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For all those fans who have written to me over the years about a fourth Pit Dragon book: I now have a contract for it. Tentatively titled Dragon's Heart, I have already written the entire manuscript (over 400 pages) and revised it twice. If everything works to plan-- in writing NOTHING ever works to plan! --the book can possibly come out in Fall 2008. Thanks to everyone for being so patient with me.
FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS AND THEIR ANSWERS
Will you help me with my
homework? [This is not the form of the question, which can vary.
Often it is: Will you contrast and compare a particular Jane
Yolen book with some other work?]
No. My job is to write books. Your job is to do homework.
The answers to most of your questions are already in this website--if
you look carefully.
When and where were you born?
February 11th, 1939 in Beth Israel Hospital in New York City. I was named Jane Hyatt Yolen.
Do you have any brothers or sisters?
One brother, Steven H. Yolen, three-and-a-half years younger than me, who lives in Brazil with his beautful wife Maria and is surrounded by many grandchildren. He was a journalist for many years wrote five or six books for Brazilian children, and is now a translator.
When did you start writing?
I love writing and have always been good at it. I started as
a poet and a writer of songs. I still do both. My first big success
as a writer was in first grade where I wrote the class musical.
It was all about vegetables and I played the chief carrot. We
all ended up in a salad together! In junior high I wrote my big
class essay about New York State manufacturing in verse, with
a rhyme for Otis Elevators I have--thankfully--forgotten. In
college I wrote my final exam in American Intellectual History
in rhyme and got an A+ from a very surprised teacher.
Who were your parents?
Both my parents were writers. My father was a journalist, my
mother a short story writer who also created crossword puzzles
and acrosstics for magazines and books. So I just assumed all
grownups were writers! Since my brother is a journalist, and
my three grown children all write well, in our family--at any
rate--that is true.
When did you publish your first book?
My first published book, Pirates
in Petticoats was sold on my twenty-second birthday and came outcame out when I was twenty-four. It was about
women pirates. I always enjoyed reading. When I was young, I
particularly enjoyed reading fairy tales.
Do you ever illustrate your books yourself?
I don't make the pictures for my books. (Alas--I cannot draw!)
The editor, not the author, is the one who chooses the artist.
Some of the artists who make pictures for my books are friends
of mine, but often I do not know and have never met the illustrators.
It may sound like an odd way to make a book, but it seems to
work!
What kind of a family do you have?
I have three children (Adam, Jason, Heidi); though they're
all grown up now, they still gave me ideas. And now that I have five
granddaughters and a grandson, I am sure they will give me ideas as
well!
Are you married?
I was married for 44 years to the same wonderful man who, alas, died of cancer March 22, 2006.
Where do you get your ideas?
I am always asked where I get my ideas from. That is a very difficult
question to answer, since I get my ideas from everywhere: from
things I hear and things I see, from books and songs and newspapers
and paintings and conversations--and even from dreams. The storyteller
in me asks: what if? And when I try to answer that, a story begins.
What awards have you won?
What awards have you won?
My books have won any number of awards--the Caldecott, the Golden Kite, the Christopher Medal, the Nebula, etc. And I have won a number of body-of-work awards--the Kerlan, the Keene State, the Regina Medal.I have six honorary doctorates from colleges and universities. But awards just sit on the shelf gathering dust. Or (as in one case) set my good coat on fire. The best awards are when young readers love my books.
What are you writing now?
What are you writing now?
I'm always working on something, usually several somethings.
At times I am working on as many as ten projects: stories, books,
poems, songs.
What book took you the longest to write?
Stone Silenus took me nineteen years to write from start to finish. Dragon's Heart over twenty years. However, I have several other manuscripts that I haven't finished yet. It will take me longer to finish them than it took me to finish either Stone Silenus or Dragon's Heart. This has nothing to do with how big a book is. This has to do with when I can figure out how to finish the book, something that is not always apparent at the beginning, middle--or even the end!
What book took you the least amount of
time to write?
An
invitation to the Butterfly Ball, which took three days from
start to finish.
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