Showing posts with label Saint Hildegard. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Saint Hildegard. Show all posts

Friday, September 13, 2019

Cloister Ruins



Good morning, Poetry Friday! Laura Purdie Salas has the Roundup over at Writing the World for Kids. Thank you, Laura!

I may have posted this poem before. I thought I'd share it again in honor of Saint Hildegard as I prepare a virtual party to celebrate her Feast Day on September 17. I wrote it in 2002 after visiting the ruins of Disibodenberg, where she first became a nun. There's a link to the Facebook party below. I'll share Hildegard's poetry and music. There will be prizes! I'd love to see some of you there.

Ruins of Disibodenberg, Odernheim, Rheinland-Pfalz

CLOISTER RUINS

Seeds sprout in holy space until
beech and oak arch over toppled stones.

Larks trill in a hilltop canopy
where psalms once floated upward,
and leafy hands now murmur prayers.

The stones, weighted with

longing whispered in secret,
sink into the earth.
Centuries ago they tumbled, like thunder
rumbling through the Great Silence.

Ivy anchors their moss velvet faces. 
Rose thorns ramble over crumbled gables.
Helpless to shelter, the stones stand sentry,
mute witnesses to divine desire.

Did you think wind, rain, the shifting of earth’s crust
conspired to collapse these hallowed structures?

Know this - the human heart
beats a hunger for its creator
more powerful than natural forces.
Echoes of supplication saturate each stone.
Ages of murmured ardor are stronger than gravity.

These stones are deaf now.
Speak freely.
                                © Joyce Ray



Thursday, September 5, 2019

Saint Hildegard's Feast Day


Saint Hildegard wrote some wonderful poetry back in the 12th century. She wasn't a saint then, but the songs she composed for her monastic community show her love of language and her skill at using it.

O branch of freshest green,
O hail! Within the windy gusts of saints
upon a quest you swayed and sprouted forth.

2. When it was time, you blossomed in your boughs—
“Hail, hail!” you heard, for in you seeped the sunlight’s warmth
like balsam’s sweet perfume.

3. For in you bloomed
so beautiful a flow’r, whose fragrance wakened
all the spices from their dried-out stupor.

4. They all appeared in full viridity.


-from  ‘Song to the Virgin,’ “Symphonia,” Nathaniel M. Campbell, translator

You can read the entire song here and listen to a choral group singing a beautiful rendition of the entire song here.

This icon painted on wood was discovered in a tiny church  by a friend traveling in Tallinn, Estonia. Isn't it gorgeous? Then again, I have a thing for Hildegard!


I'll be sharing more of her words at a virtual party to celebrate Saint Hildegard's Feast Day on September 17. This is  new for me! I've participated in an virtual book launch party, but never hosted an online event before. Wish me luck!f you have the time, please check it out. Here's the Facebook invitation.

Please venture over to today's Roundup at Poetry for Children, where Sylvia and Janet share a poem for school read alouds and their excitement about the upcoming IBBY Regional Conference. See you there!

Wednesday, March 12, 2014

Feathers & Trumpets, A Story of Hildegard of Bingen





 March 16th Launch

What an exciting week it is! My publisher is hosting a launch party for my book this weekend, and I'm preparing a talk. Looking back over my 13-year journey with this story has been an amazing exercise. Most writers do not write in a vacuum. In re-living each stage of my manuscript, I've come to appreciate more deeply the mentors and colleagues who have guided me to each milestone. I've paid homage to Agnes, the character who walked onto the page and changed my writing.

Appearances and opportunities are starting to line up, and I hope young readers will soon meet the young medieval girl who developed into the 12th century's strongest female voice. Though I will never achieve Hildegard's fame, I am thinking how far I have come and am enjoying my little spotlight. Thank you, Vermont College of Fine Arts for preparing me for this journey!

I hope that Saint Hildegard is smiling.

