Jacqueline Woodson: What reading slowly taught me about writing
For Jacqueline Woodson, writing is a gift of joy not only to herself but also to her readers, who span all ages and backgrounds. Full bio
Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.
was the most beautiful in all the land.
playing in his garden,
of "The Selfish Giant" in 1888.
moved into my Brooklyn childhood
both the Bible and the Quran.
both religious and recreational,
of television-watching.
you could find my siblings and I
of our apartment reading,
the fire hydrant blasted,
we could hear our friends down there
through our open windows.
I went into my books,
of the outside world.
who were racing through books,
running beneath the words,
told big kids don't use their fingers.
with our hands folded on our desk,
then returning them to that position.
not just on grade level
being pushed to read faster.
outside of my teacher's gaze,
again told me his story,
sneaking into his garden,
I learned something new
that the kids were forced to play on
that appeared one day,
of a writer named John Gardner
as the "fictive dream,"
was where I was inside that book,
and the world that the author had created
were meant to be savored,
maybe years, writing them.
to one day become a writer --
or the internet or even the telephone,
and information and memory through story.
of connective technology.
better down the Nile
to preserve the dead
into the 21st century.
began making tools from stone,
or gestures or drawings,
television channels of my childhood
of cable and streaming.
through time and space,
is getting pushed out of the way,
of the narrative.
with stories change,
to audio to Instagram to Snapchat,
beneath the words.
regardless of the format,
we never thought we'd go,
we never thought we'd meet
that we might have missed.
faster and faster,
has led me to a life of writing books
and closely at the world,
and by doing so,
possibilities of a narrative,
I needed to know about writing.
I needed to know about creating worlds
could be legitimized,
read or heard by another person,
that became a connection between us,
to not feel alone in this world,
we've changed it before we leave?
and all of it, remembered.
to understand the future.
the hard times we're living in,
those who came before us,
lived in Greenville, South Carolina,
called Nicholtown.
the descendants of a people
to learn to read or write.
how letters form words,
and their stories.
of being threatened with death
beneath that one.
to the narrative,
and the ones beneath those.
continue to survive.
that connected the way I learned to write
and older and deeper
who never learned to read.
out of enslavement,
grad school, beyond.
seemed to be born reading,
stepped out of their way.
the Great Migration wagon --
the history of a narrative,
the only way they could hold on to it,
or their stoops at the end of a long day
through the thick heat of picking cotton
and sew them into quilts,
into something laughable,
exhale the history a country
to imagine an invisible finger
the author's work
who finally learned to control fire
the Selfish Giant,
through his garden.
to my ancestors,
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Jacqueline Woodson - WriterFor Jacqueline Woodson, writing is a gift of joy not only to herself but also to her readers, who span all ages and backgrounds.
Why you should listen
Despite being raised by "old-school Southerners" who would've preferred she embarked on a sensible career, award-winning author Jacqueline Woodson tells us that "I've known I wanted to be a writer since I was around seven years old. I loved everything about stories -- how they made me feel and think, the joy good ones brought both the listener and the teller, the double and deeper meanings ... I knew writing made me happiest, and wrote as often as I could.
"Now, when I'm not writing, I'm out speaking about writing. I write for young people and old people. I write for magazines, newspapers. I write speeches and plays. I do this because it's never not joyful for me."
Jacqueline Woodson | Speaker | TED.com