pbs kids block

Welcome to the best article on pbs kids block

Archive for the ‘Self Improvement’ Category

Author: Irene Watson
Source: articleage.com

Interview with Dan Peterson
Author of “Fergus, The Soccer Playing Colt”
Reader Views is pleased to have Dan Peterson, author of “Fergus, The Soccer Playing Colt” with us today. Great to have you here Dan.
Irene: What inspired you to write “Fergus, The Soccer Playing Colt”?
Dan: I had a palomino horse which I had raised from a weanling. The book is based loosely on that horse. He could open gates, get grain out of an old tire; he would also carry around a ball (with a handle on it) or anything else he could pick up that interested him.

And, kids pbs
, I just wanted to write a kids’ book.
Irene: Did you train your horse to do those things, or is this innate?
Dan: No this is learned behavior. Innate behavior I think is fleeing a predator or grazing on pasture grass. This horse actually learned how to do those things on his own. I think the grain in an old tire is a good example. I don’t know how he figured it out but, kids pbs
, he would actually pick up the tire and toss it to the ground in front of him. Every time he did that a few bits of the grain would bounce out.

He would continue the routine until he had every last morsel of grain out of that tire.
Irene: Why did you have Fergus playing soccer rather, than say, baseball, or football?
Dan: I had Fergus playing soccer because it would be more believable that a horse could kick around a fair-sized round ball, etc. That would not have been possible with a football or a baseball. And basket ball was out of the question. And I had carried around the first couple of lines in my head for about a year. I wanted the colt to be more than just an acrobat.

, kids pbs
, It would give my story more possibilities for other things to happen.
Irene: How did you come up with the characters in the story?
Dan: Well, I of course knew that I’d have to have kids in a kid story, hence Bobby and Ramon. Ian Connor was a convenience or a conveyance–a way to get Fergus and Bobby and Ramon on the excursion, where the rest of the story might happen. I don’t know how I came up with the “bad” guys. I knew they couldn’t be really scary bad, so I tried to laugh at all of them a little bit.

Rumble Smith was a villain, but a sort of bumbling villain. He could be dishonest (and pay the price for it eventually), but he could not be threatening. Reiterate was just a sidekick, but I didn’t want him to be bland or uninteresting. I wanted him to contribute to the story. Billy Joe was essential as someone with more dimension.
I liked all of these characters. They are, in fact, my favorites. I still like reading about them. I don’t know how I cam up with them. They just sort of appeared and took on a life of their own.

I knew when I decided to have Fergus stolen that it would have to be by a cowboy like Rumble. More plausible that the colt be stolen by someone other than another soccer type, because it would be easier to make the colt, Fergus, disappear.
As I’m sure you know, the characters gain dimension and their personalities as the story progresses. They didn’t all arrive as what they ended up being.
Irene: How much of yourself is in the plot?
Dan: Me in the plot. I think if I’m anyone in the plot, I’m Bobby Simpson, though the story is not told exclusively from his point of view.

Irene: When writing a children’s book, do you have to place yourself in the eyes and minds of a child of the age group you are writing for? If so, how do you do that?
Dan: I think of course you have to view the world through the eyes of a child. You have to think things that a kid would think but give a kid’s view more dimension. Can’t be just declarative sentences of what the kids in the book are doing or thinking. I don’t know how well I succeeded. I do try to think and stay young and not be an “old fart” that my kids and my grandkids have trouble relating too.

Plus I spend a lot of time with my grandkids when I can and I like to talk to kids sometimes. And I try hard to remember what I would be doing and thinking and feeling at that age.
Irene: Have, kids pbs
, any of your grandchildren read Fergus? If so, what are their responses?
Dan: My granddaughter, who is a reluctant reader, finally finished the book a couple of months after I gave it to her. She told me she loved it and that she cried in some parts, but that may be because she wanted to please me or not hurt my feelings.

Her brother, my only other grandchild has not yet read the book, but he’s too young for it right now.
Irene: You seem to have a close connection to horses. Tell me more about that.
Dan: I do have a close connection to horses. I was raised around them, on my grandparent’s farm, I learned to ride early, and I’ve always liked being around horses. I think they are magical creatures. As a kid–and that was a very long time ago–I read all the horse stories I could find. I have raised several babies, trained them into adults I could ride, etc.

I just love the animals. They enchant me. But they also make me angry and frustrated sometimes. I wish I could think more like a horse like some of the great trainers do. Some people have almost a mystical connection. I have never been able to achieve that with horses.
Irene: When you say “mystical” do you mean that people can communicate with the horse – for instance, a horse whisper? Have you tried to communicate on another level?
Dan: Yes I firmly believe that a select few people, kids pbs
, can communicate with horses.

I have never been able to reach that level partly because I don’t spend all my time with them, and partly because I don’t have the gift.
I just listened to an interview on our local PBS station about a woman who was autistic but was able to complete the work for her doctorate. The gist of what she said while I was listening was that she and some autistic people like her don’t see words in their mind’s eye but pictures. She thinks that’s the best approach to communicating with animals. You first try to see the world as they see it.

And I think that all the great trainers do that.
Irene: This book isn’t just about a colt playing soccer. The story has a deeper message. Would you tell your reading audience what that message is?
Dan: I never realized this book had a message until other people started telling me it did have one. I just wanted to tell a story that was in my mind and that progressed as I wrote. But I am told it sends a message that differences are a good thing and not a bad thing; that teamwork is a good way to accomplish goals (Fergus and Bouncer).

