| From
the January/February 2000 issue of The Horn Book Magazine
Boston Globe–Horn
Book Award Acceptance
by Louis Sachar
his
is great. It is very gratifying to be recognized by the Boston
Globe and Horn Book. I feel especially rewarded being
here in New England at this time of year. Holes was inspired
by my dislike of the hot Texas summer. It is now autumn in Texas.
According to the newspaper, the projected temperature in Austin
today is 93 degrees. We have our fall color as well. Brown. You
don’t know the pleasure I get just putting on a jacket. Or
maybe you do.
As I was writing the novel, I identified with my
main character, Stanley Yelnats, who had to dig a hole each day,
five feet deep and five feet wide under the blazing Texas sun. Most
days I too felt like I was struggling for no apparent reason.
It occurs to me now that Stanley was sentenced
to Camp Green Lake for eighteen months, which was exactly how long
it took me to write Holes. I arbitrarily chose the length
of his sentence early on. Maybe on some unconscious level, I knew
how long it would take.
I’m carrying this comparison a bit too far.
All things considered, I would rather be writing than digging. My
office is air-conditioned. But most days it was hard to believe
I’d ever finish the book, let alone receive the accolades
that I’ve now received.
I want to thank the judges for selecting Holes
as the winner of this year’s award for fiction. And let me
take this opportunity to also thank and recognize everyone at Farrar,
Straus and Giroux, especially my editor Frances Foster, whose advice
and support has been invaluable.
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