World Lit/Comp IA Blog

Friday, May 18, 2007

Gary Soto "LIVING UP THE STREET" work until the end of the spring 2007 school year

Gary Soto Living up the Street

“Father”
“Being Mean”
“1, 2, 3”
“Deceit”
“Baseball in April”
“Summer School”
“Desire”
“Bloodworth”
“One Last Time”
“Black Hair”
“Being Stupid”


Gary Soto Frequently Asked Questions:

FAQ
Gary Soto was born April 12, 1952 in Fresno, California, where he was raised and went to the public schools. From ages 7 to 18, he seemed to live at Romain playground, an education in itself. He has been married to his wife Carolyn for thirty years, and they have a daughter, Mariko, who works as a veterinarian.
When did you first start writing? I was twenty and a student at Fresno City College, when I discovered an array of contemporary American poets. My favorite then was Edward Field. Soon I discovered W.S. Merwin, Charles Simic, James Wright and the master of them all, Pablo Neruda. Then I discovered the novelist Gabriel Garcia Marquez, and I was hooked. I wanted to make writing my life.
Do you need to read in order to write? Claro qué si! Poets should fill themselves with the works of poetry and other writers. My advice for young poets is to read what’s available in the contemporary landscape. Later they can begin to study the grand masters such as Flaubert and Turgenev.
Were you a “good student” in school? Claro qué no! I graduated from Roosevelt High School with something like a 1.6 GPA. But while in high school I discovered the works of Hemingway, Steinbeck, Jules Vernes, Robert Frost and Thorton Wilder. In short, I was already thinking like a poet, already filling myself with literature.
What was your major in college? I went to Fresno State College, where I graduated in 1974. My major was English.
Do you speak Spanish? Sometimes.
What do you like to do? Read. It appears these days I don’t have much of a life because my nose is often stuck a book. But I discovered that reading builds a life inside the mind. I enjoy biographies and novels and reading in Spanish. Also, I like theater, tennis, basketball, traveling (especially London) and working in the garden…sometimes.
Who are your favorite writers? Thomas Berger, Gabriel Garcia Marquez, Pablo Neruda, Carson McCullers, Richard Russo, John Galsworthy, Walter Mosley, James Crumley, Richard Ford, Christopher Durang, David Mamet, H.E. Bates, A.R. Gurney, Nicky Silvers, Martín Espada, Robertson Davies, Elmore Leonard, and Bill Shakespeare. My favorite Faulkner novel is The Light in August. My favorite poem is Christopher Smart’s “My Cat Jeffery.”
Have any of your stories been made into moves? Yes, I had a short story of mine called “The No Guitar Blues” made into a short film. Buried Onions, my young-adult novel, is scheduled for film production, but it has delayed.
You are the Young People Ambassador for California Rural Legal Assistance (CRLA) and the United Farm Workers of America (UFW). What does this title mean? It means that when I make presentations I devote some time to telling my audience about the legacy of these two organizations. Under the Directorship of José Padilla, CRLA helps the rural poor when they need legal representation. The UFW is a union of farm workers started by Cesar Chavez and Dolores Huerta in the mid-1960s.
When writing, do you revise? Yes, all writers revise and almost all writers have friends who look at his or her work. My first reader is my wife; poor thing, I bother her almost daily as I beg, “Carolyn, could you please look at this masterpiece?” Of course it’s not a masterpiece, but a way of getting her attention.
What’s the favorite book you have written? Jesse, a novel set in the early 1970s and about two brothers. I also enjoyed writing my novel Poetry Lover.
What is your favorite novel written by someone else? It might be The Feud by Thomas Berger or it might be Love in the Time of Cholera by Gabriel Garcia Marquez. My all time favorite—it’s a tough call—is Flaubert’s Madame Bovary.
Do you have a favorite movie? No, I don’t. But I can tell you my wife’s favorite movie—“Babe.”
Do all your writing projects get published? No, I have written several picture books that were just awful, and I have written a middle grade novel that was too violent for its own good. I put them away, and sometimes I burn the poetry I feel is no good.
Do you teach? No
We hear that you have a library named in your honor? Yes, this is at Winchell Elementary School in Fresno.
What is your highest honor? In Kennesaw, Georgia, there is one wonderful teacher who named her dog after me. She apparently loves my work. The dog is named Soto. Apparently he is one goofy dog.
Do you often go back to Fresno? Almost monthly. I have friends and family there, and I like to kick around its streets. My most recent novel, The Afterlife, is set in Fresno. I can’t get Fresno out of my system. Qué viva Fresno!
Do you see your friends from childhood? No, I’m sorry that I don’t. Friends, as you may know, sometimes disappear. Mine did.
What are you working on now? I’m in the final edits of a collection of love poetry for middle-grade students. It’s called Partly Cloudy: Poems of Love and Longing. Recently I read a few of these poems at a school near Chicago and asked the young men in the audience if they would buy a book of love poems. They grumbled and one uttered, “Absolutely not!” So will the book be a failure? No, because it’s my hope that the young women will buy the book and get the young guys (wake up, guys!) to read the poems. The book is due in early spring 2008! Love, I guess, must wait.
Are you going to write more plays? No, I’m afraid not. I recently finished a one-act play called Everything’s Broken, and my wife, my good friend José Novoa, my literary agent—the whole world, it seemed—said that it stinks. Of course, they used kinder words, but I got their meaning.



WHAT FROM THIS FAQ SHEET IS ALREADY APPARENT IN “FATHER”?

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