Friday, June 26, 2026

A New Generation of Storytellers! By Isabel Estrada O’Hagin

On Wednesday, May 13, I had the honor of being the featured author at the 39th Young Writers Day coordinated by the Heritage Southwest Intermediate School District held at the beautiful campus of Southwestern Michigan College in Cass County. The program included an illustrator, Aaron Zenk, and storyteller, Kevin Kammerad.   

“The purpose of Young Writers Day is to enhance and motivate elementary students to write.”

HSISD directs this fine celebration of student writing both by exhibiting literally hundreds of student works, and by introducing children to published authors and illustrators, as well as leading storytellers. The program is open to 2nd through 5th grades, and each participating student must submit a book for display.

Teachers from four different school districts brought fifteen students per grade level per school system. Each of the grade level groups, 2nd-3rd and 4th-5th, rotated between the three sessions: writing, storytelling, and illustration, in addition to two breaks and lunch.

After a quick plot summary of my picture book, LA MARIACHI (illustrated by Addy Sonda Rivera), I shared the inspiration that led to my manuscript and talked about my background and writing process. I emphasized the idea of connecting your passion with the heart of your story.  To get them started, I encouraged students to draw on their own life experiences using a template: What Do You Bring to the Picture, inspired by Linda Sue Park’s concept of what a writer brings to the table. After identifying their strengths, interests, and unique traits, I encouraged students to build on those traits combined with their imaginations to create a Story Spine (Leslie Helakoski)—one of the fundamental building blocks to writing a story. First, we created a story as a group, and then students were given time to work on their individual stories and were encouraged to discuss their story ideas with their peers. The Young Writers were engaged and involved throughout the process—an exciting opportunity for all.

A marvelous aspect of the Young Writers Day involves students preparing their own manuscripts and sharing them with their peers. The schedule allows breaks for students to peruse the manuscripts and books written by their peers. Last year, students asked for more time to read each other’s books, and this year’s schedule reflected that change. How awesome is that? Student-created works were on display before the event, during two fifteen-minute breaks, and during the lunch break. Lowry’s Books also offered books for sale.

Let me tell you—after I perused the fourth & fifth-grade book displays, I joked with their teachers that I would never write again. The students’ stories were fabulous with creative titles, exciting characters, pages full of driving action moving the plot forward, and eye-catching book covers and illustrations. Some students even had their books hardbound at a print shop! Other students included a comments page where readers (their fan base) could share a like. All were positive and supportive.

Author visits are typically filled with memorable moments. . . I glanced at a fourth-grader’s What Do You Bring to the Picture? worksheet where she’d written two sentences: I am a queen.  I am funny. The second part of the writing task was to use the Story Spine as a springboard for their story. This part was left blank. I walked around the hall and came back. The queen was stumped.

I asked, “What does the queen want?” I waited. When she didn’t respond, I made a suggestion by saying something like: “You wrote that you were funny. If I were the queen at this court, I might want everyone to laugh at my jokes and order them to do so.” Immediately, she sat up and with imperial flare gazed down at me. “No, you can’t do that. I’m the queen, and I decide what happens in my court.”

“Yes, I replied. “It’s your queendom after all.”  The Queen’s POV? Covered.

Another awesome memory: After my presentation, students lined up for my autograph—totally unexpected. I’ve signed books at book launches and book festivals, but not at an event like this. After I signed his folder, one boy told me: “This is great. I have Raul the Third’s autograph, and now I have yours.”  Wow! My name in the same sentence as Raul the Third! What fun to feel like a school celebrity!

Other SCBWI members have presented at this event in past years such as Leslie Helakoski, Kat Higgs-Coulthard, Lori Eslick, and LaurieKeller. I’m sure there are others! Please add your name to this list in the comments section.

Final thoughts:

Like Lisa Cron, I believe that we are wired for story and have been since the beginning of time. Story is what keeps us alive and keeps us going. My experience left me with hope that the next generation will value human-based stories. Young writers are writing their own stories and young illustrators are illustrating, and I can’t wait to read them!

