Monday, April 6, 2015

E: Madeline L' Engle

My theme for the A to Z Blogging Challenge this year is a mishmash of books, movies, writers and TV shows that have in one way or another taught me something about writing and helped me be a better writer. Some inspired my own stories and a few taught me what not to do. Each post is a one minute lesson on writing. I'm also participating in the challenge with the other co-hosts over at the IWSG blog where I have some everyday inspiration to talk about.

I was in the fifth grade when I found a battered copy of A Wrinkle in Time by Madeline L'Engle on the shelves where my teacher set out her own books for us to borrow. This book was the first speculative fiction book that I read. Nobody called characters geeks during those days but that's exactly what Meg and Charles were. And I loved them. I loved their adventure to other worlds with their mixture of futuristic science and things that could only be magic. YA wasn't even a genre at the time but A Winkle in Time was the book that launched a lot of preteens and teens into a livelong love of the science fiction and fantasy. The main characters weren't superheroes. They were regular kids with real lives, yet they rose to the challenge and won. Madeline L'Engle was ahead of her time in this award winning book. I was grown up before I realized she'd written more than one book. Of course, I bought the entire series for my daughter.

Lesson: It's okay to blur that magic/science fiction line if you write a great story. Heroes come in all shapes and sizes and from all kinds of families. One book at the right time, can turn a child into a lover of the written word.

On a side note, when I was in elementary school, my poor little tiny country school didn't have its own library until I was in 6th grade. That wonderful 5th grade teacher gave me a real gift with the books she allowed me to borrow. Years later when I was around 12, I started playing on a women's softball team and this teacher was one of our players. We ended up being very close friends for many years. And wow, could she hit a ball for a country mile. I only hope a few of my students loved me as much as I loved and admired her. Here's to you, Carol Livingstone.

"Many people will walk in and out of your life, but only true friends leave footprints in your heart." Eleanor Roosevelt

Have you read any books that mix science fiction and fantasy? Do you remember the first book that introduced you to your favorite genre? Ever make a friend of one of your teachers? Does your school have a good library?


80 comments:

Tasha Duncan-Drake said...

My fav genre is fantasy and the first book that really introduced me to it (other than fairytales) was The Hobbit. Our teacher read it to us in primary school. Our primary school didn't have a great library, but my secondary school's one was pretty good - I made my way through all the sci-fi and fantasy in it :).
Tasha
Tasha's Thinkings | Wittegen Press | FB3X (AC)

Unknown said...

A great book and a lovely story.

My primary school was a harsh one. A Catholic school run by nuns who felt the way to teach reading was to hit you on the back of the hand with a wooden ruler whenever you misread a word. Needless to say, they instilled a nervousness around reading for me. At 12 or 13 I found Lois Duncan's Stranger With My Face. That book was so exciting I quickly found and read her others and moved on to books I should have read already, like The Wishing Tree. I'm grateful to Lois Duncan for that, and I've told her so :)

http://www.tdharveyauthor.com

Unknown said...

A great book and a lovely story.

My primary school was a harsh one. A Catholic school run by nuns who felt the way to teach reading was to hit you on the back of the hand with a wooden ruler whenever you misread a word. Needless to say, they instilled a nervousness around reading for me. At 12 or 13 I found Lois Duncan's Stranger With My Face. That book was so exciting I quickly found and read her others and moved on to books I should have read already, like The Wishing Tree. I'm grateful to Lois Duncan for that, and I've told her so :)

http://www.tdharveyauthor.com

Unknown said...

I wonder, Susan, was it this Carol who made you consider being a teacher? People can be like books, too; read at just the right time.

mshatch said...

I loved that book - still do :)

Maria Zannini said...

A Wrinkle in Time was my first SF book. It's also the book that inspired me to read every other book in our teeny, tiny school library.

Kat said...

This was -and is- one of my fave books of all time. We read it in 6th grade and it really stuck with...and added to my growing need to read all the books I could get my hands on. (Something that sticks with me, even today!)

Alex J. Cavanaugh said...

Your school didn't have a library until you were in sixth grade? Whoa...
Believe it or not, I've never read this book.