If I wanted consciously, kids pbs
, to send a message it would have been that animals are capable of more than most people expect of them, and that they can surprise you with their intelligence and adaptability. And maybe in Billy Joe Culpepper’s case, that someone can do bad or questionable, kids pbs
, things, but not be bad themselves.
Irene: “Fergus” is geared for pre-teen boys. Have you had young boys read the book, and, if so, what were the responses?
Dan: I have actually received more responses from young girls than from young boys.

All the ones I have talked to have liked the book. But I think it is a sad thing that kids just do not read as much as they used to. Too much TV; too much Nintendo, etc. I have yet to have someone tell me they didn’t like the book.
Irene: What do you believe it is that they like about the book? It is nothing like what kids watch on TV.
Dan: It’s true. It’s nothing like what kids are watching on TV today. And I think that most kids are watching TV and not reading. If they read my book I think they like the parts where Fergus and the dog, Bouncer, team up to rescue themselves.

I think they maybe like to fantasize about having a horse like Fergus. And they might like the idea of Reiterate Johnson. He was sort of my comic relief. But I’m just guessing about that one.
Irene: You have authored and published various publications. What is different about “Fergus: The Soccer-Playing Colt” from your other writing?
Dan: Fergus was fun to write and satisfying. Though it was kids’ fiction, it was still fiction. I would rather write fiction and poetry any day because it gives you so much, kids pbs
, more leeway for your imagination.

I like lyrical writing; imagery. Fiction gives you an opportunity to try your hand at that, even if it is for kids. I would hope that kids like stories that are more than just exposition or informational text.
Irene: Is there anything else that, kids pbs
, you would like to tell our reading audience about yourself or your book?
Dan: Only that after writing it, and rereading passages I still think it’s a very good book and that’s usually a sign that you’ve done a fairly good job. I would also like to ask people who read it to email me their reactions whether good or bad.

And that I am 65 and have never given up wanting to get something published, showing that anything is possible when you stay with it.
Irene Watson is Managing Editor of Reader Views, a book review service. http://www.readerviews.com She is also the author of “The Sitting Swing,” a memoir published last fall.

Possibly related posts: (automatically generated)

Author: Pegine Echevarria
Source: download

Okay, I can vouch 100% for that if it breaks abstraction focused on his dream, if you are accommodating to do every day something like your dream, if you are positioning themselves to not give back at any moment you accept a known aloft their wildest imagination. When I was seventeen, continuing along the curve in my jean jacket, cigarettes blind from my mouth, my hair, kids pbs
, went blind for the abandonment of my face, accompanied Peanuts alleged, Lefty and, kids pbs
, Rat.

My new boyfriend, Tex allegedly told me it would be "addicted prostitute," as my sister. I looked and looked back down. Rage abundant and again I calm came over me. I capital to leave all, kids pbs
, the stern and be somebody. Someone told my mom that I was, my ancestors told me it was and it was aural ambush me. I knew more than I would go after my dream. I had a dream. I saw at that time my angel on a TV screen, like an expert. They are known as real, as possible. I told my "goodbye friends, ran home and began an adventure that never included to adhere permanent place in that corner.

The adventure was very specific that led me to the award, in addition to the block and back, an adventure that all that stunned thought / think / perceived and accepted as healthy as adventure airy sound that woke me from a port that has never known my soul. I took risks, and acquired distressed me. I'm still alteration and growing today, capable of body-on today was appropriate for me because I was working my dream award. Today I met with my ambassador of control and an ambassador of a PBS pilot appearance.

That in itself was surprising. However, walking to the date (which is a huge room with rows and rows of lights on top of you), with an ambassador walking beside you, assuming that the area of the fans is the date in my area and will be. .. I fear above. I've been in a lot of television sets. CNN, Montel Williams, MSNBC News from others. I've even helped other people for hosting on its pilots, as bedfellow, but able to go on air in a package that is for demonstration PAGE was … so he took away my animation.

My affection swelled with such appreciation and gratitude. It is an account in order to make the plan that you love, of all that you agree to accept and achieves 5 has fear. return in the curve in the Bronx, I never feel that it would be absurd to go on air on stage my time. Today I and was able and honor. If there is a newsletter that is: – Go later his dream. Not according to top. Do your best and perceive that they are loved. Joel Osteen shares that you tell your children "It is not annihilation can do.

Accepts a burning in the foreground about you. You are in the midst of God's grace. Everything that you are traveling blow to thrive. "My mom told me the same thing, but I do not agree … That night in the corner, I thought. I believed in my dream … and I took action. Today I know my children, my husband, my audience and my accompanying "I accept you accept a fire burning next to accept the knowledge acquired about you. Play Big PAGE PAGE, kids pbs
, authority Empowerment Echevarria, MSW and his company, the computer PAGE, transforms people's organizations of the award.

You and the ability to be absorbed into commodities PAGE networking calls, "Go Fish: For friends, business opportunities," an archetype naively accepting as collateral for your ezine in http://www.pegine.com chargeless his most recent book is "Sometimes you need your own Kick Butt: Strategies for Success" PAGE appeared on CNN, MSNBC, ABC, CBS, NBC and speech programming. The New York Times, LA Times, Chicago Sun Times and magazines such as Hispanic Business Magazine, America, Health, Sexy, Working Mother and other prominent accent or accept their work.

She speaks at conferences on the block and is accessible for your next appointment or meeting.

Possibly related posts: (automatically generated)