 “The best stories are those that come from the heart.” - Kate DiCamillo


Isabel grew up in the desert borderlands of Arizona, dancing and singing her way through life. Always a dreamer, she blends her life experiences as a performing arts educator with her love of Mexican-American culture & folklore into stories. When she’s not writing, she loves to dance, cook, read, daydream, and play with her two gatitos, Dante and Cosmo. She also loves her volunteer work for SCBWI-Michigan as Outreach Coordinator and K.A.S.T. Co-Coordinator (A shout-out to my KAST friends—Where everyone’s a star!)  LA MARIACHI is her debut storybook! 
Isabel would like to remind everyone that her author name is Isabel Estrada.

 

Tuesday, June 23, 2026

Book Birthday Blog with Darren Cools

 

Welcome to SCBWI-MI's Book Birthday Blog!

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

 

Congratulations to Darren Cools on the release of Light in the Canyon

 


 

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

Around 2015 I was flipping through an old notebook and found an entry from when I was 15 years old. It describes a dream I had just awoken from: I opened my teenage eyes to discover I’d become a girl overnight. In this dream I was distraught, exhilarated, and utterly preoccupied with a sense of dread about what might happen when I encountered parents, siblings, friends. My 30-something year-old self, reading this forgotten old diary scrawl with fresh eyes, felt there was something intriguing here, something I might want to touch on in a story someday.

In 2016 I completed a century ride. 100 miles in one day on a bicycle. I didn’t bring headphones — a fortunate oversight, it turns out. While riding my bike around Puget Sound all alone, from Seattle to Bremerton, I crafted (in my head) the rough plot of what eventually became Light in the Canyon. It took me another five years and a move across the country to actually sit down and write the book, but it progressed quickly once I really got going.

 


 

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

I find the strict division of gender roles, interests, and self-expression a bit mystifying. Aren’t we all human, first, after all? Simply living in open, generous community together as fellow humans with all our various interests, hopes, desires, and inclinations is, to me, the basis of our interconnectedness. Not so much how we’re ‘allowed’ to behave or what we’re supposed to do and not do based on some rigid notion of what’s correct for ‘our kind’. I’m oversimplifying. But I try to explore these ideas in a respectful, thoughtful way in my book. I also talk about forgiveness. Of letting go of anger, even if that means losing ourselves a bit. A lot of young adult novels out there right now focus on justice, often through violence and vengeance, and I get that there’s a place for that narrative. But I’m trying to do something very different.

I hope there are people of all ages (but especially young people) out there who might experience something of the same excitement I would’ve felt if I’d found this particular story during my own complicated, internally turbulent teen years. My book is about a lot of challenging things: identity, accepting oneself, daring to say ‘yes’. It was written for young me, but it’s for everyone who feels they’re on the outside or who don’t quite fit in. It’s for those who wonder about what happens when science and magic get all mixed up. It’s for all who delight in the unusual and the unexpected.

What was the most difficult part of writing this book?

Being brave enough to tackle the parts of the plot that deal with gender head on. Those moments are some of my favorite scenes in the book, but it was difficult to get them just right. To really say what I meant to say.

What inspires you to write/illustrate?

I’m a silly, old-fashioned person. One of my absolute heroes is Edward Gorey. I love his absurd, dark, wistfully funny vibes. I’m transported by ghost stories, cloudy skies, long road trips, tall brick apartment buildings, cluttered bookstores, the sound of a Meadowlark. I’m deeply inspired by amazing women (men, too!). I wish I could be Joan of Arc or Ellington Feint or Matilda — but I’m entirely unwilling to suffer as much as they had to! There’s nothing more compelling to me than a smart, fierce, quietly incredible woman who is too brave and honest to accept things as they are — or a man who flips everything on its head because he cares about the wellbeing of children and clean dishes and isn’t afraid of others witnessing his tears over something beautiful.  

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

I’m working on a solarpunk trilogy, a series of YA novels about a near-future world suffering from rapidly accelerating climate change and political issues. I’m also developing a stand-alone YA novel about growing up in the endless, empty wheat fields of eastern Washington State, and a graphic novel about a secret island and a message in a bottle, set on Washington State’s Olympic Peninsula. I dream of achieving just enough success to keep writing and publishing for the rest of my life. (What author doesn’t?) I’m about halfway through it already (my life), so I feel it’s a reasonable ask, haha! 

People can order from any independent bookstore, and if they're willing to suggest that the store stock my book (as opposed to just ordering a single one for themselves), that would be wonderful.

If folks want to order online, here are some places to find it:

IndieBound (Bookshop.org) 

Hudson Booksellers 

Barnes & Noble 

Amazon 

Walmart 

More about the book . . . 

