Friday, December 20, 2024

2025 Illustration Mentorship is Coming Soon!

by Jay Whistler

While the weather outside may be frightful, I have some news that is delightful. As you may know, our next mentorship is right around the corner. If you’re an illustrator, 2025 could be your year, as 2022 was for Bear Howe, who won a mentorship with illustrator Bea Jackson. You can read about Bear’s experience below. 


But before we get to that, I want to make sure you know where to find more information about the mentorship, what you need to submit, how to submit, and any other mentorship info you may need.



I hope Bear’s experience helps you take a chance to enter the mentorship. Think of it as a gift to yourself! Or ask a loved one to show how much they support your illustration and your career. It’s a gift that will return incredible benefits. Even if you don’t win, you will get feedback from THREE professional illustrators to help you on your journey. There is literally nothing to lose! 


And now, take it away, Bear!


My 2022 Mentorship Opportunity


Bear Howe
In 2022, I had the opportunity to have an illustration mentorship with Bea Jackson. We met online monthly on a flexible schedule depending on when we were both available and I was ready to get feedback as I worked toward my next goal. This format really worked well–having a “deadline” that was somewhat flexible as a creative practice sometimes is!


I cannot say enough about Bea’s generosity and insight. She was really tuned into helping me right from where I was that day/week/month. The pandemic really took a toll on my health and my art practice and my goals were somewhat mushy and unclear. I felt insecure in some ways about not having clarity about my kidlit goals anymore. In fact, I was working on a lot of art that wasn’t kidlit related but that was therapeutic for me to make. I was exploring how the two might merge, and Bea’s feedback each month came at the right time! Bea was great at seeing the big picture of what a creative career looks like, and helped me push forward even when my way felt murky and unsure.


I’d recommend this mentorship to anyone, no matter your experience level. The internship is designed to work within your practice, with some structure that holds you accountable, but isn’t oppressive, and should flow with what you’re hoping to accomplish. The connection and friendship with your mentor is an extra bonus I am grateful for with Bea. And having a dedicated creative session at regular intervals with someone who is also a committed creative is priceless.


To learn more about Bear, please visit their website at bearhowe.com





Friday, December 13, 2024

Memories of Mackinac Island

Beautiful spaces, 2011 or 2014?, medicinal fudge, wet bike rides, Arthur Levine, plein air painting, and butterflies: the SCBWI-MI 2014 Mackinac Island conference

Compiled by Charlie Barshaw

Disclaimer:  There were two SCBWI-MI conferences--2011 and 2014--as well as a number of Michigan Reading Association conferences around the same time. So we're going with Mackinac Memories. It may not have happened in 2014, but it happened on Mackinac Island. Thanks to everyone who contributed. 

First memory begins here:

I blame the Mackinac Island conference for my addiction to writing in beautiful spaces. Until then I had been content to labor away in my office or the dining room table at home. Now, I look for every opportunity to write in places wooded and wondrous.

The Mackinac Island Bridge
photo courtesy of Ann Finkelstein

My favorite thing about writing conferences is the community. Getting to chat with other people who love stories the way that I do is a rare treat. Being on Mackinac with that particular group of writers was incredible. Time just slows down on Mackinac. I loved going on walks with other writers, strolling along the shore, down the streets through town, and feeling like we were outside of time. That this space was sacred and we could write and share and never run out of time.

Since that conference, my writing life has really taken off! My debut book, Hanging with My Peeps, was published in 2016. I met the editor for my second book, Junkyard Dogs (Peachtree Teen, 2023), at a MI SCBWI conference. Junkyard Dogs has been a huge success for me--with the audio book being narrated by Robbie Daymond! and the story making the shortlist for the Indiana Author Awards (since I work in Indiana). 

One really cool thing that's happened: As a teen I used my babysitting money to pay for a subscription to Writer's Digest, which I read cover to cover. Just last month, I was asked to write an article for them! What a full circle moment!


I don't think I did a presentation then. I was really new to the group. I think I just attended as a participant. And, yes...it was glorious!
--Deb Gonzalez


Boats and dock
Photo courtesy of Vicky Lorencen

I remember being overwhelmed by all the talented people around me, and surprised by everyone’s kindness! Most meaningful of all was a wonderful walk and talk time that Heidi Sheffield and I shared. She is such a wonderful person!
--Elizabeth McBride

I recently remembered that at that Mackinac Island SCBWI conference I had a fabulous critique by Candace Fleming. I remember she told me that manuscript would definitely one day be a book. And finally two years ago it was published. My Christmas book.
--Lindsey McDivitt


My 2014 conference memories are muddled - nothing stands out! Was I even there, lol! Strangely, I remember the Mackinac conference before that more clearly, not even sure when that was (2010?) when I roomed with Terry Lynn Johnson from Canada and she entertained us with her funny adventure stories.
--Kristin Lenz


Scenic view
courtesy Ann Finkelstein

You've asked me to take a trek down memory lane, and to the 2014 lane to be exact. I'm flattered that you think I might have a good memory. Haha.
At my age, my memory kinda goes in and out, so I'm not sure what I can dredge up from the 2014 conference.

