Friday, February 21, 2025

Editor Spotlight: Christy Ottaviano

 

Running, reading, Beverly Cleary, no computers, book design, and collectibles: Editor Christy Ottaviano

Charlie Barshaw coordinates our regular Writer Spotlight feature and interviews writers of SCBWI-MI. In this piece, meet Editor Christy Ottaviano, esteemed faculty member of the 2014 Mackinac Island conference. 

You’ve always been a runner, and you’re still running. How have you changed your routine from 2014 until now?

Running has been an integral part of my life.  I run about four days a week and have recently upped my mileage to 20-25 miles per week. Running is when I do my best thinking. 

I also love to swim (usually twice a week) and I play lots of tennis, paddle tennis, and pickle ball.  I’m very active. I especially love to run when travelling. 

I recently visited San Juan, Puerto Rico and couldn’t get over how many runners were on the roads thanks to a central running/bike path the city recently created.  

I love that many US cities are rebuilding their waterfronts and adding pedestrian pathways to accommodate runners, walkers, and bikers. This is a wonderful initiative that benefits us all.


 

You’ve been a voracious reader your whole life. What was the book you first loved? What’s the best part of reading?

I am the third of four children and inherited my older siblings’ books which were love-worn by the time they reached me. I grew up on a healthy diet of Golden Books (by Mary Blair, Richard Scarry, and Eloise Wilken) as well as the books that were part of the Parents Magazine Book Club as we were subscribers in the 1960s and 70s. 

That curated club introduced me to the work of Margaret Bloy Graham, Arnold Lobel, Virginia Lee Burton, and JP Miller.  I still own these books and return to them often as I learned so much about storytelling, design, and illustration just by reading them over and over.  

The first book I was able to read by myself was a joke book called Animal Riddles written by Bennet Cerf (one of the co-founders of Random House) and illustrated by Roy McKie.

 

Growing up in a house of readers, there must have been books everywhere. Where did you keep your TBR pile?

My books felt like close friends, and I treasured them from a young age.  My mother often purchased the books I would check out of the library again and again.  

Another great memory is participating in our summer library readathon – I loved going to the library every week to take out more books in the hope of reading 20 novels by the end of the summer (I always succeeded!).  

There was one very special summer where my goal was to read all of Beverly Cleary.  I packed my camp trunk with about 15 of her books and returned two weeks later with all of them read.

 

Laurie Keller tells the story of how she, a young artist from the Midwest, went knocking on the doors of NYC publishers. Some of them even talked to her, and she left her artwork and her manuscript for The Scrambled States of America at your workplace. And the rest is history. She said you two have the same sense of humor. What’s funny to you?


Laurie and Christy's
daughter Elena

Laurie is one of the smartest and funniest creators I have ever worked with. Laurie is a genius at creating humor both through story and artwork. Her brand of humor is both clever and silly, and above all, always kid friendly.  We both have a wacky side and have always clicked on humor. On a regular basis, we send each other funny photos, bits, and clips through our phones– it keeps us laughing and inspired.  She is a dear friend.

 



You’ve worked with some of the biggest names in children’s literature. You could write a book with all the stories you could tell. No, seriously, write that book. Care to share an interaction that made you smile?

Around fifteen years ago I published a powerful novel by Marsha Hayles called Breathing Room, about a group of twelve-year-old girls living in a sanatorium recovering from tuberculosis during WWII.  

Recently a college student got in touch with me about it – she said it was a formative book during her tween years and she wanted to learn more about my role in bringing it to publication.  

That was a few years ago and that college student is now entering the publishing world as an editorial assistant.  As much as I love nurturing writers, I also love offering mentorship to aspiring editors as it brings the editor cycle full circle and helps pay it forward. 

 

I interviewed editor Arthur Levine, who has two handfuls of picture book titles he wrote. Have you written a manuscript you’re shopping around? Are you a closet writer?

I’m passionate about helping authors and artists create the best books they can; I also enjoy pitching ideas to authors and artists when I think an idea for a story might be in their wheelhouse.  

In my free time what I love to do is make art.  I love printmaking – both gel-plate printing and linocut printing.  I find the printmaking process incredibly creative.

