Sunday, September 15, 2019

Book Birthday Blog with Rebecca Grabill

Welcome to SCBWI-MI's Book Birthday Blog! 
Where we celebrate new books by Michigan's children's book authors and illustrators


Congratulations to Rebecca Grabill on the release of her new book,  A YEAR WITH MAMA EARTH!




Q#1: Congratulations on the release of A Year With Mama Earth! What inspired you to write a book about the seasons?

Thank you! I’m thrilled to see this book become a reality. I had the luxury of growing up in Michigan with our four vividly distinct, often unpredictable seasons, and so many of my childhood memories are “hooked” on a remembrance of the seasonal weather, like getting off the school bus in the afternoon, dripping sweat, because my sweater and corduroys that were cozy that September morning were now waaaay too warm. Or scuffing through a golden carpet of leaves, stuffing snow in my brother’s hood, catching the first spring worms after a rain.

For me, seasons are a way of telling time, a way nature communicates where I am in the year, where I’m headed. It felt natural to use that inspiration to encourage children to listen and see if Mama Earth is whispering to them as well!

Q#2: Whats something you hope readers will take away from your book?

Stillness. More than anything I want to cultivate stillness. It’s only when we put our devices down, turn off the video games, close Spotify, take the earbuds out that we can hear, truly hear: nature, one another, our own thoughts. Hearing is essential to experiencing, to living, to empathizing, to understanding. And our culture is sadly out of practice.

I also want kids to get outside, explore their area’s own seasonal uniquenesses. This book is set in Michigan because that’s my experience, and I have the benefit of living in an “idyllic” Hallmark-channel locale with brilliant fall leaves and serene winter snow. A book about seasons set in Hawaii or the Arizona desert, for example, would be very, very different. But if children develop stillness they can sense the subtle nuances no matter where they are. December smells different than July, even in New Mexico, Texas, Tokyo. The book won’t speak directly to every child’s experience (no book can do that), but it can help enhance their experience no matter where they are, and it can either broaden their experience by painting a picture of another place, or affirm it with its similarities! Both are valuable outcomes, both desperately needed.


One of Rebecca's photos, featured in
Sweetened Condensed

Q#3: Your writing for this book is described as a poetic exploration of the seasons. Where does the inspiration for that lyrical voice come from? Do you have any favorite poets, or are there certain themes in nature that you find especially inspiring?

Where to start? There are so many poets I admire, I can only begin to list them: Mary Logue, Jane Kenyon, Dorianne Laux, Ron Koertge… Rumi, Edgar Allen Poe, the ubiquitous Emily Dickinson. I’m drawn to poets who don’t use the form to show how educated or smart they are (i.e., poems full of allusions to “classic lit,” even when I get the allusion. Paint the form with words and leave Plato in his cave). I’m drawn to poetry that sees language as a means of communicating—to others, language that’s playful, meaningful, accessible.

As for themes, I find the cycle of nature inspiring (as it is exhausting). Every year the natural world is either improving upon itself or slipping more toward chaos, like my garden, now in a second year of neglect. It’s amazing how dominant mint can be! I also love exploring the sensory experience of nature, the silliness and unpredictability of it, the mind-boggling complexity and intelligence of it. Science has shown that even trees communicate, that nature it has a mind, or a mind behind it. I’m convinced that those who believe this living mind emerged randomly, no matter over how many millennia, have far, far, far more faith than I could ever summon. I love to witness and celebrate that stunning complexity, to feel my own smallness, to express what it feels like to be significant in the face of that grand insignificance.

Q#4: You make a lot of activity pages, crafts, and teachers resources. What inspired you to start doing this, and what do you hope it adds to the experience of reading your books?

The reason is largely pragmatic—I have a background in graphic design and over the years have made oodles of quick worksheets for kids because it’s so hard to find *just the right* worksheet, and to find it for free. Serendipitously, I stumbled upon Teachers Pay Teachers, a website where educators can sell the very resources they stay up late creating on Sunday nights. This led to imagining how my books might be used in the classroom. I realized I could save educators a step—they don’t have to stay up late making worksheets, because I already made them!

