Saturday, February 19, 2011

Pringle on Spokane's KYRS

She recently dropped into the KYRS studio and read a few stories and talked with the host of Open Poetry, about writing, the Midwest, and more.

Spokane listeners can tune in to 92.3 or 89.9 FM on March 6, 5:30-6:30 P.M. 

Monday, January 10, 2011

2011 Ghost Story Contest: Scare the Dickens Out of Us, $1000 to Winner


Logo for Scare The Dickens Out of Ghost Story Contest
The 2011 Edition of the Scare the Dickens Out of Us Fiction Contest runs between July 1, 2011 and October 1st, 20011.
Contest has closed for 2011. Results will be announced before December 2011.
Results Announced on library webpage. 








Length Limit: 5,000 words
Entry Fee: $20 (used to benefit the Clark Library in Lockhart, Texas
For an entry form, Junior Division Information, or a list of previous winners, see www.clarklibraryfriends.com

Scare the Dickens 2012 deadlines will likely be posted in early 2012.




Organized and held by The Friends of the Dr. Eugene Clark Library, to promote reading, writing, and the love of the page.

Friday, December 10, 2010

January 2011: Spokane's Beacon Hill Reading Series

She will read selected stories as part of the January 2011 installment of Spokane's The Beacon Hill Reading Series

Poets Tod Marshall and Tom Gribble will also read.

WHERE: Spokane Community College Library (Building 16, Second Floor), 1810 North Greene Street                 Spokane, WA                

WHEN: Wednesday, January 26th, 6:30-7:30 P.M.

(Copies of The Floating Order will be available to purchase: $15, cash or check.)

Thursday, August 5, 2010

Toad Flower, A Garden Fairy Tale

Photograph of toad in plant by Erin Pringle-Toungate
Toadflower, taken by Erin Pringle-Toungate 2010

The story of toadflower is very long so I cannot fit it all here, but I will tell you it involves a girl, a hat, a piece of bread with the crusts cut off, and a far away forest made of one tree with two limbs and three autumn leaves that still haven't fallen off after all this time.

Saturday, July 3, 2010

From The Child's Shelf: Seven Top Children's Books, from Sendak to Baum


Last night she noticed that the sign on the Ozona bank announcing that July is Early Childhood Literacy Month. She thought this was a national event until she googled it and learned that November is the national month, but San Marcos, TX has decided that July is more fitting for this city. (Skip to the end of this post if you want more information about where to donate books in July in San Marcos.)

Since she's procrastinating working on a story that she has worked on for several days and more hours, and she's at yet another decision-making place (and without clear answer), she is procrastinating productively. Therefore, here is her list of favorite books (and unfavorite books) to give, read (or not give) to children between 0 and 6:
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1. Maurice Sendak's Nutshell Library

Cover Nutshell Library by Maurice SendakShe still has the Nutshell Library that her mother read to her. Her favorite book out of the collection is Pierre. She thinks of him often. Pierre doesn't care about anything, which becomes problematic when a lion asks if Pierre wouldn't mind being eaten. She thinks she especially liked the books because they were her size--no larger than an adult's palm. Since then, she has preferred small books and would be thrilled with a palm-sized edition of As I Lay Dying. Her least favorite book is the alphabet one called Alligators All Around. She will momentarily discuss her thoughts on talking animals.

Cover Alexander and the Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Day by Judith Viorst
2. Alexander and the Terrible, No Good, Very Bad Day by Judith Viorst

She still has her copy of this, too: a faded hardback discarded from the town library. She wonders why it was discarded. She tried to give her personal copy to children who would like it, which means any child she has met, but she likes the book too much to part from it. She read and reads this on particularly bad days, and even if she doesn't open it, she often hears Alexander saying that he wishes he could move to Australia. She is an escapist like Alexander, wanting to move far away since it seems life would just be a bit better in the faraway. There's a sequel to this book, but she has never read it. She assumes Alexander is older in the sequel, and she doesn't like it when characters grow up.

She especially didn't like characters growing older than her, which happened in the Anne of Green Gables books. In book 1, Anne was Erin's age. By book 8 (and the length of the summer it took to read to book 8), Anne's children were Erin's age at the time, and she found that especially irksome--because she'd lost Anne as a friend and comrade.

