Sarah
Wilson wrote and illustrated her first story at the age of four. She remembers
putting it together in a small book with help from her mother. By the age of
five, Wilson pecked out simple stories on her father’s typewriter. And in second
and third grade a few of what Wilson dubs her “little poems” were published in a
newspaper and a children’s magazine. According to Wilson, “I can’t remember a
time when I wasn’t writing.” But in fourth grade, a visiting art teacher planted
the seed in Wilson’s mind that she could write and draw for a living. “Max was
such a gift,” Wilson says of the visiting teacher. “He’s why I’m so willing to
go into schools to speak to kids.”
Wilson
plays with words as a form of entertainment. She carries a little notebook and
scribbles down funny word combinations or words that sound good together.
Sometimes she gets a title idea, sometimes a story idea. “There is so much
stimulation from every direction, ideas come faster than I can get them down,”
she says. “Trying to catch them is like catching milkweed down.” [Excerpted from my Sarah Wilson profile.]
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