Tuesday, November 5, 2024

Book Birthday Blog with Suzanne Jacobs Lipshaw

 


Welcome to SCBWI-MI's Book Birthday Blog!

Where we celebrate new books from Michigan's authors, illustrators and translators.

 

Congratulations to Suzanne Jacobs Lipshaw on the release of The Super Volcano: The Hidden Hero Below Yellowstone National Park

 


How did you come up with the idea for your book?

In 2012, my family and I took a summer vacation to Montana, Wyoming, and South Dakota. One of our stops was Yellowstone National Park. Journeying through the park, I was in awe of the spurting geysers, gurgling mud pots, and colorful hot springs. As an elementary school teacher, when I discovered these incredible sites were created by a volcano lying below the park, I knew I had to share these wonders with my students. That year, I transformed my classroom into a miniature Yellowstone and immersed my students in books, videos, and projects revolving around the park. This was a new method of teaching for me and sparked a fire under my students by motivating and engaging them. Wanting to continue to spread the wonder of Yellowstone to more children, I penned my manuscript.

What is something you hope your readers will take away from your book?

I want readers to learn about and appreciate Yellowstone’s amazing water features, animals, plants, and of course its supervolcano. Additionally, I offer readers to take a pledge and become stewards of not only Yellowstone, but also our beautiful planet. I hope readers embrace the pledge. Our world could use more superheroes championing the need to keep our environment clean, our animals protected, and our planet preserved for future generations.

What was the most difficult part of writing this book?

Actually, this was the only book I’ve ever written that flowed out of my head and onto the page in close to the same form it is now. I credit award winning author Patricia Newman and the writing wisdom she imparted to me during my SCBWI-Michigan nonfiction mentorship experience with her.

What are your marketing plans for the book and where can we find it?

Science, Naturally and I have been focused on a media campaign through reviews, bookstagrammers, interviews, videos, etc. We have passed the first couple of hurdles to get the book into Yellowstone and are hoping we pass the last one. Send good thoughts please. In the meantime you can find the book on the Science, Naturally website https://www.sciencenaturally.com/product-page/the-super-volcano as well as the Barnes and Noble and Amazon websites.

What's next for you?

In 2025, I have another nonfiction picture book coming out from Fifth Avenue Press. For the past few years, I have switched my concentration from nonfiction picture books to fiction middle grade and will be shopping publishers soon for my first fiction novel DECODING THE MOON.

More about the book . . .

A secret superhero lies beneath Yellowstone National Park…
 
In a wonder-filled trip through an iconic destination, discover the spectacular powers of the supervolcano hidden below the ground. WHOOSH! SIZZLE! BLOOP! Visit the volcano’s exploding geysers, boiling mud pots, and much more.
 
But what does a hero do best? Help others! The Yellowstone Supervolcano doesn’t just dazzle tourists. Learn how its superpowers support a thriving ecosystem, helping feed and protect the unique wildlife year after year.

Publisher: Science, Naturally

More about the author . . .

Suzanne Jacobs Lipshaw is a children’s book author and former teacher passionate about growing young minds. Her writing credentials include the true-story picture books I Campaigned for Ice Cream: A Boy’s Quest for Ice Cream Trucks, Mighty Mahi, and The Super Volcano: The Hidden Hero Below Yellowstone National Park. Suzanne enjoys speaking at schools about writing, leadership, and how kids can make a difference. When she’s not dreaming up new writing projects, you can find her kayaking on the lake, hiking the trail, practicing at the yoga studio, or comparing paint swatches at the local Sherwin Williams. To learn more about Suzanne visit her website at http://www.suzannejacobslipshaw.com/

 


 



 

Friday, November 1, 2024

Hugs and Hurrahs


Happy November, everyone! 

 Welcome to this quarter's Hugs and Hurrahs!





Although Katherine Higgs-Couthard lives in Michigan, she works at Saint Mary's College in Indiana and her YA novel, Junkyard Dogs, made the shortlist for the Indiana Author Awards. Junkyard Dogs explores teen homelessness and poverty and is inspired by Kat's experiences growing up in poverty and also by South Bend’s 2006 Manhole Murders, which made national news.

We're so happy for you, Kat!