A year has passed since Halley’s mom died, but she still feels like she’s falling to pieces. Dad talks her into joining him at her uncle Gill’s house for yet another homemade science experiment (something to do with black holes and cosmic rays), but to their horror, his machine explodes in a flash of blue light.

Jamie finds himself increasingly isolated now that his brother Ash left for college—not long after his father left for forever. Out for a walk, he’s thinking about the book that Raina, the neighborhood librarian, gave him when there’s a sudden explosion down the street…

A few houses away, the blast hits Raina too. She’s joined by Halley’s dad, who can’t find his daughter—or his brother. Their search leads them first to Gill’s wrecked machine, then to a secluded farmhouse where a young girl died many years ago.

This astonishing debut novel for young adults and readers of all ages—in the spirit of beloved writers like Madeleine L’Engle and Maile Meloy—is by turns chilling, tender, and profound. A story of loss and courage, Light in the Canyon explores how change can help us discover who we’re truly meant to be. 

Published by: Slant Books https://slantbooks.org/ 

More about the author/illustrator . . . 

Darren is an author, illustrator, and designer. When he’s not writing or working, he likes to spend time outside running, biking, or relaxing with friends around a campfire. His home is in Michigan with his wife Anna and their three children (and two cats). 

https://x.com/darrencools 

Instagram https://www.instagram.com/d.j.cools 

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

LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/in/darrencools/ 

 


 

Friday, June 19, 2026

Author/Illustrator Spotlight: Deb Pilutti

Town and country, kind people, cartoons, Giverny, doodles, retreats, and Kirbi: Author/illustrator Deb Pilutti

Charlie Barshaw coordinates our regular Writer Spotlight feature and interviews writers of SCBWI. In this piece, meet author/ illustrator  Deb Pilutti.




The City Kid and the Suburb Kid, published by Sterling in 2008, is written by you and illustrated by someone else. Did you try to illustrate this book, or did you consider yourself primarily a writer back then?

I knew I’d like to do both some day, but at that time was sending out illustrator postcards in the hopes of being published as an illustrator first. This book came from an unusual situation — an editor at Sterling Publishing had received my postcards and asked if I would consider trying to write and illustrate a story they already had an idea for: The City Kid and the Suburb Kid, based on The Town Mouse and the Country Mouse. 

I did not have a contract, but gave it a try. Sterling liked my text, but my sample illustrations weren’t quite there, so they ended up choosing Linda Bleck to illustrate it – which I agree was the right choice for that book. It was a great learning experience for me and I enjoyed working with the team.

 


Then you illustrated but didn’t write The Twelve Days of Christmas in Michigan. Was this your first illustrated book? How did you come to be involved in this project?

The Twelve Days of Christmas in Michigan was part of a book series with the same editorial team at Sterling that produced the City Kid and Suburb Kid. They chose an author and illustrator from whichever state was being featured. Sue Collins Thoms and I were chosen to do the Michigan version.

 

Ten Rules of Being a Superhero was published by Christy Ottaviano’s imprint in 2014. What happened in the four years after Twelve Days and before Ten Rules? 


Life! I was co-parenting two children and working my day job as a graphic designer, so I would often go a long time between working on book projects or sending out postcards or manuscripts. 

At one point, I realized I would never have a book as an author/illustrator published unless I treated writing and illustration like a full-time job. So that’s what I did. I put in the hours.

Just one year later, 2015, Bear and Squirrel are Friends…Yes, Really! was published by Paula Wiseman Books. Now you’re treading with big children’s publishing icons. What’s it like working with the best? Are they regular folks?  

I continue to be amazed at how kind people in children’s publishing are. I came to publishing after working as a graphic designer in an ad agency where bigwigs in suits (clients) would regularly make some of us creatives cry. It could be a cutthroat industry.

I still pinch myself that I get to work with some wonderful editors and art directors, like Paula Wiseman, Christy Ottaviano, Susan Kochan and Cecilia Yung. They are so skilled at bringing out and publishing the best possible story.

While I did read quite a bit as a child, I also watched copious amounts of TV. Especially cartoons. This was once a source of shame, until I realized that I received a master class in humor, pacing and illustration from the artists at Warner Brothers studios and Jay Ward animations. My sensibilities were defined by episodes of Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, Road Runner and Wile E. Coyote, Rocky & Bullwinkle, Fractured Fairy Tales and of course that one with the singing frog! The humor in these programs ranged from slapstick to sophisticated—I definitely did not always catch the joke the first time around.

