Great American theater started in a library
By Carrie Benseler
The Pruyn Library in Albany, New York, was
Gregory Maguire’s first experience of the
splendors of the public library system. As
a child, Maguire claims to have spent
hours immersed in the library’s
collection of fairy tales and fantasy
books. The Pruyn Library has since
been demolished to make room for an
interstate connector highway, but Maguire
credits the public library of his youth with
engaging his imagination, fueling a passion
for literacy and effectively starting his
writing career.
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Gregory Maguire |
Maguire hails from a family of writers, his
father being a journalist and his mother a
poet, and many of his siblings later became
writers as well. Maguire became dedicated to
reading and writing at an early age, composing
more than a hundred stories and novels between
the ages of 7 and 17.
“My childhood was very restricted,” says Maguire. “My parents did not let my brothers and sisters and I
watch television. The public library and the benefits of
reading were all I had to feast on.”
Maguire is the author of more than 15 children’s books and
five books for adults, including his 1995 bestseller, Wicked: The
Life and Times of the Wicked Witch of the West. Thanks to the
success of both the novel and the Tony Award-winning Broadway musical,
Wicked, he’s been able to champion the importance of reading through speaking
engagements, book signings and codirecting Children’s Literature New England, a nonprofit
educational charity he established in 1987.
In addition, Maguire is now championing the importance of libraries through OCLC’s most recent public library
advocacy campaign. The OCLC advocacy campaign was developed on behalf of libraries
everywhere, aimed at library budget decision-makers. Through the campaign, OCLC hopes to raise awareness of
critical library issues, enable more informed dialogue and ultimately help libraries demonstrate their value.
Maguire’s inspiring story is proof that rich imaginations can yield best-selling results. The latest advocacy ad
showcases this aspect of libraries: as a career inspiration zone.
Q&A with Gregory Maguire
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| OCLC advocacy ad featuring Gregory McGuire. |
Age 51
Why you love libraries Libraries are the ultimate in
hypermedia—a library is a maze that delivers you where
you didn’t know you needed to be.
What motivates you Liberty, fantasy, key lime pie
What are you passionate about The rights of readers
to read what they want, uninterrupted and unsurveyed.
Working style Fuss, neaten, obsess, neaten, fuss,
coffee, clean coffee rings off counter. Twenty minutes
before the school bus is due to return
with the kids, have brainstorm.
Best thing about libraries The
company one keeps! Cervantes, Matt
Groening, Emily Dickinson, Roz
Chwast, Tolkien, Tolstoi and the
editorial boards of all the major
newspapers in the United States!
Worst thing about libraries Do
they really have to close? What
about 24/7 Libraries “R” Us?
Top three issues facing libraries The video mesmorama eats
into their appeal, for fiction anyway.
Threats to the privacy of citizen
readers. Libraries serve increasingly
as a neighborhood’s prime center,
instead of being one of several. Wear and tear is
expensive.
The future of libraries Secure—if we treasure them.
How your idea for Wicked came about I became
interested in the nature of evil, and whether one really
could be born “bad.” When I realized that nobody had
ever written about the second most evil character in our
collective American subconscious (the first being Hitler),
The Wicked Witch of the West, I thought I had
experienced a small moment of inspiration.
Favorite authors Jill Paton Walsh, Stona Fitch, Ron
Hansen, T.H. White, L.M. Boston, Jane Langton.
Last nonfiction book read Probably a biography of
Lucretia Borgia.
Last fiction book read Old Filth by Jane Gardam.
Favorite T.V. show The West Wing—because it has
Stockard Channing and Kristin Chenoweth, both of
whom have appeared in adaptations of my novels.
Last movie seen Bad Education by Almodóvar. Also,
The Wedding Singer, on tape.
Type of music Chopin nocturnes, Bach keyboard (on
piano only), Brian Eno’s Music for Airports.
Significant life experience Hmm. Adopting my three
children from Cambodia and Guatemala.
Hobbies Frequenting used bookstores.
Tips for library advocacy Discuss—with enthusiasm—what you read, at
every opportunity.
Memorable library experience Spying on unsuspecting patrons when
I was 10 years old, and being
convinced I was Harriet the Spy. Not
at what they were reading—just on
them. So my aversion to Homeland
Security’s threat to the privacy of
patrons of libraries is a guilty response
to earlier transgressions of my own.
A great idea for libraries Social
evenings with music, beverages and
books. 10-minute “best of” readings
(my favorite poem, etc.).
Greatest achievement Fatherhood.
A Broadway musical inspired by my novel is an
acceptable runner-up.
Why reading and libraries are important To ensure
the survival of a humane and literate society.
Where your ideas come from Other books (don’t tell).
Dreams. My boring life. My not-so-boring imagination.
Do libraries need fundamental change? Why or
why not? The computer revolution must happen; it
must not displace the book, though—and won’t.
What was your reaction when you heard your
book would become a musical? I had cautious
optimism that it might find an appreciative audience.
What was it like seeing your book transformed
into a musical? Magic! Sheer, unadulterated magic.
How do you like the musical? I adore it and have
seen it 15 times.
About Gregory Maguire
Gregory Maguire holds a bachelor’s degree in English and Art from The State
University of New York and a Ph.D. in English and American Literature from Tufts University. He is a founder and
codirector of Children’s Literature New England, Inc., a nonprofit educational charity established in 1987. His work as
a consultant in creative writing for children has taken him to speaking engagements at conferences and schools
across the United States and abroad. Maguire writes book reviews for the New York Times, The Horn Book
Magazine and other journals. He has received honors and awards for his books from literary organizations, such as
the National Council of Teachers of English and the American Library Association.
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