Friday, September 26, 2025

Writer Spotlight: Kristin Bartley Lenz

 If I Could Fly, cover reveal, pantsing, 15 words, Social Work, and wayward titles: Author Kristin Bartley Lenz

Charlie Barshaw coordinates our regular Writer Spotlight feature and interviews writers of SCBWI-MI. In this piece, meet author and former editor of The Mitten, Kristin Bartley Lenz.

When did young Kristin know she wanted to write? When did she find that helping others was something she needed to do?


My second-grade teacher made us write a poem for a Young Author’s Contest. Even though I loved to read, writing a poem seemed impossible. I complained and procrastinated. 

Finally, I stood at the back window of my house looking out at the woods, and inspiration struck. My poem, If I Could Fly, won the contest. I was asked to read my poem in front of the whole school (somehow I didn’t have stage-fright then!), and I attended a young author’s conference where I met real life authors. 

From that point on, I wanted to write. But it took more than 30 years for me to win another writing contest!

Even though I wrote throughout my childhood, I lost confidence in my writing during my teen and college years, and explored other areas of interest, earning a BA in psychology and then an MSW

Social work was a detour on my writing path, but it greatly expanded my worldview and ultimately prepared me to return to writing years later with more confidence and a stronger voice. 

Both writing and social work have given me a way to contribute to making our world a better place. I worked at a runaway shelter and counseling center in Michigan, a community mental health clinic and schools in Georgia, a program for children with developmental disabilities in California, and a children's hospital/home-visiting program back in Detroit.

(From your website) My novel is currently out of stock, but we're working on a reprint/updated version, hopefully to be released in 2026!

Wow! Good news and bad news? The good news being that you sold through the first press run. The bad news being that the second print won’t be available for a year. What’s your attitude?

My first YA novel, The Art of Holding On and Letting Go, is not just out of stock, but out of print because the publisher closed just before we could do a third print run. My attitude was bummed because Elephant Rock Books was such a great, award-winning small press. Rights reverted to me, and now Wild Ink Publishing will be re-releasing the novel, along with my new novel, The Door Swings Open, in spring 2026.

You hustle to get your work published, entering contests, writing poetry and flash fiction and prose poems and short stories and YA novels. And you’ve succeeded in building and diversifying your body of work. Is it another full-time job to query and submit your work? How many rejections?

Ha, yes, querying takes a lot of time and it’s a very effective way to procrastinate during the long slog of a novel draft! I haven’t kept track of the number of rejections, but it’s painful to look at the sea of red on my Submittable account which goes back to 2011. 

I like entering contests because they give me a deadline and challenge me to try a prompt/theme or meet specific word counts. My writing has evolved into new directions over the years, and I’ve been fortunate to learn from many wonderful teachers who encouraged experimenting with new forms. 

I write poetry and short fiction when I’m in between novel drafts or stuck. It’s fun to play with them over time. Most aren’t publishable, but every now and then I’m happy with the result, and I’ll research publishers who might be a good fit.

You write freelance for Detroit-area non-profits. Who do you write for, and why?

Over ten years ago, I was looking for ways to blend writing into my social work career, and Gleaners Community Food Bank of Southeastern Michigan gave me my first freelance job. 

They have a strong marketing and communications department, but they hire freelance writers when they’re short-staffed or have a big project with tight deadlines. This is collaborative writing which is different from my own individual work. 

The initial idea/direction comes from the Gleaners team, and then my words get blended with their words/formatting, and I enjoy seeing how it ultimately turns out in print.

Rock-climbing Kristin

My favorite assignments are for their Harvest Magazine. One time, they sent me to a senior apartment complex in Detroit that hosted a monthly fresh food distribution. I interviewed and photographed residents and volunteers to share their stories and Gleaner’s impact. 

I will always remember the elderly grandmother who cherished a fresh grapefruit, cutting it in quarters to make it stretch for days. She sat with me and detailed her monthly budget, including rent, utilities, medicines, and the paltry $16 of monthly government food assistance. It was impossible for her to make ends meet and why programs like Gleaners are crucial.

Most recently I’ve volunteered to do grant writing for Making Spirits Bright, a Detroit area literacy nonprofit that provides free school book fairs and more. They always need donations of gently used books, and they have a variety of volunteer needs! Check it out: https://makingspiritsbright.org/volunteer/

You co-founded The Mitten Blog, and worked as editor-in-chief for seven years, which is where I had the pleasure to work with you. Who else founded the blog? What was the original vision? How was The Mitten different when you started it versus when you left?