 

Veteran book people who’ve been in the industry for decades, have seen decades full of technological innovation. What was your first day at Henry Holt like? Was there lots and lots of paper?

Henry Holt, 1992

I didn’t have a computer in 1992 when I started at Henry Holt.  Assistants worked on typewriters with carbon!  

But within a year that changed and computers were introduced. By the end of the decade we were all on email and sending attachments.  

It’s amazing to see how far tech has come in the last 30 years.  We can now make books digitally which proved to be very important during the pandemic when we all had to work remotely and not rely on shipping.

 

You took graduate level art classes, and with your voracious book habits, you certainly experienced lots of amazing children’s book art. How involved are you in the design and feel of a book? Do you dabble in any art yourself?

I am completely involved in the design and art direction of all my books – it is one of the main reasons why I feel I was given my own imprint.  

I have a strong vision for what I want the books on my list to look like and I work together with the author and illustrator and the designer and art director in achieving that vision.  

I’m involved in every aspect from editing the text and providing art direction notes on the sketches and overall layout, to deciding on trim size, choosing the paper stock and specs – I am fully immersed in the overall aesthetic of my list.

 

As much as you love (and depend on) reading, do you ever worry that you’re Burgess Meredith in that Twilight Zone story that ends with broken glasses? As a fellow glasses wearer, how do you protect your invaluable sight?


I love the Twilight Zone and especially that episode!  I must have a dozen pairs of readers in different colors to match my outfits, so taking care of my eyes (and being fashionable while I’m doing that!) is important.  

Reading is a huge part of my life but I never read “on screen” for pleasure.  I’m always reading a few physical books at one time (currently a terrific book on the architect Le Corbusier as well as the novel Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow). 

I find reading a traditional book rather than reading on screen is easier on my eyes and also just more pleasurable.

 

In grad school you took a job in an antiques store, and you’ve been hooked on collectibles ever since. What’s your collection look like?

I have too many collections to enumerate (it’s a bit of a space problem).  During the pandemic I posted about them on the Instagram account: Vintage Kitchen Cupboard -- for anyone who is interested: https://www.instagram.com/vintage.kitchen.cupboard/.  There is a big community of vintage lovers out there!

 

What’s on the horizon for Christy Ottaviano Books? How about you, personally?

Kristy and Jess
I’ve now been with Little, Brown/Hachette Book Group for four years (having moved over from Macmillan during the pandemic). Together with Senior Editor Jessica Anderson, I love being part of such a stellar team across all the departments; it’s an amazing group.  

We have many inspiring books on the horizon that I’m eager for readers to discover.  Please check out both the imprint Instagram as well as Little, Brown’s Instagram to hear more about these wonderful books. 



To close out the series on the Mackinac Island conference 2014, here are Christy's memories: (for other pieces on the 2014 conference, see HERE, HERE,  HERE, HERE, and HERE.)


What do you remember about the trip to Mackinac Island 2014, and/or the return trip home?

Laurie and Christy

I was excited to come to the conference as I had never been to the Upper Peninsula and the Mackinac setting seemed idyllic.  I took two planes to get to Michigan from Connecticut and then met Laurie Keller in Grand Rapids.  We drove around five hours to get to the ferry. We had a wonderful time catching up, stopping for food, and talking about Laurie’s upcoming books. The drive was beautiful, and it was a lovely road trip.

 



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

It was my first (and still only) time at Mackinac Island.  I thought it was such a special place and a truly peaceful setting that had an old-world charm to it.  As a child, my family vacationed in the summers on Fire Island (off Long Island, NY) and Fire Island also did not permit cars.  As kids we rode our bikes all over the island; I have so many fond memories of those days.  Mackinac reminded me of that childhood nostalgia.

 

Leslie Helakoski, Arthur Levine and Christy Ottaviano

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

I loved hearing all the presenters -- such a terrific range of speakers, and I enjoyed learning about their creative styles and processes.  I especially enjoyed Candace Fleming’s presentation as I publish a good deal of nonfiction and was interested in her elaborate research process when taking on a challenging historical topic.

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

I specifically remember a three mile run around the island with creator Deb Pilutti.  We are both runners and Deb was familiar with the island, so she took us on a scenic run along the water. We had a chance to chat about life and, of course, the book she was working on for me at that time.

