Lifetouch, bossy, Niles, Copper Turtle, Summer Rain, and girls and mules: author/photographer Doris Holik Kelly
Charlie Barshaw coordinates our regular Writer Spotlight feature and interviews writers of SCBWI. In this piece, meet author and photographer Doris Holik Kelly
In a Goodreads bio, it mentions a portrait you photographed of Joanne K. Hill, who wrote Rainbow Remedies for Life's Stormy Times. How did you come to photograph Joanne? Why is this portrait among your favorites?
Joanne Hill was a smart, funny, great friend from the Bethel College writer’s club. She wrote Rainbow Remedies during a very tough time in her life. If I remember right she had a whole series of deaths (6?)in her family in a very short time, starting with her husband and ending with one of her sons.
She was in so much pain that she slipped into a deep depression and one of the ways she worked out of it was by writing her book. I was happy to gift her with a portrait and she was beautiful.
I just saw it a few days ago
on her obituary. She passed away a few days before Dave (David Kelly, Doris' husband). I didn’t see it until
a few days ago.
Although you’ve got five published book titles, you are also known for your talent taking photographs. How did you hone your skills with a camera? What equipment do you prefer to use for the best results?
Just give me any camera and get out of my way! π
You worked for Lifetouch doing portraits. What were some of
your more memorable photo sessions?
Oh Lord. You would ask that.
I worked for Lifetouch three different times. Sears Portrait studio, Lifetouch school traveling photographer, and the Senior Portrait division. Each one of these had its challenges.
The Sears Portrait studio ranged from birth to -- drag them in—wheel them in—carry them in. And group photos. As many people as I could squeeze into the room.
But my greatest challenges there were 2 year-olds. Keep
them on the table and keep them from screaming. My favorite prop was a rubber
duckie. I balanced it on my head a lot and I’d sneeze- ha-chooo! And drop it
into my hand and make everybody crack up.
We had great excitement one day when 2 women raced into the studio to sign in and when one beat the other one to the sign in sheet, a fist fight broke out between them.
A knife showed up, and someone yelled GUN, which there wasn’t one, but everyone was on the floor with a lot of screaming. FUN! (Sarcasm in case you didn’t notice)
It was wonderful when the security guys came and took them both away.
Drugs, drinking, and kids photos—never thought they went together.
Traveling school photographer. UGH. One of the worst jobs
I ever had. Preschools? Drag 40lbs of equipment up 2 flights of steps and spend
up to 4 hours trying to take toddler and preschool pictures. Go to a gym and
take 400 to 600 school pictures in 2 hours with rude, sulky uncooperative
teens.
Take group pictures of each junior high classroom, and
have to redo half the school because I didn’t see rows of kids giving me the
finger down at their sides from my perch 50 feet away on a 10-foot ladder.
Never said I had eagle eyes.
Senior division was more fun. Studio work was fun with different kinds of props lighting and back grounds. I took most of their outdoor photos with really interesting backgrounds.
The place the studio was in
was an old brewery and had layers of steps, cubby holes, brick backgrounds, and
weird windows. I was known (ahem) πfor being the best outdoor photographer in
the division.
You were born in South Bend, Indiana. What was life like for
young Doris? What early experiences led you to your present-day passions?
| Sixth grade Doris |
You grew up in Niles, Michigan, and live there still. What
about the place and its peoples makes it home for you?
Niles is a small town of about 12,000 people. We’re the
first town and township from the Indiana state line and one of the closest
places for the Hoosiers in South Bend to grab their supply of pot and run back
into Indiana where it’s not legal. Lots of red and blue lights shine on 933
everyday.
Niles has the best history EVER! We have the Fort St.Joseph (1691) archaeology dig every summer. There are a lot of other festivals,
too; Apple, Bluegrass, Jazz, Renaissance, River fest, all summer long.
What’s not to like? We’re 25 miles from Lake Michigan
beaches, 30 miles from Warren Dunes State Park that has 3 miles of beaches, and
6 miles dune trails, 3 camping areas, 10 miles from Notre Dame, 10 miles from a
great shopping area, two train systems, Amtrak and South Shore, to take you
into Chicago if you don’t want to drive 90 miles into the city to the museums
and fancy shopping, and 2 baseball parks, and DA Bears!