Kristin Bartley Lenz's young adult flash fiction, Metamorphosis, was published in a YA anthology, Just YA: Short Poems, Essays, & Fiction for Grades 7-12. The anthology is part of an open access program at Oklahoma State University and includes a teacher guide. Learn more at https://open.library.okstate.edu/justya/.

Congratulations, Kristin!







Lori McElrath Eslick has a solo exhibition at the St. Cecilia Music Center's Terryberry Gallery, including paintings from Cricket Magazine, and several of her book's cover art and interior painting/illustrations. Oct. 1- Oct. 31 Terryberry Gallery, St. Cecilia Music Society's gallery



She is also honored to be in the Ezra Jack Keats Memorial Fellowship Exhibition at the Kerlan Collection of Children's Literature and Art, University of Minnesota. As a former fellow, she was invited to exhibit art, and explain how the research collection influenced her art going for future children's books. More about this at www.lib.umn.edu/clrc/  Oct. 22, 2014 - Jan. 4, 2025

What an honor, Lori!


Sarah Rockett at Tilbury House has acquired world rights to My Backyard Used to Be by debut author Lynn Baldwin about a child playing the backyard who ponders the history of the land—from the present to the prehistoric—imagining all the people and animals that played there before. Publication is planned for Fall 2025. 


That's wonderful, Lynn!









Upasna Kakroo’s nonprofit, Peerbagh, just released the first edition their BIPOC-led illustrated children's magazine, Bento. It is the only South-Asia-inspired children's print magazine in the world with contributors from US, Canada, India, Pakistan. The magazine has opened to glowing reader/parent reviews.The first issue is themed, "where the wild things are" and it talks about wildlife and conservation.


Way to go, Upasna!







Rhonda Gowler Greene is excited to announce the sale of her manuscript If You Want to See a Narwal to Little Brown which will be published in Fall 2026 and illustrated by Xin LiXin lives in Norway (one of the few places narwhals live!).  She was a grand prize winner for the SCBWI 2021 Winter Conference Portfolio Showcase.


Rhonda also sold her story THE TRICK-OR-TREAT TRAIN to Bloomsbury. Its planned release is Fall 2027.


Finally, she was happy to learn that Bernie’s Book Bank, a literacy organization based in Chicago, is publishing a low-cost edition of her book THIS MAGICAL, MUSICAL NIGHT (little bee books, 2021) and planning to donate 20,000 copies.

That's incredible, Rhonda!



Please join me in congratulating our talented and prolific colleagues! 



Next quarter's Hugs and Hurrahs will be in the new year. Please feel free to send your good news any time to aewhodgson@gmail.com. 


Keep writing!


~Alison Hodgson




Friday, October 25, 2024

Mackinac Island Conference 2014

Horses and fudge, big names, plein air, abandoned bra, and a slurpee brain freeze: The Mackinac Island SCBWI-MI fall conference 2014

by Charlie Barshaw

"I was fortunate enough to be Co-Chair of the 2014 Mackinac Island conference." 

That's how I started my email to author Candace Fleming, who signs her emails "Candy." I know this because Candy wrote back and said,  "I remember that conference like it was yesterday.  It was a terrific event."

photo courtesy Anita Pazner

It's the tenth year anniversary, 2014-2024. The other conference I co-chaired was at a convent in Kalamazoo the year before, was limited to 40 writers, and was a live-in, weekend-long workshop/boot camp.

The Mackinac Island conference was going to be an extravagant affair. We had a bigger enrollment, as many people as could book a room at the Mission Point hotel or a nearby B&B. Also, we had an "in" because my co-chair, Anita Pazner, knew some island people.

And because it was unique Mackinac Island, the co-RA's Leslie Helakoski and Carrie Pearson decided to swing for the fences. We brought in the premier editor of Scholastic, Arthur Levine. We invited local author/illustrator Laurie Keller  and asked her to bring along her famous editor Christy Ottaviano. And we brought author Candace Fleming and author/illustrator Eric Rohmann in because they were partners and children's book pros separately and together.

