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 - –  –  –  –  –  ---.:
 • Betsy Franco
 • Robin Hirsch
 • Mary Ann Hoberman
 • Paul B. Janeczko
 • Alan Katz
 • X. J. Kennedy
 • Marilyn Singer
 • Sonya Sones
 
 
 Poet Roundtable with
 Children's Poets
 
 AuthorsOnTheWeb brought together 16
 poets to discover why poetic expression is
 so appealing to them and how they would
 respond to those who find poetry more than
 a little intimidating. The participants in the
 Poetry Roundtable included Mary Jo Bang,
 Billy Collins, Cornelius Eady, Jeffrey
 Greene, Richard Matthews, Honor Moore,
 Marge Piercy and Marc Woodworth who write for adult
 audiences as well as Betsy Franco, Robin Hirsch, Mary Ann
 Hoberman, Paul B. Janeczko, Alan Katz, X. J. Kennedy,
 Marilyn Singer and Sonya Sones who write poems for children
 and teens.
 
 
 Betsy Franco
 
 Betsy Franco
 inspires trust in the
 many people she
 meets in the course
 of her work as a
 writer. As she
 explains, "My
 philosophy when
 researching and
 writing books has
 always been to let adults, young
 adults, and children speak for themselves as much as
 possible."
 
 With You Hear Me? and Things I Have to Tell You,
 Betsy's purpose is to let teenagers speak for themselves.
 Both anthologies, compelling in their honesty and
 sometimes raw expressions of the many-layered
 concerns of the writers, are uncensored. The sheer
 honesty of the teens' submissions surprised Betsy as
 she started her projects, and inspired her as she
 continued in her mission. "The writers' openness made
 me determined to try not to hit a false note in any aspect
 of the books."
 
 Betsy's three sons have been the inspiration of many of
 her ideas. Today, she has published more than forty
 books, including poetry, picture books, and nonfiction for
 children and adults, and has also invented educational
 toys. She finds that compiling anthologies of other writers'
 work provides a nice balance with her own writing, and
 allows her to collaborate with very interesting people. The
 recipient of a B.A. in studio art from Stanford University,
 and an M. Ed. from Lesley College in Cambridge,
 Massachusetts, Betsy and of husband of more than thirty
 years live in Palo Alto, California. Betsy's next project
 (with Annette Ochoa, Indian Education Program
 Specialist, and Traci Gourdine) is collecting the poems,
 essays, and true stories of Native American teens and
 young adults, ages 12 -22.
 
 Interview on Teenreads.com
 
 Candlewick Press
 
 Browse Betsy Franco's books on Amazon.com.
 
 Back to top.
 
 Robin Hirsch
 
 Robin Hirsch is a
 former Oxford and
 Fulbright scholar and
 the author of the
 acclaimed memoir
 Last Dance at the
 Hotel Kempinski.
 The co-owner of the
 renowned Cornelia
 Street Café in
 Greenwich Village, Mr. Hirsch lives in Brooklyn, New
 York.
 
 TW Bookmark
 
 Robin Hirsch's Website
 
 Browse Robin Hirsch's books on Amazon.com.
 
 Back to top.
 
 Mary Ann Hoberman
 
 Mary Ann Hoberman
 is a poet and the
 critically acclaimed
 author of many
 books for children,
 including the beloved
 A House Is a House
 for Me, which won a
 National Book
 Award. She was also the editor of the
 poetry anthology My Song Is Beautiful: Poems and
 Pictures in Many Voices. Ms. Hoberman gives readings
 in libraries and schools, and her poems are included in
 countless anthologies. She lives in Greenwich,
 Connecticut.
 
 Mary Ann Hoberman's Website
 
 TW Bookmark
 
 Browse Mary Ann Hoberman's books on Amazon.com.
 
 Back to top.
 
 Paul B. Janeczko
 
 Paul Janeczko didn't
 always plan to be a
 poetry anthologist. "I
 started out as a kid
 in New Jersey who
 had two major goals
 in life,» he says. «To
 survive one more
 year of delivering
 newspapers without being mauled by
 Ike, the one-eyed, slobbering cur that lurked in the
 forsythia bushes at the top of the hill, and to become
 more than a weak-hitting, third-string catcher on our sorry
 Little League team."
 
 Though Paul Janeczko says he failed to achieve either of
 these goals, he did reach college in one piece, and that's
 when he discovered his love of poetry. "I became a poetry
 junkie and read poetry the way some people watch soap
 operas, work in their gardens, or follow the Red Sox."
 Whenever he read good poetry, he was struck by
 everything about it-its form, language, images, structure,
 rhythm, voice, sound, feeling, and endless subjects ---
 and wanted to share these possibilities with others. "I
 want young people to see that poems are expressions of
 human experience and are as different as people. I've
 offered young readers poems about teeth, suicide,
 lasagna, movies, swimming, insomnia, gluttons, dentists,
 war victims, crows, cars, cats, and gnats, to name a
 few."
 