Cover Frog and Toad by Arnold Lobel
3. Frog and Toad books by Arnold Lobel

She doesn't have any of these books, but she doesn't remember ever owning a copy. Checked all of them out of the library when she was a kid. She remembers not liking Frog so well because he was sort of a know-it-all, or maybe it was that he was always getting Toad out of predicaments. She liked Toad. They're very good friends, like Mole and Troll (equally recommended).
Cover Amelia Bedelia Goes Back to School by Herman Parish




4. Amelia Bedelia books

She very much enjoyed Amelia Bedelia. Amelia, a maid, always takes things literally and so makes hilarious mistakes. For example, when she is supposed to plant bulbs, she plants lightbulbs. The reason a child would especially like Amelia is because she, like a child, is always being told what to do and then getting in trouble for not behaving as she should. Children will both identify with Amelia and feel protective of her (once they learn the pattern of Amelia's faulty reasoning or language errors).



Cover of The Velveteen Rabbit
5. The Velveteen Rabbit --whichever illustrated version the child chooses (or a non-illustrated edition if such a book exists)

This is, by far, one of her favorite fairy tales because she simultaneously does and does not like it and spend more time than you would think trying to figure out why. Deciding which illustrated version to read or buy a child seems very important because if the reader does not like the illustrations, the story may be shot. In searching for book covers of this, she recognized several versions. It would be nice if some publisher made a box set of, say, five different illustrators of this story. She has never seen such a thing done. Also, one must be careful with this book because it's the kind of story that will be changed or made "nicer".

For some reason, she remembers reading one in which the boy wasn't sick. The boy must be sick. If he doesn't get sick, then the story's shot because the velveteen rabbit's feelings of loss and abandonment come from the boy being sick. If the boy is merely cleaning out his closet, then it might as well be any boy and any rabbit or Toy Story III (which is wonderful, by the way).

Jerry Pinkney hasn't yet illustrated The Velveteen Rabbit, but if he ever does, then that would be the version she would recommend. Anything Pinkney illustrates is excellent. As a child, she didn't read any stories illustrated by Pinkney; she only discovered him a few years ago, but he's always who she looks for now when in the children's section of a bookstore or library.

Brown Bear, Brown Bear, What do you See?
Cover of Brown Bear, Brown Bear, What do you See? by Eric Carle

She did not like this book. Her kindergarten teacher read it all the time. She thinks she had read the book (or had it read to her) before the days of kindergarten, so it became pretty hellish every time the class got in a circle and had to listen to it.

Also, she despised sitting "Indian-style" so having to do this and listen to this book was pretty terrible (which must be why it was especially good to have the Alexander book). She still doesn't understand the practice of making children sit that way because, really, children are small and don't take up that much room. She was always very happy when, in second-grade, there were times the class didn't have to sit like that.

This book is best for children who are a long way from reading on their own. Good to read to a one-year old because the text is simple and has call-and-response rhythms.

She had a similar relationship with The Very Hungry Caterpillar, but the caterpillar book may have been useful since she still thinks of it when she sees butterflies. She thinks it was a bit confusing or perhaps irritating because the caterpillars she saw in real life were fuzzy and brown, not green and hairless. She can't remember if the brown bear talks--she thinks he does. He sees this, he sees that. She has never liked talking animals. Frog and Toad are exceptions to this rule since they behave like humans. If the animal isn't wearing a coat and hat, then it shouldn't talk. That is how she thought and thinks about it.

Later notes: She enjoyed Bumble-ardy by Maurice Sendak, which has talking animals, so talking animals must not be what her major malfunction is.  Maybe children's literature is drowned with talking animals, many of whom aren't the brightest or in the most interesting of storylines.

Also, this little nugget about Brown Bear, Brown Bear.  Evidently, the book "was banned in January 2010 by the Texas Board of Education because the author has the same name as an obscure Marxist theorist, and no one bothered to check if they were actually the same person" (Huffington Post)

Cover of Morris the Moose by Bernard Wiseman
6. Morris the Moose books


In one of the books he eats gum balls. She remembers liking him. She remembers her mother reading this to her, so this was the pre-literate stage since, once literacy was established, she jumped to the romance books. A Vote for Love, a Sweet Dreams Romance, was the first long book she read, which was in first grade. The librarian, before checking it out, told her there weren't any pictures in it. The librarian didn't want her to check it out. Consequently, she read the entire Sweet Dreams series within a few years and never wanted to read "a kid's book" again. This may have negatively influenced her perspective on the world; if so, it gives her a strange thrill to blame this on a librarian, since the reverse should probably be true.

