Real or Not Real?


Usually a book begs to be written when several ideas clump together. Yes, I wanted to write a story about how the unexpected could be great (see earlier post), but also I'd been thinking a lot about the importance of story and imagination and the beautiful wildness and freedom of children's imaginations.
I thought about two conversations I'd overheard between my grandchildren and their parents (these are also reprinted in the preface to The Great Unexpected):
Father:  Did you brush your teeth?Son:  Yes.Father:  Really?Son:  Yes.Father: Tell me the truth.Son:  What is 'truth'?
-and -
Daughter:  I'm going to be a dolphin.Mother:  Is that so?Daughter:  Yes. I will live in the ocean.Mother:  For real?Daughter:  What is 'real'?

I loved those conversations. I loved being reminded that 'truth' and 'reality' are learned labels.  When we are young – or when we are writing a story – characters are as vivid as 'real' people. Reality and fantasy, past and present and future all dwell easily together. 


I wanted to explore those blurred regions.  Maybe I dance around the edges of these regions in many of my books (Fishing in the Air and  Replay come first to mind here), but in The Great Unexpected, I took these notions up (or down?) one more level.

(One young reader diving in . . .)
xx

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Published on August 24, 2012 07:02
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