Showing posts with label Detroit Jewish Book Fair. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Detroit Jewish Book Fair. Show all posts

Friday, December 16, 2022

The Return of the Country's Largest Jewish Book Fair by Alice Blumenthal McGinty and Lisa Rose

 At seventy-one years old, The Detroit Jewish Book Fair is the oldest and largest Jewish Book Fair in the nation. Authors from all over the world are invited to the fair to talk about and sell their books. This annual community-wide event attracts 20,000 people each year. After a two year hiatus due to Covid, this year it was back LIVE, offering both in-person and virtual events. 

Alice Blumenthal McGinty, Lisa Rose, and
Suzanne Jacbos Lipshaw at the 2022
Detroit Jewish Book Fair

Organizers weren’t certain about how to plan…would people come in-person?  Online? Would people buy books? Thankfully, people did all of those things. As authors, we were pleased to be a part of the local author schmooze, where attendees could talk with us and get their books signed. 

During this event we loved the chance to reconnect with each other and with members of the Jewish community. We also made new connections with other authors and attendees, each carrying potential for new opportunities. As author Suzanne Jacobs Lipshaw said, a book event is not to be measured only in numbers of books sold, but by the connections that happen. Hopefully, we come away from every book event with at least one “moment” to be treasured. 

At the same time, we can’t help but think about the larger picture that this event represents in the push for diversity in children’s publishing. Children need both mirrors and windows in the literature they read. The literature at the book fair offered mirrors in which Jewish children could see themselves and their families and communities, as well as windows into new aspects of Jewish life. 

However, wouldn’t it be wonderful if the book fair could extend its reach to offer these books to Jews and non-Jews alike, bringing these windows and mirrors to people of all religions? While the focus on diversity in children's literature began with racial diversity, religious diversity is a crucial part of this need as well. It's not that this need isn't being addressed. More religiously diverse books have been published recently. However, there is more work to do in making sure that these books reach a wider audience. It’s still rare for someone who is not Jewish to attend the Jewish Book Fair. And in recent years, antisemitism has exploded—just this past week there were two bomb threats at Metro Detroit Jewish Day Schools. Through stories, children learn about others. They find connection and create empathy and understanding. The need is there. 

While we loved our chance to celebrate Jewish books and Jewish authors, we hope to also create opportunities to share these books with the wider world, creating more religious diversity and opening new windows to children of all races and religions. 

 

Alice Blumenthal McGinty is the award-winning author of 50 fiction and nonfiction books for children, including Jr. Library Guild and P.J. Library Selection, A Synagogue Just Like Home (2022, Candlewick Press, illustrated by Laurel Molk), My Israel and Me (2021, Kalaniot Books, illustrated by Rotem Teplow), and Jr. Library Guild Selection and New York and Chicago Public Library Best of 2022 List, Bathe the Cat (2022, Chronicle Books, illustrated by David Roberts)

Alice recently moved to Michigan from Illinois and is Regional Advisor Emerita of the Illinois SCBWI chapter. She looks forward to being a speaker at the Michigan Reading Association conference in March and the SCBWI Michigan Spring Conference in April.   


Lisa’s latest book Senor Saguaro The King of Desert will be published by Little Fig January 1, 2023. It is available for pre-order now! She is the author of The Singer and the Scientist (Kar-Ben Publishing, 2021). It was a National Jewish Book Finalist and Bank Street College Best Book. It also was selected to represent the great state of New Jersey at the National Book Festival at the Library of Congress. Shmulik Paints the Town (Kar-Ben Publishing, 2016) was a PJ Library Selection in 2016 and 2020. A Zombie Vacation (Apples & Honey Press, 2020) was also a PJ Library Selection in 2021. Lisa also has many other titles. Lisa is a teacher, reading specialist, literacy coach, and librarian. Please learn more at www.LisaRoseWrites.com




Friday, November 1, 2019

TooZooZEEM Is REAL! A Puppet Brings A Picture Book to Life by Carol Levin


My invitation to present my picture book, Haggadah Regatta, at the Detroit Jewish Book Fair 2019 came as a sweet surprise. I’m an indie author and illustrator and this fair in West Bloomfield is the largest of its kind in the country. I had two months to prepare for five-minutes-of-fame on the Michigan Authors Panel.