Cover of The Patchwork Girl of Oz by L. Frank Baum
7. The Patchwork Girl of Oz


This was one of the nightly books her mom read aloud, so this may not count as an Early Literacy book or not, but she was under six when her mother read it. She doesn't remember why she liked it or even the book's plot, except that someone finds the Patchwork Girl. She's living alone or maybe with someone who made her. She's a maid or servant. Living in a rather isolated place.

She liked her a lot, though--vice and versa.

She especially liked this and the other editions of the Oz books her mother had because they were old hardbacks and it was really wonderful when an illustration appeared because it was beautiful and took up a whole page, and the illustrated pages were always glossy, and so those seemed more important than the other pages, even the ones that might have a black-and-white illustration amidst the text. She can't remember if this book has any of those nice glossy pages.
________________________________________________________________
She could probably think of three more books to add, like Goodnight, Moon, which is always at the top of people's recommendations, but she never liked that book. Then there's the Corduroy Bear books, which she didn't like enough such that she would now go out of her way to buy one for a child. Same with Clifford the Red Dog. Really, she'd only buy #1 and #2 on this list because those are books to be read again and again and again--the others she'd find at the library.

If you live near or in San Marcos, TX, here is the link to information about July as Early Literacy month, along with a list of the places to donate new or gently used children's books. The catch-phrase is Early Readers Become Leaders. She doesn't know if that's true or important. She doesn't know where we're all going that we need all these leaders. But, if the idea is appealing enough to encourage book donations and reading, then she supposes that's fine. If she had to come up with the catch-phrase, it wouldn't be any better, and it wouldn't fit on a banner, like Early Readers Become Better Writers, Engaged Readers, and Critical Thinkers.

Saturday, June 26, 2010

The Woman Who Helped Author Me: An Interview with My Mother


As I’ve been cleaning out the house and packing up for my husband’s and my move to Spokane, I ran across the first book I “wrote”, in 1984. It is palm-size, stapled, and page after page of letters, letter after letter--top to bottom.  Mostly Ks because I must have just learned that one. It is the first of several homemade books I made as a child—several of the books my mother “translates”, which she would do in letters she wrote to her mother (she and her mother wrote each other a letter every week). 

I would scrawl, telling mother what the scrawls meant, and she would write the words under the scrawls.  Something similar to when I was learning piano before I began lessons, and she would write the names of the notes beneath them so I could play the sheet music.  Something also similar to when I learned cursive—making her teach me because I didn’t want to wait until second grade, and so for a while, each day that we (my father, my mother, and I) went to the diner for coffee, she would write words in cursive, and I would copy them.  I would get in trouble in first grade for writing in cursive on my spelling test because I wasn’t following directions, and I shouldn’t have known how to write like that yet.

She read to me most every night before bed.  Grandpa in Oz, The Scarecrow of Oz, The Patchwork Girl of Oz, Ozma of Oz, Charlotte's Web, The Trumpet of the Swan, Ramona the Pest, book after book from the library.  Mole and Troll, Frog and Toad, any book by Maurice Sendak.  On and on, books and books.  And she would always make the voices. (I always liked how, before she was done reading a page, she'd slip her hand beneath it ready to turn it so she wouldn't miss a beat.)

During my mother’s visit, we take time during our coffee so that I can interview her.  I get the idea mainly because I'm currently chatting online at Goodreads, and I can never think of what to say in online chats--how to get them started, how to make them interesting for readers, and it had occurred to me that my mother would be here during one of the two weeks I'm chatting online, and so I thought as part of the chat, she could answer reader questions.  And so, although no one has yet asked her a question, I decided to write up some questions myself, quickly realizing that I didn't know any of the answers.  

A brief bio: 
My mother was born in 1939 and grew up in Indiana. She will turn seventy-one next month.  She has her college and Masters degrees in Elementary Education and has taught in elementary schools for "thirty-plus years". Also, she likes to read, which is the main subject of this interview since I’m a writer, and it seems I should try to keep this blog as thematically focused as possible.

We are in San Marcos, Texas, sitting outside the coffee shop where I penned most of The Floating Order.  It is hot, but my mother says no to my offer of going inside.  She says she has been waiting for this kind of weather for a long time.  My mother says I have to wait for her to finish copying a scripture into her notebook before we can begin (in July, she is going to Liberia to teach in a literacy program; she asked members of her church to tell her their favorite scriptures so that she can read over them each day while she is gone).  One thing then the next, that’s my mother.

