Two Mommies. “Nothing pleases me more than coming up with a phrase or image that moves me in some way.... This is what I live for, the joy of discovery, or what a writer friend of mine calls the daily miracle.”

Since publishing her first poem in Seventeen Magazine, Newman’s received numerous literary awards for her poetry, as well as for her books for children and adults. “Each genre informs the others,” she says. “For example, I believe that being a poet has made my fiction more lyrical; being a fiction writer has helped me write narrative poems. I always encourage writers to think of themselves expansively—there’s no limit to one’s imagination!”

The former poet laureate of Northhampton, MA, where she now makes her home, says she tries to write every morning. “I never plan ahead; when I sit down to write, I stare at a blank page and pray some words will come along to fill it.”

The more one writes, she says, the better one gets. “The only thing that’s a guarantee is that if you don’t pick up your pen (or turn on your computer) nothing will happen on the page that day.”

Indeed, she has her share of days when nothing much happens on the page, days that occur more often than she’d like to admit. “Then one day something interesting will emerge. If that happens on day #42, I know the 41 days that preceded that writing were absolutely necessary. It’s all part of the process.”

It isn’t easy to keep taking risks as a writer, she confides to the students whom she's given lectures to at schools like Harvard University, Yale University, the University of Oregon, Bryn Mawr College, Smith College, the University of Judaism, and Spalding University, where she’s currently a faculty mentor in the MFA in Writing program. But that’s the job of a writer.

“One has to be willing to take risks,” she says. “One has to give one’s all, 100% of the time. One has to accept failure as well as success. One has to be in it for the long haul. One must be humble. And of course,” she insists, “one has to do one’s best writing.”

Recently, Newman completed October Mourning: A Song for Matthew Shepard, which tells the story of Matthew Shepard's murder and its aftermath in a cycle of 68 poems and which will be published by Candlewick Press in 2012. She was kind enough to take some time from her current work-in-progress to share thoughts on writing with wordswimmer’s readers.

Wordswimmer: If writing is like swimming... how do you get into the water each day?

Newman: I dip in slowly, one toe at a time. I wait until I'm used to the temperature and then inch my way in. Once I'm in up to my waist, I take the plunge and immerse myself completely. Often I stay in the water for hours and someone has to remind me to come out!

Wordswimmer: What keeps you afloat...for short work? For longer work?

Newman: What keeps me afloat is curiosity. I never know what's going to happen next and I'm eager to find out. Also, once I have something on the page, I love love love to rewrite, and I will pester a piece until I'm satisfied. This can take hours, days, weeks, months, years.

Wordswimmer: How do you keep swimming through dry spells?

Newman: I know that one gets better at any activity by practicing. So I do laps around the page in hopes that something will take. Also, I remind myself that there is no guarantee but this one: if I don't show up and dive onto the page, nothing will happen. But if I do show up, anything might happen.

Wordswimmer: What's the hardest part of swimming?

Newman: The hardest part of swimming is conquering fear. There may be some dark places in the water, and I may wind up being in over my head, but still, one has to be fearless and dive right in.

Wordswimmer: How do you overcome obstacles, problems, when swimming alone?

Newman: I actually believe in the buddy system, and though I may start out alone, I have many buddies to call on: my spouse, the members of my writing group, my agent, etc. If I'm not sure where to go, one of them can always point me in the right direction.

Wordswimmer: What's the part of swimming that you love the most?

Newman: Diving into the unknown.

For more about Leslea Newman and her work, visit her website: www.lesleanewman.com

And for additional interviews with Newman, visit:
http://lisaromeo.blogspot.com/2009/11/author-interview-leslea-newman.html
http://www.afterellen.com/archive/ellen/People/2005/8/lesleanewman.html
http://www.smith.edu/library/libs/ssc/activist/transcripts/Newman.pdf

Sunday, June 05, 2011

On Courage

Sometimes we take for granted the courage that it takes to put words on paper day after day, month after month, year after year.

But then a writer like Leslea Newman will share her thoughts on the courage to write and remind us of the important role that courage plays in the writing process.

The author of more than sixty books for children and adults, including Heather Has Two Mommies, A Letter to Harvey Milk, Nobody’s Mother, The Reluctant Daughter, and Out of the Closet And Nothing To Wear, Newman is a poet, novelist, and children's book author who has written courageously about her life and life-style choices. She has received numerous honors for her work, among them the James Baldwin Award for Cultural Achievement, the Highlights for Children Fiction Writing Award, poetry fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts, and more.

Here’s what she says about courage in a recent interview that I found in the May/Summer, 2011 issue of The Writer’s Chronicle:
I want to get back to the theme of courage–because at the beginning of this interview I said I don’t really think of myself as a courageous person, but why I think you need courage as a writer is that at every step of the way you need the courage to believe you have something to say, you need the courage to make this a priority in your life, because often there are the other people saying you need to get a job, or why are you wasting your time, or whoever’s voice is in your head, so you need courage for that.
And this:
You need the courage to show your writing to someone else, whether it’s people in your writing group, or your spouse, or a potential agent, or a potential magazine editor. So then, you need the courage to keep going when your writing is turned down, as it probably will be–I don’t know any writer who hasn’t had that experience.
And this:
And then, you need the courage once it’s accepted to put it out in the world, and hear what people think of it, you’ll need the courage to live through bad reviews, most likely, or tepid reviews, you’ll need the courage to stand up to people who disagree with you, you’ll need courage in the face of offending people–-every step of the way, you’ll need the inner core of strength, or what we say in Hebrew, "koach" to get you through.
You can find more information about Newman and her work at her website: Linkhttp://www.lesleanewman.com/

For more interviews on writing, take a look at The Writer's Chronicle: http://www.awpwriter.org/magazine/