How could I squeeze all I have say about a Haggadah that combines the best parts of a traditional Passover seder with the tale of seder on a matzah raft? I drafted script after script, trying to whittle my message to five minutes and get the fact across that this family Haggadah is for everyone at the seder. Little kids, teens and grown-ups can all learn from my character TooZooZEEM and his crew of shoes. This night is different from all others.

Nicola’s Books in Ann Arbor provided an answer. Lisa Wheeler, author of People Don’t Bite People and her cuddly puppet were at the store, charming a small gathering of kids and parents. That’s it! What if TooZooZEEM joined me at the Book Fair? Touring together would be great fun. Lisa steered me to Folkmanis Puppets.

I oohed and aahed through a virtual zoo of stuffies at Folkmanis.com, searching for Haggadah Regatta’s four-legged kid. The company has been making puppets since 1976. I focused on their split hoof collection. Screaming Goat had a spotted coat. Lamb’s ears were too short and Bleating Sheep’s ears were black. Sadly, TooZooZEEM was missing. That night, I awoke from a dream and padded down the hall to my office. TooZooZEEM was in the catalog, after all. He was hiding in a Longwool Sheep costume.

The little kid found his way to my door three days later. A few necessary adjustments completed the magic. First, a good shearing.


Then, a few tacks to pin down his ears.

I grafted horns to his head and stitched glossy floss upon his nose. After much wiggling in his new life vest, TooZooZEEM bleated, “It’s my birthday! I’m REAL.”






Getting real requires practice. We played and replayed lots of puppeteering videos. And we shot our own videos to improve our routine. Now we’re a team. We can gauge when to listen, and when to talk. When TooZooZEEM whispers in my ear, I scratch behind his ears. His favorite action is to stomp with the crew. We can be silly, and we can be serious. Our Yom Kippur debut with human kids featured TooZooZEEM, playing the scapegoat with “mistakes” we taped to his vest. Saying I’m sorry is easier when we say it with our friends.

TooZooZEEM makes holidays more fun. Join us for Passover!

Carol Bloom Levin is the author and illustrator of Haggadah Regatta. Carol and her kid puppet (the star of the Haggadah) will speak at the Detroit Jewish Book Fair on November 3 at 10:00 AM at the JCC in West Bloomfield. The Ann Arbor duo are booking author visits for Passover 2020. Learn more at www.carollevin.us.













SCBWI-MI member, Suzanne Jacobs Lipshaw, author of I Campaigned for Ice Cream, will also speak on the Michigan Author Panel at the Detroit Jewish Book Fair. See the panel line-up and full schedule here:https://bookfair.jccdet.org/schedule-2/


Important Announcements for SCBWI-MI members!


Registration has begun for the SCBWI Annual Winter Conference in New York City, and SCBWI-MI members have a wonderful scholarship opportunity thanks to Shutta Crum.


Learn more and apply here ASAP! The deadline is Nov. 3rd!
More info is also available on Shutta's website:
http://shutta.com/shuttaco/2020scholarship.pdf

https://michigan.scbwi.org/2019/10/24/shuttas-scholarship-solution-to-the-winter-doldrums-is-here-again/

SCBWI-MI is thrilled to announce:



In collaboration with the spring nonfiction conference (Save the date: March 7, 2020), SCBWI-MI is holding two nonfiction mentorships next year.

One will be for nonfiction picture books with mentor Patricia Newman.
The other is for nonfiction middle grade/young adult with mentor Stephanie Bearce

We're giving you plenty of time to get prepared!

The submission window for both mentorships will open on May 5, 2020.
The submission window for both mentorships will close when we receive 30 applications or on May 26, 2020 – whichever comes first.

The registration fee is $20.
All applicants receive constructive comments on their submissions from the three super-secret, superstar judges.

More information and complete submission instructions are available at: https://michigan.scbwi.org/2019/10/23/non-fiction-mentorship-2020/



Coming up on the Mitten Blog:

Introducing the SCBWI-MI Diversity Committee, interviews with the Non-Fiction Mentors, an ongoing series about local Michigan publishers, more Book Birthdays, a Writer Spotlight, another round of Hugs and Hurrahs, and much more.

More soon!

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Did you know SCBWI-MI is on Instagram? See what our illustrators are up to:

SCBWI-MI Shop Talks are happening every month all around the state! Reach out to the coordinator in your area to get on their email list. It's the best way to stay up-to-date with the schedules and speakers. Go here to learn more and find a Shop Talk near you: https://michigan.scbwi.org/critique-groups-2/

Have a great weekend!