Our youngest Pen and Inker, eight-year-old Victoria Kroll did a wonderful interview with Richard Peck by telephone after meeting him at the 2013 SCBWI Summer Conference. Her mom helped her. The original interview was published in January, 2014. We are reprinting it In Memoriam. All of us at Pen and Ink revered Richard Peck's work. He will be sorely missed.
In 2018 Hilde Garcia's class read his trilogy featuring Mrs. Dowdle, (A Season of Gifts, A long Way From Chicago, and Way Down Yonder.) They all wrote thank you notes to Mr. Peck, dated the day he died. Hilde will be doing a post featuring the notes.
In the meantime, here is the original conversation with Mr. Peck.
by Victoria Krol and Hilde Garcia
Pen and Ink met
Richard Peck at the 2013 SCBWI Summer Conference. Hilde asked if she and
Victoria could interview him for the blog. He said yes. It took some
time and doing, but we finally connected.
Scene 1- The Call
Hilde: (
The number on the screen is a NYC number I don’t recognize.) Hello?
Richard Peck: Is this Hilde Garcia?
Hilde: Yes.
Richard Peck:
This is Richard Peck. (My heart skips a beat. My hairdresser waits
patiently, blow dryer in hand.) Is this a good time for an interview?
Hilde: Umm, well, (I sound so dopey), I'm getting my hair styled for a party. Could we possibly do it in 30 minutes?
Richard Peck: (
chuckle) Yes of course. You can call me.
Hilde: I know I said I would drop whatever I was doing to be at your disposal, but I don’t think I can drop the hair dryer.
Richard Peck: (
chuckle) No, I don’t think you should.
Scene 2- The Introduction
One
very excited eight-year-old, pen and pencil in hand, was waiting for me
to run in through the door, with perfect hair, no doubt.
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I am ready
mom. |
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Me too. |
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(I am about to interview THE Richard Peck, author of more than 30 incredible novels. I am most certainly not ready.)
We run to the garage and set up our call. We dial.
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Hello. |
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Good evening,
Mr. Peck. We are ready and the hair dryer is safely put away.
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That’s good. |
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Hi Mr. Peck,
remember me? We met and I was wearing my Hello Kitty earrings. |
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Yes I do. Hello Victoria. |
(To me, she mouths: “He remembered me!")
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To Mr. Peck: May I ask my first
question? |
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Yes, you may. |
Scene 3- The
interview
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Why do you use
a typewriter to write your stories and not a computer? |
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I use a
typewriter because I have never lost a young reader to a typewriter, but I have
lost too many to computers,
games and texting. |
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My teacher
says that we have to rewrite our stories to make them better. How do you revise your stories, because there are
no mistakes in them at all? |
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I write each
page six times because I don’t get it right the first 5 times. Then when I get it right, I take out 20 more words because I
wasn’t confident initially with the words I chose. Then I go to the
next page. |
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Why did you
decide to become a writer? |
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I was a
teacher but I couldn’t find things for my students to read that had any worth. |
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Well, that
answers the question of what other jobs have you done. |
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Yes, it does.
My students didn’t know it was stuff I had written. And eventually, I had to stop teaching because I needed the time
to write. |
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I
had a
teacher in high school for advanced English Literature, Mr. Harrell, who
did
the same. He would write poems, essays, and short stories, and then
have us analyze them for
daily assignments or exams. I never realized he was writing these
original pieces of literature. I simply thought they were from some
famous writer I hadn't studied yet. I think I figured
out it was Mr. Harrell a couple of
years after I graduated. I was in a college literature class and it
suddenly dawned on me that none of those pieces were actually published.
Thank you, Mr Harrell. |
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In The Secrets of Sea, you made the
mouse, Louise, and the girl, Camilla, friends, and then their lives took a lot of crazy
turns. Why? |
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Louise and
Camilla. Well I created the story with three sisters. The older sister was
bossy. The youngest was the rebel.
And then Louise was the communicator even with human beings.
I often use middle children in my
stories because they are good communicators. And taking the story through many turns is what makes it
compelling. |
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|
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So in essence
the middle child or mouse becomes your reliable source of information.
|
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Yes. |
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Mrs. Dowdel (from A Season of Gifts, A Long
Way Down from Chicago, and The Year Down Yonder) is a completely unique character. |
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Yes, she is
unparalleled and works her way into your soul the more you read of her in each
of those books. |
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Is she
inspired by someone you know? |
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She is
inspired by all the old ladies in my house. I had a grandmother that was six
feet tall with a crown of snow-white
hair, that lived in that house and in that town. My dad told me the story so in a way, these stories are his, and I felt they
had more poetry than my own, so I wrote them. I will
share with you something serious, too. Mrs.
Dowdel loved her grand-kids, where my own grandmother
didn’t. |
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WOW. |
(This
was whispered to me, and Mr. Peck obviously couldn’t see Victoria’s face, which was both excited and sad.)