So, I went to THE MITTEN blog and to 2014 and found a treasure trove of pictures and summaries from shadows and others who were in attendance.

September/October might have had lead-in articles, but the Nov blog has a lot of pictures. (See posts HERE, HERE, and HERE.)

Sorry that I can't offer more to you. I, seriously, remember being there and working hard. I didn't sightsee, or take a carriage ride. Didn't even get to buy fudge.
--Rachel Anderson

plein air in the butterfly house



What I remember most is the 1st Mackinac Island Conference with Donna Jo Napoli, Beverly Horowitz and Tamra Tuller.

Couple memories from that conference (even though you didn't ask.) Donna Jo's dinner speech was a hoot. She had us all in stitches. It had something to do with starting out in the field and making all the mistakes when it came to submission.

Sunday afternoon after the conference ended Donna Jo, her husband Barry (?), Kristin Nitz and I took a walk around the island - through the interior if I remember correctly. Somehow we ended up near the Grand Hotel and snuck in through a side door. It wasn't as grand as expected but somewhat shabby - at least the part we saw. (Maybe that's where the help stayed and not the public part?)
--Pat Trattles

Arthur and Heidi
courtesy Heidi Sheffield

The Mackinaw Conference was one of my most cherished SCBWI-Michigan conferences of all time. I think my favorite remembrance was buying a raffle ticket and getting the prize of a manuscript critique and phone conversation with Arthur Levine. I was SOOOO EXCITED!!!! At the time, ICE CREAM FACE was unpublished, so Arthur took a look at the manuscript and we discussed it on the phone. 

Later that year, I was in NYC for the SCBWI Winter Conference and visited Scholastic with a group of illustrators. We got to see “the great wall,” (I think that was the name) a place they would pin favorite illustrator postcards. I couldn’t believe one of mine was there and was practically tearing up. :)) I had brought a mockup of ICF with me and gave it to Arthur, who ultimately passed on it, but he gave me some feedback that helped me refine it that much more. 
Heidi and Ruth


At the LA conference in 2017, Nancy Paulsen from Penguin/Random House saw it and offered a contract the next week to buy ICE CREAM FACE, which is now a Dolly Parton Imagination Library Book. I encourage members to keep their minds and hearts open to the revision process, going to conferences when possible and meeting folks like Arthur and Nancy. When preparation meets opportunity, it is a beautiful thing.
--Heidi Sheffield



From the best of my recollection, Dana Atnip, Kara Marsee, Nina Goebel and I drove up to the docks in my show van I used to sell my books, often referred to as the Book Mobile. After getting to the island Dana, Nina, and I got an extra roommate to share with, and that was Beth Rayner

We shoved all our gear into that room for the SCBWI conference, which was a hoot and a half! Four women and one bathroom! I remember Dana and I renting bikes to take an island round trip ride and headed back up for more conference doings after buying fudge in town. The fudge was for medicinal purposes only, 

I was slated to speak at the conference on self-publishing, a new venture and turn for SCBWI. I remember being extremely nervous but with the help of friends and fudge I was able to deliver. I was happy to meet some great authors and illustrators, some whom I've kept in touch with since then, such as Doris Holik Kelly.

I have been to Mackinac Island before and recently as last summer, 2023 to do research for my book. It's truly a magical place especially off the beaten or paved path. 
photo courtesy Heidi Sheffield


I remember that the trip went by far too quickly, but I did sneak time in to get down to the Mission Point shore to observe and sketch a mother beaver and her clan working on their lodge. This was all that stayed in my mind from that trip. The industrious beaver family and the overcrowded room. 

Sadly, last summer at the island the beaver lodge had been torn down and the family not seen. Some say that they are secretly housed safely up further on the eastern side of the island, I should go back again to look for them! 

Yes, all in all, a great conference with great connections and would love to rejoin the SCBWI gang to return to the island for another conference.
--Lori Taylor

Plein air and visitor
courtesy Ann Finkelstein

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

Arthur Levine who was with Scholastic… (the publisher of the Harry Potter Series) was visiting some friends in Saugatuck and wanted to get to the conference (as a speaker) a day early. Anita called from her up north cottage and asked if I could drive him up to the island. I explained that Saugatuck is not a close drive for me and I would not be going up for another day. Anita is so personable and nice that you just can’t say no to her, so I came up with an alternate plan. I said, “If you can get him to my driveway, I will meet someone halfway.”

