The unfortunate answer is no.
Perhaps it was because I went to a Catholic grade school where the
emphasis was on recruiting priests and nuns.
I decided I wanted to be a writer as early as the 4th grade. Granted my
early “novels” consisted mainly of first chapters about a stallion watching
over a herd of mares and foals—typical adolescent subject matter for the time.
In 5th grade, however, a freelance writer (let’s call him “Mr. Smith”) visited
our class to help us with fiction. I had high hopes of producing a quality tale
worthy of praise, but rather than nurturing our imaginations, he told us to compose
a story about a chair and, in the next session, one about an angel. Neither of
these topics inspired me. I wanted to write about cowboys and horses and the
Old West.
In 7th grade, we lucked out with a lay teacher instead of a
nun. Maybe since he wasn’t in the religious life, my fortune might change! I
tried to get Mr. Elmer to read my chapters, but he really didn’t want to. Was
it because he later followed this school’s wishes for vocational callings and
became a priest?
Because of Mr. Smith, however, I felt discouraged
about “creative writing” classes and didn’t take any in high school or college
because I thought I’d be told what to produce. In addition, I avoided working on
the school newspapers and yearbooks for the same reason. I later realized this
was a severe mistake on my part and very shortsighted.
Unfortunately, I let the one negative experience
from grade school influence my thinking and limit my avenues of creative
opportunity throughout my remaining educational years. To this day, I regret
it.
My senior year of high school, I was in an advanced
placement English class. The teacher (let’s call him Mr. Jones), hated my
writing, and despite being up until 2 AM every night doing his assigned
homework, I never seemed to manage an A. I got my satisfaction, however, when I
won the All-City Theme Contest. I’ll never forget how he sputtered announcing
the results to the students.
Motivated by this win and undeterred by Mr. Jones,
after I graduated from college, my thoughts returned to becoming an author. I wrote
my first book—a western, of course—while I was living on a
Norwegian-turned-British oil tanker (another whole story that is the subject of
my next book). The western remains unpublished, since, in it, I made every error
listed in “Common Mistakes Beginning Authors Make.”
When I returned to the United States, I was thrilled to discover a “Writing
for Publication” class through Adult Education. Surely, this class would encourage
students in pursuing their own ideas. The instructor, Anne Ewing, a well-known
writer, loved my work, and I was exhilarated when, after hearing one of my
chapters of my second novel, a sci-fi, she said with enthusiasm, “This girl is
going to sell!”
At last, I had found a teacher who supported me.
She invited me and one other student to apply for membership in the
prestigious Writers’ Club of Whittier, a critique group that started in 1953 and
of which she was a founding member. Through that group, I refined my skills,
and I finally started selling articles and short stories. (The WCW is still
going this day and celebrated its 60th anniversary in 2013.)
I finished the novel I had started prior to Ms. Ewing’s class, but several
years passed before I sold my first book-length work, a non-fiction hardcover called
Inside Out: The Wonders of Modern
Technology. A four-book contract quickly followed for a series called Breakthroughs in Science. In addition, I
sold articles to national trade magazines and a few short stories to consumer
magazines. Since that time, altogether, I have published 26 books and about 200
articles.
The moral of the story is that I made it despite negative experiences
and a lack of encouragement from grade- and high-school teachers. My advice to
everyone who wants to be a writer is to ignore naysayers. Don’t let them
discourage you. Listen to your own inspiration, to people who offer
constructive critique and help you develop your own voice and your craft.
Write on!