 

Any interactions with faculty or fellow attendees that stood out?

I remember having a chance to sit down with Arthur Levine one evening and comparing notes on our lives in publishing at that point in time.  We talked about the industry and the companies we were working for then. It’s always therapeutic to talk with a publishing colleague and conferences are a great place to do that.

 

Photo courtesy Anita Pazner

What do you remember about the ferries? The horse-drawn wagons? The bicycles?

I remember that it took me six separate modes of transportation to finally get to Mackinac:

Car to airport (CT to NYC) to plane 1 (NYC to Detroit) to plane 2 (Detroit to Grand Rapids) to Car to UP (with Laurie Keller) to Ferry to Island to Carriage to Hotel. 

Quite a journey but very much worth it!

 

 

Please share any social media you care to.

                      HBG Website  Instagram 

https://www.instagram.com/littlebrownyoungreaders/?hl=en

Christy Ottaviano Website: http://christyottaviano.com/


 

Friday, February 14, 2025

Things You Love

Happy Valentine's Day!

Today I'd like to do something a little different. Instead of you hearing from us, I'd LOVE to hear from YOU in the comments.

Let's talk about what you love.

What do you love about writing and/or illustrating?
What are some books you love?
What do you love about SCBWI?

Also: what do you love about our blog, The Mitten? And what would you love to see or see more of? If you have ideas for future blog posts, let me know (especially if you'd like to write one)!


Friday, February 7, 2025

Hugs and Hurrahs

 


Welcome to the first Hugs and Hurrahs of 2025!




Patti Richards is excited to announce she signed a contract with The Little Press/Bless This Press for her second picture book, Then God Whispered: A Big Story About Little Things (Spring 2027). Patti also had her poem, “Snow Quiet,” in the November/December 2024 issue of Highlights High Five.


Congratulations, Patti!












Last fall, Melanie Hooyenga signed with Michelle Grajkowski at 3 Seas Literary Agency!


We're delighted for you, Melanie!















Laura Stewart has a book, Clucky's Week, releasing November 2025 with Lawley Kids as well as another titled Orchestra for Oliver being published by Pauline Media Press in spring of 2026.


Congratulations times two, Laura!








Jay Whistler is happy to share her YA short story, "The Three-Eyed Tree," appeared in the October 2024 issue of the online zine, The Quiet Ones. The story deals with mental health, family dynamics, and the struggle to trust your own instincts when everyone dismisses you. Find it on page 33 at https://wearethequietones.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/The-Quiet-Ones-Annual-2024-Edition.pdf


Way to go, Jay!





Jacquie Sewell’s manuscript, Explore the Deep Sea: From A to Z, won SCBWI’s 2024 Work-in-Progress Award in the Nonfiction category! "My journey to the deep ocean has been filled with wonderful discoveries and fascinating creatures I'm excited to  share with young readers (hopefully soon!). The WIP Grant is a huge step in realizing that dream. Thank you SCBWI for all you do to support writers and illustrators!"


How wonderful, Jacquie!




Congratulations again to these tenacious and talented Michigan writers! 

Please send your own good news to Alison Hodgson (aewhodgson@gmail.com) for the next Hugs and Hurrahs post!





Tuesday, January 28, 2025

Book Birthday Blog with Vicky Lorencen

 


Welcome to SCBWI-MI's Book Birthday Blog!

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

 

Congratulations to Vicky Lorencen on the release of The Big Book of Barf

 A Spewnami of Sick Science, Hurled History, and Body Oddities

 

 

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

My husband and I were chatting, and he mentioned the new lineup for a team he volunteered with at our church—including someone named Ralpha. The unusual name immediately tickled my imagination and made me think of “ralphabet.” That’s when the lightbulb/barf bag appeared over my head. “THAT could be something!” I said, and my husband immediately agreed. I wasn’t even thinking of writing non-fiction for kids, but the idea was too fun to pass up. What started as a ralphabet book of weird words for vomit exploded into THE BIG [as in 288 pages!] BOOK OF BARF. Proving once again, much like vomit, you never know when inspiration will spew something at you! 