Jodie Fletcher and I were co-editors way back when The Mitten was a quarterly newsletter, first in print and then digital. Blogs were becoming popular and a way that we could share content more frequently, while giving our members more opportunities to contribute and promote their online visibility. Jodie set up our initial blog format, but then she was ready to explore other projects beyond children’s writing.

Patti Richards and Nina Goebel joined me on the original blog team, and it seems like only a few years ago that we gathered at a coffee shop to brainstorm. Patti has since published numerous picture books, and Nina is working as a licensed counselor/art therapist. 

Henry wants Kristin to take a break

I enjoyed the weekly rhythm of the blog posts/planning and how it kept me connected to our chapter’s leadership and members. Volunteering is a great way to meet people in a large organization, and I loved that my job gave me a way to champion our members’ work and success stories. 

It was hard to let go of my role, but it was time to shift my energy in other directions and I knew the blog would benefit from fresh eyes. It’s been fun to see the new team grow into their roles and make it their own, keeping some of our traditions and starting new ones. 

Thank you for your long run, Charlie! Your in-depth interviews foster connections and build community throughout our chapter. 

Congratulations on your second novel, The Door Swings Open, forthcoming in March 2026 from Wild Ink Publishing. You describe it as a genre-bender with mystery, suspense, and magical realism. Was there a bit of the “Sophomore Jinx” playing through your head at times? Like, maybe one novel is all I get?

Oh my goodness, yes. It took ten years to get my debut novel published, and I never thought it’d be another ten years before the next one came out! 

Three different agents believed in this novel and took it on at various stages of revision. We had some close calls and some bad luck (like going out on submission just as Covid hit New York), but we finally found the right fit with a small press.

Here's the teaser for your new novel:

THE DOOR SWINGS OPEN

Ella’s missing. Without a trace. A runaway.
Charlotte’s searching. For her missing friend. For help for her veteran father.
Aiden’s running. From his brother. From his past.

Tarot cards, urban art, lunar energy, fireflies, thin places.

A girl trying to reinvent herself.
A girl trying to find herself.
A boy trying to right his wrongs.

One will escape.
One will get caught.
One will die.

Did you slowly “pants” this one? How did your writing process evolve from your first novel to the second?

I’m definitely a pantser, but it was the many revisions that took so long. The story grew from a straight-forward first-person narration/simplistic plot to its current genre-bending form with multiple perspectives, a non-linear timeline, and elements of magical realism. 

Along the way, I was fortunate to win the SCBWI-MI novel mentorship competition with Leslie Connor. I’m so appreciative of her support and encouragement (and SCBWI-MI for providing these opportunities!)

Florida Writers blog shows your short poem “Flying,” about a young girl learning to ride a bike. You were able to take the heart of that poem and submit it to the NY Times, where it was published and honored.

How conscientious are you in recycling and repurposing your words?

Thanks to SCBWI-MI member Shutta Crum for recognizing the lesson in my poem and writing about it for the Florida Writer’s Association (where she spends the winters). 


I tinker with my words endlessly, and the work often evolves in unexpected ways over time. I can only think of one other instance where I deliberately recycled/repurposed my words for publication – a poem turned into a short story and both were published in different anthologies. 

I never intended to publish the first version of Flying. I wrote it as my own personal reflection on my daughter’s upcoming high school graduation. 

Years later, when I saw the call for submissions from The New York Times, I misread the instructions. I thought they asked for short poems on the theme of renewal with a maximum of 15 lines. I thought I could cut a few sentences from Flying

Then I realized the directions said it could only be 15 words! I cut the poem to the bone, and it worked! You can read more about the process, and how Shutta turned this into a writing exercise with other examples here: https://floridawriters.blog/hidden-treasures-finding-poems-within-your-poems/

You’ve been an active SCBWI member for at least fifteen years. Many friends and colleagues have helped you in your career: Heather Meloche, Natalie Aguirre and Deb Gonzales, to name a few. Want to name a few more?

I couldn’t have kept going without the support and camaraderie of so many writer friends from SCBWI and beyond. Critique partners, accountability partners, nature trail walking partners… There are too many to name, some have moved on to other states and career paths, and I will surely forget someone if I try to name them all! 