Alex Hurst said...

That's a great book. I still remember the illustration of the shortest points between A and B. I remember the room I was in, the feel of the page, and the weather outside. It was one of those moments, because I was a kid, where I really felt my first "there are different ways to think about things!" experience.

And how awesome that you became a teacher, too. :)

Alex Hurst, A Fantasy Author in Kyoto
A-Z Blogging in April Participant

Pat Hatt said...

It can work really well if done right. I've sure mixed a few and will continue to do so at my zoo

Donna Smith said...

We had no school library until I moved on to 9th grade. We had a traveling bookmobile though, so we could get books once a month. My parents would drive me in to town, and drop me off at the public library and bought me lots of used books to keep up with my appetite! A Wrinkle in Time was one of those wonderful books, and I read it to both my children.
I think, though, that Robert Louis Stevenson's - A Child's Garden of Verses is what set me on my way to writing poetry. I adored that book.

cleemckenzie said...

What a blast from the past this was. I envied Meg and Charles like crazy.

Chrys Fey said...

I've seen the movie, but I haven't read the book...I didn't need to in school. But it is on my TBR list. :)

Shanaya Tales said...

This book has been on my TBR from a long time. The book that made fall in love with the written word is the Harry Potter series. Once I read the first book, there was no looking back. I can't thank my cousin enough for gifting it to me in my early teens.
*Shantala @ ShanayaTales*

Unknown said...

Oh, someone else loves this book! Wonderful!

betty said...

I have not read this book, but my daughter in middle school really enjoyed it and read it a lot back then. I remember liking Betty Smith (A Tree Grows in Brooklyn) when I was in 8th grade. Read that book dozens of times over the summer between 8th and 9th grade. I think that helped shape my love of the type of books I read these days. Our school did have a nice library, I think (so far back can't remember exactly)

betty

Madeline Mora-Summonte said...

I remember originally picking up L'Engle's books because her name was so similar to mine - her's has the extra 'e' so it's Madeleine. But I kept reading because her stories were so good. :)

Cherdo said...

In middle school, I was a voracious reader and I loved our school library. There were several series I really followed and I couldn't wait to get the next one. I talked the librarian into letting me be her helper. That way, when we were adding new books, I got first crack at it, ha ha ha.

The librarians name was Mrs. Buch (pronounced "Book").

Thanks! Glad you're in the A-to-Z!

Cherdo
www.cherdoontheflipside.com

Jeremy [Retro] said...

Never read this, it's about time... :)

A Tarkabarka Hölgy said...

Never read it, but heard about it before. Our school library was small, but fairly good; I lived in the mythology section for years. :D And the librarians were very sweet. Oh, memories.

@TarkabarkaHolgy from
Multicolored Diary - Epics from A to Z
MopDog - 26 Ways to Die in Medieval Hungary

Arlee Bird said...

Never got too close to any of my teachers--I was kind of afraid of even the nice ones. Never read this book though it sounds like it could be up my line of interest. I'm not sure about the sci-fi fantasy blend. I think I've read some, but right now couldn't name any.

Arlee Bird
A to Z Challenge Co-host
A Faraway View

Susan Gourley/Kelley said...

We had to read The Hobbit in 9th grade and I fell in love then. I read the entire series at least once per year through high school.

Susan Gourley/Kelley said...

That so great that you were able to thank the author who inspired you to be a reader.

Susan Gourley/Kelley said...

I re-read that book so many times through the years. When we finally got a library, it was pretty small.

Susan Gourley/Kelley said...

Yes, great minds thinking alike.

Susan Gourley/Kelley said...

No library wasn't that uncommon back in 'the day.' Or maybe I'm just a lot older than you, you young whippersnapper.

Hilary Melton-Butcher said...

Hi Susan - loved that your teacher lent you her books, then you became such great friends. Brilliant you were able to buy your daughter all of Madeline's books and no doubt read the others .. and I love the Eleanor Roosevelt quote ..

Cheers Hilary

Susan Gourley/Kelley said...

It was the first book where I kept going back and reading it again and again. It never got old.

