Posted in info, poetry, teachers' resources

Meet children’s poet, Jackie Hosking

Jackie Hosking photo
Poet, Jackie Hosking

Today is ‘Poem in Your Pocket Day’! And we’re thrilled to have a wonderful poet visiting the blog today: Jackie Hosking. You can find one of her poems in the current issue of Alphabet Soup magazine (issue 6).

Welcome, Jackie! Can you tell us a bit about yourself?

I am a Nigerian born, Cornish, Australian. How can that be? Well, my parents are Cornish, they were living in Nigeria when I was born, they moved to Victoria, Australia when I was ten where I became an Australian Citizen. I left my parents’ home with my kitten, Gizzy when I was 18 years old. Gizzy lived to be 21 years old and I wrote a poem, ‘My Cat,’ in her memory. Now I live in a beautiful seaside town with my puppy Rex. Rex is a Blue Staffy and he wrecks (Rex) everything. I love walking by the sea and in the bush and discover many of my poems this way. I also love to read.

How long have you been writing poetry?

I have been writing poetry for about 25 years. I wrote my very first poem when I was 17. I have been writing for children for about 5 years.

You seem to love rhyming poetry in particular. Can you tell us why?

I grew up reading poems by A.A. Milne. He wrote the ‘Winnie The Pooh’ books, and I always enjoyed discovering when a poem rhymed. I thought it was really clever and so doubly satisfying. Even though I love rhyme, I like the rhyme to be incidental, a bonus, not the whole focus but the icing on the cake.

Do you prefer writing poems to writing stories?

I much prefer to write a poem. I think it might be because I have a short attention span. I love how a poem can condense thoughts, feelings and descriptions into a powerful piece of writing. Poems are bite sized stories to be consumed greedily.

Why do you like writing poems for children?

I think because I never really grew up. Also I think when I write a poem, I try to write with a fresh eye, a child’s eye. Instead of having a bird’s eye view, I write with a child’s eye view. I have also written poems for adults, a few serious ones but mostly funny ones for parents with small children.

Did you like poetry as a child?

I didn’t really enjoy reading adult poetry as a child but I always enjoyed the children’s poets. I’ve mentioned A.A. Milne and there’s also C.J. Dennis, Dr. Seuss, C.S. Lewis and Roald Dahl.

Who are some children’s poets you admire today?

Of course, all of those mentioned above, as well as – Lorraine Marwood, Meredith Costain, Claire Saxby, Sally Murphy, Janeen Brian, Stephen Whiteside, Sherryl Clark and Edel Wignell, just to name a few.

Do you have a favourite style of poem when you are writing?

I like to think about my poetry as an artist might think of a painting. Poetry, to me, is painting with words. I’ve written all types of poetry, funny, sad, pretty, long, short, limericks but what is most important, for me, is the rhythm or the meter. It has to be perfect and I enjoy the challenge of getting it that way.

Have you ever done anything unusual with one of your poems? (e.g. purposely left one on a train … )

Funny that you should mention a train. Two of my poems are travelling around Melbourne on the trains as part of the ‘Moving Galleries’ project. It’s such fun when someone contacts me to let me know that they’ve seen one. I also entered a very personal (and a little bit rude!) valentine’s poem into a competition where it ended up being included in the anthology.

Do you have any advice for kids who want to write poetry?

Think of poetry like making gravy – it needs to be reduced. It needs to be the essence of what you want to say. Less is always more where poetry is concerned. Use strong, sparkly words, become friends with metaphor and simile and don’t be afraid to be unique. Never use clichés – never say that something was ‘as cold as ice’. Find a new way like … the water was as cold as money.

Where can kids find your poems?

Many of my poems have been published in The School Magazine.

Alphabet Soup has published ‘The Moon’ and ‘A Raindrop Race’.

The Poem a Week Project – ‘To Catch a Dewdrop’.

I also have a blog! http://www.versatilityrhymeandrhythm.blogspot.com

How do you get ideas/inspiration?

Ideas can come from anywhere. Walking stirs up lots of ideas, as do my pets. Nature is a favourite, the flowers, the birds, the beach. I love to capture all of these things and display them on the page.

Today is ‘Poem in Your Pocket Day’. Would you share one of your poems with us today?