But I’ll give a special shout out to Tracy Bilen because she approached me at a conference over ten years ago, we became critique partners, and we’ve been cheering each other on ever since.

You’ve done tons of workshops and presentations, but the ones that surprised me were creative writing sessions aimed at social workers. That’s your personal Venn diagram, but it must be for others, too? What kind of audience do you get when you ask social workers to write?

I even have an SCBWI-MI member to thank for pointing me in this direction! Years ago, Betsy McKee told me about the University of Iowa National Poetry Contest for Social Workers. I entered, placed 2nd, and was given a scholarship to attend their annual Writing Workshop for Social Workers. 

So many people have personal stories they want to write – often for their own healing and/or to help others. My workshops introduce social workers/counselors to therapeutic writing for their own self-care and to benefit their clients. We delve into journaling, poetry, short stories, and memoir, depending on the group’s interest. 

Many people write in secret, and my goal is to provide a safe, supportive place to be vulnerable and receive encouragement and validation. I wish I knew years ago that poetry therapy even existed! I’m not planning to return to school to become a certified poetry therapist, but I’ve taken workshops to further my skills, and I benefit personally from the sessions too.

How do you, as a writer, take the experience you’ve gained over the years and various jobs as a social worker, while maintaining privacy for your clients?

The Just YA anthology included one of Kristin's short stories.
Free online access at 
https://open.library.okstate.edu/justya/

That’s a really good question that I’ve thought about a lot. Confidentiality is paramount. Their stories are important, but not mine to tell. 

I think it comes back to resilience. That’s what I’m tapping into when I write. Not the actual details of my clients’ circumstances, but the resilience that keeps them going, keeps them hopeful and seeking light and love. Individual resilience as well as resilience in families and communities. 

And then this all gets mixed up with my own values and personal experiences, so in the end it’s a new creation yet universal and relatable. The Art of Holding On and Letting Go grew out of my own rock-climbing experience, but readers have remarked that my social worker empathy is infused throughout the story.

You’ve praised editor Jotham Burrello for his help with The Art of Holding On and Letting Go. What did you learn working with him?

Jotham was the founder of Elephant Rock Books, but he’s also a college professor, the director of the Yale Summer Writing Program, and a published novelist. I had already revised The Art of the Holding On and Letting Go countless times on my own, with my first agent, and through the Highlights Foundation Whole Novel Workshop. 

But working with Jotham, the story grew deeper and richer. He asked me to step away from my computer and journal by hand, to write a scene of a seminal moment for each character. I was initially resistant – after all the revising I’d already done, now I wanted to be on my computer making final changes in the actual manuscript. 

I didn’t want to write scenes that wouldn’t be included in the final book. But I gave it a try, and it led to important discoveries about my characters. The scenes didn’t make it into the book, but many details did – so many layers.

And now I’m working with a new editor at Wild Ink on my next novel and just received a 12-page editorial letter with such thorough, thoughtful feedback. 

Small publishers can’t compete with the big NY publishers in many ways, but I’ve been fortunate to receive such personal attention and care from editors at small presses.

 

Thank you card from a high school student after Kristin's school visit

Titles, they’re a bugaboo of mine. What does it take to come up with your titles?

I never have a good title to start. The Art of Holding On and Letting Go was initially titled Climber Girl and then Carabiner, and my first agent said we needed something better before we went out on submission. 

We brainstormed and then scanned the entire manuscript looking for a word or phrase, and I found it on page 232! I love that the title describes the physical action of climbing and my character’s emotional journey.

The title evolved similarly for my forthcoming novel, The Door Swings Open. My drafts were titled Runaway. But in a revised scene, a door swung open, literally, and then that grew into a theme for each of the main characters.

What’s next for Kristin?

Wild Ink Publishing just did the cover reveal for my new novel, so it’s starting to feel real! Look for The Door Swings Open next spring, as well as the updated reprint of The Art of Holding On and Letting Go

I need to revamp my website and plan events. My current work-in-progress surprised me by turning from YA to adult, and I’ll be plugging away at my slow pace. 

It might take ten years to publish that one too (!), but in the meantime, I’ll keep writing poetry and short stories and teaching workshops and taking nature walks and cheering others on.

