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James Howe
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 An interview with James Howe

I don't believe I was born to write. In fact, if you'd asked me when I was seven or eight, I would have probably said I was born to ride. Back then, you see, I wanted to be a jockey. But that dream was put out to pasture when my mother told me she had calculated that my adult height would be 6'4". (Actually, she was off by two inches. I'm only 6'2". But then, how many of us are as tall in our own eyes as we our in hers?) She suggested to me, then or sometime later, that I consider becoming a writer.

No, I thought, writing was not something to do for a living. Writing is something to do for fun. For years I wrote for fun. When I was nine or ten, I wrote a play, based on the "Blondie" comic strip, entitled Dagwood's Awful Day. I also directed it, sold lemonade during the intermission, and played the title role. I wrote short stories and published newspapers, my favorite being a newsletter for a club I founded when I was eleven: The Vampire Legion. I called the newsletter the Gory Gazette. I wrote a humor column for my high school paper. And in college (Boston University, where I majored in theater) I wrote more plays. I then had fun writing critical papers for my English and dramatic literature courses.

After graduating from college I moved to New York City, where I pursued a career as an actor, modeled, appeared in some commercials, directed a few plays, and, for quite a number of years, worked as a literary agent for playwrights and other writers.

All the while I continued to write for fun. And not once did I think that that was what I should be doing for a living. After all, Writing was pleasure! Work was work! And never the twain shall meet, even if your name is Samuel Clemens.

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Then one day in the mid-70s I dreamed up the character of a vampire rabbit named Bunnicula. I'm asked all the time where he came from. The truth is: I don't know! At the time, there were many movie versions of Dracula being shown on television, usually late at night. Most of them were as funny as they were scary. It might have been this late-night viewing that inspired Bunnicula, but as I don't remember the moment he popped (or should I say hopped?) into my mind, I can't be sure.

It was my late wife, Deborah, who suggested we write a children's book about him. Sounds like fun, I thought, and so we began, never imagining we'd be creating characters who would one day become favorites of young readers. We weren't even thinking about getting the book published then. We were just having a good time, writing the kind of story we would enjoy reading ourselves. We had such a good time, we went on to write a second story, Teddy Bear's Scrapbook.

While we were writing these two books we learned that Debbie had cancer. She died in 1973, a short time after the books were completed. Based on my experiences and observations during Debbie's illness, I went on to write The Hospital Book, a serious book, but one I enjoyed writing nonetheless. Then I remembered how much fun I had with the characters in Bunnicula and decided to write a second book about them, one I eventually called Howliday Inn. Since then I have written more books about Harold, Chester, Bunnicula, Howie, and the Monroes, including The Celery Stalks at Midnight, Nighty-Nightmare and Return to Howliday Inn.

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A lot has happened since I started writing books for fun. In 1981, I left my job as a literary agent and began writing full-time. Besides the further adventures of Harold and Chester, I've written a series of mysteries featuring a thirteen-year-old sleuth named Sebastian Barth. I've also created a series of short chapter books, loosely based on my own childhood, about two best friends named Pinky and Rex. And I've written picture books, novels, nonfiction, adaptations of classic stories, and screenplays for movies and television. Recently, I began writing for older readers as well. My first young adult novel is called The Watcher.

Over the years I've learned that there's more to being a children's author than writing books. There's the thrill of seeing each idea develop from a lightbulb going on over your head to a book you can hold in your hand ("Imagine," you think, "this exists because I made it exist!"); the satisfaction of receiving letters from readers and learning what it is they like (and maybe don't like) about your books; and the pleasure of meeting readers face-to-face, talking with them, and getting to know who they are and what they're thinking. I've come to realize that there's more to writing than my own amusement. There's the reward of fun that's shared.

And you can make a living at it!

There's a moral to this story: Except when she's telling you to eat mushrooms, listen to your mother!

 

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