Deeper into Terabithia
Bridge to Terabithia author Katherine Paterson says a story reveals a writer's faith, whether she likes it or not.
Interview by Peter T. Chattaway | posted 2/16/2007 09:10AM
Katherine Paterson once planned to be a missionary. She was born to missionary parents in China and spent four years in Japan as a missionary herself. But after returning to the United States to continue her educationand after meeting and marrying a young Presbyterian ministershe gave all that up and became a writer.
Some of her early novels reflect her love of Japanese culture, and some of her nonfiction books reflect her religious background. But she's probably best known for Bridge to Terabithia, a story about two childrena girl named Leslie and a boy named Jesswho create an imaginary kingdom in a secret grove.
Terabithia won the Newbery Medal in 1977 and was recently adapted into a movie now showing in theaters. (See the film review at ChristianityTodayMovies.com.)
Paterson spoke to CT Movies critic Peter T. Chattaway about the book, the film, and the meaning of "story." (Warning: This interview includes plot spoilers for both the book and the film.)
Did you ever envision a movie coming out of this book?
No. I thought it was such a private book that my editor probably wouldn't want to publish it; and if he wanted to publish it, I thought nobody would read it; and if they read it, [I thought] nobody would understand it. I was shocked to realize that teachers were reading it out loud in schools. It just seemed like a very, very private, personal story.
How involved have you been with the new film?
I actually haven't been all that involved, because I gave the rights to my son David. It was actually his friendship with, and the death of, his best friend when he was eight that caused me to write the book in the first place. So when he asked me several years ago if he could do a screenplay and try to market it, I told him yes. Not only because he's my son, but also because he's a very good playwright.
It took him many years, and by the time he sold it, his original screenplay had been sent to a highly paid Hollywood writer who changed the story considerably. So he's been fighting for the integrity of the story for a long time, not only because it grew out of his own story, but also because I was his mother and I had entrusted this to him and because, as he said, he wanted to honor his friend who died. I think they've made a good film.
How does your Christian background inform the story?
I think C. S. Lewis said that a book cannot be what a writer is not. Who you are informs what you write on a very deep level. You reveal yourself whether you intend to or not. So you don't signal that you're a Christian; you write the story as well and as truthfully as you can because that's how you glorify God, and you have to be true to the characters and who they are and how they talk. If it comes from a person who has a Christian hope and a Christian knowledge of grace, then I think hope and grace are going to infuse my worknot that I put them in, but because I can't help having them there.
In the book, Leslie knows Narnia and lends the Narnia books to Jess. Yet she seems unaware of the Christian elements there, because when she goes to church and hears the story of Christ, it is completely new to her.
That happens all the time with kids who've read Narnia and have no Christian background whatsoever. I actually had a friend who loved all the books and then felt betrayed when people told her they had Christian associations. She didn't want it to be there, because she didn't believe that stuff. She said, "I loved the books until somebody ruined it for me!" Whereas for Leslie, it helps her to appreciate the story of Jesus.
March 2007, Vol. 51, No. 3