Friday, January 2, 2026

Writer Spotlight: Suzanne Jacobs Lipshaw

 5 Ws, Jeckyl Island, swatches, CubeSats, and New Year's resolution: author Suzanne Jacobs Lipshaw

Charlie Barshaw coordinates our regular Writer Spotlight feature and interviews writers of SCBWI. In this piece, meet author and SCBWI-MI Events Coordinator Suzanne Jacobs Lipshaw.




Was it always your plan to teach? When did you find you had a knack of writing for students?

I didn’t decide to go into teaching until my sophomore year of college. Growing up I always thought I’d be a writer. In elementary school, I was that kid who when assigned a two-page paper, wrote ten. I received my first rejection letter from Western Publishing Company (they published the Little Golden Books) for my manuscript Boogie the Snail when I was twelve. 


In high school, I was co-editor of the school newspaper and co-wrote articles for the “High School Happenings” page of the Royal Oak Tribune. As a freshman in college, I majored in journalism, but, possibly ignorantly, decided I need to be pushy to be a journalist and that wasn’t part of my personality and rethought my major. 

I focused on things I found the most rewarding and being with kids as a day camp counselor kept topping the list. I took my first education class that year and never looked back. Now as a nonfiction Kid Lit author, I have combined both passions!

Do you remember your first teaching assignment? Ultimately, you crushed this teaching thing, but what were the early classroom days like?

I do! My sophomore year at MSU, I was selected for The Elementary Intern Program, which provided a lot more hands-on classroom experience than the traditional track had. 

My first internship was with a fourth-grade teacher at an elementary school in Okemos. I spent one day a week there and mostly helped students who had questions while working independently. 

One day, my mentor teacher was introducing a writing lesson and out of the blue called me up to teach. I was the type of person who liked to be prepared, and this was way out of my comfort zone. She told the students I used to major in journalism, so I was the perfect person to teach them how to write a newspaper article. 

There I was up in front of twenty-some kids all waiting for wisdom from me. I shot an apprehensive look to my mentor teacher who suggested I start with the basics of good journalism. That was all the info I needed. 

I did a lesson on using the five ‘W’ questions and the students were off and running. She was one smart lady. She knew I was nervous to get up in front of the classroom, so she threw me in using something I was familiar with and good at.

What was it about Special Education, kids with reading and other challenges, that drew you into the field?

I know it’s cliché but watching the lightbulb turn on for students who struggle shines a light across the entire room and the warmth filled my heart.

What were some of your most rewarding moments in your long career in the classroom?

When you work with kids there are so many rewarding moments. Overall, the aspect of my teaching I am most proud of and brought some unpredictable rewarding moments was the unique teaching program I developed. 

My mission as an elementary resource room teacher was to motivate, engage and empower my students to realize that even though they struggle in some areas, they are destined to do great things. Beginning in the 2013-14 school year, I started teaching my developing readers through a program I created called “Themed Project Based Learning Approach” (TPBLA).


The projects all centered on a high interest yearlong theme.
The theme for the 2014-15 school year was Oceanography. That year my students boarded an imaginary yellow submarine from Northville, Michigan and embarked on a yearlong journey to explore the undersea world!


Their adventure began on Jekyll Island, a small island off the Georgia coast with a virtual field trip to the Georgia Sea Turtle Center. Our tour guide, Kira, taught us basic facts about sea turtles and how those found sick or injured are cared for in the center’s hospital. One of the first turtle patients we met was Mahi, a juvenile green sea turtle who was missing her right front flipper.

She also taught us about the dangers sea turtles face because of human disregard. This was when Kira helped me carry out a secret mission—to inspire my students to advocate for and help these endangered creatures. 

Kira explained that Mahi’s care was expensive. To help with the costs, people could symbolically adopt Mahi for fifty dollars. Without hesitation one of my fourth graders jumped out of his chair, pumped his fist into the air and shouted “Yes! We can do that!” 

Students decided to inform our school community about the threats to sea turtles. To accomplish this, they chose to put on a taped “virtual assembly” informing our school community about the threats. 

While researching, students discovered that cold weather stranded many Kemp Ridley sea turtles along New England beaches. This news further motivated my students to make a difference. These leaders decided to sell reusable collapsible water bottles for donations of $5.00 or more to help with the plastic problem that is plaguing our oceans. 

They designed a logo with “Protect Sea Turtles” imprinted on the water bottles and introduced the fundraiser at the end of their virtual assembly.

The assembly was successfully received, and donations came pouring in. My readers were thrilled to donate $1,711.38 to the center! Watching my students become leaders in our school and contributing to a cause that became dear to us all was heartwarming.

In your bio, there’s a line about comparing paint swatches at the local Sherwin Williams. Do you like to paint the walls in your home often? Or do you have another use for different hues of paint?

Ha! In light of this question, it’s obviously not a great line to imply my love of interior design. Looks like I’m going to be tweaking my bio. . .

Between teaching gigs, I stayed home to raise my sons Josh and Jeremy. When Jeremy, the youngest, was going into kindergarten I entered a bit of a mourning period. What was I going to do when both boys were in school? I knew I would volunteer in their classrooms, but it wasn’t going to be enough to keep me busy when Jeremy entered first grade. I started thinking about what I could do part time.