Arthur’s friends dropped him in my driveway. He commented on how much yard I had and how uncluttered and organized everything was. I imagined that in a New York City apartment things are a bit more cramped. I drove him up in my 350Z to make it fun. We had interesting conversations. He said my books exceeded the national average but would never publish them as they had already been published.

That halfway person was the wonderful & good friend Jay Whistler, whom I didn’t yet know at the time. He bought us lunch before she drove him the rest of the way.

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

It is a magical place. Yes, I have been there many times. On this trip the sky broke loose and it poured. Water was gushing out of the eaves. Christine Grabiel & Linda Barley rode bikes from Linda’s cottage on the other side of the island. They were soaked to the skin however, they were still all smiles and laughter.

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

I think I spoke with three others on indie publishing. Sandy Carlson, Julie Hedlund & (sorry I can’t recall the 3rd one maybe Lori Taylor?). I only had 10 minutes to speak and wanted to get a lot in and thus probably spoke way too fast. I was impressed that RA’s Carrie and Leslie sat in on the session.
Anita and me
courtesy Anita Pazner

Ha! I remember that you and Anita dressed up in 18th century garb.

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

My wife also came to this one. We didn’t do too much walking around due to the rain.

Any interactions with faculty or fellow attendees that stood out?

I recall Kirbi showing me her amazing artwork portfolio. I was very impressed.

I felt like I knew Arthur pretty well after the long car ride. We talked shop nonstop. He had many questions about indie publishing.

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

Having been there before I don’t recall. I think we may have ridden a bike around the island on a dry day.
--Dave Stricklen

In the butterfly garden
courtesy Anita Pazner
What do you remember about the trip to Mackinac Island 2014, and/or the return trip home?


I live in Marquette in the UP, so I drove south to the ferry marina. I remember thinking that most of the attendees from Michigan would be driving north to get to the same location. And lucky me, I got to experience three of five Great Lakes in one day: Superior, Michigan, and Huron. The ferry boat is the coolest (literally) transport method! You can see for miles across pristine freshwater oceans, and as Mackinac Island approaches, slowly leave behind the normal hustle and bustle of cars and trucks and enter the beguiling magic of a simpler time.

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

I had been to Mackinac Island as an enthralled child (biking! horseback riding! fudge eating!), a moody early teen (“can we go now?”), and finally as a woman in her late twenties vacationing with her long-term boyfriend. I left that trip engaged!

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

They were all fantastic. So giving and authentic. I believe they all loved leaving their real lives behind for a few days and sharing what they knew with attendees. 

Arthur Levine floored me with his description of editing the Harry Potter series for the US market. Greatness in our midst! Then, he floored me again in our one-on-one critique of my middle-grade novel manuscript. I had a big inferiority chip going into it (did I mention he was the US Harry Potter editor?), but he nudged me out of that unhelpful mindset and treated me respectfully. The gems he gifted that day are still part of my writer toolbox.

Eric Rohmann, Anita, Candy Fleming and me
courtesy Anita Pazner

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


We were too busy with the conference to do much sightseeing, but one delightful memory involved Arthur again. As we walked to dinner on Thursday night with faculty and volunteers before the conference started, he sang show tunes a capella. He had a great voice, but his enthusiasm was unparalleled.

Any interactions with faculty or fellow attendees that stood out?
Anita and Heidi
courtesy Anita Pazner



Conference coordinators Charlie Barshaw and Anita Pazner thought of all the details that would make the weekend special, organized, and memorable. They were effective, funny sidekicks who modeled partnership at its best.




What was your biggest surprise?

I was surprised that so many people made the effort to drive, ferry, horse taxi, and walk to be together and learn. Our community of bookmakers is truly remarkable.

Thanks for the trip down memory lane, Charlie!
--Carrie Pearson


I’m afraid I am mixing up the two events we had on the island. One with me and Monica as RAs and one with me and Carrie.

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

I remember we got a late request from Arthur to pick him up a day earlier than we had planned. The planners were already near the straights. We ended up contacting Sue Thoms and Dave Stricklen and Jay Whistler, who coordinated picking him up and driving him north. Ask Jay about this, her memory is probably better.

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

I had been there a few times. Always magical
Leslie, Arthur Levine, and Christy Ottaviano
courtesy Anita Pazner

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

Donna Jo Napoli—a class act. Not about her work, which I love, but about her manner and capacity for sharing with attendees.