Susan Gourley/Kelley said...

You mix a lot of things, Pat. Some that I didn't think could be mixed.

Susan Gourley/Kelley said...

The book mobile came to our area after I was older. I never used it but always wanted to. We lived way, way out in the country.

Susan Gourley/Kelley said...

I wanted to be Meg, that's for sure.

Susan Gourley/Kelley said...

You won't be sorry. Probably read it in one sitting.

Susan Gourley/Kelley said...

Harry Potter helped my second son to fall in love with books so I appreciate that series for that if nothing else.

Susan Gourley/Kelley said...

Great minds thinking alike.

Susan Gourley/Kelley said...

I miss those warm summer days when I had hours to read and read.

Susan Gourley/Kelley said...

Cool name for a librarian. In high school I was such a frequent visitor before school started that the librarian starting putting the new books aside for me so I'd have first chance at them.

Susan Gourley/Kelley said...

I had a lot of teachers I was close to throughout high school but only the one in elementary school.

Susan Gourley/Kelley said...

She was the most special teacher of my elementary career. All her students loved her because she made each one of us feel special.

Notes Along the Way with Mary Montague Sikes said...

My daughter discovered L'Engle at about the same age you did, and she loved them! The Eleanor Roosevelt quote is wonderful. Thank you for sharing!

Elise Fallson said...

I remember reading this book and loving it when I was a kid. I still have my battered old copy and can't wait to give it to my daughter when she's a little older. :)

Liz Brownlee said...

Oh! Do you know, I found that book when I was 12 in the local library and loved it so much I took it back, watched where it was put on the racks to go back on the shelf and ran round to get it out again. I did this for a year till I got my own copy! Fabulous author, and yes it sparked a life-long love of science fiction and fantasy in me. ~Liz http://www.lizbrownleepoet.com

Scribbles From Jenn said...

That is an example of a GREAT teacher. I wish all teachers had a heart for their students like that. Yes, I was very close to several of my teachers. I'm very thankful for their input in my life. I think their love for me influenced me to be a better teacher.


Scribbles From Jenn - Visiting from the A to Z Challenge

Sabina said...

I never read a Wrinkle in Time (or anything else by L'Engle)--when my dad read the book to my sister I was too young for it, and it wasn't something I ever picked up later. But I've heard great things about it!

Tara Tyler said...

loving your lessons of writing wisdom! and who doesn't love a little sci fi mixed with fantasy once in a while! they're both magical!
happy e day!

Susan Gourley/Kelley said...

My daughter did too. It's a great series for girls.

Susan Gourley/Kelley said...

It will be more special because it is yours.

Susan Gourley/Kelley said...

That sounds like the hard way to renew a book. Glad you finally got your own copy.

Susan Gourley/Kelley said...

She was wonderful. I had one high school teacher who really touched me too.

Susan Gourley/Kelley said...

Hurrah for you dad for reading to you. It is a great book.

Susan Gourley/Kelley said...

Sometimes it's difficult to tell the science and fantasy apart.

noelle44 said...

Love your blog - thanks for stopping by mine! Really eye-catching and interesting - and I am a fan of A Wrinkle in Time!

Luanne G. Smith said...

That's a good one. And it probably was one of the first science fiction books I ever read, come to think of it.

J E Oneil said...

I've read a few of the science-fantasy variety. Some were good. Others...not so much.

Nick Wilford said...

I've never read that book but I've heard a lot about it. The Lion, The Witch and the Wardrobe was the book that really got me into fantasy.

Karen Jones Gowen said...

I loved A Wrinkle in Time with its blend of real world, sci fi and fantasy.

J.L. Campbell said...

That's one book I haven't read yet.

D.G. Hudson said...

I haven't read that book, but I have had teachers who became friends of a sort. They were usually teachers who offered that little bit of extra to get young minds thinking or who encouraged their students to read and explore things.

Tyrean Martinson said...

Wonderful quote, and what a wonderful teacher! I had an organ teacher like that . . . she loaned the complete Narnia series to me before I had any of the books. :)

Anonymous said...

