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Charles Ghigna - Father Goose®

the author of more than 100 award-winning books from Random House, Disney, Hyperion, Time Inc.,

Scholastic, Simon & Schuser, Capstone, Boyds Mills, Abrams, Orca, Charlesbridge and other publishers.

On Writing: A Mini-Lecture

Style isn't how you write.
It's how you do not write like anyone else.

In order to grow as a writer,
you've got to be willing to risk it all every time you sit down to write.
You've got to be open and brave and curious.

We're all born poets.
We all enjoy the sounds of language.
We're all born with the universal need to sound our “barbaric yawps
over the roofs of the world.”

Poetry is a natural part of our lives.
It's not something we have to memorize and recite in front of the class.

Losing ourselves in a poem
is one of the best ways of finding out who we are.

The act of writing brings us to that point of discovery,
of discovering on the page something we didn't know we knew
until we wrote it.

Don't let reality cloud your imagination.
Look up at the sky and find once again
those long-tailed dragons and sailing ships.

Wake up to the world as though you are seeing it for the first time.
Find the wonder.
Question the way things are.
Imagine new choices.
Write from the child in you.

You don't need a degree to be a writer.
It doesn't take teachers or textbooks to show you how.
One learns how to write by writing.
There is no other way.

Style isn't how you write.
It's how you do not write like anyone else.


©2009 Charles Ghigna

3 comments:

Cathy Puett Miller said...

Charles, You have captured the spirit of the writer so well. In the writing classes I am conducting in the falls with home school students, yes I focus on frameworks, tips and techniques but most of all I want to instill the idea "yes, I am a writer" with my young students. It is amazing to see what 10 weeks of that will do to the quality and power of their writing!

I'm enjoying your poems....

Mary Lee said...

I need to post the couplet that starts and ends your poem in my classroom. Heck, I need to post the entire poem!! THANKS!

laurasalas said...

Fabulous poem/lecture--thank you for sharing it. I think it's what I needed to hear today.

My favorite part:

Don't let reality cloud your imagination.
Look up at the sky and find once again
those long-tailed dragons and sailing ships.

I want that first line tattooed on me (if I didn't hate tattoos)!

Thanks!
Laura