Suzy Becker is one of those rare authors who writes for children and for adults. Her debut
adult title, All I Need to Know I Learned
from My Cat was an international best seller. She went on to publish many
other illustrated memoirs such as One
Good Egg, about her decision to become a mother, and I Had Brain Surgery, What’s Your Excuse.
She’s also an award-winning advertising copywriter and an
entrepreneur who established the greeting card company, The Widget Factory, and founded the
HIV/AIDS bike-a-thon, Ride FAR.
But today she’s here to talk about her work as a children’s author, and the first book in her new Kate the Great series, Kate the Great, Except When She’s Not. Welcome Suzy!
Often compared to the Big
Nate and Diary of a Wimpy Kid
series, your books are a happy combination of text and pictures, with much of
the humor embedded in the illustrations. What is your process? Do you write
first, and then add the illustrations, or vice-versa?
It’s really a
cartoonist’s process, the combination of text and art you see on the page is
how I picture it in my head. The most efficient process—given the amount of
editing that goes on, is to make notes for sketches in the early
drafts—it saves me from doing a lot of drawings that end up on the cutting room
floor.
Kate Geller is a marvelous character, funny, a sharp
observer, yet someone whose basic impulse is to be kind. How did she introduce
herself to you?
Thank you! I’ve been
writing and illustrating books for, er, 25 years now— ideas and characters
rarely strike me like lightning bolts. I sit down at my desk every morning and
invite them in, troll around my head for them, review notes about ideas and
snippets of dialog I’ve overheard. Kate was just another voice in my head—I
have a ten year old daughter with lots of ten year old friends, and truthfully,
a good part of me is still that age.
I loved the BOB, the big old bowl of conversation starters,
on the Geller family kitchen table. How did you come up with that?
A couple years ago,
Frank Bruni (the New York Times
columnist) wrote about a friend of his who’d withdrawn himself and his family
from the church and was concerned about his kids’ spiritual education. His
solution was this idea of a bowl of spiritual and philosophical questions. I
loved it. My daughter? Not so much. In Kate’s family, they’re equal parts
conversation starters and stoppers, 110% well-intentioned and a helpful
narrative device at least 50% of the time.
Nora, Kate’s nemesis, is anything but a typical antagonist.
Where did she come from? How does she play off Kate’s character? Will she be
appearing in future Kate the Great
books?
How widely read is
your blog? Let’s just say Nora is a hybrid of a couple of puzzling characters
from my childhood. Kate is charged (by her mom) with befriending Nora because
Nora’s dad has to work overseas for several months. Nora is atypical, as you
suggest-- she doesn’t have any friends but (and?) she seems to like it that way—which is initially incomprehensible
to Kate. Nora’s eccentricities cause Kate to examine and sometimes expand her
worldview. On a plot level, it introduces relatable tween issues—triangulation,
standing up for your beliefs, your friends, etc. Nora’s definitely in the next
couple of books.
Kate often quotes Eleanor Roosevelt, “We must do the thing
we think we cannot,” sometimes angrily, sometimes with pride. Has this quote
been particularly important to you in your life?
I feel like I first
read Eleanor Roosevelt on a neighbor’s whiskey glass when I was a kid: “No one
can make you feel inferior without your consent.” I liked the idea of it,
although I’m still not sure I agree. Then, I came upon, “Do one thing that
scares you every day,” in my early teens. And THAT scared me. (That’s when I
first started imagining Rooseveltzilla, tearing up the streets of New York in
her black Oxfords.) Kate’s quote is the one I try to live by.
How is plotting a series different than plotting an
individual title? Have you envisioned a dramatic arc for the whole Kate the Great series?
I should have,
shouldn’t I?! I just heard the creators of The
Good Wife on Fresh Air yesterday,
and they’ve known all along how the series will end. KTG: Except When She’s Not was my first novel—plotting one novel had a pretty sizable learning
curve. As for the series, I tend to think more in terms of character and
relationship (family, friendship) arcs, hoping that there will be a fourth,
fifth, and fifteenth book some day.
You’ve had such a varied career. What led you to writing for
children? How is writing an illustrated memoir for adults the same/different
from writing a book for kids?
I’ve wanted to write
and illustrate children’s picture books for as long as I can remember. When I
was eight, I wrote in my first journal, that “I want to write children’s books
and live on a farm.” The thing was, I never met any authors growing up, so by
the time I was in 8th grade, I figured it was something I would have
to do in my retirement. (Wish I’d kept up the retirement planning.) I ended up
studying international relations and economics, and then in my senior year of
college, a friend decided to publish a story I’d written and illustrated (for
fun) as the center spread of a literary magazine on campus. I got to see people
reading and laughing at my work—so I did a career-planning 180º. After a short
stint in advertising copy writing (my first real job), I had my own greeting
card company and a couple years into that, I published the cat book with
Workman, which paved the way for my other titles.
I have ten books out,
in six genres, I think—excellent for happy, interesting life-building, not so
much for the brand-building. First, I’ll get an idea for a book, then the idea
usually dictates the audience. When I work on any book, I imagine I am writing
(and drawing) for one person. The creative process is the same, that person
(someone I don’t know well, but has a friendly face) changes—either the
middle-aged parent of a former student, or a ten year old friend of a friend of
my daughters, for example.
Would you care to tell us more about some of your other
titles?
I’ll tell you about
one, then you should really go outside and play. The KIDS MAKE IT BETTER book is an anthology of kids’ solutions to
world problems, with room for its owner to write and draw in her own answers.
The book also includes profiles of kids under the age of ten who’ve made a
difference, a resource guide and an action plan, so you can do something real
about one or more of the problems. There are elementary schools who have
adopted it school-wide and I hear from kids on a regular basis who have been
inspired to do unpredictably wonderful things. One of my favorites was a junior
girl scout troop’s smoking cessation campaign—the girls each asked a smoker
they knew to show them how to light up. The results were powerful.
I love the premise for KIDS
MAKE IT BETTER. I’ll definitely be checking that out. What project/s are you working on
now?
I’m finishing up the
final art for KATE THE GREAT: WINNER TAKES ALL, and starting KATE THE GREAT:
BREAK A LEG. I’m also starting to do some work on a follow up to my first
whiteboard animation HOW YOUTH LEARN .
Wow! That’s an impressive slate of projects. Thanks so much
for being my blog guest today! You can find out more about Suzy Becker on her
website and you can follow her on facebook and twitter https://twitter.com/thesuzybecker.
3 comments:
As always, you have introduced me to an author I didn't know, and one whose books sound fascinating. I can tell from this interview that Susie Becker's books are going to make me laugh AND think. I'm anxious to get reading.
Thanks, Cheryl! I'm so glad you were able to stop by!
Wonderful interview. Thanks, Linda and Suzy.
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