What is your earliest memory of your mother reading to you?
I remember us all sitting on the sofa together.  Not just me—my sister and my brother.  And I think she was reading us The Honeybunch classics.  Every night she would read us a part of that book.  I was four or five.  It’s interesting that you didn’t ask if my father read to me—he didn’t.  I never had a man read to me.

Did your parents read?
Yes!  They took a book to bed with them to read every night.  Avid readers, avid readers.

I remember your mom reading mainly thick, hardback mysteries.  Was that what she read when you were a kid? 
I don’t know.  Sometimes she’d read a book more than once, but when she got older, old as me, she’d make lists so she wouldn’t read a book more than once.  I know she read Harry Truman’s wife or daughter, I remember her reading those books.  Mother wasn’t a jabberbox, she didn’t tell you everything, so I don’t remember what she read.  She was very reserved.  She didn’t say things like, I really enjoyed that book.  We didn’t have, for example, book discussions around the supper table.


I know your father wrote letters to your mother during WWII.  Did your mother have you include notes in your letters to him?
Well, there was a special V-mail.  I don’t know what it stood for.  They took a picture of them [the letters], and you got a negative of it, and it had been reduced in size.  But, yes, we wrote to Dad.  I don’t know if it was one letter included in Mother’s or if she’d just write what we said.  But he would respond to what we had said in her letter.  I was five or six.

When did you learn to read?  What did you learn to read on?
The Dick and Jane series.  I don’t remember using phonics to learn to read.  We learned it in first grade because I was six.  I remember the big book the teacher had.  I remember her telling us the difference between how and now.  The h and the n.  That’s all I remember her telling us. I don’t remember if we brought our books home to practice on.  That’s still during WWII, you know.  There were like thirty kids to a classroom.  And that was all the way through grade school—those poor teachers!

What excited you more—learning to read or learning to write?
Photograph of Carol Ryan Pringle as a child in Evansville, Indiana 1940s
I don’t remember learning to write.  You’re assuming I was excited to learn to read.  It was just part of what you learned.  I remember in second grade being bored.  Because everyone read together, and the slow readers took longer.  I know I sighed.  First grade you learned to read, second grade you learned to tell time, third grade you learned cursive.  You knew what you would learn.  No, fourth grade we learned cursive.  I was impressed by that.  But we had ink pots.  You couldn’t control the ink.  Big blobs.  That was before ball-point pens were invented, apparently.

Did your elementary school teachers read aloud to you?
Oh. . .  yes.  I especially remember fifth grade because she was so good at read-aloud stories.  To this day, I still wonder what one of the books was.  One of the characters had a lisp and she would read it that way.

Were the books in the boxes in Grandmother’s attics ones that you read?  Like the Bobsy Twins?  Where did she buy them?  Was there a bookstore near your house?
No bookstores, no.  I think Grandma ordered the books, but I don’t know where she ordered them from.  I know she ordered The Child’s Book of Knowledge.  And that’s where I felt so badly because I always thought everyone else was more prepared than we were. I couldn’t go to The Child’s Book of Knowledge to make any report because it didn’t have in it what I thought was in the reports by the other children. 

It seems like on radio—this was before TV days—people read stories to you.  You could buy records.  Margaret O’Brien—that’s where I heard “The Bremen Town musicians”.  On a ’78 [record].  We must have bought records.  I remember the day we bought a record player because Dad said we were going in to town to see a movie, but we went to get a record player, and I was so mad because I wanted to see the movie. 

And the movies, they had—I don’t know what kind of movies you’d call  them—in the summer time, every week you could go to the movie and it was a classic book on film, and I thought that was wonderful.  We were being better educated than I realized.  They were entertaining, I don’t know if we realized they were classics.  Like Tom Sawyer, I’m sure there were others, but I can’t remember the titles.

What did you like about the city library where you went as a child?  Could you walk to it, or was it a special trip by car?
Yeah, we could walk to it, about six blocks.  It was a regular occasion.  You never had your books overdue, that was a no-no.  So every two weeks, and it was special to be with mother.  It wasn’t a place where you could have conversation—not like today’s libraries.  You were always told to shhh, be quiet. 

I remember the librarians being mean, except one, which wasn’t conducive to wanting to go to the library.  They had these things you could look through and you could see a picture from two sides.  There was a slide.  Before view masters came.  That was an extra perk of going to the library, what you’d do while Mother looked for her books.  There weren’t many books in the children’s section of the library.