Do you despair then, at the outcry that children are spending too much time on their screens? Or are the games and reels and videos of today masterclasses for the right creative individuals?

I think we are all spending too much time on our screens! But when I’m in a school visit, one thing I tell young creators is that they should take note of what catches their attention, whatever that might be. 

I happened to love watching Warner Brothers and Jay Ward cartoons and reading. I think what I really loved was the storytelling, characterization and design, and those passions filtered into a lot of later choices.

Before becoming an author & illustrator, I was a graphic designer and created toys for Oliebollen.com and graphics for SeaWorld and Warner Brothers theme parks.

Did you get a chance to work in some of your favorite Warner Brothers cartoon characters while you worked for the theme park?

As a matter of fact, the area we (The Ten8 Group) were hired to work on was Cartoon Village, where Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, Porky Pig and the rest of the characters had houses, rides, restaurants and shops. We needed to know everything about these characters in order to design the graphic elements of Cartoon Village, and I felt like I really knew them. Finally! Validation for the hours I spent in front of the television. It was a full circle moment for me.

My studio is in a small bedroom. I have a long table with a computer and extra monitor set up on it, and I sometimes sketch here as well. A painting easel is in the corner of the room. It’s a very messy place, with papers everywhere and knick-knacks and toys and bits of shiny things on every surface. I like all of my toys, but my favorite one is a realistic toy model of a T-rex with a moveable jaw.

Does that still describe your studio. Ruth also works out of a small, cluttered bedroom. Do you ever pine, like she does, for a spacious workspace?

Absolutely. I would love to have a little more space to draw and paint and spread out pages. I’d also like to work in a communal studio. But honestly, if I had more room, it would probably still be messy.

 


Old Rock (is not boring)
won a whole slew of awards, including the 2022 Giverny Award for best science book. After years of writing and illustrating so many titles, were you surprised by the love Old Rock received?

I had so much fun working on Old Rock and loved working with the team at Putnam. I felt really gratified that people connected with it, because you don’t really know how a book will be received. Old Rock came out a couple of months before the pandemic, so I was lucky it was reviewed beforehand, and that it got to be in a physical store for a few weeks before everything shut down for months.

Usually, the story comes first for me, but this time, all I had was the character to start with. Well, really, I had two characters—Henry and the fish costume! The costume became a character who didn’t always react in the same way as Henry. I needed to find a scenario where a boy wearing a fish costume felt natural. I also needed to find the heart of the story.  I wrote a few different versions before I found something that I thought worked.

You loved the doodle of the kid in the fish costume so much you decided to put Henry and his costume into a story. Would you recommend this character-first way of creating a story to other writers?


I would recommend trying it as an exercise, at least. I had three books come from drawing a character first and then finding a story through that character
.

 


Bear and Squirrel are Friends…Yes, Really! is a favorite of mine as I love subversive humor. How did these characters and plot begin?

Thanks so much! I was attending a remote retreat in Michigan with a couple of writer friends when the idea for the story was conceived.

That’s the second of your books I’ve seen born out of a writer retreat. (My Best Friend is a Lion is the first.) What head space do you seek while at a retreat?

I prefer to go on a retreat with one or two trusted friends and not have very structured activities. It’s good to take a couple of uninterrupted days to think about book making. It might be a time to work on revisions, talk through problems, or spend time ideating. We usually have suggestions for activities though. 

For instance, at one retreat, we were writing down memories from our own childhood to connect with the age of kids we were writing for. One of my memories was about wishing I had a pet lion, and I ended up writing a loose first draft of My Best Friend is a Lion, which was published last January.

I have a big messy wooden table that I always have to clear off when I want to draw. (Sometimes I do my sketching at the dinner table so that I can spread out more.) My laptop and monitor are also on the table and I will composite work digitally there and prep for printing. My easel is in a nook. I like to paint standing up because I feel like I put more energy into the work.

Do you still enjoy painting at an easel? Or are you satisfied with the digital magic now available to you?

I almost always start an illustration with a painting, though not always at the easel. And I often will try out a different medium or technique, like monoprinting or adding wax pastels.  I’ll use digital tools for compositing elements or drawing details.

What was your favorite story?  