Please share any social media platforms:

I’ve stepped away from regular posting/sharing on social media, but I still pop in and out every week to keep in touch.

 https://www.facebook.com/kristinbartleylenz

https://www.instagram.com/kristinbartleylenz/

Website: www.kristinbartleylenz.com

 

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 Reminders about Upcoming SCBWI-MI Events


  • TOMORROW (Saturday)! Little Free Library Day hosted by SCBWI-MI's E&I Team- September 27th
  • OPEN UNTIL TUESDAY! SCBWI-MI 2025 Critique Carousel- RegistrationSept.18th-30th
  • DUE WEDNESDAY! SCBWI-MI's BIPOC ScholarshipSept.1st-Oct. 1st
  • Fall webinar with Sheela ChariOct. 22nd at 7:00 pm Registration period: Oct 1-22
  • Fall webinar with Cate Berry- Nov. 12th at 7:00 pm Registration period: Oct 22-Nov 12

Tuesday, September 23, 2025

Book Birthday Blog with Lynn Baldwin

 

Welcome to SCBWI-MI's Book Birthday Blog!

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

 

Congratulations to Lynn Baldwin on the release of My Backyard Used to Be

 

 

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

I read Lesa Cline-Ransome’s Before She Was Harriet and knew that I wanted to write something in a similar, “going backwards” structure. I tried several stories, but none worked in that format. One day, I was in my backyard and remembered that a neighbor had mentioned how our neighborhood used to be a farm…and that was the spark I needed!

What inspires you to write? 

I’ve always loved to read and really enjoyed reading picture books with my teenage son when he was younger. The idea of creating something that other parents can share with their children is truly special to me. 

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

I hope kids realize that their backyards (or wherever they play) is “theirs” only for a while and that it needs to be taken care of so that someone else can enjoy it in the future. I also think it’s fun for kids to think about the history of their own backyards. 

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

I’m doing a launch event at Schuler Books Ann Arbor on September 27 and would love to see any local kidlit friends there. I also plan to do school visits. I’m lucky because Tilbury House is supporting me in the marketing of this book. 

What's next for you?

I have some other stories out with editors, so fingers crossed I have more good news to share soon! 

More about the book . . . 

Hit rewind on the view out your backdoor as this story zips back in time, showing readers how people, lifestyles, and land have changed over time. My Backyard Used to Be makes history feel current and accessible to young readers—and encourages them to discover what their own backyard used to be. 

Published by: Tilbury House Publishers 

More about the author . . . 

Lynn Baldwin is a picture book author who lives in Ann Arbor with her husband and teenage son. She writes in a purple office with a “Create with Joy” sign on her deck surrounded by trees. She loves being outdoors – whether exploring the world or in her own backyard. She is a long-time SCBWI Michigan member and the Critique Group Coordinator for SCBWI Michigan. 

@lynnbaldwinwrites on BlueSky and Instagram

 


 

Friday, September 19, 2025

Celebrating National Hispanic Heritage Month with Jacqueline Alcántara!

By Isabel Estrada OHagin

Its time to celebrate National Hispanic Heritage Month, Sept. 15-Oct.15! In recent years, I have focused on the book titles of some of my favorite authors such as Donna Barba Higuera, Yuri Morales, and Elizabeth Acevedo. This year, I spoke with author-illustrator, Jacqueline Alcántara, whose work, which often features diverse characters, has already earned her plenty of kudos. 

We’d love to learn more about you and your background.

Im from Chicago but spend a lot of time in Southwest Michigan, and I lived in Detroit for a year (2021). I was part of the SCBWI Michigan for a brief time! [I remember sending Jacqueline our Welcome to SCBWI-MI letter back then]. I studied art education at DePaul but only taught for a year before I was laid off and then started to pursue illustration while simultaneously doing a lot of random jobs - framing, art gallery, hospitality, TV (Chicago Fire, of course). I took the dive into focusing full time on illustration around 2016. I also teach illustration at Columbia College Chicago. 


Im curious. . . when did you know you wanted to be an illustrator? Was there a turning point where you “didnt look back?”

After I was laid off from teaching, I discovered “illustration” from a website a friend shared with me. I decided then that I wanted to give myself the time and space to find out who I was as an artist. I took a summer intensive at Parsons in New York and then took Continuing Educations classes at SAIC when I returned that fall. I took a handful of classes but really think my education in publishing and illustration came from SCBWI conferences and critique groups and a WNDB mentorship I landed in 2016. That was the year I “didn’t look back.”