You graduated from Southwestern Michigan College in Dowagiac,
taking classes in creative writing, photography, and Art and Education. As a
young college graduate, what was your plan for your life?
I went to college the first time for music. I wanted to be a professional singer. (Many are called…) The second time was as an adult. My plan was to have a job I enjoyed and to help my husband take care of the family.
After I graduated I worked for a local family portrait studio. That’s
where I also took wedding pictures, ( there’s a lot I could tell here too about
some weddings),and senior pictures and I took the (shiver) elementary/jr. hi,
and high school pictures. And I wrote on the side when I had some peace and
quiet.
Your first mid-grade novel, The Mystery of the Copper
Turtle, was published on May 22, 2009. By November 2 of that same year, you
had published The Mystery of the Voyageurs Rendezvous. How did you
accomplish that incredible feat of two published books in six months?
I started thinking about a book I could write for kids that was like the real Mackinac Island. I had a directed study in creative writing at SMC so I wrote a couple of chapters a week and turned them in. (I was also working at Sears in the men’s clothing department, taking pictures for the family studio, and I had a ten-year-old and a 14-year-old and an out of work husband then.)
I didn’t have a computer then, so I’d write in longhand,
give it to friend of mine to type out, then I got a computer and typed my own onto
a disc, then the next system came a long, and on and on. I need to roll my eyes
here. Just thinking about the different programs it went through was
ridiculous.
BUT it took me almost 20 submissions to find a publisher
that liked my book and wanted to do a series. I guess it was hard to place, too
local, too much Michigan info, and I probably wasn’t the best writer. But I was
trying!
That was before 9-11. I actually had a redirection letter reach
me from New York City a year after it had been originally sent back to me. It
was slightly damaged.
While I kept submitting Copper Turtle I started on The Voyageur’s Rendezvous. My teenaged son says, “There’s got to be a ship wreck!” and I started the ship wreck. I’d read what I wrote to him--- “BO-RING!”
So I just kept working. So when I found a small Michigan publisher she wanted both books, and she also wanted the third (Mystery of the Bone Scavengers). And then she didn’t… but that’s another story. (That’s when I met Lori Taylor.)
| Cover art: Lori Taylor |
So I just kept writing about the things that interested me. Archeology, Michigan history, stealing Native American art, diving to shipwrecks and stealing from them, grave robbing native sites; all are white collar crimes that continue all over the world.
But, some things have changed. What
once didn’t get paid much attention, and the bad guys rarely ever got punished,
now we have repatriation laws in the US and the world and many things are being
returned to the tribes. There used to be wide open Native American graves that
people could look at and even buy bones from and now that is completely closed
down. Thank God.
By July, 2010 you had written and published a third in the
series of Big Mitten Mysteries, this one titled The Mystery of the Bone Scavengers. There was a fourth
book planned, but never published. Do you have a draft? What was the title?
The Bone Scavengers had a really small audience. Not
supported at all by my publisher. But it’s out now at your favorite bookseller.
I wanted the fourth book to be a story about the Fort St. Joseph archeology dig, but nope, she said it wasn’t a physical place for kids
to visit so the idea went to the side. I may still write one for it anyway,
just because a dig is an interesting thing for kids to participate in.
So the 4th book won’t be in Mackinac It’s
going to be set in the Traverse area in the town of Glen Arbor. The Lost
Cubs of Sleeping Bear. It’s 95% DONE. But not totally finished. I’m
struggling with the ending. Too many strings untied.
Do you miss your main characters of the middle grade mysteries?
What part of Jared and Sadie are you, your kids, or grandkids
| Doris and grandkids |
I tried to make the characters after my kids. They are sort of like them. Jared and Jeremy are both pretty laid back, and Sadie and Susana have the same temperament, but Susana doesn’t love makeup.( She’s pretty grown up now but she’d still punch her brother if she could get away with it. ;-) )
In Bone Scavengers you mention the horrifying Native
American legend, the wendigo. In Copper Turtle, a monster called a Gi-bi
thwarts the children trying to solve the mystery. What is a Gi-bi?