I also feel it’s an effective use of my (severely limited) time and energy. There’s tremendous value to doing events (and I do go to schools and bookstores, even to the Grand Rapids Children’s Museum!), but as mother of six children who are all busy and going in different directions, a school visit isn’t a simple “show and do” event. I have to arrange childcare for the toddler, the homeschooled 2nd grader gets a “day off” from school (homeschoolers don’t get subs), and my husband has to be available for the ECSE school bus, which means someone else has to pick up teens from high school, etc. It’s madness.

I can create printables at home, in my pajamas (though, confession, I don’t. I hate staying in pjs all day — sorry to all the pj fans out there). The added benefit of an online resource is that once that resource is online, it’s there FOREVER. A school visit lasts a few hours in a specific location with a limited range of influence; a well-designed printable is perennial, global, and as eternal as the internet itself.

One of Rebecca's printables, find it here

Q#5: Whats next for you? Where can we find A Year With Mama Earth, and how can people connect with you?

Ooh, good question! Next up is a book of poetry set to release October 10th. Flying Ketchup Press, a new indie publisher is launching with a select handful of books, mine included. Sweetened Condensed is about motherhood, daughterhood, the life of a writer, and is illustrated with my own b&w photos. I hope it touches on the universal—what it means to be a writer-mom who feels like one of those single-serve pats of butter that needs to cover the whole dang loaf of bread. That book will soon be available on Amazon, and I think could be a fun book group read! And wouldn’t you know, I’m creating a book-group-guide that will be on my website sometime next month. (Be warned: it’s *not* poetry for children! About them, yes, and so much more. For them, nope.)


A Year With Mama Earth will be available from bookstores and on Amazon. Plus, if anyone wants a SIGNED copy, just call Hopscotch Children’s Store in Grand Rapids. They can arrange for me to come in and sign, and either ship the book or set it aside for pick-up.

I’ll actually be at Hopscotch September 28th from 4-5:30 to lead a story time, read the book, and sign copies. I would LOVE to meet all of you in person, so stop on by! If October is better, I’ll also be at Baker Books in Grand Rapids the morning of October 10th for a special story time with crafts, snacks, and nature-related fun.

Otherwise, I’m active on instagram @rebeccawritesbooks, and present on twitter and FB. Plus, I hope everyone will visit my website, rebeccagrabill.com. You’ll see that I don’t do *just* printables. I have creative resources and an ever-growing collection of tools for writers, creatives, educators, and parents. Like the printable nature journal I’ll be releasing one month at a time all year!

One last thing, I would LOVE for you to friend me on Goodreads and follow on Amazon! Send me your links and I’ll do the same (we need some Goodreads and Amazon link list, don’t you think?).




A little bit about the book: In September, Mama Earth sighs out the first autumn frost, which crunches under childrens feet. Mama Earth looks after natures plants and animals throughout the year—singing lullabies to fat bears in the fall, dressing evergreens in icicles in winter, and waking up the crocuses in spring. And in the summer, Mama Earth sends warm sunbeams to her beloved children, so they can play outside and enjoy the amazing world around them.

With enchanting text and radiant artwork, A Year with Mama Earth offers a joyous celebration of natures beauty and the changing seasons.

A little bit about the author: Rebecca Grabill is an award-winning author of the picture books, Halloween Good Night (Atheneum, Simon & Schuster), Violet and the Woof (Katherine Tegen Books, HarperCollins), A Year With Mama Earth (Eerdmans Books for Young Readers) and the forthcoming poetry chapbook, Sweetened Condensed (Flying Ketchup Press). Her other publications include poetry and essays in a broad range of literary journals. She has an MFA in Writing for Children and Young Adults from Hamline University and is a Sustainable Arts Foundation awardee. Her childrens and general market works are represented by Victoria Wells Arms of Wells Arms Literary, and religious works by Karen Neumair of Credo Communications.

She lives in rural Michigan with her husband, six children, and two cats. Find the latest updates at her blog, Works in Progress

3 comments:

  1. Congrats on your new book, Rebecca! It sounds fantastic. And I love the cover.

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  2. Congrats on your new book, Rebecca, and great to learn about all of your projects!

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  3. I look forward to reading this one. I love books about seasons!

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