Feathers & Trumpets, A Story of Hildegard of Bingen, YA historical novel
Apprentice Shop Books, March 16, 2014

Tuesday, January 7, 2014

Book Review: THE SECRET WORLD OF HILDEGARD


The Secret World of Hildegard
By Jonah Winter
Illustrated by Jeanette Winter
Arthur Levine Books (Picture Book Biography), 2007

To celebrate the upcoming publication of of my YA novel about Hildegard of Bingen, I'm highlighting another book that tells the story of the recently named saint and Doctor of the Church. Mother and son team Jeanette and Jonah Winter have created a terrific picture book that introduces Hildegard to very young readers. As a Hildegard scholar, I love this book.

Let me tell you a bit about Hildegard first. Hildegard was a prophetic woman of many talents. She was a Benedictine nun and then an abbess who lived in the 12th century kingdom of Germany when women had no voice at all. After an unbelievable childhood of seclusion at a monastery, she dared to share visions she felt were from God at the risk of being named a heretic. But the pope blessed her visions, and Hildegard went on to become a writer, composer, artist, scientist, natural healer and preacher. Without the pope’s approval, she would have had no voice in that time and would have remained unknown. Her writings helped shape Christian doctrine; she founded the first independent woman’s monastery; she composed the largest body of 12th century music; and in 2012, Pope Benedict named her a Saint and a Doctor of the Church.

The Secret World of Hildegard is a clever and historically accurate telling of Hildegard’s story. Jonah Winter used snippets of biblical construction to frame Hildegard’s story for the youngest readers. Phrases like “And lo” and “Now it came to pass” repeat throughout the text, linking this story to the grand epic of the Bible. Echoes of the creation story in Genesis show up in this repeated sentence:

And there was grayness
and silence and sorrow,
though a light shone brightly inside her.


How appropriate for the story of a woman who devoted her life to serving God!

Throughout, the author presents Hildegard’s life and the concept of her visions in a very accessible manner. The subject matter is spiritual, but young children do have big questions about God. They will relate to this amazing historical figure because her story begins as a child – one who was sent away to a monastery where she would be safe and have the greatest chance for survival. One half of the book relates Hildegard’s unique childhood. The other half presents her adult life and her many accomplishments and contributions to her world and to ours.

Jeanette Winter’s illustrations are a visual feast. Her color palette is bold, and she designed the book in the style of a medieval illuminated manuscript. Each illustration is framed with an arched border. It seems we are looking through a window at Hildegard’s life. One of my favorite illustrations shows Hildegard emerging from seclusion. She carries her candle, symbolizing the light she will come to share with the world.

Another illustration interprets one of Hildegard’s visions of the universe surrounded with creative energy and Jesus at the center.

This book earned starred reviews from both Kirkus and Booklist. It is
a New York Public Library Best Book for Reading and Sharing.

The Secret World of Hildegard is a gem and the perfect introduction to Hildegard for young readers. I hope as older readers they will one day want to read my fictional version of Hildegard’s story in Feathers and Trumpets, A Story of Hildegard of Bingen,coming this spring from Apprentice Shop Books.



Monday, February 4, 2013

My Next Big Thing



Thanks to fellow children’s author, Linda Crotta Brennan (Marshmallow Kisses, Flannel Kisses, The Black Regiment of the American Revolution and the forthcoming When Rivers Burned: The Earth Day Story, among other books) for inviting me to participate in the online literary blog called MY NEXT BIG THING. 

The blog is a series of questions about works-in-progress and not yet published titles. Many national and international writers have participated in this. It gives readers a glimpse into the working life of a writer. Part of the fun is tagging someone else. It is with great delight that I will be tagging three other writers at the end of this post.

MY NEXT BIG THING is a novel chronicling the life of the 12th century’s foremost woman writer, an accomplished composer and an authority on natural healing, Hildegard of Bingen. As a young girl, she endures frightening visions, ill health and a beginning that is unimaginable to us today. She becomes a nun and then an abbess who is unafraid to challenge the male authority of the Church. Even though she devotes herself to God, she still feels the love and sting of human relationships.
Statue of Hildegard, St. Hildegard's Abbey, Germany

What is the working title of your book? FEATHERS AND TRUMPETS,     
A STORY OF HILDEGARD OF BINGEN

Where did the idea come from for the book? In a sermon, my pastor referenced women mystics, and I decided to research them. Hildegard, whose parents tithed her to the Church at birth, immediately interested me. To me, the idea of being given to an institution was unimaginable. I thought young readers would be fascinated by the way Hildegard’s life unfolded.