Did you like reading out loud when you were in elementary school?
Yes, because there was a time—this was in fifth grade, this is why I loved fifth grade—opportunities just came for us.  We read to the lower grades.  I owned probably three books.  My favorite book I took and read.  I knew which ones were my sisters—hers were the Raggedy Ann stories.  My brother won all kinds of books in a drawing contest, and I thought that was wonderful, like he’d hit the jackpot. The books just kept coming.  We went to the library every week, and I really wasn’t that much of a reader.  I don’t know if it was because I couldn’t see so well [Mom got glasses when she was three].  There was a summer reading program.  If you read the book then gave librarian book reports, we got to go to Lincoln City.

What fairy tale did you like the most and why?
I liked “Rapunzel” because she had long hair and I never did.  I was tender-headed.  It hurt to have it brushed or combed.  Did I like “Cinderella”?  “Snow White”.  Definitely I liked “Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs”.  “Three Billy Goats Gruff”.  That fascinated me—that was almost like birth order.  I was the middle child.  It made me feel safe because the oldest goat goes first and so I knew the ogre wouldn’t get me because I knew he was there.  And “Little Red Riding Hood”, that was a prominent one.  I remember reading it over and over.  And see, I didn’t mind the different versions—especially the ones that Grandma was safe, where the hunter came and saved everybody. Oh, and “Three Little Pigs”. I liked that one.  I liked the building process, the different ways they built the houses.  They were clever.  The ways they thought to outwit the bad guy.  They used their head to solve problems.  That still appeals to me.

Were you in spelling bees?
Yes, fifth grade.  Did I win? No.  You know what word I missed?  Weird.  I spelled it w-i-e-r-d, and I never misspelled it again in my life. 

My teacher made everyone feel like they were smarter than all get-out, made them all feel special.  We got new desks that year, they were blondish wood, and you could raise the lids.  She went on all year about how well we needed to treat these desks, and we’d have special days to wax the desks, and she made us feel that way too, special.

How did you find books to read to your third-grade students?
Well, Scholastic Books always had these things you could send home and they’d buy them.  We had a library at school—not a very extensive one.  I had taken the course in Children’s Literature in undergraduate school so I knew what quality books to read to them.  For me, it was more the authors.  Like E.B. White, Beverly Clearly—still to this day.  C.W. Anderson who wrote Blaze books, they’re still around to this day.  I don’t know if other teachers, probably other teachers mentioned books they thought were good, or the special reading teachers would mention them.

One of Mom's teacher photos
What were your favorite books to teach as a teacher and why?
I didn’t teach them. I just read them to them.  I always thought, whatever reading series we were reading from. . . I thought there were some good stories in them but all the questions in them messed up the literary. . . it didn’t create a desire to read—all the questions we had to from the teacher’s manual.  I know why we had to ask them, but it didn’t create a love for reading any more than AR [Accelerated Reader] does, but I don’t think that was ever the aim.  Reading comprehension was.

I know you and your class wrote E.B. White one year as part of your Charlotte’s Web unit.  How did your students respond to receiving a reply, and what made you think to write him?
We had just read Charlotte’s Web—I read it every year except the last page, I couldn’t read that without crying so I’d hand that over for someone else to read it to them.  We’d dress up like Charlotte or Wilbur.  I don’t know how we decided to write him. I just wrote letters to people. I didn’t expect a reply.  They were excited that he wrote back.  I thought it was wonderful, that it was teaching them that authors were real people and did ordinary things like write back when people wrote to them.

Do you think there’s a certain age when parents should start reading to their children?
Yes.  Probably six or seven months old so they can hear the rhythm of the language.  And that’s where language develops.  This produces imagination, hearing the beauty of the language.  Even the rhyming of it.  That all leads up to good reading skills—it’s a predictor of later-reading skills, their ability to handle the language as they hear it.

Do you think a children’s book has to have a happy ending?
No, but I think it needs to teach something, and I think it needs to relate to something in their lives or their imaginations.

What elements do you think make a good children’s book?
Conversation among the characters, an interesting setting, universal things that happen to children like in Where the Wild Things Are where Max gets sent to his room without any supper because he has been bad.  A plot that makes them think how the characters will solve the problem.

What do you think a student gains from writing a book report that he or she doesn’t gain from reading programs like Accelerated Reader that have students answer multiple-choice questions?
I don’t know.  Book report is almost a dirty word.  It’s painful for them.  Ideally, it would make them think about what appealed to them in the story and how the character worked through whatever the problem was.  –Whereas, the AR is really superficial, low-brain thinking. It’s not an evaluation of anything, it’s just what they remember from the facts they read.  You don’t have to have any empathy for the characters to read an AR book.  From the child’s perspective, they’re probably only doing it so they can meet the requirement and go to a party at the end of the quarter—and eat pizza or popcorn or watch a movie.  That’s how AR is set up, that’s the big reward. 

