school interviews
Hanna Andersson interview in Swedish
There is a second Torey Hayden site and message board at : http://www1.appstate.edu/~moormang/wwwboard/wwwboard.html. This is run by the special education department at Appalachian State University in Boone, North Carolina, USA. Come here to read Torey's professional papers and research conducted by others into Torey's methods and books. Join the discussions on educational and special ed. matters with Torey, other professionals and Appalachian State students.
| Megan Stone's Interview |
Johanna Pitt's Interview
|
Megan
Torey came to our middle school, which is called Brockside, and did a talk about writing to our class, which is an eighth grade journalism class. Four of us got the chance to interview her afterwards for our school paper.
I decided I wanted my interview to be different because what everybody really wants to know about people who are famous is their personal lives. You can read about the stuff they got famous for in lots of places, but you can not find out about them personally unless you get to meet them, which most of us can't.
So, this is my personal interview with Torey Hayden.
MS: What were you like when you were a kid?
MS: Were you a good student?
TH: I was an OK student. School was easy for me but I wasn't very interested in it. My grandfather,
hoping to focus my mind a bit more, promised me the year I was nine that he'd buy me a new pair of
ice skates if I brought home a report card with straight A's. I didn't actually manage it until the
year I completed my master's degree" (And no, he didn't keep his promise!)
MS JP ^
MS: Did you read a lot when you were a child?
TH: Oddly, given my work now, no. I think this may have been because I was a
very active child. No doubt I would be classed as hyperactive by today's standards. I found
it very hard to sit still and concentrate on something like reading for very long. I was always
a fluent reader but I did not learn to enjoy it until I was in my early twenties.
MS
JP ^
MS: Even so, did you have a favorite book when you were little?
MS: What was your favorite subject at school?
TH: I don't remember having any classes I liked better than others. It was more the combination
of a challenging teacher and a challenging subject that appealed to me, so it varied from year to
year. In ninth grade it was Latin, because I had a teacher who was challenging and I had a very
good time. But I didn't like Latin at all in tenth grade. It was boring that year.
MS JP ^
MS: Were you good at English?
TH: Yes, I was good at English but I never cared for it very much. I spent all my time trying
to get good grades without actually reading the books! I was rather a nasty show-off in that
way, I'm afraid. Recently I met up with one of my old English teachers from high school and
I apologized, because I am embarrassed now by how I behaved.
MS JP
^
MS: Did you have a nickname when you were in school?
TH: Not really. My real first name is Victoria, so when I was little, I was called
Vicki. I hated that name from the very start. It wasn't "me". Plus, it was a very popular
name and one year there were five of us in my class alone! Since I was the only one whose
full name was Victoria, I started going by Torey in my teens. I remember practicing different
spellings for about six months before I settled on this one!
MS JP
^
MS: Did you get picked on or bullied when you were at school?
TH: No. I was a rather self-contained child when I was little. I liked to play
by myself a lot of the time, but I also had a good time with friends. I remember there were
kids I didn't like and who didn't like me, but I don't remember being bullied. I was the kind
of kid who gave as good as she got.
MS JP ^
MS: Who's the teacher you remembered most?
TH: I've had a lot of memorable teachers, not always for the best reasons! But I think
I would say Anne Arnold, an English professor at Montana State University/Billings. Because
I didn't especially like English but had to take two English courses to get my liberal arts degree,
I decided to fulfill one by taking a summer course in Billings because I thought it would be a soft
option. Anne Arnold was almost sixty that summer.
She had short, gray hair in kind of a Prussian soldier's helmet style. She wore glasses with
these black, 1950's style frames, had a cast one leg and walked with a cane which she regularly used
to whack desks loudly with. And she swore. Like a sailor. Which was a pretty surprising
thing for a little old lady professor to do in those days. And when she arrived in the class
on the first day she immediately told us that no one ever got an A in class and if we didn't like
it/her/her style of teaching, we should leave then. This was like a red flag to a bull for me. Because
she said no one got A's, I was determined to prove her wrong. So, I wrote the required essays
with everything I could muster and I did get the A's. But Anne Arnold did not let this become a power
struggle between us, which is what I think I'd enjoyed doing with teachers previously. Instead,
she called me into her office one day and told me I could really write well and had I thought of
doing anything with it? She was the first person who ever said this to me and from that point
on, she was my staunchest supporter. I've always felt enormously grateful for Anne's place in
my life. She became an important mentor, who, through the years, helped me develop my writing
right up until her death three years ago.
MS JP
^
MS: If you didn't become a teacher and an author, what job would you have liked to have had?
TH: I would love to have been an astrophysicist or a cosmologist. My high school physics
teacher would probably drop his teeth, if he heard me say that, because I goofed around in physics
a lot. But I was actually quite good at it, continued to take it in college, and as I got older,
I found these were the kinds of books I enjoyed reading. In answer to the earlier question about
which subjects I liked, what I did always find fascinating was science in all forms. Not so
fascinating that I behaved in class, mind you, or even did my homework! But once I got past
my very annoying adolescent stage, this area I liked a lot.