 

Several of your Instagram posts are about upcoming publications and receiving recognition for past publications. For example, Solimar: The Sword of the Monarchs by Pam Muñoz Ryan sat on my shelf. Solimars stunning portrait on the front cover was one of the reasons I picked it up from the bookshelf. Only recently, did I learn you illustrated the book cover! What are some of your past and future projects our readers will want to know about?

My forthcoming book, titled Just Shine, released 9/9/25 was written by Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor. Also published this year was my author/illustrator debut titled Tíos and Primos (published simultaneously in Spanish as Tíos Y Primos). I have illustrated 9 books in total, my 10th book is the one I'm currently finishing up titled Wifredo's Jungle, a biography of Cuban artist Wifredo Lam written by Margarita Engle. My past titles that I've illustrated include The Field and its companion Climb On!, both written by Baptiste Paul; Freedom Soup, written by New York Times bestselling author Tami Charles; Jump at the Sun, written by Newbery honoree (and Detroit native!) Alicia D. Williams; Your Mama, written by NoNieqa Ramos, which was a finalist for the Kirkus Prize; Jam, Too written by Janay Brown Wood; and Ordinary Days, a biography of Prince written by Angela Joy. 

 

Quite an impressive list! Congratulations on your many honors. You’ve worked with several well-known authors. Did you get to meet any of them in person or virtually? Also, I’m wondering if your agent was instrumental in making these connections or did editors or authors request your work directly?

Yes! To answer your first question: I have met Justice Sotomayor as I was invited to her office at the Supreme Court to look through her family photo albums while doing research for Just Shine. It was incredible— I never thought a career as an illustrator would bring me to collaborating with someone so impressive and beloved. I have met most of the authors I have worked with— I love to do events with them during book launch and still have great friendships with a number of them today.

But yes, my agent, Adriana Dominguez, was very instrumental in all of these book deals. While perhaps it was the editor who shared my work with the authors directly, it was my agent who is always out there advocating for us, sharing our work and fostering relationships with editors to keep us top of mind when the perfect manuscript falls onto their desk.

Amazing! Meeting Justice Sotomayor in her office at the Supreme Court! And how fortunate to collaborate with Super-Agent Adriana Dominguez who believes in you and your work.

Describe your typical workday in the studio.

Well, I now have an 8-month-old baby so my workdays are very different than they used to be! Long gone are the mornings where I sit with coffee, jot down my daily goals, do a little sketch, write down some thoughts, and take my dogs for a relaxed stroll before having a long day in my home studio playing around with materials, ideas and then maybe heading out for some research at a museum, gallery, bookstore, or bar.🙂 

My workday now consists of jotting down ideas in my phone whenever a spare moment allows and squeezing an 8-hour workday into maybe 3 or 4 hours! But wow I feel like I'm getting more efficient with my time and perhaps actually appreciating how my art style is changing with limited time. I've long wanted to have more of an intuitive approach to making my final art and with less time to mull over details, I think I'm naturally achieving that! Ha! 

Im glad to hear youre making it work and that your stylistic approach reflects these changes in your lives.

Who are some of the major influencers on your work, and who are some of your favorite illustrators?

Illustrators I love: Patricia Polacco— her people are illustrated with such personality and movement. I've loved her books since I was a kid. Chris Rashcka - same as above. I've long been obsessed with his style, people, and characters. Not to mention his style of writing is what I hope to achieve— he has a contagious rhythm in everything he creates. Olivier Tallec— his artwork made me fall in love with using gouache. Picasso/Matisse—I know what a cliché to list them as favorite artists but I did a study abroad in Barcelona and spent a lot of time looking at Picasso sketchbooks and just love his way of drawing. I think too a lot about his famous quote: " It took me four years to paint like Raphael but a lifetime to draw like a child.” So many other artists and illustrators I'd like to keep mentioning. For each book I do, I love the research the most, and in the process Im always discovering other artists that become inspirational for that and future projects. 

In addition to SCBWI, youre a member of Las Musas, a collective of Latinx women and otherwise marginalized people whose gender identity aligns with femininity, writing and/or illustrating in traditional children's literature. What does being a member mean to you?

I'm thrilled to be a part of Las Musas. While as an illustrator I have a nice number of books under my belt, I'm a debut author this year and so I finally applied to be a part of the group. It's wonderful to know you have a network of fellow creators to ask questions, get advice, read each others books to get ratings/reviews, etc. I'm looking forward to meeting many Musas at the upcoming Latinx Storytellers conference in NYC.

[Note: The Latinx Storytellers conference met Sept. 12-13 at the NYC Scholastics Headquarters.]