On the other hand, the kids who didn’t make the goal, they have to go to some other room while everyone else goes to the party, which is almost a punishment.  There are realistic goals. It’s not that the goals were too high, but that will never teach them to enjoy reading.  By fifth grade, it’s almost impossible to administer the program honestly and motivationally.  They just seem to lose interest, although there are some good books up there, but there must be another way to motivate them to read those good books.  Maybe they are all worn out from being pushed every year previously.  It [the program] starts in kindergarten.

What do you think causes children not to like to read?
It’s not modeled for them at home.  They probably don’t see the connection between the books and their lives, and feeling forced to read when they don’t want to rather than inspired to read. I think it’s who comes into their lives at a crucial point to make that happen.

[She then relates a story about a child who grew significantly in his reading from kindergarten to second-grade, how exciting it was watching him grow—how she thinks he’ll always be a reader now.  Her face is bright as she tells the story, her hands gesturing, talking through a smile]

Why do you think children make fun of children who like to read? 
I was just thinking that what is valued in our culture is sports, and so they spend their lives practicing sports at the expense of spending time reading.  Maybe it’s a stereotype of especially boys being nerds if they read. I haven’t heard other kids put down kids for not reading, but there’s a lot adults don’t hear of what kids are saying to each other.  I don’t know if it’s a popularity thing or not.  I’ll stop there.

Photograph of Carol Pringle teaching literacy in Liberia, Africa 2010
Mom teaching in Liberia, July 2010
In thinking about the thirty years you’ve been in elementary school education as an educator, have you noticed any changes in children as readers?
I don’t know the answer to that, but there’s a lot more distractions today in a child’s life, starting with TV that could pull them away from loving to read.  We’re not talking about skills here, just the loving to read. 

On the other hand, children’s literature has exploded, so I think more children own books, so I don’t think we have a poverty of books in the home that I know of.

I think we know more about children and child’s development that we know more about what books can match to age.  I’m a little bit bothered by videos of children’s books.  I don’t know if it leads them to read books or stunts their imagination that reading the book would give them.  We know more about dyslexia and things like that to know how to teach.

 It doesn’t matter if you’re a good reader if you don’t read.

I’ve often heard you complain about bathroom humor in children’s books—what other aspects of content in children’s books do you not welcome?
Have I?  That’s just where they are developmentally, I’m sure.  It’s just one of those repressed things society makes jokes about.

Sometimes when I’d be reading in third-grade, and there’d be content about beer parties and things like.  Not that they don’t know about them.  I just think society puts a bunch of stuff on children that doesn’t allow them to be children for very long.  Far more from TV than books.  And swearing.  I’m talking elementary-level.  I just don’t think it’s appropriate.  I remember even in eighth-grade, we could choose our own books to read.  I think we had it in our home, and that’s why I chose it: Showboat, and I came to the word “damn”.  I was shocked that it was there and then felt so guilty.  Does my teacher know this word is in this book?  I felt assaulted by the book, and it’s not that I hadn’t heard swearing in my life—Dad swore all the time.  So, I’m saying, beer parties in third-grade books?

I realized one positive aspect of the AR program is that children recommend books to each other.  I see the pattern of what books are read and what are not.  Like those Boxcar books are read a lot and the Bill Wallace books. 

Why do you think reading is important?  Do you think reading is less or more important as an adult, or what exactly do you think?
I believe reading is just as, if no more so, important as an adult.  To be challenged and aware about life.   There’s just so much more to learn, and it’s usually by reading.  It’s like people are back to living in the here-and-now.  What’s the conversation at a coffee shop?  It’s the weather, last night’s news, news around town, and politics, rather than what’s the latest book you’ve read, how can we improve our community more by this or that.  People are just tired and stressed these days, but they don’t look to a book to relieve any of that.  I hate to generalize.  I can think of others who are teaching their children, taking them to the library, teaching them how to be socially-integrated, but think how much time is spent on a cell phone.  That is not an intellectual hobby.  I think books connect people to each other, especially when you’re reading the same thing.  There are book clubs. 

I think reading is important as an adult because you’re still looking for the truth, the truth of life, and I think books can do that.  Even when we don’t know, when we have questions our mind are working on, and when we see that in print, it’s a huge relief, like “Oh, yeah!” There it is, the solution right there on the page.  It helps you know about your inner world.