 After teaching high school English for twenty-two years,
 Paul Janeczko resigned to become a visiting poet, and
 has since worked with young writers in schools from
 Maine to Alaska, as well as in international schools in
 Dusseldorf, Frankfurt, and London. He has also edited
 twenty poetry anthologies for young readers, many of
 which have been named a Best Book of the Year by the
 American Library Association.
 
 Paul Janeczko's first book for Candlewick Press, Very
 Best (Almost) Friends, was meant for anyone who has
 ever known the fierce devotion of a very best friend.
 »Friends are an important part of our lives,« he says. "I
 wanted to share with kids some of the delicious poems
 that celebrate this (almost) always wonderful experience."
 A Poke in the I, an anthology of concrete poems (poems
 that form shapes and pictures), was published in April
 2001. Paul Janeczko hopes "this 'poke in the I' kicks
 kids' imaginations into high gear and lets them run wild
 writing their own concrete poems."
 
 Paul Janeczko is a frequent presenter at workshops for
 teachers, librarians, and young writers; has served as the
 poetry editor of English Journal and as a member of the
 Editorial Review Board of The New Advocate; and is a
 member of NCTE's Books for You Committee. He also
 writes reviews of audio books for Audiofile and writes the
 »Kids' Poetry Workshop« column for Scholastic's
 Instructor magazine.  Paul B. Janeczko lives in Maine
 with his wife and daughter.
 
 Candlewick Press
 
 Browse Paul B. Janeczko's books on Amazon.com.
 
 Back to top.
 
 Alan Katz
 
 Alan Katz has been a print and
 television comedy writer for more than
 twenty years. In addition to being a
 multiple Emmy nominee for his work on
 The Rosie O'Donnell Show and
 Disney's Raw Toonage, he has written
 for children's programming on
 Nickelodeon, ABC television, and
 Warner Bros. Animation's Taz-Mania.
 He has also authored several adult humor books as well
 as humorous essays for the New York Times and other
 publications. Alan lives in Weston, Connecticut, with his
 journalist wife, Rose, and their children, Simone, Andrew,
 and twins Nathan and David.
 
 Simon & Schuster
 
 Browse Alan Katz's books on Amazon.com.
 
 Back to top.
 
 X. J. Kennedy
 
 X.J. Kennedy's
 poems have
 appeared in more
 than one hundred
 fifty textbooks and
 anthologies and have
 been aired on the
 Today show, Good Morning America,
 and Garrison Keillor's radio programs.
 In recognition of his work for adults, Mr. Kennedy was the
 first recipient of an international prize for light verse
 awarded by the Academy of American Arts and Letters,
 and he is the 2000 winner of the Award for Excellence in
 Children's Poetry given by the National Council of
 Teachers of English. He has published sixteen children's
 books and, with his wife, Dorothy M. Kennedy,
 anthologies Knock at a Star and Talking Like the
 Rain. Formerly a professor of English at Tufts University,
 X.J. Kennedy lives with his wife in Lexington,
 Massachusetts. They have five large children and two
 small grandchildren.
 
 X. J. Kennedy's Website
 
 TW Bookmark
 
 Browse X. J. Kennedy's books on Amazon.com.
 
 Back to top.
 
 Marilyn Singer
 
 Marilyn Singer is the
 author of 10
 collections of poetry,
 including Monster
 Museum and Turtle
 in July, an NCTE
 Notable Book and a
 Reading Rainbow
 selection. She lives
 in New York.
 
 Photo Credit to © Francene Keery.
 
 Marilyn Singer's Website
 
 Knopf
 
 Browse Marilyn Singer's books on Amazon.com.
 
 Back to top.
 
 Sonya Sones
 
 Before becoming a
 writer, Sonya Sones
 taught animation,
 worked as a
 photographer, and
 edited movies. Her
 first book, Stop
 Pretending: What
 Happened When My Big Sister
 Went Crazy, was a finalist for the Los
 Angeles Times Book Prize and won a Christopher Award,
 the Claudia Lewis Poetry Award, and the Myra Cohn
 Livingston Poetry Award. It was also an ALA Best Book
 for Young Adults and a Top Ten Quick Pick for Reluctant
 Young Adult Readers.
 
 Ms. Sones says, "In Stop Pretending, which is
 autobiographical, there are some poems about my first
 love. I had such a good time writing about those first
 feelings of overwhelming passion that I knew I wanted to
 delve into them more deeply. That's why I wrote this
 book. These poems are definitely not autobiographical.
 Especially not the embarrassing ones."
 
 Ms. Sones lives with her family in California. She can be
 reached at SonyaSones@aol.com.
 
 Photo Credit to © Ava Tramer.
 
 Sonya Sones Interview
 
 Simon & Schuster
 
 Browse Sonya Sones's books on Amazon.com.
 
 Back to top.
 
 
 
 (c) Copyright 2002, AuthorsOnTheWeb.com. All rights
 reserved.
 
 
 [source: http://www.authorsontheweb.com/features/0204-poet/kid-poet-authors.asp ]
 
 
 
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