Aileen Fisher

Aileen Fisher

Photo of Aileen Lucia Fisher

Aileen Fisher
Born (1906-09-09)September 9, 1906
Iron River, Michigan, USA
Died December 2, 2002(2002-12-02) (aged 96)
Boulder, Colorado, USA
Occupation Children's writer, poet, playwright
Alma mater University of Chicago, University of Missouri School of Journalism, BA, (1927)
Notable works "Otherwise"
"After a Bath"
Valley of the Smallest
Notable awards NCTE Award for Excellence in Poetry for Children

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Aileen Lucia Fisher (September 9, 1906 – December 2, 2002) was an American writer of more than a hundred children's books, including poetry, picture books in verse, prose about nature and America, biographies, Bible themed books, plays, and articles for magazines and journals. Her poems have been anthologized many times and are frequently used in textbooks. In 1978 she was awarded the second National Council of Teachers of English Award for Excellence in Poetry for Children.[1] Born in Michigan, Fisher moved to Colorado as an adult and lived there for the rest of her life.

Life

Aileen was born September 9, 1906 in Iron River, on the Upper Peninsula of Michigan, to Nelson E. and Lucia (Milker) Fisher. Her father was a homesteader who established several businesses in the area;[2] her mother had been a kindergarten teacher.[3] When she was five years old, poor health caused her father to retire to 40 acres near the Iron River in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan, where he built a home called High Banks. She and her brother, Leslie Paul, spent much of their time playing in the nearby river, walking country roads, and taking care of their farm animals. On Aileen's eighth birthday her baby sister, Lucia, arrived; considering her a birthday present, Aileen soon began taking care of her. Another sister, Beth, was born six years later.[4]:868

Fisher attended the University of Chicago for two years, then transferred to the University of Missouri in order to obtain a BA in journalism in 1927.[5] After graduating she took a summer job in a small theater, then returned to Chicago.[4] She was working as an assistant in a placement bureau for women journalists, then as the director for the Women's National Journalistic Register.[3]

In 1933, wanting to live someplace that had beautiful scenery, a good library and an "invigorating climate",[6] she moved with attorney and fellow-writer Olive Rabe to Boulder, Colorado. Five years later they bought a 200-acre ranch in Sunshine Canyon, at the foot of Flagstaff Mountain. They lived there, totally off the grid, for thirty years. An active woman who loved the outdoors, she and Olive designed and built the cabin on their ranch. As Fisher explained in 1948, “We bought the ranch, built a cabin, got a dog — and now we don’t care if we ever leave Boulder county”.[6] Her other interests included reading, woodworking, hiking and mountain climbing.[4] Aileen Fisher died at the age of 96 at her home in Boulder, Colorado.[7] Her papers are held in libraries at Southern Mississippi University and Stanford University.[8]

Writing

According to Fisher, "Poetry is a rhythmical piece of writing that leaves the reader feeling that life is a little richer than before, a little more full of wonder, beauty, or just plain delight." And, despite the great variety found in her writing, she thought of herself primarily as a poet. "My first and chief love in writing is writing children's verse."[9] The first work she sold, to Child Life magazine in 1927, was "Otherwise".[4] This nine-line poem, opening "There must be magic, Otherwise, How could day turn into night?", has been reprinted in a number of anthologies and is still used in schools. Fisher continued to sell to poetry magazines after the publication of her first volume, The Coffee-Pot Face, in 1933. A collection of poems about everyday things like lady bugs, tummy aches and icicles, it was illustrated by her own silhouette drawings, and became a Junior Literary Guild Selection.[4]