It's not fiction-related, but I had a history teacher who would lend me texts by historians as she knew I was passionate about the subject but the books were expensive and not readily available in libraries. We used to have great discussions about them when I returned them too.

Delynn Royer said...

This is one of my favorite books of all time. I discovered it around the same age as you did, maybe a little older. It made me want to be a writer. No—more than that. It made me want to be an Awesome Writer. :)

Delynn Royer said...

This is one of my favorite books of all time. I discovered it around the same age as you did, maybe a little older. It made me want to be a writer. No—more than that. It made me want to be an Awesome Writer. :)

Heather R. Holden said...

Madeline L'Engle is awesome. I first discovered her books in sixth grade. I've only read a couple of them, though. Hopefully I can get around to the others someday!

Susan Gourley/Kelley said...

And you reached your goal because you are awesome. Thanks for stopping by.

Susan Gourley/Kelley said...

There's a history teacher at our high school that turned all four of my children onto history. He's amazing.

Susan Gourley/Kelley said...

Some teachers just have a gift of giving and inspiring.

Susan Gourley/Kelley said...

I should do a post where every one can share their story of a favorite teacher.

Rajlakshmi said...

I haven't read the book, but I remember being impressed by Nancy Drew. That was really nice of your teacher :)

Ann Bennett said...

I used Wrinkle in my sixth grade classroom. My favorite line was when Mrs. It? fell from a chair. She was Ok, but her dignity had been bruised.

tawnya said...

I have never read this book, but I remember falling in love with books in fourth grade. I read Island of the Blue Dolphins and I just loved it. I am not sure exactly what it was about that book, but still to this day I remember the feeling I had when I picked that book up.

Heather M. Gardner said...

I love that she let you borrow her own books!
Great teacher!

Heather

Jay Noel said...

Having great teachers inspired me to be a teacher. I need to read A Wrinkle in Time, as it's been eons since I last read it.

Yvonne Ventresca said...

I loved A Wrinkle in Time. And I had a fabulous 6th grade teacher who made a big impact.

Yvonne

Elizabeth Mueller said...

I'm so loving your posts! You're so thoughtful. Like you, my first book that launched me into the love of the genre was A Wrinkle in Time! I also loved ElfQuest--though it is just a graphic novel, it still gave me the love for fantasy (including The Hobbit!)

Elizabeth Mueller
AtoZ 2015
My Little Pony

Mike said...

One of my favorite authors when I was young

Cathy Kennedy said...

I have never been a big reader. I attribute my lack of interest to how uncomfortable my grade school teacher made me feel. I had trouble learning how to read. I think it may have something to do with bad ear infections I had when I was little. I felt self-conscience and stumbled to utter the sounds of the words. It was a horrible, horrible feeling to a wee one to have towering mean giant look down on you because you had trouble with sounding out words. I came to think, if someone who could read better than me must be smarter than me, too. So, I dumb down myself driving my self-esteem into the ground. I learned in my early teen years I had severe scare tissue on my ear drums after seeing my ears, nose, & throat doctor. I had yet another bad sinus/ear infection. My hearing isn't impaired much as an adult, but it sure isn't what it should be for my age either. The only thing to change over the years is that I am not that little nervous kid afraid of the world. I am confident and smart, but reading anything of length just isn't appealing for the most part. On the occasion that I do read anything, I like true stories. I bet your students love you, too! Thanks for hosting the A2Z fun!

Nadine_Feldman said...

I didn't read Madeleine L'Engle's books until about ten years ago, and I just fell in love with them!

The Happy Whisk said...

Haven't read it.

Courtney said...

This is one of my favorite books of all time. I used to reread it over and over as a child. I related so much to the character of Meg who was kind of a misfit and her interaction with IT was so powerful. Good choice!
Maui Jungalow

Michelle Wallace said...

I haven't read this one... yet.
I HAVE seen it around the blogosphere, mentioned by lots of bloggers/readers/writers.

Chris K. said...

Yes, I love the Madeline L'Engle books, and also the Diane Duane young wizards series that mix science and magic in a similar way. Thanks for sharing this.

Come visit me at http://chriskelworth.com/blog/