It's such a great joy to celebrate success with writers that we have come to know through online groups. Rita Lorraine Hubbard is a member of our ReFoReMo community, among many other common writing groups. When I saw the cover reveal for this book, I could not wait to get my hands on it. Hammering for Freedom releases today!
Happy Book Birthday, Rita! Do you utilize picture books as mentor texts? If so,
how?
I most certainly do! Sometimes
(actually, more times than I like to admit) I get stuck on a manuscript and need
an example text to nudge me back into action. For example, I’m currently
working on a manuscript where the MC is very young – possibly even pre-verbal,
if I can manage it. First I visited
ReFoReMo and asked for mentor recommendations, then I compiled a list of books
to check out from the library. The books provided great examples of how
different authors handled stories told by very young MC’s. I was able to study
how the art worked closely with the text to tell a smooth and often very funny
story. In one book, the MC didn’t tell
the story, he “thought” it. I really appreciated the possibilities this
particular book offered for me in terms of what I could do with my own story. In
another especially delightful book called Mine! (by Shutta Crum) the MC (a
toddler who hasn’t yet mastered the art of sharing) utters one word throughout
the story: Mine! It was hilarious…and gave me hope for my own
story.
Again, through those and other examples, I was better able
to envision possibilities for my own story. I haven’t completed my manuscript
yet; I’m still experimenting, but at least I have great examples of the
different ways I (or the MC) can tell the story.
How has reading picture books helped you discover who you
are as a writer?
They have helped me discover how much I love history—and
art. There’s nothing better than a well-written historical pb that uses
breathtaking illustrations to help tell a story. They have also helped me discover that I
enjoy a range of genres. I love humorous pb’s, and collect them as often as I
collect the more serious biographies.
Were there any particular mentor texts that inspired you in
the creation of
Hammering for Freedom?
Three picture books come to mind. By the way, I read and reviewed
these books long before my own book began to take its final shape and make its
way to publication. These books had elements I never forgot, and I quickly
reached for them once I began to shape and sculpt my own book.
I was looking for books that dealt with unsung heroes; books
that skillfully squeezed lives that stretched on for decades into 32 brief pages;
books that made things that happened long ago seem new and exciting and worth
investing the time it took to read them. I found what I was looking for in
these books:
1. It Jes’ Happened: When Bill Traylor Started to Draw, Don Tate
This lovely book is the story of an enslaved man who lived a
very long life. After freedom comes, his wife dies and his children scatter
across the country, and he ends up alone and living inside his memories. I
loved how the prose emphasized his stark loneliness and his memories of what
home had been like so long ago.
2. Love Twelve Miles
Long, Glenda Armand
This biography captured the loneliness of little Frederick
Douglass who had been separated from his mother by 12 long miles. I thought Ms.
Armand prose and artist Colin Bootman’s illustrations captured Frederick’s
yearning and strength he didn’t know he had, to perfection. This was what I
wanted to portray in Hammering for Freedom: I wanted to show that sheer
determination and the belief that he and his family could be free if only his
strength held out were the driving forces that kept Bill slinging that hammer.
3. Lift Your Light a
Little Higher, Heather Henson
The story of Stephen Bishop, an enslaved man consigned to guiding visitors through Mammoth Cave. It took courage to learn the dark and
dangerous secrets of Mammoth Cave, including “an impassible chasm called the
Bottomless Pit” where he could have drowned or met some other equally tragic misfortune in the cave, but instead he used courage and wit to make his life a
little better.
Thank you so much for sharing your mentor text perspective with us, Rita, and congratulations!
Rita Lorraine Hubbard is the author HAMMERING FOR FREEDOM, the story of enslaved
blacksmith William Lewis who rented himself from his “owner” and spent the next
25 years earning money to free himself and his family members. The book is
published by Lee and Low and debuts on September 25, 2018. Hubbard has also
penned a number of nonfiction books for young adults, and runs the children's
book review site Picture Book Depot, and the historical site The Black History
Channel. Hubbard lives in Chattanooga, Tennessee. You can find her on Facebook
and also online at ritahubbard.com.