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

First, my goal was to create a book with an intimidation factor of minus 10 so that kids who are shy about exploring science will feel welcome to wade on in. Because it’s arranged in ralphabetical order, young readers can jump into any page to find digestible chunks of facts, stories, activities or recipes. I hope kids will become so fascinated, they’ll want to keep reading.

My second hope is that kids will come to a whole new appreciation of their amazing bodies and be encouraged to take good care of themselves. 

What inspires you to write? 

I can’t “not” write. Writing helps me see what I’m thinking (if that makes any sense). It’s how I entertain myself and how I connect most easily with others.  

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

THE BIG BOOK OF BARF is available through big box retailers like Amazon, Barnes and Noble and Target, but I’m very pleased it can also be found in independent bookstores across the US and even around the world—after all, barf is a global experience! 

What's next for you? 

My agent is sending out a proposal for another non-fiction middle grade with a whole new cast of characters who introduce loads of cool sciencey stuff. Fingers crossed! 

More about the book . . . 

THE BIG BOOK OF BARF A Spewnami of Sick Science, Hurled History, and Body Oddities is for curious, science-minded kids who love to digest (and then regurgitate) cool and crazy facts. This colorful and engaging book is hosted by 10-year-old Chuck, his buddy Queezy, and their knowledgeable friend Professor Anita Puke. THE BIG BOOK OF BARF is filled with myths and history about vomit, humorous health hacks to keep your food down, facts about your digestive system, activities for home, jokes—and even recipes! All this gastronomic gargle-gravy goodness will entertain and inform young readers whether at home, in school, or especially [cough, gag, heave] in the bathroom.

Publisher: Bright Matter, an imprint of Random House Children’s Books

More about the author . . .

Vicky Lorencen has been in healthcare communications for more than 15 years, writing about everything from allergies to Zika virus. Her previous writing-related roles include college writing instructor, freelance journalist, and associate editor for Kids in Common, a family resource magazine. Vicky’s work for young readers has appeared in Highlights for Children, Ladybug and Girls’ Life. Vicky and her husband live in Michigan with their feline proprietor Finn.

Find Vicky via her website/blog "Frog on a Dime" at https://vickylorencen.com/

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/vicky.lorencen 

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

Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/vlorencen.bsky.social 

 


 


 

Friday, January 24, 2025

Author/Illustrator Spotlight: Eric Rohmann

 

Steam shovel, page turn, earthly delights, Oxford, giant squid, and a sketchbook: author/illustrator Eric Rohmann

Charlie Barshaw coordinates our regular Writer Spotlight feature and interviews writers of SCBWI-MI. In this piece, meet author/illustrator Eric Rohmann, esteemed faculty member of the 2014 Mackinac Island conference.

Eric from his website

You mention on your bio page some of the children’s book makers you admired. The two well-known males, Maurice Sendak and Robert McClosky, the female names unfamiliar to me. Wanda Gag at least has a website, but Virginia Lee Burton has an expired link. What can you tell us about the works of these two female author/illustrators?


Wanda Gag (pronounced Gog) was of Czech heritage—like me—and if you look at her books you will see the influence of folk art and culture in the images.  The book which enchanted me as a child was called,  Millions of CatsThe pen and ink drawings are unique, bizarre and wonderful.  The story itself is rather absurd, and that’s always a good thing. As a boy I found myself wanting to believe every word.  That’s the thing about books—they make the impossible, probable.


Virginia Lee Burton was a spectacular book maker and artist. Have a look at 
The Little House or the Illustrations from Mike Mulligan and His Steam Shovel. Like Wanda Gag she was influenced by folk art, but had a modern sensibility that was clearly influenced by the art of the mid 20th century.  

I love these artists because they understood how pictures fit into a book, how to use page turns and tell a story with clarity.  I also love them because their work is nothing like mine and so seems forever fresh.

In a video interview you talk about your childhood struggles with reading, and even today you read slowly. Have you been diagnosed with a reading disorder?

I think my struggle was due to having never developed the habit of reading early on.  My mother read romance novels and mysteries, but we never had many books in the house. 

Later in life my father discovered he was Dyslexic and he finally discovered why he couldn’t stay focused on a book.