What were the last four books you read?
Cover of Three Cups of Tea by Greg MortensonThree Cups of Tea—that was a non-fiction about a guy who was a mountain-climber originally and was trying for the top of K2, and so at the point he was supposed to go to the summit the next day, someone in the group got sick, and he chose to take them back to base camp, so he missed his chance to get to the top.  However, he had a heart for the poor and the children of India, Afghanistan, especially those, and so he said to these people, When I come back from America, I’m going to build you schools for children, and he had no idea how, how he’d fund it or anything.    


I’ve been reading this collection of short stories, Hemingway and Chehkov and Fitzgerald and . . .  [Shirley Jackson, I remind her, as she told me earlier that she had read "The Lottery".  She says, Will they know who I'm talking about?  Yes, I say.  Okay, she says,  And Jackson.]

Over your life, who have your favorite writers been?  I already know Maeve Binchy and you liked Erma Bombeck.
Those [Bombeck’s books] were light-hearted.  Eugenia Price.  A woman who wrote Amish books.  I want to say Matthews but I don’t think that’s right.  Catherine Cookson.  My authors are dying off, you know.  Who was that who wrote The Thorn Birds?  That must mean I like female authors.  It never occurred to me.  I guess I do, I do.  That’s interesting.  Oh, the one that wrote about the Episcopal priest, a whole series.  I read that last summer.  I can see where they were in the library.   

Do you read books that people recommend to you?
Cover of The House at Sugar Beach by Helene CooperNobody recommends any to me.  [I remind her that I recommended Carol Shields to her, that she then read all Shields’ books.  Oh, yes, she says.] Mother and I had pretty similar taste.  Robin Cook.  Yeah, I do.  I ordered a lot of Liberian books [she’s going to Liberia in July]. Sirleaf, this woman [writer].  Sugar Beach, how it was during the war when the rebels took over.  I read a lot of those Liberian war stories.


Oh, and I read a lot of religious books, too, you know.  Philip Yancey.  And then Beuchner.  Those are my favorite Christian authors.  I don’t do well with C.S. Lewis.  He’s beyond me.

Has your mother’s side of the family always sent books to each other after they read them—why do you think that started?
I remember it was either a birthday or Christmas, I was very disappointed as a child that my Grandfather gave me the book Winnie the Pooh.  I wasn’t interested in it.  I didn’t think it was a good present. I don’t know what I wanted.


I have sent books to my aunt that I thought she would like, like Beverly Cleary’s autobiography because it was in the era my aunt grew up in.

So, how did it start?  I don’t know.  Did you know your great-grandmother was a teacher?  I don’t know if she was a reader or not.

It just started because people shared everything, and we were far enough away from each other that if we wanted to share, you either mentioned it so they’d get it at their library, or you sent the actual book, but that wasn’t until adulthood.

You know your great-aunt was a librarian.

I know you have a wish-list, but I never check it.  What books are on it right now?
Mostly the Christian books.  Nouwen. I have a lot of his books on there.  After we went to North Carolina and all those places, I  think I have more Eugenia Price on there.  [We had gone to Eugenia Price’s living and burial place, Saint Simon’s Island.] One book by someone about his aunt’s mental illness. He was being interviewed on NPR about his book, and it hadn’t been published yet so I put that on the list.  I’ll probably get that this year.  About how his aunt was treated—her mental illness—in her day.

I think I remember you reading the ends of books when you were still in the early part—why did you do that and do you still do that?
I just started doing it as an adult because I’d get too anxious about how it was going to end, so I couldn’t even concentrate on what I was reading.  So, I’d check, and then I could be calm and read it to the end.

What book would you say is your favorite book and is that the same as the book you care about most? 
Cover of The Trumpet of the Swan by E.B. WhiteI think it’s Charlotte’s Web.  I know it is.  I still quote from it.  It’s a book I would give to children. I also like his book, The Trumpet of the Swan.  You know he was not originally a children’s  author.  He’s the one I wrote a report on in graduate school.


What was the first book you read to me?


One of the first books was just where you identified objects, a Richard Scarry book.  Here’s the grocery, where’s the squash.  Someone had given it to me for my birthday.  But, "The Three Bears".  Oh, man, we used to go to the library and get four at a time, but that wasn’t one of the first ones I read.  I guess they were fairy tales I read to you.

