Showing posts with label Carrie A. Pearson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Carrie A. Pearson. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 23, 2025

SCBWI-MI Spring Conference Presenter Carrie Pearson

 

Apgar, Yooper winter, so many socials, and U of M preschool: Carrie A. Pearson

Charlie Barshaw coordinates our regular Writer Spotlight feature and interviews writers of SCBWI-MI. In this piece, meet author and  former RA Carrie Pearson. Carrie is also part of the cast of distinguished faculty at the SCBWI-MI spring conference.  To read Carrie's 2023 interview, click HERE.

Donckers Princess Launch 4/29/23

What were some of the formative books you read growing up that shaped your curious and insightful young mind?

Age 10 w/service badge
Thankfully, reading came easily and early to me. I devoured typical fiction such as "Misty of Chincoteague" and the "Little House on the Prairie" series, along with less conventional choices like "The Andromeda Strain," anything by Edgar Allan Poe, and every available Reader's Digest Condensed Book (which I had to sneak because they were "for adults”). But it was good old Encyclopedia Britannica that thrilled me. The truth boggled my mind then, and it still does.

You wrote about Doctor Apgar. Before the APGAR Score, it was common practice for maternity room doctors to put aside newborns who couldn’t breathe or make the transition to life outside the womb. Horrifying. What specifically did Doctor Apgar discover?

Apgar in action
Dr. Apgar’s primary goal was to ensure that newborns received medical attention. Up to the 1930s and into the ’40s, maternal mortality rates during childbirth were high. Mothers’ care was prioritized over that of newborns who were struggling. 

Dr. Apgar was the right person at the right time to change this perspective; she had a solid understanding of airway management due to her training and experience as an anesthesiologist. 

She embodied resilience in the face of significant gender discrimination. She was intellectually brilliant and skilled in practical applications. The test she developed shifted care towards both babies and mothers. It transformed a subjective inquiry (“How is the baby doing?”) into a numerical value, allowing for comparison. 

It also engaged a natural competitive spirit, as physicians were eager to avoid poor APGAR scores associated with their deliveries! It has been said that every baby born is seen through the eyes of Dr. Apgar.

Carrie in Marquette

Living as you do in the Upper Peninsula; you’ve experienced your share of weather. Can you share some weather-related stories when traveling for school visits? Or any other harrowing tale of Yooper winter survival?

I have never been asked this before, Charlie! I recall a pre-dawn winter car trip to a bookstore in Gaylord, 3.5 hours south of Marquette, during which I had to continuously scrape ice from the inside of the windshield throughout the Upper Peninsula because my defroster couldn’t keep up with the sub-zero temperatures outside. "Harrowing" is a good word to describe the experience, but “dumb lucky” fits too.

You’ve got a new book coming out this fall. Please share some details.

Watch Them Grow: The Fascinating Science of Animal Beginnings is a surprise for many reasons. First, we submitted the manuscript about animal gestation as a picture book (32 pages/about 600 words including back matter). However, Lerner/Millbrook wanted it as a middle-grade novel. Gulp. I’d never written a MG nonfiction. 

zipline
But working with associate publisher Carol Hinz at Lerner/Millbrook was on my author bucket list. So, we accepted the offer, and I dug back into the research, tapped into my natural science background, and expanded the text. 

A big assist came from the publisher, who contracted a science educator to review a draft for alignment to middle-grade science benchmarks. Then I could edit, knowing I was in the right ballpark. 

The second surprise is that I thought the book would launch in 2026, but now it is expected to be released in September of this year. This is possible because it primarily consists of photographs, rather than illustrations, with visuals created by a talented graphic artist. I’m excited to share more very soon.

Please talk about Children’s Book Connections.

I started my consulting company, Children’s Book Connections, about five years ago to help people prepare for and find their agent partners. Having been in the trenches doing this for myself three times and watching so many friends go through it, I knew it was a pain point. 

Backcountry 2023

I learned that I love helping people in this space and will prioritize that over slogging through my deadlines, edits, and even story generation.  So, sadly, in the interest of my career, I’ve had to pare back the time I spend on Children’s Book Connections. 

But I look forward to spilling the tea about many agent-related topics at the SCBWI-MI Spring Conference on May 17th!   

You’ve used Deb Gonzales for a study guide for at least one of your books. What’s the process for creating a study guide?

In my experience working with Deb Gonzales, I reached out to her six months prior to the launch date to secure a spot on her schedule. She’s been able to squeeze in the guide, but I’m not sure if that is possible now that her business, PinLit has taken off! 