One of my friends suggested I go back to school for interior design since I was always helping my friends decorate their homes and I took her sage advice. Two years later, I had an associate’s degree in interior design and had secured a position as a part time designer.

Fast forward to Jeremy in middle school when I felt something missing in my life. After pondering, I realized it was working with kids as the middle school didn’t need parent volunteers in the classroom. 

So, I quit my interior design job and started substitute teaching. My second job was covering for a resource room teacher. It was a two-week assignment that lasted six months. I was back in my element, and it reaffirmed my true passion was teaching. The following year I got a job with Northville Public Schools and the second half of my teaching career began. 

I still dabble in interior design for my friends and enjoy seeing our mutual vision for a room in their home come to life. Also, I’m great at picking paint colors if I do say so myself.




Your newest title RUGGED RAX: The Little Satellite that Could, will be out in the world before this interview publishes. What can you tell us about your latest picture book?

Rugged RAX launched (pun intended) on December 10, 2025. Publishing, like many NASA launch dates get scrubbed. That’s what happened to RAX—twice. But RAX has now landed on bookstore shelves. Here’s the blurb.

 

Imagine you are part of an engineering team tasked with designing and building a mini but mighty satellite—a CubeSat named RAX. Your CubeSat’s mission? Gather space weather data to help scientists prevent massive blackouts caused by solar storms. But this team failed during its first attempt; will it succeed this time? RUGGED RAX is the true story of CubeSat RAX and is packed with a payload of space science and engineering for STEM enthusiasts ages 5-9.

 

What was the impetus that launched you into the world of satellites?

My son, Josh, while a junior at the University of Michigan, introduced me to CubeSats, when he joined the Michigan Exploration Laboratory (MXL) in 2013. CubeSats are miniature satellites built from 10xm x 10cm x 10cm cubic units and are extendable to larger sizes. They are much cheaper to build and deploy than larger satellites and provide an immense amount of information about space in a tiny package.

During Josh’s two years at MXL his team designed, built and tested three CubeSats. I was enthralled with every step of the process. Once I began my writing journey, I contacted MXL’s founder and director, Dr. James Cutler, and through discussion I decided to write a book about MXL’s first CubeSat—Radio Aurora Explorer (RAX).

Additionally, I am revising my first middle-grade fiction novel inspired by an experience my younger son Jeremy had rock climbing and my fascination with the moon. Is this the middle grade novel you ended up writing and getting published?

The launch of Decoding the Moon—my first venture into fiction and my first venture into middle-grade—is on February 25, 2026! This one is literally and figuratively a dream come true! (A story for another blog.)

Here’s the blurb: Avid rock climber Levi Manes thinks his newfound fear of heights is enough to shake up his twelve-year-old life. What he didn’t realize is, three months later, the tragic death of his mother would fracture his entire world. To make matters worse, Levi’s dad, unable to face his grief, moves their family from their home in the Detroit suburbs to a small town in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula. Can the combination of some secret codes, rock climbing, and the Supermoon pull Levi’s family together and bring them the closure they each desperately need?

Currently, I have four informational fiction and nonfiction picture book manuscripts out for query (these are now published – several of my nonfiction manuscripts, one which was from my weather unit, never found a publishing home – I currently do not have any manuscripts out for query), three of which were inspired by one of my yearlong science themes. Did you enter each year with a plan to use your science themes to create books, or did the book material present itself as the project gained steam?

My yearlong themes were born from a combination of my passion for the topic and their high interest level for kids. Additionally, it was created at a time when the Common Core was first conceived and the requirement for teaching nonfiction had increased. 

I chose four themes since I had some of my students for four years: space, oceanography, national parks, and weather. My goal was to inspire my students and engage them in science material I was passionate about and that would motivate them to read and learn more about the topic. Once I took my first nonfiction picture book course, I realized using ideas from my units was a natural progression.

What’s the common thread in these non-fiction works?

Continuing my mission to inspire, educate and motivate students and show them they can make a difference in our world.

Is it true that your writing career began with a New Year’s resolution?

Me in fourth grade

Yes! Eight years ago, I decided if I didn’t make a concerted effort to carve out time to write I was never going to accomplish my dream of becoming a children’s book author. 

So New Year’s Eve 2016, I made a resolution to make writing a priority and it was the first resolution I’ve ever kept! I picked up a manuscript I started years back—a fiction middle-grade version of what eventually became my first published picture book I Campaigned for Ice Cream—and continued with it. 

I also resolved to take classes to further my craft. One of the first courses I enrolled in was Kristen Fulton’s Nonfiction Archeology. The idea of writing nonfiction strongly resonated with me because I taught developing readers by immersing them in a different science theme each year and I saw nonfiction as a natural progression from my method of teaching to my writing. The course inspired me to try the ice cream truck story in a nonfiction picture book format, and it worked. And from there I was hooked!

What’s next for you?

I am currently revising the very crappy draft of my second middle grade novel and researching another nonfiction picture book. Stay tuned…

Please share any social media:

Website: http://www.suzannejacobslipshaw.com/

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/suzannejacobslipshaw/

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/SuzanneJacobsLipshawAuthorEducator/

BlueSky: https://bsky.app/profile/suzannelipshaw.bsky.social

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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