More than twenty poetry collections followed, including Up the Windy Hill: A Book of Merry Verses with Silhouettes, and You Don’t Look Like Your Mother, re-released in 2001. Her books have been illustrated by prominent artists including Eric Carle, Adrienne Adams, Symeon Shimin, and Mique Moriuchi. In 1991 Harper Collins published Always Wondering: Some Favorite Poems of Aileen Fisher, selected by the author from some of her most requested and anthologized pieces. I Heard a Bluebird Sing, is a posthumous collection of her poems chosen for inclusion by the votes of school children around the US, along with excerpts from interviews and articles she had written. Ms Fisher's poems continue to appear in anthologies and several of her collections have been re-released after her death, leading her to be included by one reviewer on a short list of "some of the luminaries in recent children's poetry".[10]

Fisher wrote both rhyming and prose non-fiction books, many of them focusing on natural history. One of her personal favorites was Valley of the Smallest: The Life Story of the Shrew, which received the Western Writers of America Spur Award for juvenile non-fiction,[11] was named a Hans Christian Andersen Honor Book, and placed on Horn Book Magazine's Best Books of the Year list.[12] It follows the life of an adult masked shrew living, like Ms Fisher, in a valley in the Colorado Rocky Mountains. Other award-winning natural history books include Feathered Ones and Furry, illustrated by Eric Carle, and In the Woods, In the Meadow, In the Sky.

Fisher published plays for children, frequently about holidays or with patriotic or historic themes. Some of these were written with other co-writers, including Olive Rabe. They also collaborated on biographies about Emily Dickinson and Louisa May Alcott.

She also collaborated with composer George Lynn by writing lyrics for children's Christmas anthems, a song cycle called "The Ladybug and Her Friends" and a folk opera called "The Violinden Tree".[13]

Critical reception

In 1958, New York Times reviewer Anzia Yezierska said that Fisher “lights the commonplace moment with wonder.” According to the Poetry Foundation, her poems are "suffused with curiosity and love for the workings of the natural world."[3] Kirkus Reviews called her verse "deftly evocative".[14] The New York Times Book Review called her "a true poet, no mere light versifier." [7] In I Heard a Bluebird Sing Boyds Mill Press said, "her work is forever fresh and timeless. With a child's heart and a knowing hand, she has honed simple words and ideas into small poetic gems that shine with clarity and sensitivity… This important anthology celebrates the work of one of America's beloved writers for young people." [15]

Ms Fisher's natural history rhyming texts were often well received. Of Going Barefoot, a Kirkus reviewer wrote, "This rhymed text imparts a substantial amount of naturalist information in a pleasant and animated fashion."[16] The factual content of her books was often praised. About All on a Mountain Day, Saturday Review wrote "There is a real feeling for these animals and the part each plays—the hunted and the hunters— in the over-all pattern of nature."[17]

Her historical novels have been called "rich in detail",[18] and "emotionally appealing".[19] The Horn Book said, We Alcotts "Captures the aura of their lives, permits them to speak for themselves, and reveals the humors and rigors of their situation."[20] In Jeanne d'Arc, "The familiar story is beautifully retold for young readers, with just enough historical background and a reverent simplicity."[21] National Council of Teachers of English complimented her "energizing American history prose against a background of place geography and basic information", and goes on to say, "Miss Fisher knows human nature."[9]

Not everyone praised all her works so highly, however. Kirkus reviewed the award-winning Feathered Ones and Furry as a "collection of coy and innocuous little animal rhymes. The verses are technically conventional, with rhythm and rhyme schemes ranging from mildly pleasant to flatly predictable".[22] Again, writing of In the Middle of the Night, in which a little girl celebrates her birthday by taking a special night time walk with her Father, Kirkus said, "The bibliotherapeutic possibilities perhaps outweigh anything that might be said about the poem as poetry".[23]

Selected works

Poetry collections

Natural history

Fiction

Other non-fiction

Plays

Other publications

The Ways of Plants: And a Sunflower Grew, As the Leaves Fall Down, A Tree with a Thousand Uses, Mysteries in the Garden, Now that Spring is Here, Petals Yellow and Petals Red, Plant Magic, Prize Performance, Seeds on the Go, Swords and Daggers.
Ways of Animals: Animal Disguises, Animal Houses, Animal Jackets, Filling the Bill, Going Places, No Accounting for Taste, Now that Days are Colder, Sleepy Heads, Tail Twisters, You Don't Look Like Your Mother.