The Las Musas collective spotlights the new contributions of Las Musas in the canon of children's literature and celebrates the diversity of voice, experience, and power in our communities. I, too, am a member of Las Musas and identify as Mexican-American. Would you care to share your ethnic identity?

Im Latinx (Honduran/ American) I'm 100% born and raised in the USA. Im first generation on my fathers side - he is from Honduras where all of my Tíos and Primos still live. My mother is from Chicago (Irish/German). 

Under the current administration, theres an ongoing effort to dismiss or downplay peoples heritage, ethnicity, and related celebrations of culture and cultural traditions, including art and literature (re: book bans). Some would call it an erasure. National Hispanic Heritage Month— should we keep it going? 

Of course! While I hope that one day the Latinx representation in books (meaning Latinx creators and Latinx main characters) is greater, it still feels important to highlight the month dedicated to highlighting these stories. Of course, I wish these stories werent only pulled out during this month, but I think the time with attention to them is still valuable and helps to put new titles on everyone's radar. 

I'm still overjoyed when I see someone who looks like me on the cover of a book— I'm more likely to pick it up, to buy it, and read it. I'm still going to be able to connect with characters of any background when reading— that's the beauty of books of course—but seeing someone who looks like me illustrated still makes my stomach jump and gives me a shock of excitement.

[Me, too, Jacqueline!]

The stories with specific cultural or language elements are of course important and we're still making up for lost time in having books and stories that represent the huge Latine population. I think we ( myself included!!) need to keep assessing our home libraries, school/local libraries, museums, curriculums, etc., to make sure we are seeing ourselves illustrated in the pages of books and painted on the walls of our world.

What do you see on the horizon? Any new directions for kidlit in relation to diversity on the page? Any predictions?

In regard to diversity, I think we are finally moving away from thinking about all Latino people as a monolith, and so we are finally seeing stories with more nuance in cultural representation. 

For example, in my book Tíos and Primos, I wanted to SHOW Honduras in the illustrations but I didn't think it was necessary to be mentioned in the story itself. As the illustrator I got very specific— down to the mountains of coffee, the Ceiba trees, the skinny dogs, and the architecture, etc. But I was also wanting to share an experience that is very universal— a kid trying to bond with their family who lives far away and they are meeting for the first time. 

As an illustrator, I love working on books where the story is just a great story, but I'm able to illustrate it with diverse characters.  It's equally important to be creating books where black and brown kids are the main characters but their skin tone or heritage isn't the main theme of the book. I believe this helps to show parents just as much as it shows children— that all are equally as innocent, adventurous, silly, curious, kind, mischievous, creative, and full of potential.

I hope to receive more books that give me this opportunity as an illustrator. 

Your perspectives differ from those who are leading book-banning efforts across the country. Any thoughts?

Books that are being Banned” and contested are disproportionately books by or featuring diverse characters— BIPOC and LGBTQ. So, we have to keep showing our support for them by supporting libraries and librarians. Checking out their books, sharing them on social media, gifting them, and buying them if possible. 

Books are some of the safest places we can think about, reflect, and digest life experiences before we may be faced with them head on. We need to protect children's freedom to read. 

While shying away from creating and advocating for diverse books isn't the right thing to do in the long term, perhaps a lesson for us all in the short term would be to start identifying ourselves simply as authors and illustrators, versus “Latinx/e/a Author/Illustrator.” Identifying ourselves alongside our heritage— in relation to our creative output—  can perhaps leave us out of conversations, bookshelves, lessons, story times, etc. where our work belongs. 

 

 I’m in agreement! Thank you, Jacqueline, for sharing your insights with us. I encourage our members to click on your portfolio and check out your Instagram posts that feature your fabulous illustrations.

May our celebration of National Hispanic Heritage Month extend through the rest of the year! 

Isabel Estrada O'Hagin 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. LA MARIACHI is her debut storybook.

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Reminders about Upcoming SCBWI-MI Events

Friday, September 12, 2025

Writer Spotlight: Janet Ruth Heller

 

Bullies, Surprise, FTA, U of Chicago, midrashim, and Isle Royale: Poet and author Janet Ruth Heller

Charlie Barshaw coordinates our regular Writer Spotlight feature and interviews writers of SCBWI-MI. In this piece, meet poet , educator and author Janet Ruth Heller.

What has changed since we completed your interview a month ago?

