Author and MFAC alum Barbara Herkert* talks with us about her newest book, Sewing Stories. Learn about her writing process for this picture book biography on the life of Harriet Powers, an African
American artist who grew up as a slave.
Sewing Stories is about an artist
who was born into slavery, faced with crushing degradation and poverty, and
still driven to create in the form of appliqué story quilts unequaled in
composition and design. The book is illustrated by Vanessa Brantley-Newton and
was released in October, 2015 by Alfred A. Knopf.
Do you have a favorite part of the
book or a favorite character?
I love the ending, where Harriet is
soaring across the sky.
Did you workshop this story at Hamline or work with a faculty member on it?
I started working on this book at Hamline
under Jackie Briggs Martin’s mentorship. I’d never written a picture book
biography before. I was transfixed by the genre. Jackie showed me how to search
for those golden nuggets, how to transport the reader with details.
When did you first begin work on it?
When did you finish?
I began the manuscript during my
third semester at Hamline. I was in the first class--the “big class.”
As the work progressed from inception
to copy-edited version, what were the major changes? How did those changes come
about?
My first editor at Knopf was Michelle
Burke. We cut out entire stanzas and shortened others to make room for
illustrations. I finished the project with another editor, Kelly Delaney, after
Michelle decided to stay home with her new baby. Kelly made further edits,
including taking the stanzas out of free-verse and including dialogue. I was extremely
hesitant about the dialogue—the only documented words of Harriet’s own are the
descriptions of her story quilts. But I found a source of testimonies by former
slaves that I felt enveloped Harriet’s spirit.
What research did you do before and while writing the book?
I did tons of research. I read
everything I could about Harriet, about slavery and life in Athens, Georgia
following the Civil War, and about appliqué quilting. I went to the Smithsonian
to see the first story quilt “in person.” The shapes and the rhythm that
continues throughout the quilt mesmerized me.
Where did you do most of your writing
for this book?
At home.
Any final thoughts on the book you'd
like to share?
The idea for this book came to me
when I was researching for another project. I was reading about anonymous women
artists when I first came across Harriet’s photograph and pictures of her story
quilts. I had to find out more about her. She enchanted me.
*Barbara Herkert received a biology degree from the University of California, Santa
Barbara and a MFA from Hamline University. She studied art and art history at
Oregon State University, and wrote and illustrated my first book in 2001,
entitled Birds in Your Backyard. I’m
currently the Co-Regional Advisor for SCBWI-Oregon. Mary Cassatt: Extraordinary Expressionist Painter (with
illustrations by Gabi Swiatkowska) was
also released in October, 2015, and A
Boy, a Mouse, and a Spider: The Story of E.B. White (illustrated by Lauren
Castillo) will be released in 2017
(both by Christy Ottaviano/Henry Holt.
It's wonderful to see what this manuscript became. Congratulations!
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