Chickens in the yard, chickens in the shower. Chickens upstairs and
downstairs, in the kitchen and under the couch. What are farm animals
doing in the city?
In Minneapolis, if you follow the sounds of crowing, you will find an inner-city shelter for (you guessed it!) chickens. Many of the feathered guests at Chicken Run Rescue have been found wandering the city streets. Maybe they escaped from backyard chicken coops or from illegal cockfighting rings, or maybe they began their lives as fuzzy chicks in a classroom incubator. Whatever the reason, these incredibly smart, gentle, and friendly animals need help.
Over the years, Mary Britton Clouse and her husband, Bert, have given hundreds of homeless birds a safe place to rest until they can be adopted by caring families. Come along and meet Yeti, Henrietta, and other guests, and find out why lovable chickens are actually “the ones who need friends the most.”
There are so many reasons to tell you about this new book City Chickens (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt) by Christine Heppermann:
1. It's non-fiction (one of the main topics of this blog)--the story of a woman who lives in Minneapolis and runs a shelter for abandoned, lost-- or found-- chickens. And this story makes us glad that our wondrous world does contain at least one person who wants to give chickens a safe, comfortable home.
2. It's about chickens. I love chickens, real and invented. Fictional chickens are the utility infielders of the children's book world. They show up in all sorts of situations (even in my Chicken Joy on Redbean Road --illustrated by the super Melissa Sweet; Houghton Mifflin, 2007).
3. Christine loves chickens, too. And she is a very talented writer, who writes essays and reviews for the Horn Book, and has published a number of poems. I should also add she is a former student and a good friend. But I would tell you about this book if I had never met Christine because it is a wonderful non-fiction story, carefully researched, well-told, with striking photographs by Chris's husband, Eric Hinsdale.
I want Christine to tell you about the book. So I asked her some questions.
CH: You know, the real-life characters are so compelling, I never once considered fictionalizing them. I love the challenge of taking actual people and events and trying to be true to them while at the same time constructing a narrative with all the literary qualities of fiction. At one point I worried because I didn’t have any child characters in the story, but then I found an actual child, Alison! (She and her family have adopted multiple birds from CRR.) And Alison had an actual rooster, Billiam, with more personality quirks than any character I could possibly have made up.
In Minneapolis, if you follow the sounds of crowing, you will find an inner-city shelter for (you guessed it!) chickens. Many of the feathered guests at Chicken Run Rescue have been found wandering the city streets. Maybe they escaped from backyard chicken coops or from illegal cockfighting rings, or maybe they began their lives as fuzzy chicks in a classroom incubator. Whatever the reason, these incredibly smart, gentle, and friendly animals need help.
Over the years, Mary Britton Clouse and her husband, Bert, have given hundreds of homeless birds a safe place to rest until they can be adopted by caring families. Come along and meet Yeti, Henrietta, and other guests, and find out why lovable chickens are actually “the ones who need friends the most.”
Author Christine Heppermann
City Chickens
There are so many reasons to tell you about this new book City Chickens (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt) by Christine Heppermann:
1. It's non-fiction (one of the main topics of this blog)--the story of a woman who lives in Minneapolis and runs a shelter for abandoned, lost-- or found-- chickens. And this story makes us glad that our wondrous world does contain at least one person who wants to give chickens a safe, comfortable home.
2. It's about chickens. I love chickens, real and invented. Fictional chickens are the utility infielders of the children's book world. They show up in all sorts of situations (even in my Chicken Joy on Redbean Road --illustrated by the super Melissa Sweet; Houghton Mifflin, 2007).
3. Christine loves chickens, too. And she is a very talented writer, who writes essays and reviews for the Horn Book, and has published a number of poems. I should also add she is a former student and a good friend. But I would tell you about this book if I had never met Christine because it is a wonderful non-fiction story, carefully researched, well-told, with striking photographs by Chris's husband, Eric Hinsdale.
I want Christine to tell you about the book. So I asked her some questions.
1. JBM: What attracted you to this story?
CH: I’m always drawn to stories about people
with uncommon passions or perceptions. Also to stories that show me something
ordinary in an entirely new way. Most of us view chickens as commodities,
valuable for what they give us—their meat and their eggs. But why shouldn’t we
see them the way Mary and Bert at Chicken Run Rescue do—as living beings
deserving of the same level of care and compassion that we give to dogs and
cats? Truthfully, Jackie, your Snowflake
Bentley stayed in my mind the whole time I was writing and researching City Chickens, because Wilson Bentley
and Mary and Bert have a lot in common. Bentley
took an amorphous mass of white stuff and showed us the beauty of each
individual flake. Mary and Bert want people to recognize the beauty and
uniqueness of each individual bird.
2 JBM: Why tell this as nonfiction instead of
fiction?
CH: You know, the real-life characters are so compelling, I never once considered fictionalizing them. I love the challenge of taking actual people and events and trying to be true to them while at the same time constructing a narrative with all the literary qualities of fiction. At one point I worried because I didn’t have any child characters in the story, but then I found an actual child, Alison! (She and her family have adopted multiple birds from CRR.) And Alison had an actual rooster, Billiam, with more personality quirks than any character I could possibly have made up.
3 JBM: What was one of the really hard parts of
writing this story?
CH: Choosing which chickens to feature. Because
most every “guest” I met at Chicken Run Rescue had such a fascinating
backstory. Originally I started the book
with Gody, a little black hen who, for a time, lived in a St. Paul, Minnesota
elementary school science classroom. The teacher acquired Gody after a
friend-of-a-friend, a woman in Minneapolis, heard a cat yowling in her
driveway. She went out to investigate
and found Gody, panicked and shivering, hiding in a corner of her garage! But
Gody had already come through Chicken Run Rescue and been adopted out to a
family by the time I started my research, and there weren’t any good photos from
her days in the classroom. Sadly, I had to deny her a starring role.
. JBM: How does your interest in poetry show up in
City Chickens?
CH: Certainly I chose words carefully and paid
attention to the rhythm of the language, just as I do when I’m writing a poem.
But more than that, I believe Mary and Bert are doing exactly what the best
poets do: they are allowing us to see something through fresh eyes. They are
saying, look at these creatures you’ve always taken for granted, aren’t they
extraordinary?
***
Thanks, Christine. I think this book will change the way we see
chickens. It will be much harder to think of chickens as "egg factories"
after reading about Chicken Run Rescue. We will see more. And isn't
that one thing we are about--helping each other to see...more.
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