Karen Cushman

Karen Cushman

Newbery award-winning children’s book author

Karen Cushman

Stories of Arrival 

The Colors of My PastIn honor of Poetry Month (I know I’m late to the party, but it’s still April). I would like to share a poem from the Immigrant and Refugee Youth Voices Poetry Project at Foster High School in Tukwila, Washington. Poet and teaching artist Merna Hecht works each year with refugee students from war-torn countries as they struggle to find words to express their longing, their courage and resilience, and their hopes for the future. Hau Sian Khai is from Burma. He hopes he never forgets his home.

Where I Grew Up 

by Hau Sian Khai

Sometimes I wish that my city in Burma was surrounded By cheerful green trees
weaving in the wind Fresh, bubbling blue water Clean, healthy air floating.

There are white, shiny bright tunics
Wondering around my city in Malaysia,
Long hairy beards like spider webs
Hurrying to the mosque for prayers.

Other times I think of
The smell of sea fish,
The smell of dead animals from hunger and cold, The smell of burning flames from
outdoor fires, The smells from garbage, awful funky animal smells.

The struggle of hunger,
The struggle of sickness
And dying, needing a cure,
The struggle of war,
People forced to move away from home,
Carrying their belongings and valuables
Like heavy, giant rocks.

For more information or to order a copy of the anthology, see Merna Hecht’s website.

My writing future

Copyright-free image of Elvis Presley from the Library of Congress collectionI was asked not long ago if I plan to write in other formats—plays, poetry, screenplays, or picture books. My short answer was good grief, no! but here’s more. I think I wrote all the plays, poetry, and screen plays that I had inside me before I was fifteen. I still have boxes of them: plays like “Jingle Bagels,” the story of Santa Claus going down the wrong chimney on Christmas Eve and finding himself in a Jewish home; a notebook called Plots for Elvis Movies; and of course poetry, poetry I wrote when I was happy, angry, frightened, in love, broken hearted—even a series of poems based on the life of Elvis (do you see a theme here?). No, I believe I’ll stick to middle-grade novels. They have gotten me this far.