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Did you
do that comic strip, Calvin and Hobbes?
Kids are always asking me that. I wish! Once I got a letter from a reader
who said he loved my books, but told me to keep doing that comic strip too!
Which
of your books is your favorite?
It's always my most recent one, because I'm still living it in my head. The
characters are very real to me, and I'm still with them.
Is there
a theme that runs through your books?
A teacher once told me that there is. When I asked her what it was, she said
it's in the words of one of my characters. I was intrigued. She explained
that it can be found at the end of Johnny Raven's letter in Far North:
"Take care of the land, take care of yourself, take care of each other." I
like the idea that this theme runs through all of my stories.
I can't
always find all your books at the bookstore. What's the deal?
Sometimes it's an Easter egg hunt, but here are a few pointers. Some of them
will be in what's called the "Young Reader" or "Middle Grades" section, and
others will be in the "Young Adult" or "Teenage" section. Remember that if
the store doesn't have the one you're looking for, you can always have them
order it for you. You can also order all of my books online, with one of the
online book stores like Amazon.com. By the way, all of my books are also available
as books on tape. If you go to the WILL'S
BOOKS section of this site, it tells for each title how to get
the audiotape.
How old
were you when you first started writing?
In school I wrote reports and essays, that kind of thing, but I didn't actually
start writing stories and poetry until I was in college. Back when I was a
kid, we weren't being encouraged in school to try writing our own stories
like kids are today. I think it's terrific how many kids are seeing themselves
as writiers, and are creating their own stories and poems.
Do you
believe that writers are "made, not born"?
I really do. You learn by doing it, just like you'd learn to play a musical
instrument or learn to play basketball. You can do it! Writing begins with
reading. I think of reading as the rain and snow that filters into the underground
water table of your imagination. Writing is like sinking a well. If you're
a reader you'll have a reservoir of good ideas and a feel for language that
will prove invaluable as you start to write.
Have any
writing tips?
Write! You get better by doing it. Get a rough draft written that you can
work with, and revise it later. Find a partner who also likes to write and
read each other's stuff, provide encouragement, make suggestions. Remember
that both readers and writers are imagining what it's like to be someone else,
so write with the five senses. Let your readers hear, see, smell, touch, and
taste what your characters are experiencing.
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