Who
Wrote That?
Featuring Bruce Coville
Published in California Kids!,
December 2000 and South Florida Parenting,
March 2001
Dear Mr. Coville,
I’m writing to you in particular because
all my other favorite authors are dead.
At the end of sixth grade, Bruce Coville found out what creative writing
was all about. “I failed at writing all year long because I always
had to write the teacher’s stuff, until the end of the year when
she assigned us to write a story and gave us three or four weeks to finish
it. . .It was an exhilarating experience.” Time and freedom of choice
made all the difference to Coville. “I loved what I was doing. This
may not be the first time I knew I wanted to write, but it’s the
time I remember.”
He first considered writing for children in the mid-1970’s when
he received a copy of Winnie the Pooh as a gift. “I suddenly knew
what I really wanted to write was children’s books—to give
other children the joy I got from books when I was young. . .My writing
works best when I remember [that] bookish child who adored reading and
gear the work toward him. It falters when I forget him.”
Coville’s The Foolish Giant (Lippincott) made its debut in 1978,
illustrated by his wife Katherine. He enjoyed modest success with his
next several books, but in 1990 everything changed with the publication
of My Teacher is an Alien (Minstrel). “In its first six months,
it sold as many copies as my previous 20 books had sold all put together
in a period of twelve years. . .I literally became an overnight success
after 14 years.”
Dear Mr. Bruce Coville,
How come you write science fiction
instead of real stories?
Coville now claims a rich, varied, award-winning body of work. His interests
take him from science fiction, to fantasy, to historical fiction, to Shakespeare
retellings. Ideas surface as he’s reading the morning newspaper,
driving his car, or staring out the window. Some ideas are taken from
his research on dragon and unicorn lore. When writing Jennifer Murdley’s
Toad (Harcourt, 1992) he studied toad lore; the skull in The Skull of
Truth (Pocket, 1999) is based on York from Shakespeare’s Hamlet.
“Ideas are the smallest and easiest part of the whole process.”
Whenever Coville needs a new idea, he plucks one from his idea file—an
actual file folder an inch and a half thick. Says Coville, “I put
[ideas] in there when I think of them. . .If I don’t write them
down, they vanish.”
Ideas also seem to occur to Coville in a thematic way; he has at least
seven ongoing successful series of books, like I Was a Sixth Grade Alien,
The Unicorn Chronicles, The Magic Shop, and Rod Allbright’s Alien
Adventures. “I think I have more ongoing series than anybody in
the field right now. It’s mostly because I really fall in love with
my characters and want to go back and see what they’re up to.”
Even though many of Coville’s characters are aliens, they take on
their own lives and he knows how they’ll react or respond in a given
situation. Nina Tanleven, one of his non-alien characters from The Ghost
in the Third Row (Bantam, 1987), The Ghost Wore Gray (Bantam, 1988), and
The Ghost in the Big Brass Bed (Bantam, 1991) is one of his favorites
because she’s based on his daughter, Cara. The title character of
the Rod Allbright’s Alien Adventures series is based on Coville.
“My wife drew the pictures in the book based on pictures of me when
I was eleven years old. Rod’s house is based on my house.”
Coville is hard-pressed to choose a favorite book; different books are
special for different reasons: “My Teacher is an Alien made the
most money, The Ghost Who Wore Gray is the best ending I ever wrote, and
Jeremy Thatcher, Dragon Hatcher is a favorite because it will still be
around in 25 years.”
Dear Mr. Bruce Coville,
I could possibly be your number one fan,
but knowing people today somebody probably named
their kid Rod Allbright or something like that.
|
HOW
TO CONTACT BRUCE COVILLE
Website:
www.brucecoville.com
School Visits
and Fan Mail: via website or Bruce Coville, Oddly Enough, P.O. Box
6110, Syracuse, NY 13217 |
SELECTIONS
FROM
BRUCE COVILLE’S LIBRARY
Odder
than Ever, Harcourt, 2000.
A Glory of Unicorns (anthology), Apple, 2000.
I Was a Sixth Grade Alien
The Revolt of the Miniature Mutants (#10), Minstrel, 2001.
There’s an Alien in my Backpack (#9), Pocket Books, 2000.
Snatched from Earth (#8), Minstrel, 2000.
Too Many Aliens (#7), Minstrel, 2000.
Don’t Fry my Veeblax (#6), Minstrel, 2000.
Romeo and Juliet (retelling), Dial, 1999.
The Unicorn Chronicles
Into the Land of the Unicorns, Apple, 1999.
Song of the Wanderer, Scholastic, 1999.
The Magic Shop
The Skull of Truth, Pocket, 1999.
Jennifer’s Murdley’s Toad, Harcourt, 1992.
Jeremy Thatcher, Dragon Hatcher, Harcourt, 1991.
The Monster’s Ring, Knopf, 1982.
UPCOMING
I Was a Sixth Grade Alien
There’s an Alien in my Underwear (#11), Minstrel, March 2001.
Farewell to Earth (#12), Minstrel, June 2001.
Half Human, Scholastic, Fall 2001.
|
(Back)
|