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

Several of us rented bikes and rode around the island. We visited the library and sat on the back deck with books, visited the school and walked up and around the Grand Hotel grounds.

What was your biggest surprise?

I remember the tulips and getting everyone to hold up their arms to invoke good weather
Leslie plein air-ing
photo by Anita Pazner

--Leslie Helakoski


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

I enjoyed spending time with the illustrators in the butterfly house.

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

I had been to Mackinac Island before, but I hadn’t stayed at the Mission Point Resort.

Any interactions with faculty or fellow attendees that stood out?

I remember talking to Sandy Carlson, PJ Lyons, Lori Eslick and Heather Shumaker.

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

I remember the gardens were gorgeous.
--Ann Finkelstein

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

When I attended this conference, it was my first at Mackinac. I was fortunate enough to be invited to a friend’s cabin for the night before the conference so that I wouldn’t have to drive so far. 

While there, a bit of a situation arose: presenter Arthur Levine’s transportation fell through. The RAs and conference organizers were having a tough time finding someone so last minute, especially because he needed to be picked up in South Haven (or maybe Saugatuck). Wherever we had to collect him, there didn’t seem to be anyone in that area attending the conference the next day to bring him along. 

plein air painting
courtesy of Anita Pazner

Instead, we cobbled together a solution. Dave Stricklen would drive from Grand Rapids to pick him up, and then I would meet them halfway to Mackinac (near Big Rapids). This meant I had to drive 1.5 hours south of the cabin, meet Dave and Arthur, drive north to St. Ignace for three hours, take the ferry across, and get Arthur to Mission Point in time for the Friday night opening activities. All this after having driven four hours the day before to get to my friend’s cabin.

Needless to say, I was wiped out, so I don’t remember much about the conversations Arthur and I shared on the drive. I do remember asking him some specific questions about publishing in general, and he was gracious enough to share his thoughts. At one point, he said, “Tell me about your current WIP.” I almost drove off the road…maybe. I don’t recall. I was very tired. But it seems likely, doesn’t it? THE Arthur Levine wanting to chat about my work? He offered some great advice that helped me with some sticky spots in the plot. I will always be grateful for that.

When I told my husband about all this when I got home, he said, “Isn’t that nice,” and I could practically feel him wanting to pat me on the head. So I explained who Levine is and how huge a deal this whole thing was, and that it would be like a non-writer being asked to chauffeur Tom Hanks somewhere. My husband finally understood and honestly got happy for me.

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

Lori Eslick
plein air leader
courtesy of Anita Pazner
I had been to Mackinac about six years earlier, when my husband and I took our daughters there while on vacation. Though we only spent the day, I remember walking through the streets and marveling at how lovely the gardens were. It seemed the neighbors competed to win “Most Beautiful,” but I don’t know how anyone would be able to choose. I also thought it was remarkable because all the flowers were annuals, which they probably couldn’t plant until June, and yet here they were, in the middle of July, a glorious riot of a rainbow.

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

I’ll be honest that I don’t remember much about the presentations. That was partly because I had volunteered to run the conference bookstore, and there was a huge issue with the spreadsheet, messing up all the calculations. I spent a large portion of the conference trying to fix the issue, and eventually had to do things by hand. That meant I wasn’t able to attend as many sessions as I would have liked. It was also the last time I did the bookstore. To those of you who do it now, there is a special place in heaven for you.

Did you get a chance to sightsee? What did you seek out? What did you stumble upon?
Photo courtesy Ed Spicer

I did not sightsee, which I was sad about. I had hoped to spend some quality time along the water, but the bookstore debacle commanded all my free time.

Any interactions with faculty or fellow attendees that stood out?

Several people stepped in to keep the bookstore moving while I dealt with the technical issues. Jennifer Rumberger and Dave Stricklen were especially helpful, and Cynthia Mathes, an SCBWI member from Louisiana, offered her support by running to the local bookstore to pick up some speaker books that hadn’t been delivered. I would never have been able to manage without their help. If there is anyone else who helped out and I have forgotten, please accept my apologies, but know that I am truly grateful for all the support.

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

I love a good ferry ride, unless it’s the kind where I am stuck in my car the whole time. Then I freak out that the ferry will capsize and my car will become a coffin. This is what happens when you have anxiety. ;) Thankfully, the weather over was nice, just a bit chilly, but not too cold. Arthur wanted to sit on the upper deck to enjoy the view of the Mackinac Bridge and the fall air. He seemed to be basking in the moment.

more plein air
courtesy Anita Pazner

He also commented on the buggies and bikes and was fascinated by an entire island with no motorized transport. He asked questions about when this happened, why they decided to do this, how people traveled in the winter, etc. I realized that, despite being a nearly life-long Michigan resident, I didn’t know the answers to these questions. So I looked it up to be able to share it with Arthur. (In case someone needs that history, here’s a link to it.)

