Tuesday, July 1, 2025

Book Birthday Blog with Kristen Uroda

 

Welcome to SCBWI-MI's Book Birthday Blog!

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

 

Congratulations to Kristen Uroda on the release of Miss Betti, What Is This? How Detroit's School Lunch Lady Got Good Food on the Menu

 


You create illustrations that inspire people to dream, hope, and imagine a better, kinder world. Please describe your creative process for this inspirational book.

The creative part felt really smooth. Lela Nargi’s script was rich enough to help me think of a lot of concepts and imagery, but light enough that I didn’t feel pigeonholed into illustrating scenes literally. Additionally, everyone I worked with at Sleeping Bear Press gave me a lot of leeway and freedom to go wild.
 
Since this was more autobiographical, I started by doing some research on Miss Betti—trying to read articles about her work and videos and interviews she’s done. The first thing that became really apparent was her joy and love for nurturing children through healthy foods and meals. And her smile was contagious! I knew I wanted to bring her playful energy into the book with some small pieces of humor. One of my favorite spreads is the one with the principal cowering from children surrounding him with their protest signs, demanding a salad bar and Miss Betti just laughing in the back. I love being able to lean a little zany when I can.
 
But overall, I wanted to imbue this feeling of community care and celebrating healthy food in schools, which I believe is every child’s right and our responsibility as adults and caregivers to advocate for. And I hope that spirit comes through—because when we champion healthy food in schools, we're nurturing children, certainly, but also the minds and bodies of tomorrow's innovators, leaders, changemakers, and community builders, and teaching them how to care for the generations that will come after them.



What was the most difficult part in illustrating the book? 

There really wasn’t one! If anything, just balancing the bright, rich colors.
 
I originally started out planning to transition the colors from boring and beige to colorful as the children learned to love healthy food, but whenever there were scenes with the children and Miss Betti, her brightness, determination, and energy was just getting drained whenever she was surrounded by more muted colors. I went through a few iterations of trying to get the right palette and eventually abandoned beige and went all in on the color.
 
Using more muted colors to make brighter ones pop more is certainly solid color theory advice, but sometimes you can be a rebel and break the rules. And because I had enough opportunities to play with facial expressions—boring or sad or grossed out—I didn’t need to ask the color to do the emotional heavy lifting of the story. Instead, I could lean into the bright blue of Miss Betti’s uniform and the rich “lunch tray” red.  



 

What do you hope readers will take away from the book?

I hope readers see Miss Betti's success story as proof that one person truly can transform an entire system. As her particular journey shows the incredible impact of having nourishing food in schools and the possibility of growing it ourselves through urban gardening, I hope readers feel inspired to get involved in similar advocacy—whether that's attending local school board meetings, advocating for urban gardens in city councils, or starting conversations about food justice in their own communities. Imagine the power of teaching upcoming generations not just to live in harmony with our earth, but to understand that caring for our environment and caring for each other are inseparable. Systemic change needs the momentum of many, but it can begin with one person's courageous action.

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

I’ll be working with Sleeping Bear Press to collaborate on the marketing together, but my hope is that, as it’s about a local Detroiter and Michigander, we can get this book in every school and library across Michigan—to start!
 
I also hope to distribute it to local urban gardens I've volunteered with, community centers, and food justice organizations as I think Miss Betti’s story is really lovely and inspirational and her story could be a great educational tool for leaders of those gardens and organizations.

What's next for you?

I’m currently illustrating my 5th picture book and continuing to illustrate covers for the Race to the Truth series with Crown Books. Last year was pretty busy, so I’m taking it slower this year to recalibrate a bit and think about some of my own stories I’d like to tell some day. :)    

More about the book . . .

Miss Betti knew wholesome, nourishing food. She also knew the kids in Detroit's public schools were not getting wholesome, nourishing lunches. Luckily, as Detroit's school lunch lady, Miss Betti had the power to make a change. She started small—with fresh apples and sweet potato fries—but soon she was filling lunch trays with a rainbow of tasty choices. And then, Miss Betti looked toward some of the empty city lots across Detroit. She started an urban gardening program to teach students about growing fruits and veggies—filling schools' salad bars with fresh fare.



A true story about big goals and small steps in America's Motor City.

Publisher: Sleeping Bear Press 

More about the author . . .

Kristen Uroda is a Michigan-based artist who creates vibrant illustrations that
inspire people to dream, hope, and imagine a better, kinder world.
Beginning her career in editorial illustration, Kristen has expanded her work to
include publishing, creating picture books and illustrated book covers. Known
for her light, joyful style and bursts of color, Kristen uses her art to spark joy,
inspire connection, and renew moral imagination.

Bluesky: @kristenuroda.bsk.social