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I love the
chapter in A Long Way from Chicago
entitled “Shotgun Cheatham.” Why did you
decide to have the cat jump out of the
coffin? |
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Mom, why
wouldn’t you? That was the funniest
chapter I have ever read. A cat jumping
out of a coffin, but everyone
thinking the dead person was still alive. |
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(chuckle) Well, the cat in the coffin
was from a story I heard as a child. The
idea intrigued me and stayed with me
throughout until I finally wrote it down.
And here’s
a little something about Mrs. Dowdel.
She is a free thinker. She
doesn’t care what other people
do or other people think. She decides
what’s right.
|
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I
think she’s
a great example of what our current generation lacks, this moral
compass, which guides each and every individual. Everything about
today’s world is about mass mentality and conglomeration. Free thinking
is a lost art. |
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Yes it is. |
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Mr. Peck, have
you read The Harry Potter
series? |
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I haven’t read
all of it. I don’t really like fantasy
and witches and all of that business.
But it wouldn’t be bad
to be J. K. Rowling. (Another chuckle). Not every character is for every child.
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Which is why
we need so many writers, to write for each child. |
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So true.
|
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Our
principal’s book club chose to read A
Season of Gifts. It was amazing to see how many children -- and in some cases, very young
children -- identified themselves with Mrs. Dowdel and Bobby and how many of them understood very
well the scene in which Bobby is bullied into the privy. It seems
a universal feeling. |
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Principal Atikian's Book Club - Morning Meeting |
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Bullies are
mean. Mr. Peck, did you write your
stories about your time in school and places you lived in or visited? |
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I am very fond
of geography and when I grew up, classrooms had maps. |
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Imagine
that! Well, I am happy to say that my
classroom has one map. |
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Good. I’ve never written a story about a place I
haven’t visited. I tried once, but it didn’t work. My newest
book is set in the gardens of Buckingham Palace. It took me a long time to get into the gardens because they weren’t public
until recently, but once I visited them,
I could write the story. It wasn’t enough to look at photos for me. I had to be there.
Now, the
three books that feature Mrs. Dowdel were about my father’s home and I did
visit that house. On
the Wings of Heroes and Dreamland
Lake are about my hometown and my experiences, though I doubt you can find those books in print anymore.
|
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Well, I'll
just have to pay a visit to Amazon
or eBay and see what they can turn
up for me. |
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Do you have a
favorite character that another author wrote? |
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Yes of course,
because I am a writer. My teacher in the
4th grade gave me a book about a boy named Huck Finn, and then I knew what I wanted to do for
the rest of my life. |
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I love that
story too! I also love Phyllis and Ruth
Ann in A Season of Gifts. What inspired you to make the sisters so different? |
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Yes, they are
quite opposite aren’t they? |
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Here’s another
story about a middle child. The brother
is very protective and that I find
interesting. Having three siblings in my stories always
fascinates me even though that wasn’t the
case for me, as it was only my sister and I, and I was the oldest.
Also, in A Season of Gifts, these kids are
PKs- Preachers' Kids- and where ever they live, they are watched and judged for everything
they do. Ruth Ann ends up becoming a little Mrs. Dowdel. This is an example of how your characters become
living people and will do and say things that don’t seem to come from you, the author.
|
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Mr. Peck, I am
a writer too. And I was wondering if you
had any advice for me? |
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Yes.
Learn five new words a day. Every book has a new vocabulary. You want
to use words to create new worlds. And you need more words than you
and your
friends use every day. If you are going to be a writer, you need to
collect words.
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I will do
that, I promise. I do have one more
burning question. |
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Yes? |
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Well, you
spelled Ruth Ann with an E at the end of Anne.
My middle name is Anne with an E like the
main character Anne in Anne of Green Gables. Well, with or
without an E, she’s a great character and you are a great writer. I love your stories, all of them that I’ve read so far.
|
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Thank you,
Victoria. |
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Mr. Peck, it
was an honor to have your book selected by our Principal for her book
club and
to have so many children
inspired by Mrs. Dowdel. Many of the students in our club drew their own
version of the cover for A Season of Gifts and I promise
to send you photos of our bulletin board. |
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That would be
wonderful. |
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I hope to see
you at the next SCBWI conference in LA next summer, Mr. Peck. |
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Look forward
to it. |
We hang up the phone.
Scene 4- The Aftermath
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Hoo Boy. |
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Indeed. |
My daughter and I sat in euphoria in our garage
studio, trying to linger in the glow of the interview, letting the words
fall on our memory.
We were on our way to a holiday party for the teachers at our school, and couldn’t help bouncing on our way there.
There
are magical moments in life, moments you know you will not forget. I
remember turning 19 and waking up in Paris. I remember holding my
children the day they were born. As a child, I remember the day I won
the school’s spelling bee at age 8.
And for my
daughter, I think this become her first of what I hope will be many
magical moments, the evening she interviewed Richard Peck. I have to
say, I was quite impressed with her poise, her calm, her questions. She
is a greater woman at 8 than I could ever have been, even now in my
40’s.
I will add this magical moment to my collection and she will use it to start hers.
Thank you, Mr. Peck.
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