Out for
a walk in the woods around her childhood home in Ware, Mass. over 30 years ago,
then 9-year-old Jennifer Krainski Plant discovered a dilapidated cabin.
Exploring inside the cabin, she found
personal belongings scattered everywhere, as if the former residents just left
one day, leaving all of their things behind.
She felt compelled to learn what had happened to them.
“It was driving me crazy,” said Krainski
Plant. “I needed to know the story and I
knew I’d never know, so I had to make one up.”
The resulting story that Krainski Plant
wrote about the abandoned cabin was just the first example of a passion for
writing that would later influence her career path as both an author and a
teacher. Today, 40-year-old Krainski
Plant is a published author of four books and four verse poems. She also teaches English composition at
Westfield State College in Westfield, Mass.
Oddly enough, even though it was a significant
part of her life, Krainski Plant never went to college for English. She said that she “sampled majors at first,”
initially going for an associate’s degree in nursing at Springfield Technical
Community College.
However, after giving birth to her son
Chance, Krainski Plant decided that she wanted to transition from a career in
nursing to a career in education. She
wanted to relearn everything that her child would be learning so she could be a
good mother. She also thought she had
the laid-back personality it takes to be a teacher.
After receiving her associate’s degree,
Krainski Plant moved on to attend American International College, where she
earned a master’s degree in education.
She also spent the past four and a half
years working on her doctorate in education at the University of
Massachusetts. In February, 2014 she
graduated, without having finished her dissertation.
Though Krainski Plant immersed herself in
her education, she never lost her desire to write. She continued to compose poetry and short
stories while in college and working. As
a public school teacher of various grade levels, she would wake up at 4 a.m.
and devote two hours to her writing before going to work.
As an author, Krainski Plant specializes
in fiction novels that are “appropriate for late middle school through
adulthood,” as she says on her personal website, JennyKrainski.com.
Her first book, “Deep in the Forest,” was
published by Writer’s Club Press in 2003.
“The Leader of Nature,” a sequel to the
first book, was a collaborative effort by Krainski Plant and her youngest
sister Meghan, the artist of the book’s pictures. “The Leader of Nature,” along with “Undetected,”
and her most recent book, “My Neighbor,” were all published by PublishAmerica
in 2005, 2007 and 2009, respectively.
She also wrote a chapter on Beaver Lake
for a Ware history book and an unpublished manuscript entitled “A Look Into the
Long, Healthy Life of Spencer Beaver,” for her elderly neighbor who wanted to
share his own story.
Krainski Plant frequently bases ideas and
settings in her books off towns in Massachusetts, bringing the world she lives
in into her writing. For example, in “My
Neighbor,” there are references to the Holyoke Mall at Ingleside and the town
of Southampton.
Krainski Plant says that over the years
she has learned to write and look for publishers and readers that are
interested in what she has written, “instead of saying, ‘This is what people
want,’” and molding her writing to fit what she believes a publisher would want
to publish or what a reader would want to read.
“The
biggest thing I learned is just write,” she said. “The first draft should be just for you and
then you can gear it towards an audience.”
Through this process, she feels that she has found out things about
herself as a writer that she didn’t know.
Krainski Plant has also published four of
her verse poems, the topics of which vary depending on her mood. When she goes hiking at the Quabbin Reservoir
in Ware, she writes about nature, but when she’s going through a hard time, her
poems can sound “scary dark.” Krainski
Plant sees her poetry as a way of getting her frustrations out and
de-stressing.
Krainski Plant has found that her
schooling, her career as a teacher and her family life have often caused her to
get sidetracked from her writing. She
has vowed to make time for that part of her life.
“I promised myself…that I was going to
make space for writing,” she said.
“Unlike years previous, I’m making time.”
However, through her position at Westfield
State College, which she has held since 2008, Krainski Plant has found that
teaching at the college level is an important part of her life and is a good
personal fit for her.
“I sat back and said, ‘You know what, this
is it. This is where I belong.”
Krainski Plant said she’s eager to
implement some new teaching tactics in her classroom because even though she’s
always loved to write, she didn’t enjoy taking English composition classes in
college herself. She wants to present things
differently than how they were taught to her in college so that her students
won’t be bored by the subject matter and can get the most out of the classes.
Instead, she wants to follow the methods
of some of her high school teachers who provided prompts that opened up her
mind to things to write about and gave her feedback to keep going. She partially attributes their positive
feedback to her motivation to write.
Krainski Plant wants to emphasize what her
students do right in their pieces so that they can have the same positive
experience.
Yet at the same time, Krainski Plant
admits that the assignments she did in high school weren’t college prep by any
means. She wants her assignments to
prepare her students for their other college classes.
“What I’m trying to do is intertwine the
creative with what the college expects,” she said.
Krainski Plant’s 19-year-old son Chance,
feels that his mother’s teaching methods are “easily accessible.” Himself a student of Holyoke Community
College, Krainski Plant often asks Chance to read the guidelines for her
assignments, asking his opinion of them as a college student before she
finalizes them.
Chance feels that his mother’s creativity
and talent can be seen in far more than just her teaching career, whether it be
in regards to her writing or her harping, which she likes to do in her spare
time at home in Ware.
“It is amazing to see her flourish with
her talents as a harpist,” Chance said in a Facebook message.
According to Krainski Plant, her husband
Alan has always been encouraging of her teaching and her writing as well.
“Jenny is more than an author; she is an
artist,” said Alan in a Facebook message.
“She looks at the world differently.”
By Shelby Ashline
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