I have stage 4 cancer. I do not have a lot of energy to send out my unpublished manuscripts of children's books and other writing. I have never been able to find an agent to represent me.  I am looking for someone to assist me in sending out my work. I can pay for this assistance.  My unpublished work for children is ten picture books and a couple middle-grade stories.
 
If you are interested in this opportunity or know someone who can help me out, please contact me at janetheller@charter.net or janetruthheller@gmail.com with your credentials, and we can discuss the matter fully.
 
Thank you for any help that you can give me.
 
I would like to express my gratitude to SCBWI-MI for its support of writers like me over the decades!

How the Moon Regained Her Shape, your breakout debut picture book, was inspired by the bullying you endured as a child. Has the success of the book helped to ease the sting of your past injustice? Have you been able to make peace with some of your former bullies?


Writing How the Moon Regained Her Shape (Arbordale, 2006; 7th edition 2022), doing subsequent creative writing workshops for children and adults, and speaking about my book for schools, libraries, bookstores, and conferences have been very healing experiences. 

Teachers tell me that their students are more likely to report bullying after I have read How the Moon Regained Her Shape for their classes and discussed the book with the students.

I have also done research about bullying and published an article about some books for children that help young people understand and cope with such abuse: “Using Novels for Children to Combat Bullying,” International Journal of English and Education, vol. 2, no. 2 (April 2013): pp. 514-23. 

I discovered that many individuals get bullied as children and as adults for a wide variety of attributes. My bullies targeted me because I was a new skinny student in my elementary school, but other kids get bullied for being chubby, being tall or short, wearing glasses, having a different religion, speaking a different language, coming from a poor family, being a person of color, being GLBTQ, having a disability, etc. 

I feel strongly that we need a multicultural society that treats all people with respect and values our differences, rather than punishing people for being unique.

You’ve published as a Jewish writer; you've tackled Jewish themes in your middle-grade chapter book The Passover Surprise; you proudly acknowledge your faith. How much is your body of work influenced by Jewish culture?

I have been active in synagogues and other Jewish organizations since I was five years old. I have served on synagogue boards, been a teacher and the principal of Jewish schools, served as president of Sisterhood, organized speaker series, etc.

Also, I have promoted equality for women in Judaism. For example, I have urged synagogues to promote more women to leadership positions. Traditional prayer books refer to men and boys but do not refer to girls and women. I have advocated for prayer books that use gender-fair language that includes all individuals. 

I organized a group of women at the Congregation of Moses in Kalamazoo who examined different options and then had synagogue members vote. The result was that the synagogue chose a new prayer book entitled Siddur Lev Shalem that is egalitarian.

Like most Jews, I have experienced discrimination, and this makes me sympathize with anyone who gets treated unfairly, including women whose voices go unheard, starving children, people of color, and immigrants. I support many organizations that strive to make our world more just and compassionate.

What was life like for young Janet, growing up in Milwaukee? What influences do you credit for your love of language?

My mother grew up in Milwaukee, but she was an English major at the University of Michigan. She shared her love of literature with me and read me wonderful books, including Rudyard Kipling’s Just So Stories, A. A. Milne’s Winnie the Pooh books, Robert Frost’s poetry, etc.

I always loved to read, and my early ambition was to read every book in my elementary school’s library. I never reached that high goal, but I did read many books. 

In college, I double-majored in English and Spanish, and I also studied Hebrew literature. I took linguistics courses, which taught me how different languages are structured and organized into families. All of this knowledge helps me to write both poetry and prose.

Your father played an important role in your life, but your middle-grade chapter book The Passover Surprise was based partly on an incident when he favored your brother over you based on your gender. Were you able, over the intervening years, to convey your feelings over his latent sexism? Maybe convince him to adopt a more enlightened worldview?

My father taught me to love the natural world, and when I took walks with him, he explained the names of different birds, animals, and plants. Many of my poems and prose works refer to the natural world, especially my poetry book Nature’s Olympics (Wipf and Stock, 2021).

However, my father had a very difficult relationship with his mother, and that shaped his biased view of women and girls. I do not think that he ever realized how much his sexism hurt me when I was a child and a young adult. 

When I was a child, I did not confront him about his favoritism for my brother. I did talk to Dad about this discrimination when I was in my twenties, but he never apologized for his treatment of me.

I hope that my chapter book The Passover Surprise (Fictive Press, 2015, 2016) can help other families to avoid favoritism and to treat children of all genders with love and respect.

