MY
MOUNTAIN SONG

Illustrated by Ted Rand
Published by Clarion, May, 2004
About
MY MOUNTAIN SONG
In
the early 1980s I read a book that changed my life. It
was Cynthia Rylant’s When I Was Young in the Mountains.
(Dutton, 1982) I read that book and said “Hey! That’s
my story, too!” Her book talked about life in the
mountains in West Virginia, which is just across the state
line from
eastern Kentucky where I was born and had spent many happy
summers visiting relatives. I had also recently read a
poem about mountain folk by Mittie L. Jordan. It read,
in part, “I
was born a mountain child/born of mountain farmers/strong
people who know that it is hard/to produce a harvest from
a rock/strong
solid people/who believe enough to try.”
I
had been writing poetry for many years and those two pieces
of writing
prompted me to try my own poem about loving the
mountains. After I’d written a poem, people read
it and said that it sounded like there was a whole story
there. Hmmm
. . . I expanded my poem and wrote a picture book from
it—the
very first book I wrote specifically to be a book for
children, My Mountain Song.
Many
years after I wrote this book I ended up selling
it to Clarion (Houghton Mifflin). But while I was still
trying
to
sell it, people who read the story told me that it
sounded like there was more to the story. They wanted to
know
more about the girl, Brenda Gail. Hmmm . . . I expanded
upon it
again and wrote a novel. That novel also sold to Clarion
and became Spitting Image. I dedicated the novel to
my sister, Brenda, as she was the basis for the little girl
in My Mountain
Song. Although Spitting Image was sold after My Mountain
Song,
the novel was published first, as it did not require
illustrations. Also, we waited to get a really fine
illustrator,
Ted Rand.
My
Mountain Song is, perhaps, the book closest to my heart for
several reasons. It was the first book I
really wanted
to write for kids, it is based upon my true experiences
of going down South every summer to visit grandparents,
and
it has my sister in it. Also, the nickname I gave
to Brenda Gail
was mine. Some in my family still call me “Shuck
Beans.” Also,
the name I gave to the bothersome cousin is my dad’s
name, Melvin. (See the dedication in the book.)
I
hope you enjoy My Mountain Song, as it is one of
many songs from my heart.
S.
C.
May, 2004.
MY
MOUNTAIN SONG
Activity Guide