creating is a continuous tribute to the moon
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creating is a continuous tribute to the moon
Oh wow it's #kitlitpostcard day all ready? Welp here are some art for that! I even did the zebra in ink for a greeting card!
#zebra #ink #SCBWI #scbwiarttober #kidlitart #childrensbookart #illustrator #postcardart #seekingrepresentation
Madam C.J Walker - she created a line of black hair care products and was one of the first black woman to become a self-made millionaire in the early 1900s.
Etsy  |  Instagram
Day 9 of #INKtober is "Swing"! #Inktober2019 #drawlloween #ink #penandink #blackandwhite #halloween #ropeswing #kitlit #autumn #cute #dog #cozy #leaveschanging https://www.instagram.com/p/B3e0AW6hglv/?igshid=vx9g99cxs7na
Author Spotlight: Aida Salazar
What are your literary influences?
My literary influences come from disparate sources. I studied a wide variety of theory in college and graduate school â everyone from Roland Barthes to Judith Butler to Gloria Anzaldua and Cherrie Moraga to Bell Hooks to Mikail Baktin to Subcomandante Marcos. I also read poetry voraciously including everyone from Waslowa Simbroska to Lorna Dee Cervantes, Audre Lorde, Rumi, Wole Soyinka, Juan Felipe Herrera. I was marveled by the fiction of Milan Kundera, Arundati Roy, Elena Poniatowska and all of the Latin American magical realists â Asturias, Garcia Marquez, Allende, Esquivel. But also, American writers such as Alice Walker, Toni Morrison, James Baldwin, Helena Maria Viramontes, Ana Castillo, Julia Alvarez and Christina Garcia. I was drawn to authors from the margin almost exclusively. In a sense, I created my own canon in this way.
It wasnât until I became a mother that I truly started reading childrenâs literature. My children and I found an oasis in our weekly visits to the library. In Oakland, we are fortunate to have a comprehensive Spanish language collection at the Cesar Chavez Library and we often checked out the forty-book limit! However, many of the books were authored by non Latinx writers and were translated into Spanish. While these books served to reinforce the Spanish language in our family, I saw the huge lack of writings from Latinx creators. I wanted to be a part of filling that gap. I wanted for my children to not only see their language reflected in books but their cultures and their sensibilities. That is why I always praise the work of those Latinx authors who forged the way so that new Latinx kidlit authors could have a seat at the table. We stand on the shoulders of giants and I would be remiss if I didnât mention their work. Authors such as Pura Belpre, Gary Soto, Sandra Cisneros, Alma Flor Ada, Pat Mora, Carmen Lomas Garza, Francisco X. Alarcon, Juan Felipe Herrera, and Victor Martinez really set the stage for us to be able to tell our stories to young audiences too.
What was the first book you read where you identified with one of the characters?
As a young child, I didnât understand that I was missing in the narratives of books that I read. I loved Judy Blume. I loved Shell Silverstein. I loved Encyclopedia Brown and Choose Your Own Adventure books. I connected to those books by default, in a similar way that I connected to mass media that also didnât include me in their blond-haired blue-eyed middle-class, English-only narratives. There was no other option. It wasnât until I was eighteen and in college that I enrolled in a Latino (we called it that back then) literature course that I saw myself reflected in a book. I remember reading the short story âMy Lucy Friend That Smells Like Corn,â in Sandra Cisnerosâ Woman Hollering Creek and feeling a moment that I can only describe as grace. I realized that I had been missing in almost everything I had read up until that point. My experiences were alive and validated in that story. It was exhilarating.
Did that experience lead you to want to write books for readers with diverse backgrounds?
I was so inspired by reading all of the books in that Latino literature class. It was an awakening not only to the world of Latinx literature but to the possibility that I too could be a writer. I had been writing poetry and stories since I was a young teenager but those writings remained in my notebooks and journals. After reading their work, I began to take myself seriously and began to understand the writing that lived in my heart could be something I could aspire to do as a living someday. However, my awakening is one that should have not taken eighteen years and I want to be part of making sure that doesnât happen to other children. Â
Your characters in The Moon Within have interesting intersections. Could you speak to why this was important to build into your book?
I did this intentionally. My children are multi-racial and bi-cultural like two of the characters, Celi and IvĂĄn. It is not uncommon to see many different mixed children in the San Francisco Bay Area where we live. I find it beautiful how they navigate multiple cultures â sometimes with a sense of wonder and pride and sometimes with neglect or shame and every feeling in between. Itâs complicated and certainly isnât always seamless given so much discussion over racial and cultural purity that is happening today. Through those characters, I wanted to show this negotiation, how they deal with these fusions. I wanted to show readers what it might look like for someone to celebrate and embrace all of who they are. Similarly, I wanted to show with the gender fluid character, Marco, the intersectionality of his identity as a gender fluid Mexican that happens to be in love with playing bomba (a Afro-Puertorican form of music). It was important to show readers that we could be queer and Mexican, Black Puerto Rican Mexican, and Black and Mexican. The range of identities are part of the beauty of who they are, and serve to strengthen and not weaken them.Â
Music infuses the whole world of The Moon Within âŚcan you speak a little on that, a little on what role music plays in your own life?
Ironically, I am not a musician though I have a good ear and I love to dance. I am married to a musician and there has not been one day in the eighteen years since weâve been together when we did not engage in some way with music â listening, playing, singing, dancing or just being in a house filled with instruments and an extraordinary recorded music collection. Our children were naturally born into this environment and took to music right away. I realized that this was a unique experience and that it could be a wonderful world to explore in this book. I wanted to normalize music and the arts as a way of life but also, wanted to inspire readers to seek out the arts as a way to find agency as the children in the book did through traditional music and dance. These are superpowers that unfortunately, with the cutting of the arts for decades now, we donât have access to as much.
I made a playlist on Spotify that includes all of the styles of music that inspired The Moon Within â bomba, indigenous Mexican music, Caribbean music, and lots of moon related songs in Spanish and in English. It can be found here: https://spoti.fi/2FSnZgM . I hope that you enjoy it!
This Author Spotlight appeared in the April 2019 issue of the CBC Diversity Newsletter. To sign up for our monthly Diversity newsletter click here.Â
Aida Salazar is a writer, arts advocate, and home-schooling mother who grew up in South East LA. She received an MFA in Writing from the California Institute of the Arts, and her writings have appeared in publications such as the Huffington Post, Women and Performance: Journal of Feminist Theory, and Huizache Magazine. Her short story, By the Light of the Moon, was adapted into a ballet by the Sonoma Conservatory of Dance and is the first Xicana-themed ballet in history. Aida lives with her family of artists in a teal house in Oakland, CA.
wisdom breathing dragon!
Get your đ ready! The #moon is about to start making its way in front of the #sun over North America so we wanted to share this #eclipse inspired illustration from @ripple_grove_press Mae and the Moon in light of the #greatamericaneclipse --- enjoy #skygazers! #solareclipse #greateclipse #americaneclipse #kitlit #illustratorsofinstagram #picturebooks #eclipse2017 #eclipseme #totaleclipse (at Chicago, Illinois)
a still from my thesis film, Leo The Great! Leo is looking for his sister who he accidentally made âdisappearâ hehehe....