When I receive an ARC (advanced reader copy) as a pdf from the publisher, I share it with her along with my bio. After she works her magic, she provides me with a draft to review. After that round, I share it with the publishing team for their input. Usually, they have one or two minor comments. Deb then gives me the final guide as a pdf. 

I use the final guide for various purposes, including linking to my website as a free download, as a follow-up to school and library visits, as a promotional tool, and as a resource for social media posts. It’s well worth the investment.

school visit
You have social media platforms on FaceBook, Pinterest, Instagram and Bluesky? Any others? How do you keep them current? Are some social media platforms better for achieving your goals?

Over the years, I’ve felt that social media platforms for my book business were a good thing, and for the most part, I’ve enjoyed being there. They offered connections I didn’t feel I could make otherwise or at my stage in my career. 

I’ve selected specific platforms for their ease of use and because I liked their format (e.g., early Twitter for its limited character posting and connections to the publishing and education worlds, and early Instagram for its visual emphasis). 

My followers are aware that I’ve recently undergone a reckoning regarding my presence and support of Meta platforms, but I've decided to stay for now. Non-Meta Bluesky feels new, safe, and quite like early Twitter. I hope it stays that way. 

Pinterest is so different in all the best ways because it's not a snapshot in time, like social media; it’s a longer-term investment with lasting dividends. I retained PinLit, and over six months, they’ve created a home base for my authored books and resources, which will continue to grow. Take a peek!

Houghton Library 1/25

You graduated from U of M, and then worked in their preschool. As a young teacher, what did your students teach you?

Such a great question. Reflecting the multicultural student body at the University of Michigan, one of my classes, which included eight 4- and 5-year-olds, had six children who primarily spoke languages other than English. I learned that the language of play transcends any barriers. 

I also discovered that books read aloud in any language serve as a magnet. They can calm, excite, build community, and engage. I’ve never forgotten the power of books from that experience and continually try to harness it in the books I write.

You  won a mentorship with Newbery Award winner Lynne Rae Perkins. What was that experience like?

This mentorship was a pivotal moment. I had concluded that my dream of publishing would likely remain just that because, after four years of learning, writing, and submitting, I hadn’t placed a manuscript. 

However, I had already signed up for an SCBWI-MI conference and submitted a manuscript for the mentorship during two moments of FOMO. No one was more surprised than I when my name was announced as the recipient of the mentorship. 

Receiving this mentorship meant that someone thought my manuscript had promise, and that someone was a Newbery Award winner! Working with Lynne Rae Perkins certainly elevated my craft and, perhaps most importantly, gave me the confidence to keep going. I am deeply grateful to SCBWI-MI and to my mentor.

Carrie’s follow-up question: Did you ever sell the manuscript you used for the mentorship submission? Carrie’s answer: Not yet!

What’s next for Carrie?

We have a nonfiction picture book on submission, so we're keeping our fingers crossed on that. My next project is out there somewhere, but so far it is just ahead of me! I’m noodling a longer-form fiction idea, which would be way outside my comfort zone. Part of me says that’s precisely the reason to do it. 

I’m building an art and design aspect into my life because I love it, and now that I’m squarely in the sixth decade of my life, why not?

Carrie and redwood

 

Please share any social media platforms:

Bluesky @cpearson.author
Instagram @carrieapearson.author
Pinterest (not really social but awesome) @carrieapearson
Facebook @carrieapearson

 

 

 

 



Monday, August 7, 2023

Book Birthday Blog with Carrie A. Pearson

 

Welcome to SCBWI-MI's Book Birthday Blog!

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

 

Congratulations to Carrie A. Pearson on the release of Virginia Wouldn't Slow Down: The Unstoppable Dr. Apgar and Her Life-Saving Invention

 

 

How did you get the idea for your book?

I first learned about the APGAR Score eons ago in college in my field of study (early childhood education with minors in social and natural science). I was interested in pursuing neonatal (newborn) psychology for a time, and APGAR Scores were referenced. When our three daughters were born, the APGAR Score took on a whole new relevance, but this was before I started writing children’s books and my antennae weren’t up yet. Then, in 2015 with my author mindset, I read that the APGAR Score was invented by a woman – Dr. Virginia Apgar – and that she was a powerhouse of energy, intellect, and moxie. I was hooked.
 
I have no idea how the book hook is set for me, but I know it when it happens. If I read or hear something interesting and experience that flying-over-the-top-of-a-roller-coaster-hill-whoosh feeling, I’m usually hooked enough to start researching. No “whoosh” means I don’t have enough interest to sustain the twists and turns of publication.
 

