logo

Quotes from Jacqueline Woodson

To me, elegy suggests that there is hope, and in some respects you've moved past the loss and are able to deal with it and to write about it.
~ Jacqueline Woodson
I think there is such a richness to the South and a lushness and a way of life.
~ Jacqueline Woodson
Greenville, S.C., in the 1970s is a rolling green dream in my memory now.
~ Jacqueline Woodson
The hardest part is telling one's story. Once the story is on the page, the rest will come.
~ Jacqueline Woodson
Everything I write, I read aloud. It has to sound a certain way and look a certain way on page.
~ Jacqueline Woodson
In the midst of observing the world and coming to consciousness, I was becoming a writer, and what I wanted to put on the page were the stories of people who looked like me.
~ Jacqueline Woodson
I rewrite a lot until I get the rhythm and story right on the page.
~ Jacqueline Woodson
My sister taught me how to write my name when I was about three. I remember writing my whole name: Jacqueline Amanda Woodson. I just loved the power of that, of being able to put a letter on the page and that letter meaning something.
~ Jacqueline Woodson
I feel like I am walking in some amazing footsteps of writers who have come before me, like S.E. Hinton, Walter Dean Myers, Christopher Paul Curtis, Richard Peck and Kate DiCamillo, who I love.
~ Jacqueline Woodson
My family is big, complicated, and beautiful - and keeps me smiling and whole. It's so important to have family, whether it's biological family, good friends, foster families, or a group of aunties who are raising you. The idea of feeling isolated is scary to me - to walk through the world alone would be heartbreaking.
~ Jacqueline Woodson
If someone has something they're really passionate about, that's their brilliance, and my big question is how do we grow that passion/brilliance and/or help them grow.
~ Jacqueline Woodson
'Another Brooklyn' came to me in this kind of dreamlike series of vignettes.
~ Jacqueline Woodson
'Brown Girl Dreaming' was a book I had a lot of doubts about - mainly, would this story be meaningful to anyone besides me? My editor, Nancy Paulsen, kept assuring me, but there were moments when I was in a really sad place with the story for so many reasons. It wasn't an easy book to write - emotionally, physically, or creatively.
~ Jacqueline Woodson
What I learned for myself... is that no matter what the circumstances, people survive.
~ Jacqueline Woodson
The civil rights movement was about access to public space. We had to fight for public space.
~ Jacqueline Woodson
I am still surprised when I walk into a bookstore and see my name on a book's binder.
~ Jacqueline Woodson
In all my childhood, I never heard my grandparents say that anything shocked or surprised them. They knew what their country was capable of.
~ Jacqueline Woodson
I've learned about marrying poetry and prose and making both accessible.
~ Jacqueline Woodson
The epistolary form is one of the hardest to write. It's so hard to show something that's bigger in a letter. Plus, you have to have the balance of how many letters are going to work to tell the story and how few are going to make it fall apart.
~ Jacqueline Woodson
I think, as a kid, turning on the television and seeing that everyone seemed to be wealthy and white made me feel like an outsider, lesser than. I was not wealthy. I was not white.
~ Jacqueline Woodson
If you have no road map, you have to create your own.
~ Jacqueline Woodson
I think, even though homophobia still exists, there is much more of a dialogue and a taboo around being homophobic.
~ Jacqueline Woodson
In the daytime, I was expected to be the straight-A student. I was expected to be college bound. I was expected to be a great big sister. And then at night, I was just a club kid.
~ Jacqueline Woodson
What I write comes from a place of deep love, and a deep understanding of all kinds of otherness.
~ Jacqueline Woodson