What was your biggest surprise?

My biggest surprise was probably the bat I would see every morning and evening in a back hallway as I walked to breakfast and back to my room at night. To be clear, the bat was outside, so I was safe, but I loved being able to watch it through the window. Sometimes it spread its wings to stretch (perhaps between naps?), other times it didn’t move at all. But he was my little companion for the entire conference. And it seemed like the perfect time of year to spend a few days with him.

What's happened to you over the past 10 years?

Since that conference, although Arthur helped me see through a sticky plot issue, I've put that novel on a shelf. Actually, I've put that novel in the trash. I can hear the collective gasp right now. But it was the right move. What I realized that it wasn't just the plot that was stuck. It was me. (All the Swifties now have the lyrics to "Anti-Hero" running through their brains.) Although I spent years on it, I got what I needed out of it. When I started, it was the novel of my heart. As the years went by, it became the albatross on my back. (I may be mixing metaphors here, but you get what I mean.) And while it will never see the light of day, it is the novel that taught me how to write.

It was also holding me back because it showed me that I had gone as far as I could on my own. I no longer knew what I didn't know. I needed a different approach. As soon as I deleted all my files, shredded all my pages, and let it go emotionally, my writing path changed in a big way. 

butterfly and flower
courtesy Anita Pazner

First, I went back to graduate school and got my MFA in creative writing from Vermont College of Fine Arts. After graduation, I started my own editing business, helping other authors develop their manuscripts and their skills. I have spoken at conferences here in Michigan, around the country, and internationally. 

I became a submissions reader for three different literary agencies and two literary journals. I've judged multiple writing competitions. But even more importantly, I am now a published author with two MG titles, one short story, and a second soon-to-be-published short story coming out. I'm currently working on another MG, this time historical.

Deleting an entire manuscript was a scary step, but it was what I needed to move forward. And though it may seem trite or hyperbolic, it's fair to say that Mackinac was the tipping point, so I took a leap and changed my life.
--Jay Whistler


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

Yes. We’d been there a few times. Loved the facility we were at. Perfect!

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

Yes. But for some reason I can’t remember her name. She had me in tears at one point, I remember. She kinda wore old hippie clothing. And I had read her most famous book. God! My memory is slipping . . . who were the presenters at that conf.? Tell me, and I can pick her out.

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

Yes. Went for walks. Always loved going up over the hill and through the woods. Past the cemetery.

Any interactions with faculty or fellow attendees that stood out? 
Heidi 
courtesy Heidi Sheffield


Got to know Heidi a bit more. But always, loved seeing folks.

What’s writing life been like for you these past ten years? 

(What! You want a treatise? It’s always been full of ups and downs. I have a new agent now, after 21 years with my old one. I’ve immersed myself in writing a lot of poetry as I wait to hear about book manuscripts. And after about 10 years just submitted a new novel manuscript to my agent. We’ll see if it sells. Still loving the process, even without any major sales lately.)
--Shutta Crum

To close out the Mackinac Memories, prolific author and esteemed faculty member, Candace Fleming:

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

The moment I remember most was when one of the participants sang OH, NO to me in the lobby.  He used the book’s text and put it to the tune of “Froggy Went A-Courtin’.”  Then other attendees chimed in, and suddenly I was being serenaded with my own words.  How amazing!

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

I’d been to the island before, so I was excited to return.  I remember being charmed by the hotel… and the fudge.

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

Christy Ottaviano’s talk resonated with me.  Her words inspired me to be a better writer.  Arthur, I remember, made me laugh.  And I met Jodell Sadler there… the beginning of a friendship that continues to this day.

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

It was rainy so I don’t think I did a ton of sightseeing.  I did eat a lot of fudge.  Yup, I know.  I’ve mentioned that already, but let’s face it, the fudge is memorable.  I love that little knife that comes with one’s brick of chocolate.

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

It was wet going home on the ferry.  I didn’t ride in the horse-drawn wagons.  I did, however, take a ride around the island when I first arrived.  It’s such a beautiful place, and so different from one end to the other.   

What was your biggest surprise?

Ruth plein air painting
courtesy Anita Pazner

I was delighted by the conferees – smart, kind, hard-working.  I wished I’d lived closer so I could make them all my best friends.  Honestly, I remember it being one of the coziest, companionable conferences I’d ever attended.  And I met you and Ruth there!!