Leslie Helakoski, Arthur Levine, Christy Ottaviano

So, the cool faculty, cool destination conference happened in September 2014. The faculty got there somehow (Candace and Eric from Chicago-area, Arthur and Christy from NY-area). They all completed the last leg of their trip on a ferry, because (absent helicopter, snowmobile or sled dogs and thick Great Lakes ice) that's the only way to get there.

Everyone had to schlep their stuff from the dock to their room in the Mission Point hotel, or take a carriage/wagon or rent a bike. The place smelled of fudge and horse manure, in a good way.

During the previous Mackinac Island conference (in 2011) master illustrator Matt Faulkner conducted a weekend-long illustrator contest and intensive boot camp. It happened inside a window-less Quonset hut, and the poor artists didn't get to enjoy the island nearly as much as the writers.


Lori Eslick
So this time, they figured to do art outside, and had master plein air watercolor artist Lori Eslick do painting out in nature, which is more or less what plein air means.

Also, butterflies!

Perhaps the thorniest Mackinac issue is that Island memories blend together. SCBWI-MI had two conferences there in 2011 and 2014, and the Michigan Reading Association also held conferences there a number of times. Many of these remembrances and photos are of Mackinac Island, but maybe not from 2014. I'll do my darndest to keep them straight.


I've heard from Candace and Arthur. He says his memories are "blurry." Candace Fleming, though, says "she remembers it like yesterday". Most people, myself included, are somewhere in-between. 

So far, I've gotten some responses:

Mackinac Island Questions (to Ed Spicer):

 

What do you remember about the trip to Mackinac Island, and/or the return trip home?


I remember being in a constant state of anxiety because I was presenting to a group of people that I admire, including several who were and still are close friends. I wanted my presentation to be thoughtful and useful and interesting and was so worried I would fall short, antacid pills were consumed. 


Equally memorable was the fact that when Ann and I were unpacking for the weekend, Ann found a black bra behind the dresser. I suggested to Ann that we hang it in the room and use it for a hammock. Needless to say it did not fit and we tossed it (but not until we shared it and offered it to several others—no takers). However Ruth Barshaw preserved this memory for the ages!


And finally on a very windy afternoon I did a video interview with Ruth and Matt Faulkner and Kristen Remenar. This was Kristen’s debut picture book and her beloved Matt was working on the illustrations. The video does not have the best audio (wind is such a brat) and it may still exist on YouTube, but right now I remember this lovely time with dear friends as if it were yesterday!

 

Had you been to Mackinac Island before? What was your initial impression?


Not only did SCBWI use Mackinac Island for conferences but so did the Michigan Reading Association. I’ve been there several times. It’s a beautiful spot and no cars!

 

Any of the presenters or presentations leave an indelible mark on you?


Every time I meet with book creators my life is changed for the better. I think this was the conference in which Debbie Diesen did a poetry program that was great. Ann and Debbie also really bonded. A bunch of us had dinner at the Pink Pony and laughed a healing and healthy hard laugh all night long. We were with our crew and life felt good.

 

Did you get a chance to sightsee? What did you seek out? What did you stumble upon?


Kris Remenar, Ann Perrigo, me, Matt Faulkner, Ruth McNally Barshaw, Ed Spicer trespassing

Of course we visited the gorgeous public library and we did weasel our way into the Grand Hotel for drinks and heavenly views of the water. 

 

What sticks out in your memories when you think of the 2014 Mackinac Island conference?


This was before the pandemic and before the really ugly, divisive political world of today. I loved working with my first graders. I loved my committee work. I loved my growing group of smart, kind, funny friends. This conference felt divine. The mood was hopeful and filled with kindness and laughter.

 

What was your biggest surprise?



That black bra was HUGE!

From Ruth's sketchbook

 

 

What was your role with the conference? What kind of prep work did you have to do? How did it go?


I was a keynote speaker and I had to wait until the very end to give my talk. Of course I wrote and rewrote and tweaked and obsessed and panicked MANY times before I got up to speak (as is the case EVERY time I present). I remember feeling good with how it went and I received several compliments from a good number of people). So I guess it went well! Fun conference! 


