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 os 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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