Here’s one I prepared earlier …

Short and Scary cover‘I had a little poem’

I had a little poem
I held it in my hand
It whispered muffled secrets
Only I could understand

I had a little poem
I kept it in a locket
And every time I went outside
I popped it in my pocket

© Jackie Hosking

You can find out more about Jackie Hosking at her website: www.jackiehoskingpio.wordpress.com. Her most recent publication – ‘At the end of the Street’ is included in the anthology, Short & Scary.

Posted in poetry, teachers' resources

A Kick in the Head: An Everyday Guide to Poetic Forms

As we mentioned earlier, April is National Poetry Month in the US, and we’ve borrowed the idea because we rather like poetry. Later in the week we hope to have a real live poet visiting the blog, so be sure to check back!

In the meantime, here is a fantastic book by Paul B. Janeczko (illustrated by Chris Raschka).

A Kick in the Head (cover)

This book is a collection of poems with a brief explanation about the rules for each form included. 29 forms are covered – some of them are ones you might already recognise, like Haiku, Tanka, Cinquain, Villanelle and List Poem. Perhaps you can find a copy of A Kick in the Head at your library. Be inspired to write your own poem, and then you can carry it around with you on Thursday for Poem In Your Pocket Day! (Or leave a short poem in our comments, and we’ll pretend it’s an online pocket!)

Here’s a couplet I wrote after reading A Kick in the Head:

I wish that it were chocolate cake –
but CAULIFLOWER is in to bake.*

*Actually, I love cauliflower cheese. It’s just that sometimes I’d rather have cake …

This book was selected for review from the Editor’s own collection.

Posted in competitions, poetry, teachers' resources

Dorothea Mackellar Poetry Awards 2010

While you’re in the mood for poetry (April being [Inter]National Poetry month and all), you might like to think about sending your best poem in to the Dorothea Mackellar Poetry Awards.

The theme is ‘I hear music.’ There are categories for lower primary and upper primary. And prizes from $300, plus a trophy!

You can find out more by visiting the website. Entries close 9 July 2010.

Posted in authors, illustrator, teachers' resources

BOOKWIZ – family event

The WA branch of the Children’s Book Council of  Australia (CBCA)  is holding a fun book-based quiz in the style of the hit ABC show Spicks & Specks.

Bring your family and friends! Meet local authors and illustrators!

When: 2 – 4pm, Sunday 27 June 2010
Where: St Mary’s Anglican Girls’ School, Karrinyup WA
Cost: $10 adults $5 children/school students
Bookings: Jan Nicholls (jnicholls@stmarys.wa.edu.au)

For more info, see the website of the CBCA (WA).

Posted in Book reviews by Rebecca, poetry, teachers' resources

Big Book of Verse for Aussie Kids

Big Book of Verse for Aussie Kids cover

This book is so much fun! The Editor, Jim Haynes, has collected over SIX HUNDRED poems in it, including a mix of old favourites (see if your parents and grandparents know them!) and more modern verse including games and chants, limericks, nonsense verse, poems about animals and birds, gross and gruesome poems … and more!

Here are a few of our favourites (but with over 600 poems, there are many more to choose from):

Fancy Dress (Anonymous)

There once was a fellow named Paul
Who went to a fancy dress ball.
He thought he would risk it
And go as a biscuit,
And a dog ate him up in the hall.

The Drovers by CJ Dennis

Out across the spinifex, out across the sand,
Out across the saltbush to Never Never land
That’s the way the drovers go, jogging down the track,
That’s the way the drovers go. But how do they come back?
Back across the saltbush from Never Never land.
Back across the spinifex, back across the sand.

Why? (Anonymous)

Why does a clock face not have a nose?
Why do foothills not have toes?
Do all-day laundries close at night?
Will the teeth on a garden rake ever bite?
Why can’t a needle wink its eye?
Why can’t the wings of a building fly?
What is the sound of a gum tree’s bark?
Can you leave your car in a national park?

I’m pretending not to notice the poem by Hilaire Belloc on page 334 called ‘Rebecca (Who Slammed Doors For Fun And Perished Miserably)’. Do you know it?

Tell us your favourite poem, and we can celebrate [Inter]national Poetry Month together!