While author Vicky Lorencen sent this along:

Like a Slurpee-induced brain freeze

Painful memories of a conference past

By Vicky Lorencen

I had nearly withdrawn the last fudge-stained reminder of the SCBWI-MI 2014 Fall Conference from my memory bank when that Mr. Barshaw demanded I recollect one of the most excruciating three weeks of my tender literary life. (Pardon? It was three days. Really? Hmm.) Anyway, thanks a lot, Chuck.

photo courtesy Ed Spicer

To those of you who missed the 2014 conference on Mackinac Island, you can cancel your FOMO. I mean, I wish I’d missed out! All in all, it was H-E-double hockey sticks on a land lump surrounded by water, blue skies and puffy clouds. Claustrophobic. That’s what I was. Be glad you didn't have to endure it.

And let’s get this out of the way. The speakers? All boars. (What’s that? I mean bores (most likely).) Presenters like Candice Fleming, Arthur Levine, Christy Ottaviano, and Eric Rohmann—every last one of ‘em—were dripping with condensation. (What now? Yes, yes, I meant condescension.) But it was in that witty, smart, warm-hearted, I’m-here-because-I-love-children’s-books-and-the-people-who-create-them sort of way. Yikes. You know the type.

The attendees? Um. Too welcoming and friendly if you ask me (and I believe you did). Most offered far more hugs and smiles than absolutely necessary. And, who knows why, but the conference organizers gave us big blobs of time for long chats, brainstorming and creativity. Madness! Yes, I took advantage of their gift (but only to be polite, you understand).

By the time the whole Alcatrazesque weekend came to a welcome halt, my brain had that uncomfortable, post-Thanksgiving feeling. (And no, milk chocolate pecan fudge squares had nothing to do with it.) It was induced by all the encouragement and insights I had to stuff in it. But again, out of my overt sense of politeness, I will extend another BIG thank to everyone who helped to plan, oversee and execute this very special conference, which is to say, 72-hour nightmare. I’m afraid (as in deeply concerned) I’ll always remember it as one of the best worst weekends I'd had in a long time.

P.S. Are you happy now, Charlie?

The answer is YES.

We're going to gather memories and photos, and hear from some of the truly stellar producers of children's books. If you have photos or memories you're willing to shares email me at cjbarshaw523@aol.com

Watch this space.

 

Anita and Charlie
retro



Charlie Barshaw conducts children's book author and illustrator interviews for The Mitten. In 2014, he co-chaired an SCBWI-MI conference on Mackinac Island with Anita Pazner.



Wednesday, October 23, 2024

Book Birthday Blog with Tara Michener

 


Welcome to SCBWI-MI's Book Birthday Blog!

Where we celebrate new books from Michigan's authors, illustrators and translators.

 

Congratulations to Tara Michener on the release of I Am Not My Meltdown

 

 

How did you come up with the idea for your book?

I am constantly talking to kids and adults about meltdowns in my everyday life. As a mental health therapist that seeks to bring healing and understanding to the lives of families it is important to normalize that sometimes we may have issues with behavior. I find that telling stories is the best way to communicate and educate while entertaining this is how I came up the idea behind I Am Not My Meltdown.

What inspires you to write? 

My surroundings inspire me to write. I see children that seek both representation and validation. I see teachers and librarians looking for resources that will serve their communities and I understand that it is important to write what you know in order to make a difference. 

What is something you hope your readers will take away from your book? 

I hope that my readers will see themselves in this book and find hope and understanding. My goal is to create opportunities to build both empathy and emotional regulation while being entertained and soothed.

What was the most difficult part of writing the book? 

I did not see any difficulty in creating this narrative. I am constantly asked how to help young people with their emotions and this was the perfect way to answer and uplift so in some ways the difficulty lies in it being overdue. 

What's next for you and where can we find your book? 

I am working on more literary works and programs that create pathways for children to understand their feelings and to gain healthy information in regards to coping. My book is available wherever books are sold.

More about the book . . .

Melt-downs are common but solutions are too. This book serves as a pathway to educate and entertain. Kids sometimes feel like they are a problem because they are having a problem...in I Am Not My Meltdown feelings are normalized and solutions for regulation are introduced to kids so at the earliest level they can understand how to cope.

Publisher: Author House

More about the author . . . 