MS JP
^
MS: What's your greatest fear?
TH: Hmm. That's a hard one. There are different ways you could interpret that
question.
Literally? Me, personally?
Dying, I suppose. Death doesn't scare me particularly, but the idea of dying doesn't turn
me on too much. On a more esoteric level, I am afraid of losing things I love, whether they
be family or pets or whether they be intangibles like freedom, but I'm working on that fear. I don't
think it's a good one to have.
MS JP ^
MS: Who's the person who has most inspired you?
TH: Hmm. Gosh. Another hard one.
As I said earlier, I was a very self-contained child and so I didn't look to others very much for
inspiration. If I were really, really honest, I would have to say it was a fantasy character whom
I created when I was four and who inspired me to try almost everything I pursued in childhood and
adolescence. This largely formed the personality I developed in adult life. I now think of that character
as my "fairy godmother", because without her I would never have become the person I am. Certainly
not in terms of writing, as it was to record that world that I began to write. So, as far as 'inspiration'
goes, she 'inspired' me. However, I have also been fortunate to have had several mentors
in my life people who have recognized talents in me that I didn't always recognize myself at the
time and who shepherded me on to become a better person
I owe a particular debt to a man called Roy Aichele in Walla Walla, Washington. It is he who introduced
me to the world of special education, a career I would never even have considered otherwise I was
planning to be a biologist! Moreover, he gave me an enormous amount of encouragement and freedom
to develop my skills at a time when I was very young and inexperienced, and I am incredibly grateful
to him.
MS JP ^
MS: Who's your hero
MS: What trait do you most like to see in other people?
MS: Tell me three things most people would be surprised to know about Torey Hayden
TH: Hmm. Hmmm! You're going to be a very challenging journalist when you grow up!!
Well, here's one: I can mirror write and I can mirror read. I can read backwards or upside down
almost as fast as the ordinary way. Most people probably don't know that about me. Most people
could probably live just fine not knowing that about me!
Two: I'm a "Trekkie". I got hooked on the original "Star Trek" back in the year I was teaching
Sheila and I have been a devoted fan ever since. I've even got a book about the episodes and three
autographed pictures!
And three: I'm a "techie" and can get seriously geeky about it all. I'm heavily into computers.
I can build them. I currently have two machines at home, one with a Xeon chip that I do graphics
on and an Athlon. These names will only be meaningful to other geeks. And I often fix friends'
computers for fun, which annoys my daughter enormously. We will go 6000 miles from home on vacation
and then she'll end up having to spend her time reading because I have my head stuck inside someone's
computer.
MS JP ^
part two..
|
Megan Stone's interview |
Johanna Pitt's interview
|
Johanna, like Megan, felt that only the personal stuff is really interesting, especially to people her age (15).
She wanted to know even weirder things.
JP: How tall are you?
JP: What is your favorite food?
JP: What TV programs do you enjoy?
TH: I don't watch very much TV. What free time I have I usually spend at the computer,
as I'm a bit of a games nut. At the moment the only program I watch every single week is "Star Trek:
Voyager". And I have a soft spot for "Buffy, the Vampire Slayer". The writing is very good on that.
I love the dialogue. Plus, Sheena is a fan, so I usually watch it with her.
MS JP ^
JP: What's your favorite film?
JP: Who's your favorite actor?
JP: What about your favorite actress?
TH: My tastes vary from film to film. When I watch films, the ones I enjoy most are
the funny, really relaxing no-brainers. So maybe I'll be really honest on this and instead of listing
some excellent, powerful dramatic actress, I'll say Julia Roberts, because I usually come out feeling
good after I've watched her stuff.
MS JP ^
JP: Do you like to watch horror films?
JP: What's your favorite kind of music?
TH: I'm a classical music person. I got into opera when my daughter, then seven, developed
an obsession with it and I've loved it ever since (although she has gone on to more normal tastes
as a teenager!) I will also confess to a secret love of country music, which is what I grew up with
in Montana. I've tried and tried to like rock but I've never really managed it. Even when I was a
teenager, it sort of annoyed me.
MS JP ^
JP: What's your favorite piece of music?
JP: Who's your favorite musical artist?
JP: What's your favorite smell?
JP: What's your favorite color?
JP: Do you have any pets?
JP: What's the best feeling you've ever had?
JP: What do you think is the worst feeling in the world?
JP: Can you speak any languages besides English?
JP: Do you go on the Net a lot?
JP: Do you look yourself up on the Net?
JP: Which book did you most enjoy writing?
JP: Which authors do you like best?
TH: Hard question. There's a million of them. While I wasn't into reading books in high school,
I've matured a lot since then and read voraciously now, probably an equal mix of fiction and nonfiction.
For fiction, I particularly like Thomas Mann, Russell Hoban, Toni Morrison and Gabriel Garcia Marquez.
My absolute favorite nonfiction writer is Loren Eiseley.
MS JP ^
JP: What was the last very good book you read?
JP: What's your favorite quote?






