Thursday, April 2, 2026

My Writing Life Is Going in Circles by Susan Van Kirk

 


Next week, my “new” version of Mr. Vonnegut and Me (And Other Incredible Tales from a Teaching Life) will appear in ebook with the paperback available a few weeks later. I emphasize “new” because this is actually the second edition of my first attempt to write a book. The memoir consists of fifteen stories of students who came into my life over a forty-four-year career in high school and college teaching, and I published it first in 2010.

 Why would I do that, you ask? Rewrite a book I wrote sixteen years ago? I have reasons.

 

First, the world has changed considerably in sixteen years even though the stories in my book remain the same. The introduction is dated because I referred to the No Child Left Behind law, which wreaked havoc on public schools, forcing them to spend time and money on days of national testing. It rested on the idea that a number could show if a student were learning, a concept loved by politicians who had no idea of what learning looked like. Since I referred to the NCLB law in my 2010 foreword, I figured I should get rid of it. The new foreword is more personal because I’m now looking back at a career beginning in 1968 from the perspective of a seventy-nine-year-old.

 

Second, in sixteen years I’ve learned so much about writing. I used my time well to re-edit the stories in the book. My whole writing style is different now after publishing an additional ten books.

 

However, the content of the stories remains the same. Those students taught me how to teach and showed me who I was, what I valued, and how I used my own moral compass to interact with 5,000-6,000 students over those forty-four years. Some stories seem fictional: a student who sneezed a hundred times when she had to give a speech, a drug overdose in my classroom, or playing electric guitar in a fraternity rock band concert when I was sixty-one. [Now THAT was a learning experience!] In 1980, the cash-strapped district tore the building down around us while we taught, planning to renovate it after the tearing-down phase. There were no asbestos laws yet. That story alone is astounding as we tried to hold classes while jackhammers were blasting and an entire bay of lights in my room crashed to the floor between rows of student desks. Then there was the book challenge in my class to a Kurt Vonnegut book, causing the entire town to line up on opposing sides over censorship and resulting in a wonderful letter to me from Mr. Vonnegut himself. I can’t begin to explain how incredible these stories are, but I assure you they all happened.

 

Finally, the world as we know it is now going through a period of time where people have forgotten the value of empathy, and they appear to have lost any ability to have common sense discussions. As I mention in my foreword: “So many of these stories aren’t written only for or about teaching. They’re stories of the human condition and of the empathy and humanity you find along the decades of your life.” Maybe it’s time to remind people of that lost world.

 

Are there lessons you’ve learned through experience that serve you well today?



Susan Van Kirk is the author of ten mysteries, including her Endurance Mysteries and Art Center Mysteries. You can find her on Instagram or Facebook, and her website is susanvankirk.com

14 comments:

  1. Each step of life has taught me to listen to other people. Looking forward to getting a better understanding of the empathy you always exhibit. ( and which the world needs).

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    1. Thank you for the kind words, Debra. Listening is sure a lost art, and I try to work on that very thing.

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  2. Congratulations on your reissued memoir. There's a lot a important information people can gain from it.

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  3. Congratulations, Susan, on giving your first book new life. I look forward to reading it.

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    1. Thank you, Grace. It's been interesting to see how much my writing changed over sixteen years.

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  4. In this time when so many are trying to "own" the truth and restrict what others read and think, this is a very timely tale. Whether we agree with the contents or not, books should be available to all.

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    1. So true, Kathleen. I have always believed parents should know and approve of their own child's books, but they shouldn't decide to restrict the same books from everyone else.

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  5. Congratulations! I'm curious to read your book. My senior year HS English teacher was a ball of fire, all about the new AP course and curriculum reform. We kept in touch--I would drop by on college breaks to lead a class discussion, and I gave him insights into what I had been prepared for in college and what I hadn't.

    He made a difference in my life as I'm sure you made for your students.

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    1. Thank you, Margaret. I do keep in touch with many of those high school and college former students!

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  6. Can't wait to read this, Susan. I imagine I'll be able to relate to a lot of the stories!

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    1. I think you will. A lot of teachers, pre-service teachers, and retired teachers have said as much!

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