~ Rebecca, Editor, Alphabet Soup magazine

Big Book of Verse for Aussie Kids, edited by Jim Haynes, Allen & Unwin, 2009

Our review copy was sent to us by Allen & Unwin
Posted in poetry, teachers' resources

April: National Poetry Month

You might have heard about April being National Poetry Month. (Actually, it’s National Poetry Month in the US, but we thought we’d borrow the idea and quietly turn it into INTERnational Poetry Month!)

So, for the rest of April, you’ll find us posting about our favourite poems, cool books of poems, poetry walls, and Poem in Your Pocket day on 29 April 2010.

Did you know that there’s a poll over on the home page of the Alphabet Soup website? Vote and let us know how often you read poems (or have someone read poems to you)!

Posted in teachers' resources

Byron Bay Writers Festival 2010 – Kids’ Marquee

The 2010 Byron Bay Writers Festival (NSW) will host Australia’s best kids writers  in the kids marquee on Saturday 7 August from 9.00am – 2.30pm.

AGES: Kids between 6 and 16

ACTIVITIES: storytelling, activities and an opportunity to meet authors during book signings.

COST: $25 or $20 for members of the Northern Rivers Writers’ Centre. (Each Kids Pass accommodates one accompanying adult allowing access to KIDS SESSIONS)

The full Festival program has not been released yet, but discounted Early Bird 3-day passes are now available. The full program will be released on 4 June 2010. For more information, you can visit the Writers Festival website.

Posted in authors

Meet Leanne Davidson, author of Quizzical!

Leanne Davidson wrote her first book, Quizzical, and decided to publish it herself. After it won joint first prize in the 2006 Australian Best Self-Published Book Award for Fiction, it was picked up by The Five Mile Press, and re-released in 2008. The sequel, Money Bags, followed in 2009, and The Five Mile Press also published chapter book, Alby and the Cat. We asked Leanne to visit us today to talk about her success story!

What do you like most about being a writer?

There are so many things I like about being a writer, it’s hard to choose the one I like most!  I really enjoy visiting schools, though, and meeting the children who read my books.  I find that really rewarding.

Are there any downsides to being a writer?

Not for me.  I would happily write for the rest of my life if people continued to enjoy my books. I just wish I had more time to write, and that I was better known so that I could write full-time instead of having to work as well!

What brought you to write your first book?

I have always loved to write, ever since I was a young child. As I grew older, it became a hobby I loved to do in my spare time.  I have a very bad habit of starting stories and not finishing them, so one day I decided to write a story from an idea that had formed in my head, and finish it.

My mum and dad had a racehorse, and whenever it raced we would go and watch it.  My dad is blind, so I used to read the paper to him and tell him the names of the other horses in the race. I noticed that a horse called ROYGBIV often raced at the same races our horse raced at and I thought, ‘What a strange name for a racehorse!  I wonder how it got that name?’  Only a couple of weeks later a story appeared in a Melbourne paper about that very horse and how it was named after the colours of the rainbow: red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo and violet. I thought to myself: ‘What a great way to remember the colours of the rainbow’ and thought what a good idea it would be to write a story using similar methods that might  help children remember things in their everyday lives. That’s how ‘Quizzical’ was born.

At the moment I prefer to write for children, possibly because I have three of my own, but one day I might consider an adult novel.

Why did you decide to self-publish your first book?

It was always a secret ambition of mine to actually have a book published so that people could read it, but as a young girl I lacked confidence, and I didn’t think that could ever happen, although I continued to write for the mere enjoyment of it. Then, I married and had children, and when they became involved in their various sporting pursuits I became involved in committees and generally helped out on a voluntary basis, which helped my confidence.

By the time I reached the age of 40 I had the ‘Quizzical’ idea in my head and one weekend I sat down and wrote it as a short story. I sent it off to a major publisher – I don’t know what I was thinking! – and although they wouldn’t accept the manuscript for publication, they did send back a very nice letter saying the story was very well written and they had enjoyed it very much. I refused to give up, and instead put it aside for a bit, trying to think of a way to make it better. I decided to expand it into a novel, with the characters and story expanded.