--Candace Fleming

 


Charlie Barshaw conducts interviews for The Mitten. He co-chaired conferences in 2013 and 2014. He is fortunate to know so many talented and giving creators in the Children's Literature community.

























































Friday, December 6, 2024

Writer Spotlight: Candace Fleming

Three-legged cat, cornucopia, Ann Schwartz, loose-leaf paper, gray areas, and baby rhinos: Candace Fleming

Charlie Barshaw coordinates our regular Writer Spotlight feature and interviews writers of SCBWI-MI. In this piece, meet prolific picture book, novel, fiction and non-fiction author Candace Fleming, esteemed faculty member of the 2014 Mackinac Island conference.

I suppose yours could have been a Roald Dahl-type story of a girl who embellished the truth and got punished/and or banished for her falsehoods. Who told adventures of her three-legged cat (when it turned out there were no cats with any number of legs—your mom was allergic), the ghost in the attic, and the fabulous family trip to Paris, all by Grade 1. But your mom was a storyteller too, and she encouraged you to write your stories. You said writing cured your itch for performing before a live audience. But did it? Don’t you still get a thrill presenting to a live audience?

Don’t get me wrong, I love talking with kids about writing.  And while I wouldn’t call it a thrill, I am inspired by their enthusiasm and curiosity, their imaginations and senses of humor.  Kids really are the best audience, even middle and high schoolers.   

School visit, gymnasium of 1st-5th grade students 2023

Your Mom influenced at least two of the books you wrote. Boxes for Katje was based on her actual childhood experience. And your book about Amelia Earhart arose from your mother’s heartbreak when the famous aviatrix and her plane disappeared. What else did your mom inspire you to do?

Both my mom and dad inspired me to become a writer.  Not literally.  They didn’t say, “Candy, go forth and write.”  But they were both storytellers, and valued story.  They bought books for both themselves and us kids.  They were enthusiastic library patrons.  We talked about books at the dinner table, and on long car rides.  

And our house was filled with so many books that we didn’t have shelf space for them all.  It was common to have stacks of books sitting on the floor beside the shelves.  

They also valued the stories I told, and eventually wrote as a kid.  My dad kept them in this wooden box he brought home from Japan after World War II. He treasured that box.  Putting my stories inside it told me he treasured them equally.  It all sent a message: my voice had value.

 

Your love of language was triggered in second grade by the word cornucopia. What are some of your other favorite words?

Cattywampus, flimflam, flibbertigibbet, azalea, crepuscular, perpendicular.

 

Fourth Grade was magic for you. It was the year when you were Arm Wrestling Champ. Also the year when you wrote a letter to author Marguerite Henry and got a response! Do you respond to young fans?

I clearly remember feeling so special when I received both a letter and a signed copy of Misty of Chincoteague (including Misty’s hoof-o-graph) from Ms. Henry.  I want my readers to feel that way, too.  

And let’s face it, it’s a huge honor to get a few words or a hand-drawn picture from a reader.  They’ve taken the time and effort.  What a gift that is!  And for a children’s writer, it’s the ultimate gift.  I’m always so grateful.  

Candy and Eric signing books

You said you wrote your first book specifically for fourth graders, when you found that they were consumed studying for upcoming standardized tests. Would that be Professor Fergus Fahrenheit and his Wonderful Weather Machine (1994)? Later The Fabled Fourth Graders of Aesop Elementary School (2005). What is it about that age that excites you?

To my mind, fourth grade is the sweet spot.  They’re so capable, yet still so excited about school and learning.  They’re funny and unsophisticated (in the best way) and willing to try new things. What’s not to love about fourth graders?

Your early picture books in the 1990’s were a mix of fact and fiction (except maybe Women of the Lights (1995), which were biographies of female lighthouse keepers.) Big hair, big cheese, bird calls, and opera singers in the Wild West. The one connecting thread—you found something interesting in every topic. What were the 1990’s like for a green picture book writer?

Wow, I hope I can remember that far back!  In the early nineties you could still send a manuscript over the transom and get pulled from the slush (I did).  There were fewer resources out there for newbies, and really, everyone was dependent on SCBWI because they were one of only groups doing workshops or conferences etc.  

Agnes Peregrine
accomplished birdcaller

Was there more opportunity?  I can’t recall.  I got rejected more than a few times.  But I do think publishing’s door was more wide open than it is now.  

When did you meet Anne Schwartz of Random House Children’s Books? Was it love at first sight, or did it take a while for your relationship to grow?

