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			 Polacco's tour to the Land of Lincoln, Logan County, was made 
			possible by West Lincoln-Broadwell School Board with Robert 
			Henderson initiating the event, and through the generosity of the 
			Woods Foundation. Ms. Polacco’s school visits were coordinated by 
			Heather Baker, Principal of WLB. 
 The library audience was full of children and their parents; adults 
			are also fans of her writing. When asked why she writes children’s 
			book, Polacco responded that she does not deliberately write for 
			children. “I don’t write necessarily for children. I write for 
			myself, what interests me. Family and home are especially important 
			in my books,” she said.
 
 Polacco was unabashed when she said that some have described her 
			books as sentimental. “We live in a steely world, and I want to 
			soften that hardness with my writing. I want everyone to know they 
			are magnificent in their own way, and to appreciate the wonder of 
			the world. Books can teach us about the connection between 
			everyone,” she said.
 
 Patricia Polacco has written more than 100 books, and always has 
			more projects in mind, constantly being stimulated by what she sees 
			around her. “I get ideas just from living,” she said.
 
			
			 
			Two of her recent books are “The Bravest Man in the World” and 
			“Remembering Vera.” 
 The Bravest Man is about Wallace Hartley, one of the musicians who 
			played on the deck of the Titanic as it sank.
 
 “Remembering Vera” is about a stray dog that was adopted by the 
			Coast Guard and served with distinction for many years. Vera became 
			a hero and when she died, the Coast Guard saluted her with a proper 
			military ceremony. Part of the book concerns Polacco’s search for 
			Vera’s grave fifty years after she died. The Coast Guard denied ever 
			having heard the story. Through her persistence and some unique 
			circumstances, she was able to find Vera’s grave on the Coast Guard 
			base in San Francisco, after fifty years and countless renovations 
			on the base.
 
 “I’m a story teller, and I came from a family of story tellers. They 
			have been my inspiration from the beginning,” she said.
 
 After a career restoring antiquities and a Ph.D., Polacco began to 
			write and illustrate books at age forty. Her inspiration was her son 
			who had childhood diabetes. With such a complex illness, it was 
			difficult for him to understand what was happening. She set about 
			writing and illustrating a book for him that would explain the 
			illness on his level of understanding.
 
 After that experience, those who read the book urged her to continue 
			writing. And the rest is history. “I just fell into writing at a 
			point when I was not that into working in a museum restoring pottery 
			from centuries ago,” she said.
 
 Her family and the generations who came before are the subjects of 
			many of her books. Her annoying older, red-haired brother was the 
			bane of her childhood, and has come in for some good natured ribbing 
			as the subject of many books. But her signature writing and the book 
			for which she is most famous is “The Keeping Quilt.”
 
			
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			“The Keeping Quilt” is an actual family heirloom that has been 
			incorporated into a book. When her family immigrated to the United 
			States, they left home and relatives behind, a sad journey for a 
			close family. To keep in touch, many family members contributed 
			pieces of clothing that were incorporated into a quilt, a sort of 
			family genealogy. A person could look at the quilt and pick out an 
			area that represented a loved one who could not be present. The 
			quilt took on a life of its own, serving as a cloak for a childhood 
			superhero, the cover of a hupa under which a Jewish couple is 
			married, a precious baby’s first swaddling cloth after birth.
			 
The unusual part of the book “The Keeping Quilt” is that it is a work in 
progress. As each new grand-child is born, as each new couple is married, as a 
quilt to cuddle into and remember family, a new chapter is added to the book. It 
is a living part of the Polacco family. “Family history in any family is a 
quilt, with parts that are contributed by everyone,” she said. 
Patricia Polacco is an activist for a strong and varied education for everyone. 
“I am an advocate for art, music, and drama in all schools,” she said. She is 
dismayed at the lack of these subjects in many schools where education is 
focused on taking tests. “We chase knowledge through the pages of a book, and 
teachers are the ones to lead us through these adventures. We need to honor our 
teachers,” she said. 
 She is also a strong foe of bullying in school. One of her classmates in middle 
school was teased and bullied by his classmates because of his unusual name and 
mild manners. After graduating he moved to Canada and hooked up with Jim Henson. 
His name is Frank Oz, co-founder of the Muppets and a director and producer of 
block buster Hollywood movies.
 
 Another of her classmates who suffered the stings of other children is Tom 
Hanks. “We need to be kind to others, and children need to be taught to treat 
each other with respect,” she said.
 
 When the meeting at the Lincoln Public Library moved to the question and answer 
portion, it was interesting to hear questions from the children attending, as 
well as from many of the adults in attendance who had read her books not because 
they had children, but for what she had to say. Her writing appeals to all age 
groups.
 
 
Patricia Polacco is a Renaissance woman, writer, artist, playwright, speaker, 
advocate for a strong education and close family ties.
 
 The community owes West Lincoln Broadwell and the Woods Foundation heartfelt 
thanks for bringing her to Logan County.
 
 Special mention also goes to the Lincoln Public Library and Director Richard 
Sumrall for keeping the library open past the official closing time so that Ms. 
Polacco could sign copies of her books and greet her many fans personally.
 
 [Curtis Fox]
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