A Gi-bi is almost the same as a wendigo, LOL. Wendigoes
almost always come out in the starving days of winter to turn insanely ravenous
people into cannibals .(Hi, how are you doing neighbor? Want to come over for
lunch?) Not the middle of Main Street Mackinac Island. π
Mysteries for kids are difficult to write, what with all the
clues you have to drop on the page, and all the research necessary to tell a
convincing story of the history and the geography of the place. How did you
write three 200-page novels in the course of a year?
They were written over at least 15 years. π
But I needed to sell the first one first, so I kept writing the others
The Gift of Summer Rain: An Arch Rock Legend was your
next book, published in 2018, and illustrated by local artist Lori Taylor. It
clocks in at a trim 58 pages. Do you consider it a long picture book, or a
novella?
| Interior art for Summer Rain |
I Love Lori Taylor! Her art rocks!
Eh… It’s kind of a long picture book novella. There is
too much story to be a picture book, but Lori’s gorgeous illustrations are so
necessary to bring the people and places within the story to life. I eliminated
a lot of words from when I first wrote it, though.
Your latest book, The Crow’s Warning: Escaping the
Wildfires of 1881, was published in 2024. Like all of your work, it is
based on Michigan history. What drew you to write about that tragic event? How
much research was necessary?
I heard a little about the family history of the 1881 fire at my aunt’s funeral at least 15 years ago. My created story is truly NOT a biography. It’s based on a series of isolated incidents reported by the Detroit and other larger city newspapers and by my imagination.
There were a lot of little notices in the Detroit paper during that week from little cities and villages all over the thumb. After thinking about it we decided that they were last ditch telegraphed pleas for help as fires approached them.
It’s very flat up in the thumb and there was literally NO place to see where the fire was coming from. No place to escape to. The fire would just appear.
| My great x4 grandma's grave. She was Old Order Mennonite from Lancaster county |
I gave the people in my story a heads up with a
climbing tree, and the crows warning, and the river. A way to survive, but most
settlers who died in the wildfire didn’t have that.
The first Cass City paper, the Enterprise began the week of the fire. It reported the fire at the end of the week and then, to my knowledge, they didn’t bring out another edition until a month later.
It was a horrendous fire. Almost 300 people died in about 24 hours. Those are the people that were from the area. It doesn’t account for any visitors to the area. My great great-grandparents did spend a lot of time in the river. They lost everything and had to start again.
| I asked about the girls and the mules |
She was a good friend and a well-loved 2nd grade teacher in our community, who supported me and loved the Copper Turtle story. She read it to her 10-year-old granddaughter on a trip up to Mackinac and her granddaughter begged for pictures so she could see what it looked like.
So
Janet made them just for fun. She gave them to me, but the first publisher
didn’t want to put anything in the book but the story, so I hung onto them.
What’s next for Doris?
Next book: Fang and the Fabulous Fundraiser. 5th
graders try to raise enough money for a class trip and everything goes wrong.
The 4th Big Mitten Mystery book The Lost
Cubs of Sleeping Bear.
I think I’d like to get The Gift of Summer Rain
onto Amazon. (Big project)
THEN!!! I have an exciting young adult murder mystery 95% finished. It’s called Bobbed Hair and Bloodstained Banners and it’s set within an orphanage in a town near me, pre prohibition, and pre votes for women.
Two young women decide to be suffragettes and find that the world is very much against them. It’s very disturbing and dreadfully sad at times, too.
I
had to set it aside for a while to decide if I wanted it to be YA or Midgrade.
YA won. I believe that some things are too deep for 5th graders.
That’s all!
Because people who know Doris mentioned her camera work, I asked for some examples:
| Grandkid portraits |
| Grandpa and grandchild |
| tree on the edge of the Grand Canyon walkway |
| the beach when Lake Huron was very high |
| bleeding heart |