I ask this because your own picture books seem word-scarce, or wordless. Have you ever “read aloud” one of your wordless books to an audience of kids?

“Word scarce”!  I Love that. 

Most of my stories begin as pictures and I find that as I am working the images often do most of the talking.  I add text when it’s needed because words and pictures do different things.  

Often, I use text in a way that allows the reader to visualize the moment. The last thing I want to do is rob from the collaboration between story and reader.  And yes, I have “read” my wordless books to children, but of course, allowed them to tell the story back to me.

Page Turn. Go.

The singular characteristic that makes a picture book a picture book,  the page turn takes collection of words and images and makes it into a narrative.  When we turn the page we recall the page we just left— and we then imagine what will happens next. As we turn the page we fill in the moments  in our imagination thereby linking one page with the next.  The page turn is the confluence of anticipation and surprise.

How did a mid-western boy like you end up in Arizona?

I wanted to study artist books and fine bookmaking.  I got into four programs— Wisconsin, Iowa , Michigan and Arizona State.  I figured, why not try the desert for a while (and they had a wonderful program—as did the other schools!)

Death of Sardanapalus? Wikipediae. It’s in my notes. Does it mean anything to you?

The Death of Sardanapalus

That crazy Wiki page!! Eugène Delacroix painted The Death of Sardanapalus in 1826 or 1827, inspired by Lord Byron's play Sardanapalus.  I saw the painting in the Louvre and was stunned by its energy, color and subject matter.  It’s one of the paintings I keep coming back to. Others include, The Garden of Earthly Delights by Bosch, Goyas’s “Black Paintings”, Breughel’s Hunters in the snow, Pollock’s Autumn Mist… and about a hundred more!

Bosch's The Garden of Earthly Delights

Oxford the dog keeps popping up in any conversations from Candy or you. He was your three-mile-a-day walk. Was he inspiring in other ways?

Oxford and a friend's portrait

There is an old saying that says, I want to be the person my dog thinks I am.  He was always a positive presence, a model for a many pictures and animal personalities, and always a way to connect with the playful part of my nature.

I loved the origin story for your collaboration with Candy, GIANT SQUID. Started with a napkin at a restaurant?


In true cliche fashion I scribbled sketches on a napkin while having lunch with our editor Neal Porter!  The idea was to divide the squid into parts…tentacles, beak, fluke etc. on separate spreads.  I made drawings and Candy wrote from those images—a truly backwards and inspired collaboration.

I’ve only known you as Candace Fleming’s partner. How did two children’s book creators, one of them an illustrator, meet and fall in love.

Honey Bee rough sketch

I wish I could say our meeting was more romantic, but we met at Children’s book panel event for Booklist.  After that we became friends and a few years later became that and more.



And collaborate afterwards, creating together, I’m guessing, more than half a dozen books. Candy talks about taking her manuscript up to your office, but also hearing you use colorful language in your workshop in the basement. Is that you, upstairs and downstairs?

Final art
part of a three-step process

We have a small house so where I work is divided between part of an upstairs room and the basement.  My work area in the basement is directly below Candy’s office and so the curses and lamentations are crystal clear through the floorboards.

Does it seem like you lucked out in life, with a talented, adventurous partner, getting to make art for kids?

Yes and yes.  I live a fine life because I have worked hard and paid attention to what I do. But having a brilliant writer and story teller like Candy in the same house has made me a very much better artist and maker of books.  Lucky, indeed.

Have you done an audio book? What’s it like?

I have not… I did some promo spots for the animated version of My Friend Rabbit and have great respect for those who record stories…I was pretty bad.

Eric in Egypt

What’s on the drawing board?

A friend and I put together a show of drawings influenced by Goya's prints that we are trying to get museums and galleries to exhibit

I am also working on paintings, prints and drawings influenced by our time spent in South Africa working at conservancies.  And, I always keep a sketchbook and that where book ideas are incubated and born.

 


 

Friday, January 17, 2025

Writer Spotlight: Lindsey McDivitt

 South Africa, no stamps, The War of Art, Gwen Frostic, and "A is for Aging, B is for Books.": Non-fiction picture book author, Lindsey McDivitt

Charlie Barshaw coordinates our regular Writer Spotlight feature and interviews writers of SCBWI-MI. In this piece, meet unapologetic late bloomer, author Lindsey McDivitt.