This is your second book to publish this year, congratulations! How do you stay organized with 2 book launches and what are the challenges?

Thank you! However, that wasn't the plan. 😊 The pandemic slowed production considerably, and over time, the two titles bumped ever closer together (April and August).

The biggest challenge is being okay with putting the books and me in the spotlight for what seems like a very long time from pre-release through post-release. But then I remember I’m sharing books that may impact readers. That keeps my momentum going! Regarding strategies, I use a combo platter of old-fashioned paper calendars and technology. Every workday, I crack open my spreadsheet that tracks categories for each book (Reviewers/Connections/Blogs/Interviews, Books to Send Out, Bookstores, Collateral, and Events). I use Google Drive as my digital filing cabinet to store research sources, drafts, and outlines because I now trust the cloud more than my computer. I use Canva (thanks, Deb G.!) and Tailwind for social media graphics and posting. 

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

Dr. Virginia Apgar was a revolutionary woman who was successful in spite of setbacks and bias. She identified problems and worked tirelessly to fix them. She gave a voice to the voiceless which, to me, is a worthy ambition for all of us, even from a young age. 

 


 

What are your marketing plans for the book? 

We’re launching the book at Peter White Public Library in Marquette with a Baby Doll and Pretend Friend Medical Clinic where children will learn why the APGAR Score is important and how to perform it using their toys. I’m super excited to see how that works out. I’m planning bookstore signings in towns that were part of Dr. Apgar’s life, participating in school visits like the Macomb Reads Festival in November, and panel discussions like the one sponsored by School Library Journal's Picture Book Palooza on July 27th. I’ve reached out to the medical institutions and professional groups she aligned with. I just learned that the book is a Junior Library Guild selection so that will help get it in front of librarians and teachers. I’ll support everything I do with social media, book giveaways, and whatever connections I can build. 

 


 

What's next for you? 

Aside from hosting our daughter’s wedding at our house in mid-August? An unannounced book is due to the publisher in early November, and additional manuscripts are in the pipeline. It’s going to be a happily busy few months ahead! 

More about the book . . . 

The Apgar Score is known worldwide as a test given to babies to determine their health moments after birth. Less well-known is the story of the brilliant, innovative woman who developed it. Born at the turn of the twentieth century, Virginia “Ginny” Apgar soared above what girls were expected to do―or not do. She wasn’t quiet, wore all sorts of outfits, played the sports she wanted to―and pursued the career she chose, graduating near the top of her class at Columbia University and becoming only the second board-certified female anesthesiologist in the United States. The simple five-step test she created―scribbled on the back of a piece of paper in answer to a trainee’s question―became the medical standard and continues to impact countless newborn babies’ lives today. Ginny adored science, hated cooking, drove fast, made her own violins, earned a pilot’s license, and traveled the world. Carrie Pearson’s jaunty storytelling and Nancy Carpenter’s playful illustrations capture the energy and independence of a woman who didn’t slow down for anything―and changed newborn care forever.

Publisher: Norton Young Readers/W.W. Norton 

More about the author . . . 

Carrie A. Pearson (BA, early childhood education, University of Michigan) is a full-time word wrangler and literacy advocate. She is a former regional advisor of SCBWI-Michigan (2013-2023), a founding member of the Steering Committee for the SCBWI Impact & Legacy Fund, and co-chair of the 2024 SCBWI Marvelous Midwest multi-region conference (April 12-14). Her nonfiction picture book releases in 2023 are REAL PRINCESSES CHANGE THE WORLD (Roaring Brook/Macmillan) and VIRGINIA WOULDN’T SLOW DOWN: THE UNSTOPPABLE DR. APGAR AND HER LIFE-SAVING INVENTION (Norton Young Readers/W.W. Norton). Carrie would love to connect with you through her website, https://carriepearsonbooks.com/, and Instagram @carrieapearson.author.

Instagram and Threads: @carrieapearson.author

Facebook: carrieapearson

Also on Pinterest: @carrieapearson

 


 

Tuesday, April 11, 2023

Book Birthday Blog with Carrie A. Pearson

 

  

Welcome to SCBWI-MI's Book Birthday Blog!

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

 

Congratulations to Carrie A. Pearson on the release of Real Princesses Change the World

 


How did you get the idea for your book?

The idea for this book was born about 20 years ago when our daughters were 8, 6, and 4 years old. They loved to pretend and dress up. One of their favorite scenarios was "princess," mostly adapted from Disney characters. While I applaud Disney's cinematography and ability to engage their audience, I always cringed when their princess characters' behavior and costuming were un-empowering to women. Plus, all of the early Disney princesses presented as white and very young. As parents, my husband and I relied on books to provide experiences to our children outside our bubbles. I could never find a book about real princesses for young readers. I knew princesses were not the caricature we saw, but I had no evidence.
 