Why did you let me read whatever I wanted?
I didn’t know that I did.  Well, I would think that if you thought it was good it appealed to you.  Some of the books I got you were discarded.  I remember the one about the girl with red hair and everything was red.  And one where the girl kept changing who she was.  She’d switch who she was.  Someone would say, You’re this, and she’d say, I’m not this, I’m . . .  What stage is it that kids go through that—when they don’t want nicknames.  Five and six year olds want to be exactly who they are. 

I know Dad wasn’t very pleased with my phase of dirty romance novels when I was 13.  What did you think of it?
Well, I read some of them myself. I didn’t think they were dirty romances.  Didn’t someone suggest that it’s good to read those kind of books every now and then?  It’s just kind of a break for your brain to go there.  That’s probably the same thing Cinderella was when you’re a little girl.

Do you have any thoughts about books becoming electronic—books being read on computerish devices?
Like Kindle?  I think it’d be handy on a plane trip.  It’d just be a handy thing, an expensive handy thing.  But, unless it has the feel of holding a book in your hands, I think it loses something—becomes impersonal.  There’s something about turning the pages.  You do have a relationship going on with the book in your hand.  Although I did check out the Kindle to see what it was about, but I thought the price was too high.  Maybe frequent travelers--that’s the very thing they need to do, but I’m a homebody. I didn’t see anyone on the plane having a kindle.  They had real books.  Paper pages.

I think the audio books are also a good thing, travelling as you go.  I’ve put them in the computer so I can listen to them while I’m going about the house.

Anything else that you’d like to add?
I'm pleased that you became a writer, that both you and Jennifer [my sister] became writers.  I’m glad you enjoy reading, though I don’t know if I had anything to do with it.  I think it’s because we introduced you to books early, took you to the library.  You responded to them.  I don’t know what I would have done if you hadn’t.  I remember what you said about being so disappointed in kindergarten because you came expecting to read, and it wasn’t taught until first grade.  I think now you would have learned in kindergarten. 
~~~
At one point I had asked her what her favorite book in the bible was; about an hour after the interview, she exclaims, Psalms!  Psalms is my favorite.
~~~


Read my Christmas 2011 interview with my mother, "Christmas Began at 1104 South Linwood".

Sunday, June 6, 2010

Whitman's Sky

(Image: America's Bard, Walt Whitman)
Her dear friend and former literature professor, Dr. Marilynn Olson is in the news with her astrophysicist husband, Dr. Donald Olson. Dr. Don Olson's team has pieced together the stars that fell into Whitman's poem Years of Meteors.
"In many of his investigations, Olson and his students use the methods of modern astronomy to determine precisely where and when a particular work of art was created or to pinpoint the event that inspired it. For example, Olson analysed Vincent van Gogh's Moonrise, a painting depicting a glowing yellow orb looming behind the silhouette of a rocky outcrop. Olson was able to determine the exact spot in France from which van Gogh viewed the rising moon, as well as . . . "
Continue reading  "Forensic Astronomer Solves Walt Whitman Mystery" at NewScientist.com


Monday, May 10, 2010

Pringle to read at Austin's Five Things


Stiffy Green
Erin will be reading a piece inspired by The Legend of Stiffy Green, a famous bulldog that once belonged to Mr. Heinl, local Terre Haute, Indiana legend (and owner of the former Heinl's Flower Shop).

Five Things takes place Friday, May 14, 2011 at the U.S. Art Authority
510 W. 29th St.

Tuesday, February 9, 2010

"Palestine, IL" in Big Pulp

\
First, the story. Then, the grave.
She loved him, she loved him not. She killed him, she didn't. Before we killed her, she spoke or she didn't speak.

Read the rest of the story "Palestine, IL" by Erin Pringle-Toungate in Big PulpLogo Big Pulp

Sunday, December 20, 2009

Not Normal, IL: "Exposure to the Bizarre Might Make Us Smarter"

Cover of Not Normal, Illinois anthology edited by Michael MartoneStarTribune ran a review by Laura C.J. Owen about Not Normal, Illinois, an anthology edited by Michael Martone. The anthology contains stories by Midwest experimental/non-traditional writers.

In the review, Owen nods to Erin's story "Wednesday Night Reflections, Edited Thursday" as an example of one of the form-playing stories:

"Erin Pringle's 'Wednesday Night Reflections, Edited Thursday' is a series of short sections describing a troubled relationship: The sections are written with such an attention to emotional detail that the sum of the story's parts is devastatingly precise."

Originally published in Quarter After Eight, "Wednesday Night Reflections, Edited Thursday" is also in The Floating Order.