An SCBWI-MI conference helped you get published. Please tell us how it happened.

Thank you for all the terrific questions Charlie. I feel a bit like I’m back in beautiful Michigan! 

It’s still a little unbelievable to me that my first book contract was for a picture book of President Mandela! But at the time I felt absolutely compelled to write about him after a trip to my birthplace, South Africa. 

Picture book bios fascinate me and I garnered many tips on writing them from blog posts by Kathleen Merz, editor at Eerdmans Books for Young Readers


Fortune smiled when I landed a conference critique by Kathleen at a MI-SCBWI conference in 2015. Her editing and stunning illustrations by Charly Palmer helped create our book A PLAN FOR THE PEOPLE: NELSON MANDELA’S HOPE FOR HIS NATION. It was published in 2021 as my third picture book.

As a child, you visited your family in South Africa regularly, but there was a gap of a quarter of a century before you returned as an adult. Nelson Mandela had recently died, and the country mourned his passing and celebrated his leadership. What was it that spoke to you about his life that started you reading, and ultimately writing A PLAN FOR THE PEOPLE?

Growing up in America it seemed unreal that South Africa was finally rid of hateful apartheid. That visit with my teenaged kids made me realize how ignorant I was about my birthplace—it was so difficult to explain how it took so long for SA to become a true democracy for people of all colors.

We visited Robben Island where Mandela spent 18 of his 27 years in prison. I was astonished to learn of all he accomplished while behind bars. And how convinced he was that white South Africans could change—that they had created a kind of prison for themselves. 

Lindsey's research stack
Coming home I read everything I could by Nelson Mandela and about him. It was a scary thing to write about him, but I came to believe a story focused on his adult life and decades in prison needed to be told.

Your fictional story, Christmas Fairies for Ouma is based on a true story linking South Africa and your new home in America. A young girl draws Christmas fairies on a card and mails it across the world with “no name, no street, and no real stamps.” Somehow, from the hand of one stranger to another across 10,000 miles, the card makes it to Grandma. This is actually based on your own experience, when you and your sister “mailed” a picture with an incomplete address and Gold Bond stickers as postage. In the story you account for the improbable journey with the magic on contagious kindness. Does anyone know how the card actually traveled all that way?

No one knows! Our homemade card (actually with princesses and no envelope) landed at my Ouma’s doctor’s office three months after mailing. The nurse knew my grandmother had grandkids in America and asked if it could be for her! The last in a chain of luck. My mom’s theory was that our picture got stuck to medical journals. But I imagined kind people seeing our card, obviously created by kids, and passing it on—one by one. Wouldn’t you? At Christmas time?

 



You worked for many years with stroke survivors and developed support and educational programs for them and their families.  How did you end up in this career?

While studying Speech and Hearing Science in college I learned about aphasia, the complex communication disorder that can occur after stroke. I met many stroke survivors in my first jobs in long term care. And I learned about the importance of peer support—people in the same boat helping each other. I started several stroke support groups and eventually worked in a hospital, a rehabilitation center and with the American Heart Association.

SCBWI is another terrific example of peer support. I’m incredibly grateful to the Michigan Chapter of SCBWI, Carrie Pearson, Leslie Helakoski and so many fellow MI writers. What a long arduous journey it is—you absolutely need support.

In the winter of 2008, in the depths of a recession, you were let go from your job. You were securely into middle age, in frigid Minnesota. How did you find the courage to choose writing as a new career?





Honestly? It was partly my desperation to get out of the house! January in Minnesota, with a move to Michigan on the horizon. I took my laptop and hung out in cozy coffee shops. A project at my job gave my confidence in my writing. Three of us had edited a set of stories by stroke survivors—peer support in book form.

My fellow editor, Jacquelyn Fletcher, gifted me The War of Art: Break through the Blocks andWin Your Inner Creative Battles. After years of dreaming and reading about writing, I learned it was Resistance keeping me from actually putting pen to paper (Resistance with a capital R).