Many years later, I started writing children's books. I surveyed students during school visits and found that children still believed that princesses were waiting to be saved by princes, lived in castles, and wore ball gowns on the daily. With this knowledge, I pitched the concept of a children's book about how real princesses change the world to my agent, and she loved it.  

How long did it take to conduct the research for the book and were there challenges?

We submitted the book on proposal as a middle grade. But an editor at Roaring Brook Press/Macmillan asked if I'd consider writing it as a picture book. They were going for a read-alike to Chelsea Clinton/Alexandra Boiger's She Persisted. It took me about a second to say yes, and while working up a sample for them, I realized that the job would be difficult. 

 I had already written a picture book biography of one subject [VIRGINIA WOULDN'T SLOW DOWN! DR. APGAR AND HER LIFE-SAVING INVENTION, August 2023], so I knew how challenging it is to distill a person's life in 1500 words or less. This project required almost the same work for 15 people and in 150 words or less each. Turns out that collective biography for young readers is challenging!

One would think it would be easy to research celebrities; for some, I could find good sources. But because these women are accomplished in several areas, I worked to 1) unearth current, solid research unrelated to the clothing or jewelry they wore! 2) create a unique, compelling theme for each princess based on that research.
 
I started researching princesses in mid-2017 for the proposal and turned in the final draft of the manuscript in mid-2021. I wasn't researching that whole time, but it was a large part of the project.

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

I hope readers see that our caricature of others isn't always accurate. I hope they realize that people are a diverse tapestry of problem-solvers and that we can use whatever power we have – royal or not – to make the world better.
 
The book enriches and supports standards for informational/nonfiction texts. It also reinforces STEM-based and other career conversations since several princesses hold professional positions (engineering, computer science, law, business, ambassador, etc.).

 


 

What are your marketing plans for the book?

This is my first Macmillan book, so I'm still learning the answer to this! Their publicity program includes ARC distribution and outreach to magazines, newspapers, online influencers (bloggers, BookTokers, BookTubers, Bookstagrammers), educators, and parenting influencers. My local indie bookseller, Snowbound Books, is hosting a launch and there are Women's History Month promotions in the works. Right now, I'm in the mode of doing whatever they tell me before it is due.😊

On my end, I contracted our own Deb Gonzalez to create an educator guide, PookyHonk Productions to create a trailer, and Blue Slip Media to fill in the essential promotions gaps. It takes a village, by golly!

What's next for you?

I'm preparing for the Apgar biography to launch in August 2023. My agent, Kelly Sonnack, is submitting a nonfiction picture book about animal gestation. Fingers crossed! Like all creators, I have a multitude of projects in various stages of completion, from snippets on scrap paper to final drafts. The goal is to keep writing amidst all the other book, life, and SCBWI activities!

A little bit about the book . . .

Real Princesses Change the World is an inspirational and diverse picture book profiling 11 contemporary real-life princesses and 4 heirs apparent from all around the world.
 
There are many ideas of what princesses are: Princesses are sweet, beautiful, and gracious. Princesses wear poofy dresses and strut about their castles. Princesses are just missing a handsome prince. But what message does that send to the children who look up to them?
 
This picture book compiles biographies of 11 princesses, highlighting who they genuinely are: diplomats, engineers, activists, athletes, and so much more. It focuses on their achievements and contributions, situating them as active global and local community members. This picture book takes readers on a trip that spans the whole world. From Nigeria to Japan, Saudi Arabia to Sweden, and Thailand to Tonga.
 
With stunning portraits by bestselling illustrator Dung Ho (Eyes that Kiss in the Corners), Carrie A. Pearson's Real Princesses Change the World showcases princesses in an empowering, feminist light that is both accessible and engaging for young readers.

Publisher: Roaring Brook Press/Macmillan

 


A little bit about the author . . .

Carrie A. Pearson is an author, a speaker, and a former early education teacher. She lives with her husband on the sandy shore of Lake Superior in Marquette, Michigan and blows daily kisses to her three grown up daughters. Carrie is a literacy advocate, an SCBWI-Michigan co-Regional Advisor, and on the Steering Committee for the SCBWI Impact & Legacy Fund. She is a mentor for aspiring creators of good books for all children. Carrie knows that narratives about princesses who need saving are most likely fairy tales. For much more, visit https://carriepearsonbooks.com/    

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