A traveling salesman from Chittenango, New
York, returned home from his trips with fanciful stories he made up to delight
his children. He failed as a businessman, but L. Frank Baum’s Wonderful Wizard of Oz,
published
when he was 44, won him lasting fame and led to 13 more books about his
enchanted land. But most successful authors create their stories, at least in
part, with material drawn from their personal experiences. Fantasy, imagination,
hard facts, snippets of conversations, and personality quirks are all coin of
the writer’s realm. Charlotte’s Web
was inspired by a cobweb in E.B. White’s barn in West Brooklin, Maine,
inhabited by a spider he endowed with endearing human qualities.
While a spider in a web was only a point of
departure for White, Mark Twain drew heavily on his boyhood in Hannibal,
Missouri, to create the scenes and settings along the river as well as the
characters and
personalities that populate The Adventures of Tom Sawyer, The
Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, and
Life on the Mississippi. Louisa May Alcott went to work at age 15 as
a governess and household servant to help support her family. At night, she
wrote stories. She sent her manuscripts to a publisher who suggested that Miss
Alcott write a story based on her childhood. The book captured the hearts of
girls everywhere, and Little Women became one of the most successful children’s
books ever published.
Writers of articles and other forms of
nonfiction often make use of their hobbies, interests, and even their work
experiences as the bases for interesting expositions. One of the outstanding
examples of this kind of writing is Science Experiments You Can Eat, written by a junior high
school science teacher. It has been
a steady seller since 1962.
You Can Take Up Writing for Children at Any Age, Any Time, and Any Place
Whatever
your age, education, and occupation—wherever and however you live—finding
the best time and place to write is the student writer’s first assignment.
Whether you’re a “morning person” or a “night person” and whether you
write on the kitchen table or at your own desk are much less important than
having your own time and place to write. That time and place then become your
creative center and yours alone—a place of one’s own.
Opportunities for New Writers
More than 500 publishers of books and 600 publishers
of magazines
related to children buy manuscripts from freelance writers. Of course, all
manuscripts must be “right on target” and written and presented according to
the publishers’ specifications if they are to be considered. While more than
5,300 different children’s books are published every year, children’s
magazines consume thousands of stories
and articles every month! Some have many subscribers. Boys’
Life has 1,300,000; Scholastic’s magazines total 7,800,000; and Highlights
for Children goes into 3,000,000 homes every month! With their voracious
appetites, magazines require a lot of writing to keep them well fed. Freelancers
supply most of it.
Where, When, and at What Pace You Write Is Up To You
One of the most appealing aspects of writing is the
extraordinary flexibility it offers; you can write anywhere, anytime you wish.
All you need is some way to capture the words.
One famous author (before she was famous) wrote in
longhand on a board propped up on the steering wheel of her car—which was
parked in her driveway, locked. It was the only way she could get away from the
children, the pets, and the telephone. She bought a precious hour every day with
this arrangement, and with it, Jean Kerr produced the best-selling novel Please Don’t Eat the Daisies.
A Record of Success
No
matter how or when you write, or what you write about, there’s always a
waiting market for good juvenile writing. See for yourself; go to your library
and skim a dozen books and magazines for children and young adults. Ask
yourself: If I had individual instruction from a real professional, could I
learn to write as well as that? If your answer is yes and if you have the
necessary aptitude to qualify, you may wish to consider the Institute’s
course, Writing for Children and Teenagers. Our students and alumni
have already written and published more than 11,000 books, articles, and
stories.
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Writing Can
Be
Highly
Rewarding
The rewards of writing begin with
the recognition that you’ve succeeded in expressing yourself on paper
the way you want to be read—first, by you, and second, by your
instructor. At the outset, those rewards may seem almost unattainable.
But once you start satisfying your own standards—and your
instructor’s—you’ll be ready to learn the next steps: how to find
appropriate markets and how to offer these editors and publishers your
work.
That first sweet letter of
acceptance from a publisher will never be rivaled by anything you’re
likely to get in the mail—except, possibly, your publisher’s check.
No matter how many checks follow that one, and no matter how big they
may be, none will be as important.
The
last, and perhaps the greatest, of these early successes is seeing your
name and your words in print. For most writers, this is the realization
of a cherished dream, a confirmation of their own faith in their
ability, and the beginning of a life in writing. |
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| Karen
Hesse, author of Out of
the Dust, achieved a great triumph in 2000, eight years
after graduating from the Institute: She won the Newbery Medal,
America’s highest honor in children’s fiction. |
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The Pure
Joy
of Writing
for Youngsters
There
are special joys to be found in writing for children and teenagers that no other
category of writing can offer you. The light your words bring to a child’s
face, the giggles and laughter your stories tickle out of a youngster’s
imagination—these are experiences you’ll treasure forever. And if your words
succeed in reaching and touching a teenager, offering understanding in that
often confusing world of adolescence, you’ll find gratification beyond
measure.
The Surprisingly Big Juvenile Market
Although for many years the cinder maids of the publishing
world, books
and magazines for children and teenagers have finally emerged as Cinderellas:
• Publishers’ sales of children’s books have
multiplied more than seven times since 1980—from $211 million to $1.954 billion
in 2000. That represents nearly $3 billion in retail sales!
• Magazines for and about children have exploded from a handful just a
generation ago to more than 600 today. And publishers’ sales of juvenile
paperbacks rose from $336,000,000 in 1988 to nearly $900,000,000 in 2000.
• While enrollments in grades K-8 are expected to increase, the boom is
shifting to young adults: the number of children ages 10 to 19 enrolled in
public schools increased from 34 million in 1991 to more than 41 million in
2000.
The reason for this dramatic growth is the population boom,
or “boomlet,” produced by the baby boomers, as well as the positive
attitudes they have developed, as parents, toward reading and education. The
result has produced an eager audience with money to spend.
Publishers
in the juvenile market have also reacted favorably, from a freelance writer’s
point of view, and they continue to be receptive to fresh, new material that
meets their specifications.
Of course, no matter who submits a manuscript for
consideration—an established author or an unpublished writer—professional
standards apply. These are the standards you learn at the Institute.
Your Best Prospects for Success
If you have the desire and the aptitude to write for
children and young adults, we have a truly superior course of instruction and a
highly qualified instructor to work with you one-on-one. We teach you how to
write—and how to get your writing published. As a result, our course offers
you the best prospects for success as a student and, later, as a freelance
writer.
Sources:
Publishers Weekly, U.S. Dept. of Education, Association of American Publishers,
and Book Industry Study Group.
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