Tara Michener is the author of 8 children's books that are focused on social-emotional development. Her time is divided between writing and operating her counseling private practice which also serves as a hub for wellness, yoga and outreach programs for schools and organizations. She loves junk journaling, educating on mental health and Twizzlers and Diet Coke. Her favorite people are her hubistrator, Jason Michener and her son Cannon. She lives in Michigan where the apples are delicious and the winters are cold.

TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@tara.michener?is_from_webapp=1&sender_device=pc

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/taramichener/

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/tara.michener/

 


 


Tuesday, October 22, 2024

Book Birthday Blog with Kate Rietema


Welcome to SCBWI-MI's Book Birthday Blog!

Where we celebrate new books from Michigan's authors, illustrators and translators.

 

Congratulations to Kate Rietema on the release of All the Babies: A First Book About Adoption

 


This is your second book release this year. What are some unique challenges of multiple releases and how do you stay organized?

I’m very grateful that both books are with the same publisher, B&H Kids! They created joint marketing materials so I can promote the books together, which is really helpful. Pitching myself as a guest for podcasts and speaking events was also easier as both books are written from my experiences with foster care and adoption. It feels less like multiple releases, and more like one extended release.
 
To stay organized, I keep a running to-do list on my “monthly goals” document.  


 

How did you come up with the idea for your book? 

After we adopted our daughter, I became mildly obsessed searching for the “just right” book about adoption. I found several ok options, but I couldn’t find the gentle introduction to adoption I was looking for—so one day, I wrote it. But this book isn’t just for adopted children! It’s an important book for any child that may have a friend, classmate, or relative who is adopted. One day, my daughter came home from kindergarten in a stormy huff because a classmate wouldn’t believe she was adopted. The classmate reasoned that she didn’t “look” adopted. And I don’t fault this classmate; my daughter’s skin tone matches mine, and this was probably in contrast to his previous experiences with adoptees. So, I’m excited to have a book that celebrates the unique realities of adoption: children can be adopted as babies or big kids, they can be adopted from close by or far away, they can be part of big families or small families; and the illustrations show that children might look similar to their parents, or they might look different.  

What is something you hope your readers will take away from your book? 

My daughter lights up whenever she reads a story about a child who was adopted. “Hey, that’s just like me!” she’ll say. For my daughter, seeing her own experience represented in stories boosts her sense of belonging. That’s what I hope this book does for kids. I hope it lets them see a reflection of their own story. I hope it makes them feel understood, celebrated, and loved.  

What are your marketing plans for the book and where can we find it? 

My book is available online at Amazon, Target, Barnes & Noble, Christianbook.com, Walmart, and in many local Christian book stores.

Some things I’ve done to get ready for my release:

  • Updated my website
  • Created a book trailer with my youngest daughter, see it  here
  • Joined a picture book launch group, #PBbuds24
  • Set up some book signings and story times
  •  Reserved a table at the Michigan Association of Christian Schools Conference to promote school visits 
  • Worked with my publisher to create printable bonus material, secure endorsements, send out advanced copies for review, and promote on social media

What's next for you? 

I’m thrilled to share about my non-fiction picture book coming next summer with Tilbury House, illustrated by Ash Roy! Cheetahs Return to India: The True Story of Aasha and Pavan tells the groundbreaking story of how cheetahs were recently reintroduced to India after becoming regionally extinct in 1952. It’s a beautiful story of a bold step in cheetah conservation. 

More about the book . . . 

All the Babies: A First Book About Adoption is a celebration of uniqueness, highlighting eleven babies who represent aspects of being adopted that might make a child feel different from their siblings or peers. Using fun language and simple sentences, this board book lays an important foundation for future conversations about adoption, diversity, and belonging. No matter how kids enter their families, they are made and loved by God—forever and always. 

Publisher: B&H Kids

More about the author . . . 

Kate Rietema and her husband live in West Michigan where they operate a beautiful family campground. They have five forever-children through birth and adoption and have cared for many more in their eleven years as licensed foster parents. Kate is the author of When God Makes Scribbles Beautiful, a picture book about finding hope when hard things happen. In her free time, she works as a nurse, volunteers at her county jail, and hobbies as an amateur potter.

You can find more about my books at https://www.katerietema.com/ and follow me on socials:

Twitter/X: @katerietema

Facebook:  Kate Rietema - Children's Author

Instagram: katerietema