You earned a Ph.D. in English Language and Literature from the University of Chicago. Did you always plan to teach?

school visit

When I was very young, I wanted to become a veterinarian because I loved animals. However, as I got older, I realized that a veterinarian needs to operate on dogs and cats and horses, not just play with them. I dislike cutting into living creatures, so I decided to pursue a different career.

By the time I was twelve, I wanted to become a teacher. Because I was the oldest of five children, I frequently served as a teacher for my younger brothers and sisters. 

I spent a lot of time assisting younger siblings with homework, explaining difficult concepts to them, and entertaining them. I enjoyed this interaction, and I think that being a big sister prepared me well to be a teacher.

When I was in high school, I joined Future Teachers of America (FTA), a club for students who planned to enter the field of education. During my senior year, I was the president of the FTA. 


I assisted Barbara Gensler, my favorite English teacher at my high school, and learned a lot from her. She emphasized that a teacher needs to have good relationships with students in order to encourage them to improve their work.

At first, I wanted to teach at a high school, but then I decided that I wanted to teach at the college level. This required my getting a doctorate. I chose to attend the University of Chicago to obtain a doctorate in English language and literature. Courses there were very challenging, and I learned a lot.

While I was studying at the University of Chicago, I tutored and coordinated the Writing Tutor Program, which employed doctoral students like me to help undergraduates improve their writing. 

I enjoyed working directly with students, and they told me about confusing assignments from professors. This helped me to shape my own assignments later when I taught college courses so that students could understand them better.

Your collection of poetry Exodus, is based on biblical characters and stories, often updated for modern times. What enduring truths do you find still resonate thousands of years later?



I identify strongly with many of the universal situations and people in the Jewish Scriptures. For example, Genesis includes stories about favoritism, family conflict, love, etc. 

Other sections of the Bible present tales about close friendships (David and Jonathan), prophets confronting powerful kings and queens, and an exodus from oppression to freedom. Such themes mean a lot to me and still have resonance in 2025.

Jews have written updated versions of Bible stories for centuries, and we call such pieces midrashim. Christians also write similar work and call this process exegesis. So my poems are part of a long tradition.

My poetry book Exodus (WordTech Editions, 2014) often presents a feminist viewpoint, and many of my poems focus on the women in the Bible and their struggle to achieve their goals in a male-centered society.

You’ve often credited your writing group with helping you sharpen and reshape your manuscripts.  Who helps to critique your work?

I have created writers’ groups since I was in graduate school at the University of Wisconsin and the University of Chicago in the 1970s. My current group consists of four women who are published authors. Three of us have doctorates in different fields, and all of us try to give constructive criticism to one another. 

We meet once a month via Zoom or in-person. Before each session, we e-mail one another manuscripts that we think need more work and get suggestions for revision from the other writers. I have found the feedback from my colleagues invaluable. Often, I substantially rework my poetry and prose, improve the pieces, and get them published.

You are writing a memoir. Prose? Poetry? Or a combination?

Janet reading
My memoir is mostly prose, but it will have some poems included. The chapters are self-contained, and I have already published three chapters of my memoir. 

My essay “Returning to Elkhart Lake, Wisconsin” appeared in Midwestern Miscellany, volume 35 (Spring/Fall 2007) on pages 55-59. It concerns my family’s long association with this beautiful lake. 

Another memoir chapter, “A Visit to Isle Royale,” got aired on Morning Edition and All Things Considered on Michigan Public Radio, WUOM, Ann Arbor, on May 3, 1999. The Toho Journal online published this chapter in its winter 2020 issue (January 9, 2021). This essay concerns a trip that my husband and I took to Isle Royale. We spent a lot of time canoeing and got to see a moose, loons, mergansers, white-throated sparrows, etc. We enjoyed our time away from city life. 

Tikkun published my chapter “Sexual Harassment in the Synagogue: A Case Study and Recommendations” on September 7, 2023 online at https://www.tikkun.org/sexual-harassment-in-the-synagogue/ This essay concerns my efforts to convince my former synagogue to restrain a male member who sexually harassed me for fourteen years and my recommendations to houses of worship for combating such abuse. 

Currently, I am a member of Temple B’nai Israel in Kalamazoo, a synagogue that will not tolerate sexual harassment, and I helped develop its policy for ethical conduct of all members. Of course, sexual harassment is one form of bullying.

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