 

You wrote a picture book about GwenFrostic, an up-north Michigan artist. She specialized in nature prints, carving her art into linoleum blocks and producing stationery in her studio/printing press. You were enamored of her art while in school, but what led you to investigate her life as a writer?

I stumbled upon a brochure for Gwen’s shop near the amazing Sleeping Bear Dunes area! A quick internet search told me Gwen Frostic overcame stereotypes of disability, gender and age in a very challenging era. She became an incredibly inspiring artist, advocate for the environment and business woman. 

And again a strategic conference critique made all the difference—this time from Sarah Rockett at Sleeping Bear Press. (She confided she’s visited Gwen’s shop in Benzonia many times.) Sleeping Bear published NATURE’S FRIEND:THE STORY OF GWEN FROSTIC in 2018. 

Michigan, you have given me so much.

 

You’ve “adopted” at least four students far from home, in part, I suppose, because you grew up in their shoes, coming from another country to settle here. How do you find them? What would a typical “adoption” entail? Have you been able to keep in touch?

Some of the family

When all your extended family is 10,000 miles away, you definitely need “found family.” The University of Michigan has thousands of foreign students also far from home. There was not an easy connection, but an off campus ecumenical center helped. Also a neighbor taught English at U of M. It began with Thanksgiving, then Christmas in Ann Arbor, and I now have two young people from China who call me their “American mom.” Over ten years we’ve traveled to spend time together—including holidays and weddings.

 

Explain your “pack a day” habit.

Ha! Post It Notes™ I love them! But I have eased off. I’m using far more scratch paper and used envelopes now to save trees.

 

Early Christmas in America
Nelson Mandela spent decades in prison and became President at age 75. Gerald Ford was 61 when he assumed the U.S. presidency. Gwen Frostic opened her printing shop on her 58th birthday. Your biographical subjects all were late bloomers, as were you. You were 60 when your first book was published. Coincidence?

I am most definitely drawn to late bloomer stories. I’ve been so fortunate to have tremendous and creative older role models, including many thriving stroke survivors. It really didn’t feel like a big deal to reach for a new career in my mid-fifties. And since I started writing I’ve met scores of late blooming writers. (You can read some of their posts on my blog AisforAging.com)

 

You found in reading picture books, that the older characters were often clichés of forgetfulness and frailty. Publishers often wish for the protagonist of that genre to be a child solving a problem, how do you suggest writers approach older characters?

I’m passionate about this topic. Thank you for asking Charlie. 

So many picture books contain age stereotypes like witchy, grumpy, lonely, sad, sick & forgetful. Often heartwarming, empathetic picture books are entirely based on negative age stereotypes. Naturally kids need to learn empathy, but much of what we think we know about aging and older adults is myth and stereotypes.

Older adults are actually more different from each other than children, due to life experience. And I’ve learned that well regarded research shows age stereotypes harm us all, beginning in childhood—our physical and cognitive health and longevity (Becca Levy Ph.D. et al). In fact, the World Health Organization recently declared ageism a global health threat.

In the same way we have a responsibility as writers to research when writing of race, ethnicity or religion, we all have a responsibility to look beyond age stereotypes. It’s far too easy to empower a child protagonist by reaching for a stereotypical problems with an older character. My website “A is for Aging, B is for Books” has many examples of picture books that depict aging in all its complexity, beauty and diversity.

 

On the ferry to Robben Island
What’s next?

Another picture book based in South Africa is under contract and awaiting an illustrator—I’m very excited for this one. I’m currently revising a manuscript about stroke that has a rehabilitation focus. And another that’s focused on age stereotypes of young and old.

One of my fantastic critique group members said recently, “Lindsey, you write about such challenging topics!” I have to admit, they’re not easy to get published either…I am still hoping to write a short and simple story in this lifetime!

 

Please share any social media platforms:

Please find me on:

Facebook   https://www.facebook.com/lindsey.mcdivitt.3?mibextid=LQQJ4d&mibextid=LQQJ4d

My website & blog   http://www.lindseymcdivitt.com/

Guest posts by late blooming writers  https://www.lindseymcdivitt.com/?s=late+bloomers

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

LinkedIn   https://www.linkedin.com/in/lindsey-mcdivitt-32907034/

BlueSky soon, I think…