I have theories about the much maligned teachers and the
public’s attitude toward them. Everyone’s been to school. Everyone knows the
education system from personal experience—some of those positive, some
negative. It’s easy then, to think you know what really goes on, to think you
have every right to criticize, to tell teachers what they are doing wrong, and
sometimes even what they’re doing right.
As a life-long educator, I’ve experienced the exhilaration
of working with teens and the thanks and appreciation of many students and
parents. Yes, there were negative moments, some of them brutal, but for the
most part my career was a joyous one.
My instinct has always been to promote respect for teachers
and the importance of a well-educated population. What better way than to make
the heroine of my novels a school principal? Let the teacher meet the alien, have
the fun, the adventure, the love affair. Yes, that was definitely the way to
go.
And if writing about what you know is the way to go, then
you can be assured that the school scenes are authentic. In fact readers who
know me say they see me in various parts of my books. Not surprising I guess.
Here’s a school scene from EMBRACED
“Miss D?” Curtis frowned. “You all right?”
Abby nodded. Another lie. She wasn’t all right. One minute
enchanted and dreamy, the next trembling in terror. One minute loving the
romance and impossibility of it, the next hysterical with the stark fear of
tumbling into an insanity from which she would never recover. Curtis handed the
pages to Tim and Lyle. She watched the boys hunched over the pages. And now I’m dragging you along with me. Oh
Lord, I’ll rot in hell for this. Fortunately the enchantment overrode all
else—most of the time. Or would fear be better, give her a way to break out of
this black hole she was sinking into? Curtis was still frowning at her.
“Any luck decoding?” she asked to be polite. That Curtis and
his friends might find something was a ludicrous expectation. She wished she’d
never involved them. No. That wasn’t true. She was glad she wasn’t alone with
the pages.
“Well …” Curtis looked from Lyle to Tim.
Lyle shrugged. Tim tapped the page of code he held in his
hand and nodded. “It’s on every page.”
Curtis sighed. “We didn’t want to say anything too soon, but
we’re pretty sure the code is a message.”
You are definitely a star in your novels. A humble one, but a star just the same.
ReplyDelete