Elizabeth Barrette (ysabetwordsmith) wrote,
Elizabeth Barrette
ysabetwordsmith

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Remembering Rudyard Kipling

I got into a conversation about Rudyard Kipling recently, so I thought I'd mention here that he's one of my favorite writers and a notable influence on my work.

My favorite books include The Just So Stories (especially "The Elephant's Child" and "The Cat That Walked By Himself") and The Jungle Book (especially "Mowgli's Brothers" and "Rikki-tikki-tavi").

My favorite poems include "The Female of the Species" and "The Law of the Jungle." When my poem "One Ship Tall" won the SFPA contest in 2007, it was described as 'Heinlein by way of Kipling' -- an apt comparison and one of the best compliments I've ever received. This site lists many poems by Rudyard Kipling.

The things I love most about Kipling's writing are his ear for language and his adroit social commentary. His poetry has a driving rhythm, tight with alliteration and repetition. His style shifts to suit the tone of each piece, yet always remains distinct. There is in both poetry and fiction the cadence of oral tradition, the storyteller's elegant delineation of plot-bone and embellishment.

As for social commentary, that's where it gets interesting. Kipling had a tendency to see both sides of an issue, and it comes through in his writing. He drew from two cultures, British and Indian, and he didn't hesitate to mock the foibles of either. He was a product of his time, but he also saw beyond it, into the past and the future. On the surface, some of his writing seems sexist or imperial ... but if you look at the word choices and structure, the main current runs the other way. "Gunga Din" highlights the arrogance of British imperialsm; "The Female of the Species" simultaneously reveals the strengths of women and the weaknesses of sexist division; and "Lukannon" is a devastating criticism of environmental degradation. Kipling had the poet's eye for seeing the world a little sideways, and speaking the truth likewise.

So if you like the lyric quality of my poetry, and the old storyteller's cadence in my fiction, and my occasional tendency to take a knife to sacred cows ... then Rudyard Kipling is one the ancestors you should thank, because he's one of the cornerstones in the pyramid of giants I'm standing on.
Tags: poetry, reading, writing
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  • 15 comments
Ah how I love Rudyard Kipling. Someone in my office was trying to quote one of his fables today and doing it wrong and so I haulled up an electronic copy of the fable and printed it out and handed it to him before he could finish butchering the parable's meaning. Can't wait till our kiddo is old enough to appreciate some of the Kipling we've got in the house. Which reminds me, sometime before he moves out of our bedroom and into his own room I should shift some of the less-than-age appropriate books out of there. He can have them back over the years when the right time comes but I don't think that he'd understand Arthur C Clark or BabaYaga just yet....
Kipling has enough linguistics fireworks to appeal to infants. Really. Take a close look at his poetry or fables, then at something like Mother Goose. Kids love alliteration and repetition.

As for the other books ... my mother read me The Hobbit when I was four. You'd be amazed what a smart kid can appreciate, and how early. Don't worry, they'll howl if they're really bored, and you can switch to something else.

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