I found this question on an internet post about questions that are not clichéd, which you might want to ask writers.
Unlike these questions below:
“Where do you get your ideas?” (Here, there and everywhere) “What is your writing process?” (Butt in chair no matter what) or “What advice do you have for writers?” (Write, period.)
These three are nice questions, but they are not interesting because they've been sprinkled about all the way from Ho-humVille to SoozzzzBay. 😴
So on to the better questions list. The one about
the first book that made me cry jumped at me.
Many books have made me cry. But the first? The very first?
Obviously, this isn’t a factual research
question. The memory of a one or two year old can’t be reliable. A two year old
may cry out of fear or shock, and I sense the question is about a different
sort of crying, empathetic sadness.
Which brings me to the first storybook that
gave me this experience, and the answer is as clear as it is easy for me. Hans Christian Andersen’s
THE LITTLE MATCH GIRL made me cry
at the age of four, and does to this day every time I re-read it.
When I read it to my kids, DD would stare into
my eyes to see the waterworks begin, because they always did. I would tell
myself that I know the story and I will not cry this time, but invariably and inevitably,
I did.
This story breaks all the conventions taught
today in kidlit workshops: It ends sadly, the main character dies, people left
behind do not “change” and the narration is much more “tell” than “show.”
Yet newly illustrated versions keep popping up. {It’s good to remember to let
go of these conventions in the service of great literature.}
I’ve never been to Copenhagen, but in lieu of
paying homage to a great storyteller there, I sat on the knee of the master when
I last visited Central Park in New York.