I met Anne at an SCBWI conference here in Illinois.  I went because I admired her picture books.  She’d just gotten her first imprint, Apple Soup Books at Knopf, and I really wanted to hear what she had to say.  I was still unpublished at the time, and certainly didn’t expect to be discovered or anything like that.  I was just seeking some knowledge.  

As luck would have it, she came down during an open mic reading (she had begged off to go to bed but got bored in her room).  She’d just sat down when my book was read.  People in the room actually laughed in all the right places.  

Sitting in the audience, I was blown away.  I was even more blown away when Anne stood and asked who’d written it.  Then she walked over and asked if she could take it back to NYC with her.  My answer?  “It’s not done yet.”  Yup, I was green!  

But I did send it to her (after I revised) and she bought it.  I’ve been with her ever since and it’s been one of the most transforming relationships of my life.  Not only does she understand me as a writer, and brings out my best, but she’s a good friend.  We’ve been together… what… thirty years?  Thirty years, twenty-six books… and counting. 

Speaking of love at first sight, how did you meet Eric Rohmann?

Eric Rohmann and Candace Fleming

Who?  No, just kidding.  We met at a conference in Chicago and really connected.  We had so much in common, not just kids books, but travel and hiking.  I loved talking with him, and he made me laugh.  (I still do and he still does). 

For years, however, we were just close friends.  Eventually, those feelings blossomed.  He’s still my best friend, though.  I’m blessed. 

Your early drafts are composed on wide-lined loose-leaf paper, scrawled with blue Bic pens. Very common tools, and you find them freeing so that your words aren’t so precious. 

Though you said the Giant Squid book started on a napkin. What are some of the most unusual “pen and paper” combinations you have been forced to use when loose-leaf and blue Bic pen were unavailable?

I’ve written on the backs of receipts and envelopes.  I’ve torn out those black, back pages in books and ripped apart paper tablecloths.   I used my lip liner the other day because I didn’t have a pen or pencil.  It worked.  

And while I hate electronic first drafts, I wrote a picture book not too long ago in my phone’s notes.  You’d think I’d be prepared after all these years and carry something.  But nope. 

You’ve done extensive traveling, to Russia (twice) for The Family Romanov: Murder, Rebellion, and the Fall of Imperial Russia (2014) and Egypt for THE CURSE OF THE MUMMY: UNCOVERING TUTANKHAMUN’S TOMB. Where else have your books taken you?

Candy inside a pyramid 2021

South Africa (twice), Roswell, New Mexico, the Aleutian Islands, Cody, Wyoming, Bletchley Park outside of London, and every Lincoln site in the United States (just to name a few).

 


You described your research techniques as “chaotic.” Surely, with all the intervening non-fiction you’ve produced, you’ve sanded off some of the rough edges. Still, research and a keen curiosity can lead you down alternate paths and all sorts of rabbit holes. What have been some of the surprises you’ve uncovered while looking for something else?


Nope, my research remains chaotic, and I like it that way.  It’s organic, you know?  What I ask next springs from what I’ve just discovered.  I never know what path I’m going to take.  I purposely leave myself open for surprise and diversions.  

In my opinion, it’s the diversions and surprise that create good books.  Hmm…. Surprises.  Here’s my favorite:  When I was working on The Family Romanov I traveled to Tsarskoe Selo, the imperial family’s country getaway fifteen miles from St. Petersburg, Russia.  

From my research, I knew that Nicholas and the family had escaped there so they could live away from the chaos of governing the country.  No one was allowed in to see them without permission.  They didn’t go out.   I assumed the palace in which they’d chose to live was smack dab in the middle of this vast estate where they remained physically isolated.  

But when I got to TS, I discovered that the Romanov’s palace was butt up against the wrought-iron fence.  And on the other side of that fence was the town.  In fact, the family’s private rooms were on the same side as the fence.  That meant that the Romanovs, who had removed themselves from the Russian people, could see them every time they looked out their windows.  They could hear those peasants talking and singing; could hear their babies crying; could smell their dinners cooking.  

I remember standing there, and thinking, “This isn’t physical isolation, this is a psychological isolation.  They’ve chosen NOT to see.”  Discovering that changed the entire book.  Suddenly, I knew I couldn’t write this story without the inclusion of peasants and workers and soldiers.  They were integral to the Romanov story, but I hadn’t seen that until my research took me there… literally.   

And that led to the book’s interstitials called “Beyond the Palace Gates,” because I had seen beyond those real live gates, and I’d discovered a newer, far richer, more honest telling. 

You weren’t interested in doing a book about Buffalo Bill (even though premier editor Neal Porter asked you to).  Likewise, P.T. Barnum wasn’t on your interest radar. But you found the hook in each life that opened the door for a book on each. You had your disinterest in each, and yet you persisted until you found something that spoke to you. You said you need the “vital idea.” What is that?