I also decided to do a writing course, the Diploma of Professional Children’s Writing, by correspondence, not only to learn more about writing for children, but also to have an unbiased tutor look at my writing. The course was brilliant. I used some of the chapters of my book as assignments, and when my tutor told me I was very talented, that was all the inspiration I needed to finish my book. I thought about sending it in to publishers, but it can be such a long process waiting to hear back from them, usually with a rejection, and I didn’t want my confidence dented. So, I spoke to my husband, who was very supportive, and we decided to self-publish it.

Although ‘putting myself out there’ was a very scary prospect for me, I felt very confident that things would turn out okay. I can’t explain it, really. I am a very motivated person, and I’m not afraid of hard work, so I was prepared to do whatever it took to get the book out there for kids to read.

Fortunately, we have a book distribution company in the next town on from us, and I initially made some enquiries there. I was put on to someone who ‘might be interested’ in helping me, and that someone was Allan Cornwell, who lived in Melbourne at the time. He was a small member publisher with the Australian Book Group, and had self-published his own books as well as those by other authors, including Michael Salmon. He read my manuscript and wanted to help me publish it. He also suggested I have it edited, and forwarded it onto a lady named Nan McNab who, as well as editing some of Allan’s work, also edited for Penguin, Pan McMillan and The Five Mile Press. She now edits all of Bryce Courtenay’s books, so I feel very privileged that she wanted to edit my work, too! The result was Quizzical, a book I’m very proud of.

Five Mile Press then took over as publisher of Quizzical and Money Bags. Can you tell us about that?Puzzle Palace cover

In 2006, Quizzical won the ‘Best Australian Self-Published Book Award for Fiction’, a competition run through the NSW Writers’ Centre. Subsequently, Five Mile Press contacted me and offered me a contract to re-release it with a new cover, along with the sequels, Money Bags and Puzzle Palace. They also published a short chapter book I wrote called Alby and the Cat as part of their Ripper Reads series.

Where do you get your ideas?

As any author would tell you, you can get your ideas from anywhere. Some ideas are inspired by events that happen in your life, but things happen all around us every day that would make great stories.

Of your own books, which is your favourite?

Hmmm.  That’s a tricky one. Quizzical would rate highly because I never thought in a million years I’d put myself out there by self-publishing a book and be prepared to be ridiculed if the book was a failure. Thankfully it wasn’t, and I’m surprised at the number of people who’ve come up to me since and told me how much they admire my courage. Then there’s Alby and the Cat. That was written from the heart. My dad was blinded in an industrial accident many years ago and had a beautiful black Labrador as a guide dog for 13 years. Ever since, I’ve wanted to write a story about guide dogs so that people were more informed about what they do, how important they are in society, and what a difference they make in the life of a visually impaired person.

Are you working on a book at the moment? Alby and the Cat: Showbusiness, cover

I spent most of last year writing, with two upcoming books being released in April/May: Puzzle Palace, the third in my Quizzical series, and Alby and the Cat: Showbusiness, the second of my books about Alby the guide dog.

Do you have any advice for young writers?

Keep writing, about anything and everything.  Enter competitions, and subscribe to groups such as the Fellowship of Australian Writers or the NSW Writers’ Centre, both of which have writing competitions aimed at all age groups. Last, but definitely not least, don’t give up and never be afraid to dream, because dreams do come true – I am the perfect example of that!

You can find out more about Leanne Davidson and her books at her website, www.quizzicalbook.com.

Posted in authors, illustrator, teachers' resources

Palmyra Primary Students Meet Narelle Oliver

Children from Palmyra Primary School in Western Australia recently visited the Fremantle Children’s Literature Centre, where they attended a workshop with author-illustrator, Narelle Oliver.

The students were enthusiastic about Narelle Oliver and her books, and wrote in to Alphabet Soup to tell us about the visit. We are pleased to share three of their letters with you!

A letter from Bridie, 8, Palmyra Primary School, WA
A letter from Charli, 8, Palmyra Primary School, WA
A letter from Bellinda, 9, Palmyra Primary School, WA

Thanks for writing in to tell us about your visit, Bridie, Charli and Bellinda. We’re glad to hear that you love Narelle Oliver’s books – perhaps one day you will be writing and illustrating your own books!

Rebecca (Editor, Alphabet Soup)