What genre does your book fall under?  FEATHERS AND TRUMPETS is an historical novel for early YA readers.

Which actors would you choose to play your characters in a movie rendition?  A wonderful 2010 German film entitled Vision stars Barbara Sukowa. Any of these American actresses would also make a terrific Hildegard Susan Saranden, Jodi Foster or Meryl Streep.

What is a one-sentence synopsis of your book?  FEATHERS AND TRUMPETS is a novel of acceptance, courage and the love found in both human and divine relationships.

How long did it take you to write the first draft of your manuscript?  The road to this book has been long and winding, with the occasional pothole. The seed was an 800-word submission to Highlights! Next, as the beginning of a biography, it became part of my MFA thesis, thanks to two terrific mentors. Later, the manuscript became an experimental combination of alternating non-fiction and fictional chapters. Finally, my editor, Muriel Dubois, told me I was a poet, and “Please make it into a novel.” I submitted the first draft to her last June, and the revision process began.

What other books would you compare this story to within your genre? The books that come to mind are written by authors of stature, and I cannot compare my debut book with theirs. Karen Cushman’s Catherine Called Birdy and Mathilda Bone and Donna Jo Napoli’s Song of the Magdalene are examples of the type of historical novel I wanted to write. 

Who or what inspired you to write this book? Hildegard was a strong woman in a time when women had no voice at all. I feel it’s important for young women to know that even in the 12th century a woman found her voice and rose above challenges she encountered. Also, when I began the manuscript, it seemed that available books with Middle Ages settings lacked references to the Church. That was a time when the Roman Catholic Church had great influence. I wanted young people to have a complete picture of that period of history.

What else about your book might pique a reader’s interest? In 2012 Hildegard of Bingen was named Saint Hildegard and a Doctor of the Church.

When and how will it be published?  FEATHERS AND TRUMPETS will be published by Apprentice Shop Books this coming fall.

Now It is my honor to tag and introduce you to three other writers with BIG THINGS in the works Matt Forrest Esenwine, Terry Farish and Linda Booth Sweeney.

Matt Forrest Esenwine started writing at an early age - primarily poetry, short stories, and radio skits, which he would then record onto his father's Panasonic cassette recorder.  As he got older, Matt moved into acting, radio, and voiceover work.  His passion, however, was poetry, and he has had several poems published in numerous independent collections, including Metamorphosis Publishing’s Visions, the Tall Grass Writers Guild’s Seasons of Change, Assisi: Online Journal of Arts & Letters, The Licking River Review, The Henniker Review, and Changes, among others.  A publishing deal for his children’s poetry, however, has been a bit elusive – although he will have a poem included in a forthcoming anthology.  Matt lives in Warner, NH with his wife and son, and gains constant inspiration from them, his surroundings, and his two older daughters. Matt's Blog 

Terry Farish is the author of a number of acclaimed books for children and teens. Her latest book is THE GOOD BRAIDER. It’s a young adult novel in verse about a South Sudanese girl’s experience of war and immigration. In a starred review, School Library Journal wrote, “Viola’s memorable, affecting voice will go far to help students step outside of their own experience and walk a mile in another’s shoes.” Terry's Blog

Linda Booth Sweeney is an award winning author and systems educator with a passion for helping young people to “connect the dots:” to see beyond obvious and to recognize interconnections and dynamics among people, places, events and nature.  She is the author of several books, including The Systems Thinking Playbook, When a Butterfly Sneezes: A Guide for Helping Children Explore Interconnections in our World through Favorite Stories.  Her most recent book, Connected Wisdom:  Living Stories about Living Systems is translated into 9 languages and won awards at the 2011 New York and San Francisco Book Festivals.  Her work has been published by Highlights Magazine for Children, and numerous academic journals and magazines.  Linda’s first picture book, When the Wind Blows, will be published by Putnam in 2014.  Linda's Face Book Author's Page