Anthologies

* Junior Library Guild Selection
^ Annual ALA Notable Books List
> The Horn Book Magazine Best Books of the Year
+ International Board on Books for Young People Honor Book
# Western Writers of America Spur Award

Learn more

"After a Bath". Aileen Fisher. Retrieved 2012-04-22. 

Biography - Fisher, Aileen (Lucia) (1906-2002): An Article from: Contemporary Authors, Gale Reference Team, (digital)

Interview with Aileen Fisher, Copeland, Jeffrey Scott, Speaking of Poets: Interviews with Poets who Write for Children and Young Adults, vol. 1, National Council of Teachers of English, 1993

Listen to A. Fisher interview at http://www.boulderlibrary.org/oralhistory/, Retrieved 4/22/2012.

References

  1. Hopkins, Lee Bennett; Books are by People: Interviews with 104 Authors and Illustrators of Books for Young Children; Citation Press; 1969.
  2. Sawyer, Alvah Littlefield (1911). A history of the northern peninsula of Michigan and its People. Lewis Publishing. p. 1193.
  3. 1 2 3 "Biography: Aileen Lucia Fisher". Poems and Poetry. Poetry Foundation. Retrieved 2012-07-28.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 Hopkins, Lee Bennett (October 1978). "Profile: Aileen Fisher" (PDF). Language Arts. 55 (7): 868–70. Retrieved 2012-07-28.
  5. "Aileen Fisher Papers". de Grummond Children's Literature Collection. University of Southern Mississippi. Retrieved 2013-06-30.
  6. 1 2 "Fisher Interview". Boulder Daily Camera. Retrieved 2012-04-21.
  7. 1 2 Honan, William H. (December 9, 2002). "Aileen Fisher, 96, Prolific Author of Children's Books, Is Dead". The New York Times.
  8. "To the High Court". First Amendment Center. Retrieved 2012-04-21.
  9. 1 2 Elementary English, Volume 44, Issue 2, National Council of Teachers of English, 1967
  10. "Small Talk". Kirkus Review. Retrieved 2012-04-24.
  11. "Spur Awards: 1966". Western Writers of America. Western Writers. Retrieved 2012-07-28.
  12. "Book awards: A Horn Book Fanfare Best Book". LibraryThing. Retrieved 2012-07-28.
  13. "The George Lynn scores and manuscripts: An inventory of holdings at the American Music Research Center" (PDF). www.colorado.edu. American Music Research Center, University of Colorado at Boulder. pp. 10, 48, 53. Retrieved 20 July 2015.
  14. "Kirkus Reviews: Rainy Day Rhymes". Kirkus Reviews. Retrieved 2012-07-28.
  15. "Introduction". I Heard a Bluebird Sing. Retrieved 2012-04-22.
  16. "Going Barefoot". Kirkus reviews. Retrieved 2012-04-22.
  17. "Fall Guide to Children's Books". The Saturday Review, 11/17/1956. Retrieved 2012-04-22.
  18. Steffens, Bradley, Emily Dickinson, Lucent Books, 1998, pg. 89;
  19. Arbuthnot, May Hill, (ed); The Arbuthnot Anthology of Children's Literature; Scott, Foresman, 1976, pg. 1045;
  20. Horn Book Magazine, Oct. 1968;
  21. Sutherland, Zena, "Hits and Errors", The Saturday Review, 6/27/1970, pg. 39.
  22. "Feathered Ones". Kirkus Review. Retrieved 2012-04-22.
  23. "In the Middle of the Night". Kirkus Review. Retrieved 2012-04-22.
  24. Teacher, Volume 91, Macmillan Professional Magazines, 1973.
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