I have two: Where the Wild Things Are, by Maurice Sendak, and Little Blue and Little Yellow, by Leo Lionni. 

Everyone knows Wild Things. But what about Lionni’s book captured your young imagination?

Little Blue and Little Yellow was Leo Lionni’s first book for children. In it, Lionni used torn pieces of colored paper to tell an engaging and emotional story about two little blobs of color. The blobs did not even have faces, yet they were believable as characters. The characters go through many emotions — suspense, fear, tears and elation. 

Little Blue and Little Yellow are best friends and at one point in the story, the characters hug and turn green. When they eventually try to go back to their families, they are not recognized and are turned away. They cry yellow and blue tears and pull themselves back together. 

Their story was an emotional roller coaster. I was so relieved when Little Blue and Little Yellow’s families recognized them and were happy to be reunited. 

(Side note: I had Leo Lionni as a graphic design teacher for a week workshop in Italy when I was in college. We designed wine labels with him. I recall his sense of play, even in designing a wine label.)

 


When I was young, my family camped. It was an economical way for a family of 7 to travel, but it was also fun and a great way to see the country. I continued camping and hiking with my own children. Michigan is a wonderful place to get out and enjoy nature.

What are some of your favorite camping adventures?

We always had a lot of fun along Lake Michigan. One of our favorite campsites was along the Nordhouse Dunes. Our kids and dogs would spend all day running down the dunes and jumping in the lake. We also have fond and funny memories of backpacking in Colorado.

What’s next for Deb?

Kirbi and Deb

Something I’m really excited about! I’m working on a book with Kirbi Fagan on a book about a child’s curiosity and musings about clouds. It will be coming from Lerner Publishing in late 2027 or early 2028.

 

Please list any social media you care to share:

Instagram and  

Bluesky @dpilutti

Friday, June 12, 2026

Critique Groups

With a statewide virtual critique event happening next Wednesday, June 17, it seems like a good time to talk about critiques (and if you want to join on June 17, make sure you sign up by June 16!).

Why join a critique group?

I'm sure many (most?) of you reading this have critique groups, have been in critique groups in the past, or at least already know the benefits of having one, but just in case, here's a few benefits that I've experienced. 

  • Improving your writing: This might be the most obvious one, but hearing what works and doesn't work in my writing (and refining my own writing by commenting on what works and doesn't work in my critique partners' work) has improved my work. There's often a big difference between the first version my critique group sees and the version that I submit to agents/publishers. 
  • Supporting each other: Having a group that I can regularly meet with and talk to about the joys and frustrations in my publishing journey helps me to keep going (and of course, I love celebrating with critique group members as they publish their work!).
  • Accountability: Knowing that I said Iwould do something (submit to five agents, write a new picture book manuscript, etc.) before my next meeting helps motivate me. When there's no deadline, writing often ends up as the last thing (i.e., the thing that doesn't get done) for me.  

Advice on giving and getting critiques:

There's lots of advice available about giving critiques. SCBWI has some here. I think some of the most useful advice that has worked for me over the years includes:

  • Use the sandwich method: Start with something good, say what isn't working, end with something good.
  • Take what you need: Sometimes a specific piece of advice feels like it wouldn't work or would change what I was trying to do too much. If a piece of advice doesn't seem like it makes sense, think about what the person giving it may have meant. Even if their "fix" isn't the right one, knowing that something wasn't working in a certain spot may be helpful anyway even if the way you address it is different.
  • Sit with advice for some time before revising. Sometimes there's something in me that rebels against some suggestions. I've found if I wait a day (or a few weeks) after getting the advice, the second time I read it, I understand better how I need to revise it (or what I might not need to revise). 

How can you find a critique group? 

Special resources for SCBWI premium members:

Why should I go to an SCBWI-MI critique group event if I'm already in a critique group?

Great question! Here's some reasons I like to attend these events:
  • Fresh set of eyes: After my critique group has commented on the same picture manuscript several times and we think it is ready, I wonder if someone who hasn't seen it before would feel the same. I would like a new perspective.  Critique events are the perfect venue for that.
  • Finding new group members: Sometimes group members have to leave a group for various meetings. At a critique event, you may meet SCBWI members who would be a good fit as an additional member for your group.
  • Seeing how other people do it: Every critique group is run a little differently. Seeing how other people handle critique discussions may give you ideas for things you want to try in your own group.
Remember to sign up if you want to come next week!