Vital idea is basically this question: What do I have to say to readers of the 21st century with this piece of history?  After all, my purpose it not to write an informational book about historical events and people.  I’m not writing so kids can use my book for their reports. 


I’m writing to show them something about how we live today.  I’m asking them to see the hooks and echoes between the past, present and future.  I’m illuminating connections.  I’m fleshing out context.  

I always say that if a nonfiction book is only about what it seems to be about, then somehow the author has failed. So what is Buffalo Bill really about?  It’s about how the myth of the American west was created by one man; how we have to remember that the pony express, wagons train circling for protection, the bugle playing infantry galloping to the rescue (among other tropes) were all invented by a showman.   None of it was true.  None of it happened. 

Truth can be very elusive.   

When doing research for a non-fiction piece, you keep a running list of questions you’d like to answer: “What was his favorite color?  Did she sleep on her back?  Believe in God?  What did she carry in her purse?  Who gave him his first kiss?” Curiosity might have killed the cat, but you thrive on it. What do the minute details of a life have to do with the Big Picture?

History is found in what I call “small moments.” It’s those dinner table conversations and shopping receipts that draw young readers directly into the lives of people from the past.  Intimate and authentic, these small moments allow us to peek into a person’s soul, and in so doing, change what we know about history.

You said you like to take your non-fiction readers to the “gray areas.” Please explain.

I mean, those places in history (and there are lots of them) where one doesn’t know what to make of the truth.  Ben Franklin owned slaves.  What do you make of that?  Charles Lindbergh was a white supremacist, a nazi and avid eugenicist.  What do you make of that?  Nicholas Romanov, despite his modern-day reputation as a loving father, was a virulent anti-Semite who ordered pograms killing thousands of Russian Jews.  What do you make of that?  

These are all “gray” areas where, through my narrative, I hand it to the reader and ask them to grapple with the morality of it.  I don’t connect the dots for them.  I don’t provide the answers.  I trust young readers to draw the right conclusions.  

But it is in those gray areas that readers will make the connection between themselves and people from the past.  It’s here that they will discover something about themselves in the present. 

You wrote three books on Benjamin Franklin. Ben Franklin's Almanac: Being a True Account of the Good Gentleman's Life (2003), Ben Franklin's in My Bathroom! (2017), and The Hatmaker's Sign (1998). Of course, you said, just about anyone would be fascinated by Ben Franklin. Sure: inventor, statesman, writer, philosopher, wit, ladies’ man. Why not? What fascinated you about him?

His charm, his genius, his humor, his deep curiosity and independence, his resolve, and his ability to learn and evolve as a human being.  

Early on, Franklin owned enslaved persons. By the time he was an old man he’d changed his mind.  In 1790, as head of the Pennsylvania Society for the Abolition of Slavery, he petitioned Congress to abolish slavery.  

Since his was a revered name (having helped establish the Constitution) the representatives had to take up the matter on the floor.  Too bad they didn’t listen to the sage old politician.

What’s next?

I’ve got a few irons in the fire.  In March you’ll see Death in The Jungle, YA nonfiction that follows (for the most part) a handful of teens and young people who were members of Peoples Temple.  Some survived the massacre at Jonestown.  Some didn’t.  

I’m a firm believer in the idea that if a book is only about what it seems to be about, then somehow the author has failed.  In this case, the book is far more than a “cult” story.  It’s about undue influence, peer pressure and personal agency.  

Why do we choose to believe the patently false?  Why do follow charismatic leaders?  Why is everyone -- and I mean everyone -- susceptible?  I had the honor of interviewing several survivors of Peoples Temple, all of whom spoke to me because they had something they wanted to say to today’s teenagers. 

Next spring also sees the start of a middle-school series called “IS IT REAL?” It might look like a series about cryptids.  In truth, it’s about critical thinking, “good” research, and reasoning.   

Readers get the chance to delve into the evidence for, say, the Loch Ness Monster, ask questions, find answers and draw conclusions.  They then get to pit their conclusions against the scientific community’s.  Fun!

October 2024 research
in South Africa

In October I head off for a month-long research trip in South Africa.  I’ll be taking a weeklong, wildlife forensics class with South African park rangers, then walking the park with the anti-poaching K-9 unit and helping to release a young rhino from the orphanage where it was raised after poachers killed its mother.  All this will result in a middle school, nonfiction book tentatively called Rhino Country.

In Rhino Country

And I’ve got a few picture books in the works.  Stay tuned…     

 

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