I wrote my first poem that year, “Si yo fuera la luz,” and my Spanish teacher liked it so much that she submitted it to a writing contest at the local county fair, and I won first place. My teacher used to read to us from Shel Silverstein’s masterpiece Where the Sidewalk Ends, and I fell in love with words. with my family when I was five but it was in fourth grade that I truly heard the English language for the first time. Romina Garber: I was born in Buenos Aires, and I immigrated to the U.S. Miss Print: Can you tell me a bit about your path as a writer? How did you get to this point? In a series grounded in Argentine folklore, Romina Garber’s Wolves of No World series is a timely commentary on the danger of labels and what can happen when we let society decide who does and does not have the right to be called “legal.” I’m thrilled to have Romina here to answer a few questions about this series and what else she has in store for readers.
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